Teen Vogue is now telling our children that the people protesting against state’s stay-at-home orders are motivated by “racism,” instead of fear of losing their livelihoods.
On Friday, the magazine tweeted that “the goals of these white Americans are rooted in a desire to return to their white dominance and white comfort.”
The op-ed’s author, Kandist Mallett, essentially argued that because many of the protesters are white, they must be racist. She also asserted that Make America Great Again is racist, of course.
“Huntington Beach is home to one of the ‘reopen’ movements, an astroturf protest focused on reopening businesses across America as the COVID-19 pandemic still rages, in a rejection of all things science. A year ago protesters took to downtown Huntington Beach for an anti-immigration rally that turned violent. Huntington Beach and Orange County in general have a strong white nationalist presence. Whether it’s ‘taking back their country,’ ‘making America great again,’ or ‘reopening America,’ the goals of these white Americans are rooted in a desire to return to their white dominance and white comfort,” the childish article asserts.
The author argued that because coronavirus has impacted more African-Americans than white people, those who are not willing to lose their jobs, homes and businesses are of course, just giving “a big ole racist F-you to Black Americans.”
“It’s almost like once they found out Black people were the most impacted, they became even less concerned,” she whined.
Allowing people to go back to work, as they have in Georgia, is a plot to avoid giving black and brown people unemployment pay according to Mallett. She wrote that “ordering Georgia’s heavily Black and brown workforce back on the job relieves the state of having to pay unemployment benefits.”
“The society that these white protesters so desperately want to reopen is rooted in anti-Blackness. That society allowed for Black people to die at a disproportionate rate the way it has since we were brought to this country to be enslaved. We must build a new society where Black people are no longer the first to be sacrificed for the elites’ mistakes and failures,” Mallett concluded.
Teen Vogue is no stranger to extremist leftism. On Christmas, they shared a “guide to anal sex” for their very young readers.
The tweet, which was an article from November, received swift backlash online from concerned parents and people who don’t think outlets, whose target audience is 13-17, should be promoting sex.
Disturbingly, the article is clearly geared very much to their young readers, discussing how not everyone wants “penis-in-vagina” sex. It also boasts that it is “anal 101, for teens, beginners, and all inquisitive folk”
“It’s important that we talk about all kinds of sex because not everyone is having, or wants to have, ‘penis in the vagina’ sex. If you do have ‘penis in the vagina’ sex and are curious about something else, or are finding that that type of sex is not for you and you’d like to explore other options, it’s helpful to know the facts. Even if you do learn more and decide anal sex is not a thing you’d like to try, it doesn’t hurt to have the information,” the explainer begins.
From there, things get pretty obscene.
“The anus is full of nerve endings that, for some people, feel awesome when stimulated. The opening of the butthole is where the most nerves are, so you don’t have to put anything very far up there (if you don’t want to) for it to feel good,” Teen Vogue’s explainer continues.
In a section about whether or not it hurts, the magazine says that “Planned Parenthood notes that anal sex can hurt if you’re not relaxed or if you don’t use lube,” but asserts that many people think it feels great.
The hyper-political magazine that once focused on fashion and teen heartthrobs also published a lengthy article in 2018 year glorifying abortion and calling for colleges to offer the procedure on campuses. The article was titled “Teens Are Speaking Up About Their Abortions Through Youth Testify” and told the stories of young women who became abortion advocates after having one.
One of the women describes how she “wants the world to know how much relief and joy her ability to get an abortion has brought her.”
The magazine has also promoted an uncritical “Antifa explainer” which glorified the violent groups and explained to their young audience what they can also do “in their own lives to stop fascism.”
Teen Vogue additionally came under fire after they published a how-to explainer on having anal sex that originally did not even mention practicing safe sex or waiting until you’re older.
“This is anal 101, for teens, beginners and all inquisitive folk,” author Gigi Engle wrote in Teen Vogue’s “A Guide to Anal Sex.” The original version of the story included nothing about engaging in safe sex — but was later edited to urge their teenage readers to use condoms.
Teen Vogue defended the article by calling concerned parents “homophobic.”
“The backlash to this article is rooted in homophobia,”Phillip Picardi, the magazine’s digital editorial director, wrote on Twitter. “It’s also laced in arcane delusion about what it means to be a young person today.”