The left’s obsession with drag queens continued at recent pride night events hosted by the New York Mets and Boston Red Sox. It’s just part of making the “right people” uncomfortable, SB Nation Outsports writer Ken Schultz said Tuesday.
“The drag gods have spoken,” Schultz wrote. “And based on the Mets’ and Red Sox’ current records, they approve.”
The “right people” are those who attend sporting events to see athletic competition, not events sure to confuse the heck out of their impressionable children. And those like Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.), who last week introduced a bill to protect children from drag queen story time, also tweeted that federal funding should be withheld from schools intentionally confusing children about gender and sexuality.
Schultz raved that the Red Sox “rewrote the script” during last week’s pride night at Fenway Park. The “Drag Sox” invited celebrity chef and Food Network personality Tiffani Faison to throw out the first pitch, escorted to the mound by drag queens Sassynation, Cole Slaw and Pamela Manderson.
“It was also a sign that the Red Sox were willing to welcome and embrace more aspects of LGBTQ culture than just our wallets,” Schultz said in his pride month review.
The Mets soon featured Jan, from RuPaul’s Drag Race, to sing “Take Me Out to the Ballgame.” Gag. Take me out to the ballgame.
The Milwaukee Brewers also featured a pride night drag queen two weeks ago (see photo).
This is all so refreshing to LGBT loudmouth Schultz, who insists these are perilous times for drag queens, the left’s favorite fetish:
(W)hat’s notable is the fact that two MLB teams welcomed them on the field during a time when the drag community is facing serious threats from opportunistic pundits, social media personalities and politicians.[…]
Drag queens being part of Pride Night might seem small. These disturbing events have made it necessary to spotlight drag queens in Pride Night. This promotes an acceptance of them as they are.
Schultz also believes that it’s crucial for drag queens to be recognized by an institution such as Major League Baseball in a period when the culture of drag is under attack.
“After all, it’s kind of hard to argue you’re representing ‘real America’ when you’re going against baseball,” Schultz also said.
On the corollary, professional sports like baseball left “real America” when they sold their souls to the LGBT fascists. With their woke and disturbing promotions of decadence, pro sports are rapidly giving traditional fans a royal kiss-off.
Schultz calls drag queen events art. They are in reality further evidence of a declining culture. The decline of baseball, apple pie, and hot dogs has reached new levels – deviance, depravity, and baseball. You are not, no thank you.