Netflix's Kid Grooming Horror: Trans Cartoons Targeting 7-Year-Olds

3 days ago
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In this explosive wrap-up to BKP Politics on Voice of Rural America—host BKP unleashes raw fury over Netflix's "children's area," a supposed safe space now weaponized with pro-transgender cartoons marketed to 7-year-olds, featuring cross-dressing boys, two dads cheering their son into a tutu and tiara for "self-expression," and kids casually outing friends as trans. BKP, a grandfather of six who's just binge-watched "OK" cartoons with his grandkids (thanks to vigilant parents like his son vetting Disney alternatives), rages at the grooming epidemic: "This is equivalent to the drugs, the gangs... going across our airways." He spotlights the show's creator, an LGBTQ Blue Sky activist mocking Charlie Kirk as a "Nazi," and demands President Trump elevate this to "the president's desk... as important as a Middle East peace deal," urging federal intervention despite Netflix dodging FCC licenses—because "protecting our children from these creeps... this garbage has to be stopped."

BKP laments trapped parents grinding for "car insurance and one thing after another," but won't absolve them: "I'm not taking the responsibility off of parents... they are busy." His work with Truth in Education amplifies the plea—framing it as a battle against "who you want... not who God" made you, with impressionable kids as the prime targets: "This is the most impressionable time of their life." The segment pulses with BKP's unfiltered passion, blending heartbreak and calls to arms ("Netflix... people are canceling left and right").

In classic tangent mode, he blitzes headlines: Trick-or-treating costs up $11 per person ; common colds surging; Trump's Harvard deal funneling $500M to trade schools; all-hands-on-deck for New Jersey's tied gubernatorial race (polls at 50-42 and 48-46, but BKP smells panic: "They are nervous wreck"); soybean farmers crushed by China's zero 2024 buys —yet Trump floats tariff-funded bailouts; Chinese gangs siphoning $153B in unaccounted Oklahoma marijuana to black markets; Virginia's Lt. Gov. Winsome Sears vs. "cheat-OK" Rep. Spanberger; and a bizarre Doc pharmacy pop-up. Grocery pain polls low (47% say harder to afford, but Dems at 50%, GOP at 34: "It’s not out there yet")—outrage-fueled, rapid-riffing, and relentlessly pro-kid, pro-farmer, pro-Republican in a world gone "crazy."

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