Sunday, February 25, 2024

NatGeo Goes Full Bud Light: Never Go Full Bud Light; National Geographic Names Drag Queen as a ‘Traveler of the Year’

NatGeo Goes Full Bud Light:
Never go full Bud Light.
National Geographic, a formerly grand American institution dating back to 1888 which was captured years ago by woke ideology (in 2017 it published a story celebrating the “Gender Revolution” with a nine-year-old trans child on the cover) has announced its nine “Travelers of the Year” for 2024. Is anyone surprised that the lineup includes a demonically costumed drag queen?
Wyn Wylie, who performs as a grotesque and insulting parody of a woman under the stage name “Pattie Gonia,” is a self-described “intersectional environmentalist, drag queen, and advocate for inclusivity in the outdoors” who works to “uplift LGBTQIA+ people and other underrepresented groups in the outdoors.”
The notion that drag queens are “underrepresented” anywhere in America today is demonstrably absurd. They are celebrated in the forefront of our cultural awareness in the media and entertainment arenas. They garner lucrative corporate sponsorships from the likes of The North Face and Bud Light. They are welcomed in libraries all across the country to groom children under the pretense of reading to them in “Drag Queen Story Hours.” In addition to the NatGeo accolade, Pattie Gonia has over 600,000 followers on social media, and he has the nerve to call himself underrepresented.
As for whether he and his ilk are underrepresented in the outdoors, who’s stopping them? Anyone of any race, sexual preference, or identity category is free to go camping, hiking, and sightseeing in any national park in the country, and always has been. If drag queens are “underrepresented” in the Great Outdoors, it’s no one’s fault but their own – certainly not the result of some mythical systemic oppression.
Nevertheless, to push back against (or rather, to exploit) this purported oppression, Pattie Gonia co-founded The Outdoorist Oath, a nonprofit which shrewdly links our culture’s obsession with gender ideology to climate change hysteria in an “action-based commitment for planet, inclusion, and adventure.” The organization asks members to take an oath to acknowledge climate change, commit to advocating for environmental justice, and recognize “that systemic oppression is real and that hatred, discrimination, and biases marginalize people.” --->READ MORE HERE
Kayla Oaddams/Getty Images
National Geographic Names Drag Queen as a ‘Traveler of the Year’:
National Geographic named environmental activist and drag queen Wyn Wylie — who performs under the name “Pattie Gonia” and — as one of its nine “Travelers of the Year.”
Pattie Gonia is a self-described “intersectional environmentalist, drag queen, and advocate for inclusivity in the outdoors” who works to “uplift LGBTQIA+ people and other underrepresented groups in the outdoors.” The Oregon-based performer has over 600,000 followers on social media.
‘Hi, it’s me, Pattie Gonia, a real-life homosexual,” the activist says in a video for the 2023 North Face “Summer of Pride” campaign. “We are here to invite you to come out… in nature with us!”
Pattie Gonna co-founded The Outdoorist Oath, a non-profit which promotes an “action-based commitment for planet, inclusion, and adventure.” The organization asks members to take an oath, which includes acknowledging climate change, committing to advocacy for environmental justice, and recognizing “that systemic oppression is real and that hatred, discrimination, and biases marginalize people.”
Outdoorist Oath seeks to promote inclusivity and raises awareness about conduct like “microaggressions in the outdoors.” The organization hosts activism workshops called “Stretch Sessions,” including sessions on white supremacy.
“This Stretch Session will challenge your perspective and make you think critically about the role White Supremacy plays into your experience in the outdoors, whether you’re white or BIPOC,” reads the announcement for a workshop on white supremacy. “Confronting our white supremacy will never be easy, but it is a necessary step in creating a more inclusive and equitable outdoors. So we wanted to provide a short introduction into some of the concepts that will be likely used and discussed during this session.” --->READ MORE HERE
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