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

Screenshot of Seth Meyers; Donald Trump
Late Night with Seth Meyers/YouTube; Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

Old Seth Meyers Joke Resurfaces After Trump Announces He'll Release Government Files About Aliens

The liberal outlet Meidas Touch resurfaced late-night host Seth Meyers' joke predicting that President Donald Trump would pivot to talking about the existence of aliens to distract from his role in the Epstein files.

Trump has done everything he can to dismiss or downplay the outrage surrounding the documents, which are said to contain detailed lists of some of his former friend and associate Jeffrey Epstein's most high-profile clients and enablers. The late disgraced financier was a convicted pedophile and sex trafficker.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of Abby Phillip; Donald Trump
CNN; Chip Somodevilla

CNN Anchor Calls Out The Brutal Truth About The Countries That Joined Trump's 'Board Of Peace'

CNN anchor Abby Phillip pointed out the brutal truth about the countries that joined President Donald Trump's "Board of Peace," noting that citizens of half the countries that have joined the initiative are considered so "unreliable and risky" that they can't even get a visa to the U.S.

Those who've joined the Board of Peace include Albania, Argentina, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Belarus, Bulgaria, Cambodia, Egypt, El Salvador, Hungary, Indonesia, Israel, Jordan, Kazakhstan, Kosovo, Kuwait, Mongolia, Morocco, Pakistan, Paraguay, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, the United Arab Emirates, Uzbekistan, and Vietnam.

Keep ReadingShow less
Donald Trump
Chen Mengtong/China News Service/VCG via Getty Images

Donald Trump Says 'Stupid People' Rate 'Make America Great Again' The 'Number One' Political Phrase

President Donald Trump was widely mocked after he declared that "stupid people" would rate his "Make America Great Again" slogan "the number one phrase in the history of politics in America."

Trump made the remark during a press conference while pledging that "together we're going to 'Make America Great Again'—though he didn't have great things to say for the slogan he claims to have come up with.

Keep ReadingShow less
Lauren Utter; Tyra Banks
@gutterutterart/Instagram; Darren Gerrish/Franca Fund/Getty Images

Former 'Top Model' Contestant Shocks Fans By Revealing Contract Clause In Event She Was 'Killed' On The Show

The tea about America's Next Top Model just keeps spilling, and apparently, there's a lot of tea.

With the launch of the Netflix docuseries Reality Check: Inside America's Next Top Model, more people who were involved have started coming forward to share their experiences from the show, including Cycle 10's Lauren Utter.

Keep ReadingShow less
Danika Mason
@news.com.au/TikTok

Australian Olympics Reporter Issues Blunt Apology After Appearing Drunk On Live TV—And That Is How You Do It

Australian sports reporter Danika Mason has apologized for apparently having a bit TOO much fun at the Milano Cortina Winter Olympics this week.

On February 17, Mason did her live report from the Games for Australia's Channel 9 while obviously hammered. Three sheets to the wind. Schnockered!

Keep ReadingShow less