Should people be allowed to criticize the LGBTQ agenda?
By Gary Sibio
@garysibi (702)
Chicago, Illinois
February 12, 2019 4:16pm CST
You would think that the answer would obviously be 'Yes' but two recent events from the UK have caught my eye recently:
1) The police showed up at the workplace of Harry Miller, a 53-year-old who was married and has four kids. Harry had posted some 30 tweets including a limerick written by a feminist which questioned if transgendered women were actually women. Although they acknowledged that no crime had been committed, the police told Harry that they would be logged as a hate incident and told him “we need to check your thinking.”
2) Police in Suffolk phoned 74-year-old Margaret Nelson about a post she made to her blog. Margaret wrote that, if the corpse of a transgendered individual was autopsied, it would show that they were of their biological sex. In other words, if the corpse had two X chromosomes, they would be female. An X and a Y chromosome would tell us that they were male. Basic biology. The police asked Margaret to take the post down and to refrain from writing similar posts. She refused. The police later admitted their error in acting as they did.
There have been other similar incidents which you can read about at
These incidents took place in the UK where the laws are different than they are in the USA but I think we are going to see similar harassment in America as well. What do you think?
More and more people in the UK are facing police investigation for challenging transgender ideology on social media.
4 people like this
3 responses
@andriaperry (118793)
• Anniston, Alabama
12 Feb 19
I think if we all got along we would not need police.
1 person likes this
@garysibi (702)
• Chicago, Illinois
12 Feb 19
Getting along does not rule out disagreeing with someone. My wife and I don't agree on absolutely everything and we've been married for 44 years. Neither of us have ever called the police on the other one.



