ESPN Takes Another Stand Against 'Don't Say Gay'

ESPN has doubled down on its support for teachers who want to talk about sex with your 6-year-old.

On Tuesday, ESPN tweeted out an official condemnation of Florida’s Parental Rights in Education bill, misleadingly dubbed “Don’t Say Gay.”






Last week, ESPN twice broke away from a live college basketball game to express its disapproval of the bill.

First, Carolyn Peck and Courtney Lyle spoke truth to power by shutting their mouths:








Next, Woke All-Star Elle Duncan, who's friends with homophobes, weighed in. According to Duncan, the bill is a threat to the LGBTQ community:






As bad as it is that ESPN apparently supports the sexualization of children, ESPN is merely following the lead of Disney and Twitter. Staffers at Disney, the parent company of ESPN, have staged walkouts over the matter. Disney CEO Bob Chapek even apologized to his employees for not condemning the bill strongly enough last week.

Meanwhile, Twitter users have labeled the bill transphobic. And as we have discussed at length in the past, Twitter has become ESPN's target audience. ESPN thinks Twitter represents sports fans. But of course, it doesn't. Twitter represents a very small, very liberal segment of the population.

We don't even know whether ESPN and Duncan have read the bill, let alone whether they have understood it. For their sake, we hope they just haven't read it. If they have read it and they still oppose it, then they're even creepier than we thought.

The so-called “Don’t Say Gay” bill prohibits teachers from discussing sexual orientation and gender identity with children in third grade and younger. That's what ESPN is protesting.

Clay Travis discussed ESPN's disapproval of the bill on radio Monday:

"This is ESPN! This is a sports network. That was not some, like, somebody’s Instagram. If you’re watching the women’s college basketball tournament on ESPN, that’s what you suddenly heard, and then they paused programming."

Anyway, whether ESPN knows it or not, its official stance supports sexually indoctrinating young children. So we can now add ESPN to our growing list of groomers in positions of power. This group shouldn't be allowed anywhere near school children.













Written by
Bobby Burack is a writer for OutKick where he reports and analyzes the latest topics in media, culture, sports, and politics.. Burack has become a prominent voice in media and has been featured on several shows across OutKick and industry related podcasts and radio stations.