Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Boebert Swiftly Called Out After Claiming Church Is A Safer Place For Kids Than Drag Bars

Boebert Swiftly Called Out After Claiming Church Is A Safer Place For Kids Than Drag Bars
Win McNamee/Getty Images

Colorado Republican Representative Lauren Boebert was called out after claiming churches are a safer place for young children than drag bars, wading into the recent conservative uproar about drag queens performing for kids.

Boebert made clear her feelings on the matter in a post to her Twitter account.


Boebert's remark came after Bryan Slaton, a Texas state Republican Representative, complained about a Dallas gay bar that hosted a family-friendly drag brunch for young children and vowed to introduce legislation to stop what he called the “disturbing trend in which perverted adults are obsessed with sexualizing young children."

But it was Boebert's suggestion that churches are safer for children that raised the ire of the online community.

In 2004, a report commissioned by the Roman Catholic Church found that more than 4,000 United States Roman Catholic priests had faced sexual abuse allegations in the last 50 years. In France, the figures were much higher, with more than 216,000 cases uncovered.

The resultant scandal confirmed much of what activists inside and outside the Catholic Church had been saying for many years and the investigation on the part of the Boston Globe's reporters was dramatized in 2015's Spotlight, which won the Academy Award for Best Picture.

Global anger toward these findings has been so great that Pope Francis held an unprecedented Roman Catholic Church summit to address pedophilia within the church and condemned clergy guilty of abuse as "tools of Satan."

These facts informed the criticism directed at Boebert, whose detractors were also quick to note that her own husband was once arrested for exposing himself to a minor.



Boebert's remarks came shortly after Florida Republican Senator Marco Rubio took to Twitter to gloat after shaming an Air Force base into canceling its drag queen story hour.

Rubio said it was "good" the Air Force had canceled the event, which would have featured a drag queen reading stories to young children, after he wrote a letter to them expressing his outrage.

Drag queen story hours have received considerable pusback nationwide from conservatives who have alleged that they are an opportunity to "indoctrinate" children into the LGBTQ+ community rather than an opportunity to impart values of inclusivity and acceptance.

"Violent threats" recently prompted one North Carolina town to cancel a scheduled drag queen story hour during Pride Month festivities.

More from People/lauren-boebert

HER dating app logo; content creator @melisa.suzan
@hersocialapp/Instagram; @melisa.suzan/Instagram

Lesbian Dating App Leaves The Internet Hilariously Shocked With Suggestive Bowling Ball Ad

For advertising to be successful it has to make a splash, and that's exactly what lesbian dating app HER has done with its latest very unsubtle ad.

The company, said to be the world's largest lesbian dating app, is going viral because of a hilarious ad likening a bowling ball to... well, just watch the ad and you'll see.

Keep ReadingShow less
Meghan McCain; Fred Rogers
Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images; Fotos International/Courtesy of Getty Images

Meghan McCain Gets Blunt Reality Check After Claiming Mister Rogers Wasn't 'Political' On His Show

Meghan McCain gained attention as a spokesperson for conservatives while constantly mentioning her father was Senator John McCain. After being fired by The View, she's remained mostly out of the public eye.

But every now and then she resurfaces to try to recapture the attention she once had. Her most recent attempt was on X with a vastly ill-informed hot take on public television icon Fred Rogers.

Keep ReadingShow less
Michael Fanone; Troy Nehls
Evelyn Hockstein-Pool/Getty Images; Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images

Beaten DC Cop Coughs NSFW Message At MAGA Rep. For Blaming Jan. 6 On Capitol Leadership

Michael Fanone—who worked for the D.C. Metropolitan Police Department for 20 years until he sustained serious and life-threatening injuries during the January 6 insurrection—didn't take kindly to Texas Republican Representative Troy Nehls trying to blame the attack on the "U.S. Capitol leadership team" instead of President Donald Trump.

Nehls spoke during a hearing where Jack Smith, the former special prosecutor who led two failed prosecutions against Trump for inciting the insurrection, defended the integrity of his investigation.

Keep ReadingShow less
Vice President JD Vance
Photo by Jim Watson - Pool/Getty Images

Vance Urges Minnesotans To Help ICE 'Find A Sex Offender'—And Everyone's Thinking The Same Thing

Vice President JD Vance had everyone thinking the same thing after urging Minneapolis residents to cooperate with ICE and Border Patrol officers and help them "find a sex offender."

Vance called for greater cooperation from the local community as protests against the Trump administration's nationwide immigration crackdown and hostilities flare since ICE agent Jonathan Ross killed resident Renee Nicole Good in her vehicle.

Keep ReadingShow less
Downward shot of a book titled "DAMN GOOD ADVICE" with a plate of food and glass for water next to it. It all sits on a wooden table.
Photo by frame harirak on Unsplash

Advice People Ignored At First That Turned Out To Be 100% Correct

I firmly believe that most humans only ever truly learn in hindsight.

We can't help it.

Keep ReadingShow less