XPost: alt.politics.homosexuality, alt.transgendered, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh
A new Halloween-themed commercial for Twix candy bars that features a cross-dressing child had social media fuming on Wednesday.
In the ad, a young boy in a princess dress opens his front door to find
a mysterious new nanny � a goth-looking witch � on his doorstep. When
some neighborhood girls question why the boy is wearing a costume when
it �isn�t Halloween yet,� he looks sad.
Immediately after, the pair visit a park where a bigger boy asks the cross-dressing child why he�s dressed �like a girl.� When the boy
answers, �dressing like this makes me feel good,� the ostensible bully
responds that he and his nanny �look weird.�
At that point, in a sequence that suggests violence against minors is a reasonable response to having a different point of view over
transgender ideology, the nanny uses her magic power to call up a wind
storm to blow the bigger boy away. The implication is that he may be
gone forever.
At no point does the ad show or mention a Twix candy bar.
https://youtu.be/FSW6x6tsauc
The popular social media account Libs of Tiktok shared the ad,
immediately drawing outraged responses.
Best-selling author J.D. Vance, who is currently running for a Senate
seat in Ohio, retweeted the video, saying, �These people ruin
everything.�
Chris Buskirk, editor of the conservative journal American Greatness,
warned, �They want your children and they will stop at nothing to get
them.�
Conservative pundit and blogger Samuel Sey noted, �This ad supports two separate kinds of child abuse.�
Finally, Southern Baptist pastor and professor Denny Burk tweeted, �So
the message is this. 1. Lie to children about how God made them. 2.
Anyone who opposes this lie is by definition a villain. 3. It�s funny
to destroy the people who oppose the lies. I don�t do boycotts, but
this one is actually making me reconsider.�
Transgender propaganda has become more ubiquitous in corporate
marketing in recent years.
As The Daily Wire previously reported, in 2019, razor company Gillette
featured a dad teaching his daughter who believes she�s a boy how to
shave her face.
�Growing up, I was always trying to figure out what kind of man I want
to become and I�m still trying to figure out what kind that I want to
become,� teen trans activist Samson Bonkeabantu Brown says in the
video. The commercial closes with the company�s iconic tagline, made
ironic by its new political agenda, �The best a man can get.�
Two years before, soap company Dove unveiled a new campaign, titled
�Real Moms,� in which a man is numbered among the mothers.
The opening text of the ad states, �Moms are redefining what it means
to be a �good mom.��
The camera then cuts to a male-to-female trans person standing with a
woman. He says of their son, �We are both his biological parents. You
get people that are like, �What do you mean? You�re the mom?� We�re
like, �Yep. We�re both gonna be moms.��
https://youtu.be/FSW6x6tsauc
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Barb
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