Displaying 30+ Stories
Allow Ads
CBNNews.com

Activists Cancel 'Trans Day of Vengeance' at Supreme Court After 'Threat to Life and Safety'

03-31-2023
transdaycancel02

The promoters of a "Trans Day of Vengeance" event in Washington, D.C. have canceled the rally scheduled for Saturday due to a "credible threat to life and safety."

Trans Radical Activist Network (TRAN), a collection of transgender activist groups called off the event that was to be held outside of the U.S. Supreme Court.  On its website, the group posted the cancellation notice, writing: "The safety of our trans community is first priority. This threat is the direct result of the flood of raw hatred directed toward the trans community after the Tennessee shooting."

The New York Post reports the group had planned the event weeks before the murders of six people on Monday by a transgender person at a private Christian school in Nashville, Tennessee. 

TRAN rejected "any connection" between their event and the mass shooting, according to Newsweek

The rally was designed to protest the various bills in numerous states that aim to protect children from irreversible, physically maiming procedures like gender transition surgeries and puberty blockers. 

READ  'Butchered by an Institution': Woman Sues Hospital for Trans Surgery She Received as Kid

Twitter removed thousands of tweets that promoted the event because "Vengeance' does not imply peaceful protest," according to The Post

TRAN explained they named the event the "Trans Day of Vengeance" after a meme that had been used by the trans community for several years. It was never intended to encourage violence, the group insisted. 

The group had reminded would-be demonstrators that its protest was "about unity, not inciting violence. TRAN does not encourage violence and it is not welcome at this event," the group said on its website. 

TRAN anticipates hosting another rally in the future "with a better theme," The Post reported. 

slider img 2AZ Gov's Press Secretary Suggests Violence Against 'Transphobes' 

Along those lines, Josselyn Berry, the press secretary for Arizona Gov. Katie Hobbs (D) resigned Wednesday after she appeared to advocate for gun violence against "transphobes" in a social media post made just hours after the transgender shooter murdered three innocent children and three more adults at the Covenant School in Nashville. 

"Us when we see transphobes," Berry tweeted and included an image of actress Gena Rowlands in a scene from the 1980 movie "Gloria," where she is pointing two revolver handguns, according to Fox News

Arizona Republicans accused Berry of inciting violence and called on the governor to fire her. 

"Calling for violence is NEVER acceptable," the Arizona Freedom Caucus tweeted. "@GovernorHobbs Press Sec. tweeting about shooting political opponents on the same day a trans activist shoots up a school is nothing short of vile & heartless. There is no room for this in AZ. Fire @joss_berry Now"

"The Governor does not condone violence in any form. This administration holds mutual respect at the forefront of how we engage with one another. The post by the Press Secretary is not reflective of the values of the administration. The Governor has received and accepted the resignation of the Press Secretary," Hobbs' office said Wednesday in a statement. 

Berry's post was later removed from Twitter for violating the site's rules against violence, according to Fox News

Meanwhile, The Daily Caller reported left-wing media outlets struggled in their identification of the Covenant School shooter, fearing to "misgender" her. 

In a commentary published by The Washington Times on Wednesday, Columnist Cheryl K. Chumley wrote the Covenant School shooter was "a woman who stormed into the private Christian Covenant School in Nashville, Tennessee, and cold-bloodedly murdered three small children and three adults as part of a planned evil plot she actually hinted to a friend was coming."

"And all the media and transgender activists go: Gasp! Don't you dare call her a woman. She identified as a man," Chumley noted. 

"Unbelievable," she continued. 

"This is what concerns the LGBTQ community — the fact that the evil woman who committed this act of evil, after which she was shot and killed by police, won't be remembered as the man she wasn't but simply wished to be?" the columnist continued. 

"Careful now, oh ye LGBTQ community. You're tipping your hand as even more psychologically ill than known," she wrote. 

Did you know?

God is everywhere—even in the news. That’s why we view every news story through the lens of faith. We are committed to delivering quality independent Christian journalism you can trust. But it takes a lot of hard work, time, and money to do what we do. Help us continue to be a voice for truth in the media by supporting CBN News for as little as $1.