You may have missed the irrelevant October 16th holiday “International Pronouns Day,” but thanks to the people of Twitter, snowflakes are still triggered by people not asking one’s pronouns before initiating conversation or not offering their pronouns in their Twitter bio.
According to one (possibly male) Twitter user, he claims the “pronouns in your bio [make] transphobes needlessly upset for no reason,” despite the inability to tell his “pronouns” for the lack of a profile picture that doesn’t include an animated animal of some kind, potentially resembling a dragon/fox thing. This individual also claims to identify as a “pansexual,” whatever the heck that may mean.
“Conservation Botanist” Imogene Cancellare wrote, “Pronouns matter. Adding your pronouns to your profile shows there is no default, or default assumption, for gender. When we stop lumping people into either cis or ‘other’ categories, we combat the idea that some people are less than,” which shows exactly what a total word salad the Left has created, with words such as “cisgender,” meaning a person who was born male or female and chose to stay male or female, instead of jumping into the bottomless trigger pit of “nonbinary” confusion.
The New York Attorney General also weighed in on “International Pronouns Day” writing, “My name is Letitia James, and my preferred pronouns are she/her/hers. As the Attorney General of New York, I have to duty to fight for equal rights for all New Yorkers, and that includes your preferred pronouns. #PronounsDay.”
What the AG is talking about is a recent New York law, which makes it illegal to mistakenly use the incorrect pronoun for a transgender person, and could mandate fines of up to $250,000. So, quite literally, the AG is tasked with upholding the laughable law. Lucky for her, it seems she’s pretty content with herself and her exclamation of female pronouns.
One skeptic of International Pronouns Day tweeted, “I thought pronouns were invented to shorten text not make it more confusing. 🤷♀️ #PronounsDay,” a valid point given that the term “they” is a plural pronoun, meant to describe more than one person. So, if someone is using the term “them” to describe itself, it’s making grammar a whole lot harder.
Other noteworthy people, such as has-been actress Alyssa Milano and Democrat presidential candidate Elizabeth Warren, commented on Twitter and provided the world with their (this is the proper use of that word) pronouns.
One person, whose job appears to be tracking peoples’ pronouns for the left-wing Human Rights Campaign, gleefully tweeted about how six presidential candidates have added their pronouns in their bios. Yes, someone is actually paid to monitor this stuff.
It appears the entire fringe ZGBXYZ base came out in full force to celebrate the nonexistent “International Pronouns Day,” but in real America, we don’t have time to ask about pronouns or complain about it on Twitter all day long. So, happy October 16th to everyone! It’s just another day in real America for us.
Pingback: CNN commentator claims Trump is responsible for Elijah Cummings’ death