Social Engineering From Canada’s CBC

Let’s check in on what national public broadcaster CBC has been doing with money confiscated from Canadian taxpayers:

This First Person column is the experience of Courtney Bates-Hardy, who lives in Regina.

Courtney tells us about her husband of 10 years, who declared to her, “I think I might be trans, or maybe non-binary” and who now goes by the name Carrie Biner.

Neither of us really had the opportunity to know ourselves before we got married. I’d gone to a small Christian school for most of my life, where I was taught very rigid ideas about marriage, sexuality and my role as a woman. My spouse had moved from small town to small town as the child of an RCMP officer, where she [sic] struggled to fit in with other boys her [sic] age.

Christianity, small towns, and police are narrowminded and bad. LGBTism is good. Now Courtney partakes of it too.

I’d also been exploring my own identity. A decade before my partner came out, she [sic] had suggested that I might be queer. Her [sic] comment sparked a years-long reckoning with myself. I had years of internalized homophobia to unlearn from home, school, and church, until I finally accepted that yes, she [sic] was right.

A happy ending.

You can see why CBC granted her a platform. Her story advances social engineering objectives. Readers are encouraged to follow her example.

To see where moonbattery is taking us, click through for a view of Courtney and her husband.

On a tip from Dean D.

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