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Prairie State Wire

Friday, April 26, 2024

Publisher: "If you don't agree that men can become women by putting on a dress and lipstick, then Gov Pritzker wants you to know that you aren't welcome in Illinois."

Dylan mulvaney pritzker

Cross-dressing actor Dylan Mulvaney (L) and Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker (R) | IMDB/Wikipedia

Cross-dressing actor Dylan Mulvaney (L) and Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker (R) | IMDB/Wikipedia

Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker believes biological sex is not real. And anyone who dares disagree with him is a "hater."

Pritzker's strident comments on the topic, most recently lauding Chicago-based makeup retailer Ulta for making ads with cross-dressing males pretending to be females, drew the attention of leading satirist Seth Dillion, publisher of the popular comedy web site the Babylon Bee.

Dillon slammed Pritzker on Twitter for calling for "inclusivity" and the broad acceptance of cross-dressers while simultaneously declaring that those who disagree with him should leave the state.

"If you don't agree that men can become women by putting on a dress and lipstick, then Gov Pritzker wants you to know that you aren't welcome in Illinois," Dillon said. "By 'inclusivity' he means, of course, that rigid, radical ideology which vilifies as hateful anyone who dissents."

Pritzker said he was "proud" of Ulta for making cross-dressing male influencer Dylan Mulvaney "part of their brand."

"Dylan has inspired millions around the world with (his) openness and positivity," he tweeted. "Hate has no home in Illinois and we will protect our trans and non-binary community."

Mulvaney, who makes Tik Tok videos some women claim mock them, describes female vaginas as "Barbie pouches" and says "wants to be a mom one day and I absolutely can."

"Trans" and "non-binary" are euphemisms for cross-dressing, typically used by men who pretend they are women and increasingly demand others also pretend they are women.

Pritzker has repeatedly called his critics, including Republican challenger for Illinois governor, Darren Bailey, "racists" and "haters." 

During the second gubernatorial debate, after Bailey criticized Pritzker's pushing of "radical gender ideology" in Illinois K-12 schools, Pritzker responded that his opponent was a "threat to democracy."

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