'Transgender' Congressman Tells Elementary School Kids It's 'Society's' Fault For Calling Him a Boy

January 15th, 2025 3:24 PM

America’s first gender-deluded congressman apparently believes it’s his job as a public representative to make his sexual dysphoria the problem of impressionable young children.

A viral video shows “transgender” Rep. Tim “Sarah” McBride (D-Del.) telling elementary school kids it’s “society’s” fault that people considered him a boy when he “knew” he was “really a girl.”

Watch Congressman Tim McBride, who pretends to be a woman, read the book "I am Jazz" to young children.

He tells kids that it's "society's" fault that people thought he was a boy and because his parents loved him, they let him pretend to be a girl. pic.twitter.com/3mj2qPlK0i

— Libs of TikTok (@libsoftiktok) January 13, 2025

In a classroom reading event sponsored by the so-called “Human Rights Campaign,” children circled McBride prepared for a session of sexual confusion. The congressman proceeded to open the picture book, I Am Jazz, a story that celebrates a Kindergartner who was castrated with the help of his parents because he wanted to be a girl. 

“I have a girl brain, but a boy body,” he began. (Wrong. His brain still has XY chromosomes.)

“This is called ‘Transgender.’ I was born this way,” the book of lies continued. 

(No. It’s called Gender Dysphoria. Nobody is born “trans.”)

But the propaganda didn’t stop there.

“Then, one amazing day, everything changed. Mom and Dad took me to a new doctor who asked me lots and lots of questions. Afterward, the doctor spoke to my parents and I, and I heard the word ‘transgender’ for the very first time,” the book described.

McBride continued to recite Jazz, who praised his parents for letting him “wear girl clothes to school and grow my hair long.”

Jazz, a real-life TLC personality, is now a neutered adult who suffers from depression. But McBride advertised his story as an inspiring “message” for the underaged audience to emulate. 

“I don’t mind being different. Different is special,” he read aloud. Therein lies the problem: Narcissistic adults preying on society’s most vulnerable to validate their need to feel “special.” 

Of course, that is when he closed the book and made the story about himself. 

“I’m like Jazz,” McBride proclaimed. 

“When I was born, the doctors and my parents… they all thought that I was a boy,” to which one little girl responded by asking “Why?” 

“Because society… people around them told them that was the case,” he answered. 

The congressman then praised his parents “who loved me” for eventually capitulating to his delusion.

“I was finally able to be myself,” he told the class, who will now go home thinking “love” means being lied to.