Whittier Elementary School in Seattle is hosting another “Drag Queen Bingo & Storytime.” The PTA’s Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion Committee brags the event will give kids “glamorous, positive, and unabashedly queer role models” and “inspire kids to imagine a world where everyone can be their authentic selves.”

Let’s unpack that lie.

Drag is not about being your “authentic self.” It’s literally the opposite. Drag is performance—caricature. It’s adult entertainment that thrives on exaggerated gender tropes and sexual innuendo. It’s putting on a costume and playing a part. And now, Seattle schools are dressing it up as a lesson in identity for children who educators alarmingly believe are living tortured, secret lives too scared to come out as transgender.

Seattle school is pushing radical gender ideology with Drag Queen Storytime

Whittier Elementary is hosting the April 6 “Drag Queen Storytime” event as a not-so-subtle way to inject radical gender ideology into a space where kids are supposed to be learning math and reading—not being recruited into progressive gender activism by radicals.

What’s particularly grotesque is the marketing around it. The PTA describes drag queens as “role models” and explicitly says this is about queerness. That’s not an accident. This isn’t about diversity, love, or inclusion. It’s about normalizing and presenting drag as identity exploration to children. Drag is being weaponized to introduce kids to gender ideology.

There’s a disturbing pattern here. Seattle’s been at this for years, with Whittier Elementary hosting a number of these exact events. When the King County Library System allowed similar events, it triggered outrage from concerned parents. Rightfully so. Their children were being exposed to adult themes in a format dressed up to look like innocent fun. Of course, media outlets dismissed the critics as bigots. That’s always the fallback.

But parents who push back aren’t hateful. They’re just tired of watching their kids become pawns in a culture war they didn’t sign up for. And frankly, they’re right to be ticked off.

This isn’t intended to be innocent fun; it’s about confusing kids

Did Whittier Elementary ask parents if they’re comfortable with drag queens telling their kids stories about queerness? That would risk accountability. They know that many families—especially those not ideologically captured by Seattle progressivism—don’t want their kids being force-fed activism in the disguise of bedtime stories and bingo.

The goal is to nudge kids into questioning their gender under the guise of being “true to themselves”—even though drag, by definition, is about being someone else entirely.

It’s 2025. Let’s stop pretending this is innocent fun. Drag Queen Story Hour isn’t about inclusion—it’s about indoctrination. It’s adults using their platform to confuse kids about identity and celebrate ideology over biology. And Seattle schools are more than happy to play along, as long as it earns them another gold star from the woke crowd.

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