Delenda Est

No comment. The thing speaks for itself.

The University of Southern California cancelled its planned “Legends of the Games” event after the lone female participant signaled that she wouldn’t be able to attend. Administrators made the determination that an all-male panel was unacceptable, and killed the event—a mere four hours before it was supposed to start… The panel would have included Jeffrey Kaplan of Blizzard, Brandon Beck of Riot Games, and David Stohl of Infinity Ward.

Nevertheless, Tracy Fullerton—Director of USC Games—believes her decision to cancel the event puts USC “on the right side of history,”

http://reason.com/blog/2016/04/29/usc-cancelled-an-awesome-video-game-pane

In other news,

Last year I interviewed Kori Rae, Pixar producer and lesbian, and asked when we’ll see a gay Pixar character. She replied: “The answer is, I don’t know if there’ll be a gay character. I hope so, I really hope we get to a place were we can do that.”

With growing numbers of LGBT families across the world, aren’t we are already at that place? The children interviewed for the Team Angelica short film Kids of Gay Parents Speak Out don’t think their families are strange for being LGBT; but in order for other kids to realise that non-heteronormative families are as “normal” as any other, gay parents need to be given cultural and social visibility. Which means we need LGBT families to feature in ads, kids’ books, Disney/Pixar movies – everywhere we see heterosexual parents.

There is a little bit of jabberwocky speech in there, something about non-heteronormative social visibility, which I may need to translate: they want your children to see so many perverts presented as heroes and heroines, that no role model of a happy and normal family will exist any longer in any young mind, and no example of a happy and normal male-female relation, no man happy with his masculinity, and no female happy in her femininity.

This is part of a decades-old movement among feminist queer intellectuals inspired by communism, to break down the family structure in America and the West.