



‘I am going to have a little boy in November, and it’s scary to think he could come home and say, ‘My friends all identify as something else and that’s how I feel’ and have my son crying because he’s not put on hormone replacement therapy,’ St. Clair said: ‘You get special attention now in the classroom if you say, ‘Hey my name is not Billy, it’s Amanda’.’ Definitely not pushing blatant propaganda messaging like The GayBCs,’ she said.ĭ has reached out to several transgender rights groups for comment about the new book. ‘If LGBTQ groups want to get upset, I’m not concerned. Clair simply replied: ‘Believing and being are two different things.’ When asked by about kids who believe they were made transgender, St. ‘The book really teaches, you’re best the way you were made, whatever way that may be,’ she said. And regardless, I don’t believe children should transition at all.’ When asked by if the book could be seen as damaging to transgender children, she replied: ‘No, I don’t think a singing elephant will be damaging. ‘But I believe that the entire concept of transgenderism is confusing to kids, and eventually damaging if they make life altering decisions such as gender transitioning when they may not necessarily be trans,’ she said. Clair said that in the end Kevin ‘realizes he’s better the way he was made and he can like to sing and still be an elephant.’ The term ‘transgender by proxy’ is not supported by scientific or psychological evidence. ‘I hope that the values taught in the book can curb what I call ‘transgender by proxy’ cases, where kids are presented the confusing idea of unlimited and interchangeable genders and get the idea that they are suddenly trans,’ St. She was previously dumped as a brand ambassador by Turning Point USA when she was pictured with white nationalists and anti-Semites
