
Abortion aside, there's nothing the modern left is more invested in than promoting sexually deviant lifestyles, and the women of “The View” extolled the virtues of drag shows.
On Tuesday's edition of ABC's Daytime Party, the ladies welcomed American drag superstar RuPaul Andre Charles for a discussion about the virtues of men dressing up as women and shake booties, often for small children.
Charles, known by his first name, is the host of the reality TV show “RuPaul's Drag Race” and after receiving a standing ovation from the live audience, he sat down at the table for an often animated chat with the harpies who fainted in his presence.
Doing her part to normalize groomers, co-host Sara Haines lamented the backlash against lusty cross-dresser drag events being banned in some areas, stating that “everybody belongs in a drag show,” presumably even small children who are being sexualized.
Even the children?
Speaking with RuPaul, The View's Sara Haines proclaims “Everybody belongs in a drag show.” pic.twitter.com/eOTEs7iIGA— Nicholas Fondacaro (@NickFondacaro) March 5, 2024
After praising the success of RuPaul's show, Haines said, “But all of this is happening while we're simultaneously seeing some places in this country ban drag shows. Now, I want to know your thoughts on why I should have. .. one of the things that attracts me to a drag show and often the community, this is a community that took time to find clarity to see themselves as authentic when they weren't. actor on stage, they had to make their own way. So I've always found that everyone belongs in a drag show. What do you think of that?”
“Well, listen, you were born naked and the rest is drag. Everyone plays a role, everyone. When you get out of the shower you put on your drag. Right?” Charles responded, with an obsessive comment and an example of the sex-obsessed demographic's fixation with nudity.
“So here's the thing, art doesn't have to be explained. Dragging is art. Here's the thing, drag is — he makes fun of — that play I was talking about earlier, the roles we play. It's there to remind you, don't take yourself too seriously. Don't take yourself too seriously,” he said, adding: “And the people who want to stand up to all those who are afraid of our light, our laughter, our joy, our dance, the our music; this is the antidote to all that negativity. What we…our biggest…our biggest tool to fight all of this is our love and our joy. So do more of that.”
Joy Behar interjected, “I think they're jealous because they see you guys having so much fun,” drawing a “I think so too” response from the very special guest.
Co-host Whoopi Goldberg added: “But you know what, you know what I especially love is that you can ban drag shows, but you're not going to come to my house and turn off my TV. Now are you? No, you're not!”
American cultural degradation has reached the stage where men dressing in women's clothes and shaking their booties, especially for young people, has become widely accepted and even passed off as a “family” entertainment, a sad sign of these. sick and twisted times.
