Clinton's Daughter Defends Sexually Graphic Children's Books

Chelsea Clinton, daughter of former US President Bill Clinton, took to Twitter last Thursday to condemn book banning. “Over 50% of the attempted book bans last year involved books with LGBTQ+ characters & themes. Books are a vital way that children, adolescents and adults learn about themselves and our world. Bans such as these are nothing but harmful.”

Alarmingly, Clinton shared an NBC News article that featured the book Gender Queer, which is an explicitly sexual book that contains visual depictions of oral sex, masturbation, and adult sexual contact with a minor.

Chad Felix Greene, a man who suffered from gender dysphoria but lives his life as a gay man, explained to Clinton what the book was about. “The photo on the article you're quoting features a book with explicit illustrations of sex acts, a book about incest, one a sex story about two 10-year-old boys, one about a man raping and isolating a 12-year-old girl, one about a teen girl who seduces a man who kidnaps her...”

Greene has spoken out against book banning in the past. When Amazon decided to remove When Harry Became Sally from their website, Greene noted the book truly helped him come to terms with his gender dysphoria.

Abigail Shrier, who wrote a controversial bestseller on the social contagion of gender ideology, quote retweeted to the president’s daughter. “Irreversible Damage is the book with the most requests that it be banned in Canada in the last 15 years, and libraries in the US refuse to carry it even when offered as a donation. Yet, it’s rarely included on ‘banned books’ lists in the US media. Why is that?”

Because of the perverted nature of the books, Twitter users have been calling Chelsea her “father’s daughter.” Bill Clinton settled a sexual harassment suit with Paul Jones in 1998, was accused of rape by Juanita Broaddrick, and committed inappropriate sexual acts while in the White House. Though Clinton’s defenders tried to paint inappropriate conduct as a “vast right-wing conspiracy theory,” Monica Lewinsky’s story came to light after she saved her infamous blue dress, stained with the president’s semen. There was a portrait of President Clinton in a blue dress found among Jefferey Epstein’s possessions (Clinton didn’t model for the painting, nor did the original artist make it for Epstein). Epstein was a rich American sex offender who died in prison before the depths of his crimes and his associations could come to light.

Other politicians on the political left have defended sexually graphic books in school, such as Michigan’s governor, Gretchen Whitmer. She refused to condemn books like This Book Is Gay and deflected to the dangers of guns while battling Tudor Dixon on the 2022 debate stage.

If Chelsea Clinton is against book banning, she should stand up for books like Irreversible Damage and When Harry Became Sally that can help children and their parents wade through the waters of gender ideology, and not simply books on affirmation and sexual exploration. Parents across the country do not feel books like Gender Queer are appropriate for minors, and parents should question why so many politicians are protecting and standing up for public access to these explicit materials.