Miss Universe representatives insult menstruating women with pro-LGBT virtue-signaling
Miss Universe is claiming that “not all people who menstruate are women,” and shared “inclusive language” guidelines to its Twitter account on Tuesday, instructing the public to say “people” have periods, not “women.”This is disgusting, and it goes without saying it's also just as insulting to men as it is to women, as are all the hijack tactics of men pretending to be women under the guise of transsexuality. And I though it was bad enough when Israeli producer Asaf Blacher tried going the PC route; it wouldn't shock me if men like him had no issue with where the Miss Universe pageant is going now. This is bound to alienate audience even further, as who'll trust them not to betray the ladies to transsexual men in the future, thereby refusing to defend a woman's honor, one of the worst problems with today's society?
“Inclusive language is important, especially when speaking about periods,” Miss Universe tweeted on Tuesday.
“Thinking menstrual health is only a niche topic for woman excludes transgender, non-binary and gender-nonconforming people who have periods from the conversation,” Miss Universe added, along with the hashtag, “Menstrual Equity.”
Including in its tweet, Miss Universe instructed the public on “How to talk about periods,” adding, “Say this: productive health. Not this: women’s health.”
“Say this: people who have periods. Not this: women who have periods,” the instructions continued, before claiming that “Not all women menstruate and not all people who menstruate are women.”
The organization was rightly mocked for their pandering:
Another critic wrote, “Are you that organisation that parades young females wearing all sorts of clothes & swim suits in front of mostly male judges & audiences? And now you are lecturing what they should and should not say?”Needless to say, those companies who've engaged in such atrocities owe an apology to the fairer sex, including our own Israeli beauty contestants. This is some of the most embarrassingly bad "PR" to be seen, and will damage the Miss Universe pageant's reputation for years to come. And here, after they'd held their most recent in Israel last year.
Inclusive language has become a hot issue, with multiple brands including feminine product companies jumping on the bandwagon. NPR was mocked recently for their tweet about national tampon shortages.
Labels: lgbt cultism, misogyny, Moonbattery, showbiz