UK students identify as horses, dinosaurs, moons amid neogender ‘furry’ trend

Really, this is not a joke.  In England the transgender thing has gone over the cliff.  It has gone from “transgender” to “transanimal”.  Yup, boy do not identify as girls—they identify as dogs or cats.  Girls have become “furries”—whatever that is.  Mental illness is now rampant in England, even worse than in the U.S.  Yet the UK government, instead of getting therapy and help for these kids, is protecting them from people who realize these kids have a mental illness.

“The outlet also found a student at an unidentified school who refers to themselves as “moonself” — and wears a cape to class to express their “true self” — even though other students must wear uniforms and could be reprimanded for not adhering to the dress code.

The kid didn’t identify as the moon but as a moon — and claimed to be able to cast curses on people.

At a secondary school — the equivalent of American high school — in the southwest of England, another student insisted on identifying as a dinosaur.

And The Telegraph also turned up a student who called themselves a horse.”

How soon before LAUSD, Newsom or Biden denounced those that think a boy claiming to be a rhino, are sick and abusive?  Child abuse is already a major problem in government schools—how?  By protecting mentally ill kids and pervert grooming teachers from parents and the real world.

UK students identify as horses, dinosaurs, moons amid neogender ‘furry’ trend

By Lee Brown, NY Post,  6/20/23  https://nypost.com/2023/06/20/students-in-uk-are-identifying-as-horses-dinosaurs-moons/

  •  

Students at woke schools in the UK have been identifying as neogender “furries” like horses, dinosaurs and even curse-casting moons — sparking outrage from Britain’s top leader and a government investigation.

The revelations are part of an investigation by The Telegraph, which reported this week on a now-viral video showing a teacher at a school in East Sussex blasting a girl as “despicable” for refusing to accept a classmate who identified as a cat.

Now, that school, Rye College, is being probed by the government, the newspaper said.

The outlet also found a student at an unidentified school who refers to themselves as “moonself” — and wears a cape to class to express their “true self” — even though other students must wear uniforms and could be reprimanded for not adhering to the dress code.

The kid didn’t identify as the moon but as a moon — and claimed to be able to cast curses on people.

At a secondary school — the equivalent of American high school — in the southwest of England, another student insisted on identifying as a dinosaur.

And The Telegraph also turned up a student who called themselves a horse.

Other pupils identifying as cats — or “catself” — are also allowed to wear cat ears to express their “true self,” The Telegraph said of the so-called neogender known as a “furry.”

Rishi Sunak’s spokesperson said the reports over gender identity “will be concerning for parents.”

A student at a school in Wales said a fellow classmate complains about being “discriminated against if you do not refer to them as ‘catself’” — and will “meow rather than answer a question in English.”

“And the teachers are not allowed to get annoyed about this because it’s seen as discriminating,” the other pupil said.

“It’s affecting other people and their education and everybody in their lessons. It’s distracting to sit in a lesson and have someone meow to a teacher rather than answer in English.

“It’s a big ask to sit there and listen to someone answer like that and not have that be the main talk of the classroom rather than the lesson going on.”

Regarding the cat incident, a rep for UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak ripped the growing classroom trend, telling The Telegraph: “We understand why these reports will be concerning for parents.”

“Teachers have a responsibility to encourage their students to engage respectfully with those they disagree with,” the rep said.

At Rye College, the East Sussex school, the teacher angrily told the objecting student that she should go to another school for thinking that “if you have a vagina you’re a girl and if you have a penis you’re a boy.”

Audio of the fight caught the teacher insisting it was a “fact” that you can “be who you want to be, and how you identify is up to you.”

Sunak spoke out after now-viral video caught a teacher in Rye calling a girl “despicable” for denying a classmate’s right to identify as a cat.

Sunak’s rep said teachers “should also not be teaching contested opinions as fact, shutting down valid discussions and debates.

“It’s important parents and carers are reassured that children aren’t being influenced by personal views of those teaching them,” the rep said. “Any example that strays from this would be wrong and we would expect headteachers to act.”

Tracy Shaw, of the child advocacy group Safe Schools Alliance, said that the current climate makes teachers fear taking the wrong step.

“If a child is coming to school identifying as a cat or a horse, that should immediately raise red flags,” Shaw told the UK paper.

“The problem is that teachers have a blind spot where anything involving identity comes in, because they are frightened of doing the wrong thing.

“They think they are being kind by affirming these behaviors, but they are not being kind, because they are likely to be missing all sorts of things that are going on in that child’s life.”