Twitter Bans ‘Activist Mommy’ for Criticizing Teen Vogue’s Anal Sex Guide

Twitter Bans ‘Activist Mommy’ for Criticizing Teen Vogue’s Anal Sex Guide

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 You may want to sit down for this.  Read these sentences from an article in Teen Vogue.  Yes, Teen Vogue, which is geared to the over-twelve-set.

Without all the run-of-the-mill hoopla, here is the lowdown on everything you need to know about butt stuff, no matter who you are, whom you’re having sex with, or who you want to have sex with.  This is anal 101, for teens, beginners, and all inquisitive folk.

Okay, so this writer is advising teen girls that anal sex is a-okay.  Here’s more:

Anal sex, though often stigmatized, is a perfectly natural way to engage in sexual activity. People have been having anal sex since the dawn of humanity. Seriously, it’s been documented back to the ancient Greeks and then some. So if you’re a little worried about trying it or are having trouble understanding the appeal, just know that it isn’t weird or gross.

Over at PJ Media, John Ellis says that this magazine has been devolving for years.

On Breitbart, they include more of the horrific article:

Among other helpful advice, Engle offered counsel regarding which lube to use and instructed her young readers how to insert sex toys into their butts to “warm up” for “larger objects.”

Apparently, the writer also advised the young readers to “get over their natural abhorrence with coming in contact with someone else’s ‘poop.'”

“You are entering a butthole,” the writer explained. “It is where poop comes out. Expecting to do anal play and see zero poop isn’t particularly realistic. It’s NOT a big deal. Everyone poops. Everyone has a butt.”

Grace Elizabeth Johnston, is also known as “The Activist Mommy,” got banned from Twitter because she criticized Philip Bicardi, the digital editor of Teen Vogue.

She tweeted:

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But of course, Twitter banned HER, not Teen Vogue.  Here was his classy response:

Activist Mommy responded to the suspension by not backing down:

On her website, Johnston called out Twitter for its hypocrisy, noting how plenty of “hateful” material is regularly posted without censorship, whereas a Christian mother’s honest concern over an article that is physically and spiritually damaging to children is singled out as being worthy of a suspension.

“Of course, actual videos of children being abused can be found on Twitter. But calling out an editor for promoting teen sodomy is worth a suspension?” Johnston posted on her website.

What has become of our society when it’s okay for a homosexual man to write an article in Teen Vogue teaching young girls to have anal sex, but complaining about it gets you banned from Twitter and YouTube?

“Conservatives and Christians who love our country and our fellow man must get louder and bolder than ever, pushing back against Silicon Valley’s draconian censorship of truth,” said the Activist Mommy.  She doesn’t seem to be backing down.

Good for her.

And parents, protect your teenagers from Teen Vogue‘s unhealthy lies.

Hat tip: PJ Media, Teen Vogue

Image Credit: Twitter


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