A family opened a town’s first bookstore. A bathroom bill is driving them away. - The Phelans ran the only bookstore in Vermillion, South Dakota. They sold it and moved after a new law would have required their daughter to use a boy’s bathroom.

  • ⚙️ Performance issue identified and being addressed.
  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account
By Casey Parks
Today at 6:00 a.m. EDT

imrs.php.webp
Customer Susan Tuve, left, talks with Mike Phelan and Nova Donstad at the Outside of a Dog bookstore in Vermillion, South Dakota. (Jay Pickthorn/For The Washington Post)

VERMILLION, S.D. — Their time in this small Midwestern town was nearly over, but for now, Mike Phelan still had a business to run, so he and his daughter leashed their dog and headed up the street.

The commute took three minutes. The Phelans passed sprawling Victorian houses with wraparound porches, then, Mike pulled out his keys. When they moved here from Chicago five years ago, Mike discovered Vermillion had a university, locally made bread Oprah Magazine once declared the best in the world, and an author who’d won the National Book Award. But Vermillion didn’t have a bookstore. No university town should exist without a place to buy novels and new nonfiction, Mike thought, so he’d opened one and named it “Outside of a Dog” after a Groucho Marx quote — “Outside of a dog, a book is man’s best friend.”

Mike twisted the key and looked down Main Street. Nearly all of downtown’s quaint brick storefronts had Pride flags in their windows. He’d once dreaded moving to a red state, but Vermillion had surprised him. He wanted to stay here for the rest of his life. But in the morning, his wife and son would head east with a trailer, and soon, Mike and his daughter, whom The Washington Post is not naming to protect her, would follow with a truck.

imrs.php (1).webp
Jen Phelan and her daughter hang out at the family's bookstore. (Jay Pickthorn/For The Washington Post)

imrs.php (2).webp
Handmade bracelets are displayed at the bookstore. (Jay Pickthorn/For The Washington Post)

Mike had tried to assure his daughter she wasn’t the reason the family was leaving South Dakota, but the 10-year-old was savvy. She knew the state had passed a measure preventing transgender young people like her from using girls’ bathrooms. And she knew that right after that law passed, her parents had said they were moving. Soon, they’d live in a New England town with explicit protections for her but none of her friends or the bookstore where she sold handmade bracelets for $5.

Mike pushed the door open. His dog, Waldo, took his place as the store’s greeter. His daughter went to the back to finish the summer homework he’d assigned, and three customers appeared.

“I hear you’re closing?” a middle-aged man in a John Deere hat said.

“Well,” Mike said. “We may have found a buyer.”

Mike knew people sometimes talked about laws that limit trans rights as if they only affect transgender people and their families. But those laws have ripple effects, he knew. Vermillion wasn’t just losing a random family. It was losing beloved community members, and if the sale didn’t work out, the town would lose its bookstore, too.

And so the town had pooled its resources. If their gambit worked, the store would soon have what Mike considered to be the ideal successors.

imrs.php (3).webp
Mike and Jen Phelan's daughter walks Waldo, the family dog. (Jay Pickthorn/For The Washington Post)

Mike’s daughter told him and his wife, Jen, at 3 or 4 that she thought it was “stupid” she had to wear boy clothes. It felt “much better” when she wore dresses and other girl items. She understood that her older brother Calvin was a boy, but her heart felt like being a girl, she told them at bedtime each night.

When she started kindergarten, school leaders said she could use the nurse’s bathroom. But the other kids wondered why their classmate made such frequent trips to the nurse. For a while, the 5-year-old held her arm in the hallway and pretended it was broken, but eventually, she stopped eating and drinking at school to avoid having to go.

The next year, Mike and Jen petitioned the Vermillion School Board to let their daughter use the girls’ bathroom. The board discussed what they described as “restroom practices” at four meetings in 2021. People testified both for and against the proposal, but the board adopted a policy that allowed her to use the girls’ bathroom.

Though Vermillion is more split, South Dakota is a deeply red state. Just nine of its 105 lawmakers are Democrats, and when Vermillion passed its policy, it became the only district in the state to explicitly allow trans girls to use the girls’ bathroom.

imrs.php (4).webp
Mike and Jen Phelan's daughter in downtown Vermillion, South Dakota. (Jay Pickthorn/For The Washington Post)

Still, for some lawmakers, one was enough. The next legislative session, in early 2022, Republican state Rep. Fred Deutsch introduced a bill to ban trans girls from girls bathrooms. Deutsch argued that “biology matters,” but many of his fellow Republicans said the issue was best left to local school boards. They rejected the bill.

In the years that followed, Republicans spent hundreds of millions of dollars on ads targeting the trans community. Most Americans support restrictions for trans people, according to a February Pew Research study.

At the beginning of this year’s session, the South Dakota legislature considered another bathroom bill. This time, it passed.

The Phelans knew other families with trans kids had fled South Dakota, but they’d always hoped they wouldn’t have to. Their daughter is too young for medical interventions, and she is more interested in theater than sports, so none of the state’s other anti-trans bills had affected them. But neither Mike nor Jen could bear to force their daughter to use the boys’ bathroom, and even returning to the nurse’s office felt untenable.

And so, Jen, an audiologist, applied for jobs in states that had vowed to protect children like hers. Soon, she had a new gig and a U-Haul rental for the first weekend in August. Now, all the Phelans needed was a plan for the bookstore.

imrs.php (5).webp
Mike Phelan embraces loyal customer and friend Mandie Weinandt at the bookstore. (Jay Pickthorn/For The Washington Post)

The day before half the family left for the East Coast, Mike’s daughter approached the counter with her math pages all worked out. She said she was bored, and he suggested she pick out a book to read.

“It’s my one and only summer!” she said. “How evil!”

Though the state’s anti-trans bills had come to dominate their life the past few years, most of the Phelans’ parenting consisted of the normal stuff — they negotiated bedtimes and dirty bedrooms, junk food intake and the best way to spend a summer. Their daughter loved Taylor Swift, and for her 10th birthday, had only requested a trip to the mall with her mom.

A bell tied to the door rang, and Mike stood. It was time to relinquish the counter. The potential new owners were here.

Nova and Elias Donstad were a young trans couple who’d met after they both moved to South Dakota for school. He was a trans man who wrote poetry. Nova was a nonbinary person who worked at the local hospital. They fell in love reading next to each other most evenings, and they fell for South Dakota the way many transplants did — accidentally. They’d come to treasure the community theater and the sandwich shop tucked into a corner of the Ace Hardware.

But as soon as Mike said he was leaving, Elias knew he didn’t want to live in a town without a bookstore. He wasn’t sure how a grad student and a nurse’s assistant could afford to buy a business, but they called Mike to ask if they could take it over. Before they’d even settled on a price, another Mike in town talked them into starting a GoFundMe so all of Vermillion could help pay for it. They raised nearly $22,000 for a down payment.

imrs.php (6).webp
Nova and Elias Donstad talk with a friend during the Phelan family farewell party at XIX Brewing Company. (Jay Pickthorn/For The Washington Post)

Now, the sale was almost official. It was, on one hand, a dream come true for the couple, and on the other, terrifying. Mike is tall and affable, the kind of guy people might see as a family man supporting his child. Nova’s hair was buzzed and dyed pink, and Elias’s fresh cut was a shade somewhere between blue and green. They were both quiet, prone to wearing book-themed T-shirts, but they worried some might see them as outsiders.

“We look like what we are,” Nova said one afternoon. “Visibly queer.”

Mike hadn’t been sure he’d find a buyer. While he has always turned a small profit, bookstores aren’t exactly cash cows in the age of online shopping.

And yet, it was clear Vermillion wanted to keep their bookstore. That afternoon, half the town seemed to stop by to express its grief.

“I was honestly worried when you announced you were leaving that we would lose the bookstore,” a man named Daniel Milroy said.

Milroy had been the shop’s first customer. He works in the Vermillion landfill, and he met Mike when Mike was clearing out junk from the retail space. Milroy had always wished Vermillion had a bookstore, and when he heard Mike was opening one, he placed an order right there from the landfill.

“I’m sorry to see you go,” Milroy said. His voice broke, and he held out his hand.

The store was crowded, then it was quiet, and around 5 p.m., Mike turned off the lights. It was time to say goodbye to Vermillion.

imrs.php (7).webp
Mike and Jen Phelan wear Groucho Marx glasses while posing for a photo with their daughter and son during the Phelan family's farewell party. (Jay Pickthorn/For The Washington Post)

A group of customers had told Mike they were planning a “Phelan Pharewell” at a brewery on Main Street, and when Mike walked over, he expected he’d find maybe a small group. Only eight people attended their send-off when they left Chicago. But as soon as Mike opened the brewery door, he could see more than 100 people were there.

Many attendees didn’t seem to understand why the state government had gotten involved in an issue the town had already handled locally.

A man in his 70s pointed to the Phelans’ daughter, who was playing Old Maid with two other girls.

“What did that little girl do to hurt anybody?” he asked his wife. “Why are they going after such a small group of people?”

While guests asked Mike about his new town, a group of adults with disabilities begged Jen for selfies. Every Wednesday, she helps teach them how to dance.

“But I don’t want you to leave,” one woman said before wrapping her arms around Jen. “I want to dance with you!”

imrs.php (8).webp
Well-wishers and friends listen as the Phelans address the crowd at their farewell party. (Jay Pickthorn/For The Washington Post)

imrs.php (9).webp
A guest writes a personal note to the Phelans. (Jay Pickthorn/For The Washington Post)

imrs.php (10).webp
Jen Phelan and her daughter hug a well-wisher after becoming emotional. (Jay Pickthorn/For The Washington Post)

Elias and Nova hung near the back, quietly sipping root beers.

“Are you the new owners?” a Unitarian couple asked. “We will support you. We want you here.”

The party seemed like it might never end. The sun fell, and no one left, but Mike knew Jen and Calvin needed to get on the road early, so he grabbed a microphone and thanked everyone for the past few years.

“This is a nice send-off,” he said. “I’m sorry that there is an end to our time in Vermillion.”

In the future, when Mike thought about Vermillion, he knew he’d always feel it had been taken from his family too soon. But here was his daughter, surrounded by people who loved her.

Maybe some politicians didn’t want her living the life she was supposed to live, he said, but Vermillion had always felt safe. The Phelans’ children could walk downtown from their rambling two-story Victorian, and Mike and Jen never worried about them. That was a gift, wasn’t it? To belong somewhere, even if only for a few years?

“So thank you all for being a part of that,” Mike said, “for making that happen for us — and for each other, too.”

Source (Archive)
 
I wonder if USAID played a role?
Not USAID, but the National Endowment for the Humanities.

From the article below:
Caroline Lowery, the executive director of Oklahoma Humanities, said her organization, which has seven employees, received roughly $1 million in operational support from the agency each year, which amounts to about 75 percent of its budget. That money is then used to support projects serving all of Oklahoma’s 77 counties, most of which, she said, are rural and lack any other humanities infrastructure.
Guess what sort of "rural humanities infrastructure" the feds were supporting?

Trump canceled all the awards and redirected the funding to civics work.

Trump Administration Moves to Cut Humanities Endowment​

Grant recipients have been told that funds from the National Endowment for the Humanities would be redirected to furthering “the president’s agenda.”​

By Jennifer Schuessler
April 3, 2025

The National Endowment for the Humanities has canceled most of its grant programs and started putting staff on administrative leave, as its resources are set to be redirected toward supporting President Trump’s priorities.

Starting late Wednesday night, state humanities councils and other grant recipients began receiving emails telling them their funding was ended immediately. Instead, they were told, the agency would be “repurposing its funding allocations in a new direction in furtherance of the president’s agenda.”

“Your grant’s immediate termination is necessary to safeguard the interests of the federal government, including its fiscal priorities,” the letters said. “The termination of your grant represents an urgent priority for the administration, and due to exceptional circumstances, adherence to the traditional notification process is not possible.”

The letters, more than a half dozen of which were viewed by The New York Times, were on agency letterhead and bore the signature of Michael McDonald, a longtime N.E.H. official who became acting director of the agency last month, after the previous leader, a Biden appointee, was pressed to resign.

In a meeting on Thursday afternoon, Mr. McDonald told senior leadership that upward of 85 percent of the agency’s hundreds of current grants were to be canceled, according to two people privy to the meeting. He also suggested that, going forward, the agency would focus on patriotic programming, the employees said.

Late Thursday, employees began receiving notices that they were being put on administrative leave.

A spokesman for the agency did not respond to a request for comment. The White House referred inquiries to a spokesman for the Office of Management and Budget, which declined to comment.

The letters came days after The Times reported that agency employees had been informed by supervisors that the Department of Government Efficiency, Elon Musk’s cost-cutting group, was seeking cuts of as much of 80 percent of the roughly 180-person staff. Employees were also told that all grants approved during the Biden administration that had not been fully paid out would be canceled.

The blanket cancellation of funding for humanities councils in 56 states and jurisdictions in particular sent shock waves through state-level funders. The state councils collectively receive about $65 million of the agency’s annual budget of roughly $210 million.

“The loss of N.E.H. funding to humanities councils will decimate the ability of these nonprofits to serve communities in their states, eliminating programs that are essential to each state’s cultural infrastructure,” the Federation of State Humanities Councils said in an “urgent appeal” to members on Thursday morning.

The legal basis for the cancellations remains unclear. Observers have noted that the creation and funding of state humanities councils was specifically mandated in the legislation passed by Congress.

Representative Chellie Pingree, Democrat of Maine and the ranking minority member on the House Appropriations subcommittee that oversees the endowment, said in a statement that the termination of the grants was “devastating and outrageous.”

“Let’s be clear: These grants were already awarded and use funds already appropriated by Congress on a bipartisan basis,” she said. “The notion that these terminations are justified by a sudden shift in ‘federal priorities’ is nonsense. This is ideological targeting — pure and simple. And it is happening with no input from Congress or the public.”

In recent weeks, Department of Government Efficiency employees have made repeated visits to the office. Two were at the agency’s office on Wednesday afternoon and spoke with leadership, according to a person who was present. The most recent update to its funding programs was posted on its website on March 20.

The N.E.H. is a small part of the alphabet soup of federal agencies, and is often conflated with the National Endowment for the Arts. But while tiny by federal standards, it is a crucial source of funding for museums, historical sites, scholarship and both school-based and community-based projects across the country.

Since the agency’s creation in 1965, it has provided more than $6.4 billion to support more than 70,000 projects in all 50 states and U.S. jurisdictions, according to its website. Supported projects have included more than 9,000 books (including 20 that went on to win Pulitzer Prizes) and more than 500 film and radio programs, including Ken Burns’s landmark 1990 documentary “The Civil War,” which received about a third of its budget from the agency.

Agency grants have supported archaeological excavations at Jamestown, Va., research on the Dead Sea Scrolls and publication of the full records of the voyage of Lewis and Clark. And the agency has funded numerous multidecade, multivolume projects dedicated to gathering and publishing the papers of figures including 12 presidents, Mark Twain, Thomas Edison, the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Ernest Hemingway.

Cathy Gorn, the executive director of National History Day, a nonprofit group promoting history education, said the cuts would be especially painful at a time when support for the humanities in schools, universities and elsewhere was already small, and shrinking.

“We are in danger of not being able to help this next generation of American citizens understand the nation’s past,” she said. “There’s a lot to lose here.”

National History Day, Gorn said, had received notices canceling the unpaid remainder of two multiyear grants totaling about $825,000.

The federal endowment is crucial to many small humanities projects nationwide since by law, it funnels a large chunk of its budget directly to state councils, which then fund projects within their states. State support differs by population. In the 2024 fiscal year, Texas received about $3.4 million, while North Dakota was allocated about $900,000.

For many state councils, particularly in smaller states without major cultural organizations and a strong philanthropic base, the federal agency provides all or virtually all funding. Without those grants, some may simply collapse.

Caroline Lowery, the executive director of Oklahoma Humanities, said her organization, which has seven employees, received roughly $1 million in operational support from the agency each year, which amounts to about 75 percent of its budget. That money is then used to support projects serving all of Oklahoma’s 77 counties, most of which, she said, are rural and lack any other humanities infrastructure.

“The impact will be devastating statewide,” she said. “There will be an immediate loss of support for programs that serve veterans, programs that serve rural communities.”

Projects have included an oral history project with survivors of the 1921 Tulsa race massacre, and an effort to digitize news coverage and other records relating to the 1995 bombing of a federal building in Oklahoma City.

“Our history will literally be lost,” she said. “We are the stopgap. We are the institution that is making sure Oklahoma’s stories are preserved.”

Mark Santow, the founder of the Providence Clemente Veterans’ Initiative, a group that provides free cultural and educational programs for veterans in Massachusetts and Rhode Island, said his group had been informed that its current two-year, $99,000 grant, of which about $18,000 had not yet been received, was canceled. Separate grants it receives from Rhode Island’s state council were also in jeopardy.

Upcoming programs, like a field trip to Civil War battlefields, were uncertain, Santow said.

“As always, the vets in our community will quietly bear the burden of these ill-considered decisions,” he said. That leaders have the power to make them, he added, “doesn’t make it right.”
Source (Archive)

Humanities Endowment Funds Trump’s Priorities After Ending Old Grants​

The $34.8 million allocated by the National Endowment for the Humanities leans toward presidents, statesmen and the Declaration of Independence’s 250th anniversary.​

By Jennifer Schuessler and Michaela Towfighi
Aug. 5, 2025

The National Endowment for the Humanities abruptly canceled virtually all of its existing grants in April, citing a desire to pivot to “the president’s agenda.” Now it has announced its largest round of grants since, $34.8 million in funding for 97 projects across the country that helps show what that means.

The grants include many focused on presidents, statesmen and canonical authors, including $10 million to the University of Virginia — which the agency said was the largest grant in its history — that will support the “expedited completion” of editorial work on papers relating to the Declaration of Independence, the American Revolution and the Founding era.

That grant will include work on the papers of George Washington and James Madison. Other grants will support work on the papers of other presidents including John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, Zachary Taylor and Millard Fillmore.

The agency said the awards, which build on decades of funding for such projects, were also a response to President Trump’s call for a “grand celebration” of the 250th anniversary of American independence next July.

“These N.E.H. grants will produce new resources and media that will help Americans meaningfully engage with the nation’s founding principles as we approach the U.S. Semiquincentennial,” Michael McDonald, the acting chair of the agency, said in a statement.

Shortly after the grant cancellations in April, the agency also announced that, in keeping with executive orders by Mr. Trump, it would not support projects promoting “extreme ideologies based upon race or gender.”

None of the new grants are explicitly related to L.G.B.T.Q. issues. And while there are several projects about prominent female figures, including Emily Dickinson and Marianne Moore, only one appears to take a broader look at gender and women’s history: a $700,000 grant to City Lore, a media company in New York, to support a documentary about female reporters during the Vietnam War.

But the new grants do not entirely bypass projects relating to Black history. Researchers at Indiana University will receive $300,000 for a project to edit and digitally publish more than 13,000 letters, speeches and other writings by the abolitionist and statesman Frederick Douglass. And the Freedmen and Southern Society Project at the University of Maryland will receive $300,000 to support its multivolume documentary history of Emancipation.

Some of the new grants fund projects whose previous grants were canceled in April. Among those was the Walt Whitman Archive at the University of Nebraska, which will receive $300,000 to support efforts to track down the poet’s voluminous unsigned articles in 19th-century newspapers.

A spokesman for the endowment did not respond to a request for further information about its funding priorities.

The grant announcement comes as Mr. Trump has continued his efforts to reshape federal cultural institutions like the Smithsonian and the Library of Congress, where he has ousted some leaders and called for an end to what he has called “divisive, race-centered ideology.”

At the humanities endowment, the turmoil began in March when the previous chair, a Biden appointee, was forced out. Employees from the Department of Government Efficiency began scrutinizing its programs soon after.

In April, the agency canceled most of the grants approved during the Biden administration, and moved to terminate more than half its staff of about 180. It also announced it would dedicate millions of dollars to the National Garden of American Heroes, Mr. Trump’s planned patriotic sculpture garden.

Those moves have prompted an outcry among historians, along with lawsuits.

Last week, a federal judge in New York ruled against the administration in a case brought by the Authors Guild, saying that the cancellation of already approved funding for 1,400 research projects violated the First Amendment. In a pointed ruling, Judge Colleen McMahon said that while the administration could focus the agency’s grant making on its own priorities, it did not have the right to “edit history” to exclude perspectives it disliked.

Another lawsuit concerns the termination of the agency’s funding for 56 state and territorial humanities councils, which by law are entitled to a portion of the agency’s funding, which they use to support local projects, including many in rural areas. Those cuts prompted a lawsuit by Oregon Humanities and the Federation of State Humanities Councils, which expect a ruling next week.

“Congress designated the funding and then from our perspective the notification and the process of peeling that funding back once it was already obligated, our argument is that that’s illegal,” Adam Davis, the executive director of Oregon Humanities, said in an interview.

In June, after the lawsuit was filed, the agency said it would restore some funding for the 2025 fiscal year. And this month, it said it would also provide some funding for the 2026 fiscal year, at the acting chairman’s “discretionary authority.” But what that means in practice remains unclear.

Phoebe Stein, the president of the Federation of State Humanities Councils, said that virtually every council has cut staff or programs. “The uncertainty has made it extremely difficult for councils to plan, including for the 250th,” she said.

A correction was made on Aug. 6, 2025: An earlier version of this article described incorrectly a round of grants by the National Endowment for the Humanities. The $34.8 million in grants it announced this month was its largest round of grants since it canceled virtually all existing grants in April, not its first round of grants since that time.
Source (Archive)
 
So some degenerate predators thought they found a vulnerable place to destroy, but were dissuaded when the State unexpectedly doesn't support them.
 
Not to worry, I'm sure the abusive parents - pedophile dad and narcissist mother - will find another Leftist haven in which to continue their evil behaviour.
 
Every time. The parents tell them "boy clothes" and if a boy prefers the "girl clothes," the kid thinks "Well I must be a girl then." They say those toys are for boys and if their daughter likes them, then she of course wants to be a boy. I think Ellen Page wrote about this in her autobiography, her mom calling comfortable clothes and fun stuff like Nerf guns only for boys. Instead of recognizing that her mom was an idiot who should've let her daughter wear jeans and play with Nerf guns, she frames this as first signs she was actually a boy all along and her mom was repressing it. It's so backwards and regressive.
It's a bit off topic for this but TBH I don't really agree that it's the kid's logic. When I was a kid I asked for the boy happy meal at mcdonalds a lot. Just as a benign example. I was a girl that sometimes liked things that were "for boys" but I never questioned myself or was bothered by this. None of these young kids go to their parents with shit like this over that. It's because of indoctrination from schools, media, social media, and the parents themselves.

I grew up in a family that had strict "gender roles" due to religious reasons, even, and it still wasn't a problem. The narrative is created to fit what they want to happen and that's all.

As long as you aren't overtly abusive kids don't really develop complexes over this shit unless they're some sort of BPD nightmare. They'll just start doing more of what they want once they're older and more independent. Even outside the context of GNC clothing choices this will play out the same way with other types of fashion and lifestyle choices.

The bottom line is that the parents and other adults in the kids life wanted this bullshit, not them.
 

They try to prop themselves up by being some kind of community center and usually do a lot of events revolving around feminism, witchcraft, communism, and other woke lefty topics.
Same with the black female "entrepreneurs" that got COVID bux to start "book stores" that were just community hang-outs with no actual business going on that were more focused on the cargo cult of being a black "business owner" at last and expecting wealth to roll in without any actual work towards that goal.

They all closed amid cries of "RACISM!" when the free money ran out....
 
A man in his 70s pointed to the Phelans’ daughter, who was playing Old Maid with two other girls.

“What did that little girl do to hurt anybody?” he asked his wife. “Why are they going after such a small group of people?”
This part made me roll my eyes, it's just so uncredulous. This never happened.
 
The town breathes a collective sigh of relief: the owner is going to troon out the kids in town.
I bet other parents in town tried to include the little troon in activities, out of pity. But it would be very uncomfortable for normal parents who don't want their kids exposed to this. You really should put your own family first before worrying about this disfunctional family's fucked up child.

Now the other local parents and people involved in kids activities will be relieved to see this horrid family leave town for good. No more telling your kid to avoid Troonette Jr in the locker room at the pool.

To the town of Vermillion SD:
Got What We Voted for Again Award 🏆
 
Every time. The parents tell them "boy clothes" and if a boy prefers the "girl clothes," the kid thinks "Well I must be a girl then." They say those toys are for boys and if their daughter likes them, then she of course wants to be a boy. I think Ellen Page wrote about this in her autobiography, her mom calling comfortable clothes and fun stuff like Nerf guns only for boys. Instead of recognizing that her mom was an idiot who should've let her daughter wear jeans and play with Nerf guns, she frames this as first signs she was actually a boy all along and her mom was repressing it. It's so backwards and regressive.

Why were they enforcing "boy clothes" at 3 years old? Your toddler is smarter than you calling it stupid. Let your kids wear and do what they want within reason. They'll probably move on to something different within weeks anyway.
"Gender isn't a binary but if you like the things typically associated with one end of our made-up spectrum, you must be located right there at one of the ends."

Leftist gender nonsense at its finest.
 
Why does that bookstore have barely any books? There are thousands of these bookslops in my state and they're all terrible. They never sell anything interesting, just woke propoganda and shitty trinkets. I don't think they make any money and I assume a trust fund is highly involved.

Or a way to launder money for a fledgling meth operation.
 
Mike’s daughter told him and his wife, Jen, at 3 or 4 that she thought it was “stupid” she had to wear boy clothes. It felt “much better” when she wore dresses and other girl items. She understood that her older brother Calvin was a boy, but her heart felt like being a girl, she told them at bedtime each night.
This didn't happen and if it did everyone in this article who enabled it was and still is a fucking retard.
 
Going by the title I thought this article was going to be about a family owned bookstore run out of business by the locals mercilessly dumping too much ass in their shop. But no, its just more tranny shit. My day is ruined.
 
he’d opened one and named it “Outside of a Dog” after a Groucho Marx quote — “Outside of a dog, a book is man’s best friend.”
Finish the joke you retards. "And inside of a dog, it's too dark to read."
Mike and his daughter, whom The Washington Post is not naming to protect her, would follow with a truck.
His son is named Jesse Phelan. That's probably the name at birth, too, given the spelling.


I had to scroll back to 2017 to find the last pic of his younger son dressed as a boy. They trooned this kid out as a toddler, as part of their TDS.
 
In spoken English it is typically ignored, but any style guide will recommend it for written English (with the occasionally exception for some particularly jarring phrases like "Whom is it?")
"To be" is always an exception to the "whom" rule. "Who is it" is correct, "whom is it" is not.

That said, "It is I" is correct, but pretty much no one is going to say that.
 
Amazing how you can't fuck, draft, or sell guns n' liquor to a ten year old but boy howdy you can pump them full of hormones and fuck their mind up beyond all recourse.

also there's nothing better than a used bookstore so full of stuff it's like a maze, that's where the Good Shit is found.
 
Why does that bookstore have barely any books? There are thousands of these bookslops in my state and they're all terrible. They never sell anything interesting, just woke propoganda and shitty trinkets. I don't think they make any money and I assume a trust fund is highly involved.
It is because they cater to "the modern audience". They like the idea of reading, or give the appearance of being a reader, but they don't like the actual reading part.
And I am 100% convinced almost all the books on display there are critical race theory, gender struggles or about tranny-rights. Books that likeminded people might come in and talk to them about and validate eachother for being really good human beings, but at the same time no one actually buys or reads.
It is not about selling books. It is about virtue signalling.

(These are the kind of people that consider reading "white" and "far-right-adjacent" activities after all.)
 
Actual fucking pedophiles making their kid wear girl dresses at 3 and 4 and making them go to a nurse’s bathroom, grooming insecurity into their child to make them retarded. THIS is how trannies are made
 
Back
Top Bottom