Off-Topic Indoctrination Material for Toddlers and Children from Mainly LGBT Organizations - And Unique Niche Books That Fit Nowhere

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Hardly any kid would enjoy reading this shit. These books are mainly created for middle-upper class white women/enbies to virtue-signal to their fellow woke mom friends.

As another user said, there’s no rhyme scheme or skilled wordplay going on that’s gonna capture a small child’s interest. These authors aren’t even trying to write something for kids in mind.
 
Hardly any kid would enjoy reading this shit. These books are mainly created for middle-upper class white women/enbies to virtue-signal to their fellow woke mom friends.

As another user said, there’s no rhyme scheme or skilled wordplay going on that’s gonna capture a small child’s interest. These authors aren’t even trying to write something for kids in mind.
Writing a kid's book is the easiest way to grift woke points out there. It's maybe a couple dozen pages long, almost entirely pictures, and you're not expected to have any kind of consistent output like you are with a YouTube channel or webcomic. You can get a picture book printed relatively cheaply and sell it yourself. Doesn't matter if the kids like or understand it. You did a thing and will be celebrated for it.
 
Hardly any kid would enjoy reading this shit. These books are mainly created for middle-upper class white women/enbies to virtue-signal to their fellow woke mom friends.

As another user said, there’s no rhyme scheme or skilled wordplay going on that’s gonna capture a small child’s interest. These authors aren’t even trying to write something for kids in mind.
Their goal is to flood education enough to indoctrinate kids into faggotry. Throw in the pozzed staff especially the counselors, you have a fag re-education camp running the entire year.

And if you remember how Communist societies work, the endgoal is to beat you hard with the ideology enough that you wind up worshipping Big Brother. Hilariously, this completely backfires on ghetto kids who will simply take the ideology for a ride and cause the staff unnecessary pain.

You did a thing and will be celebrated for it.
And that's unfortunately the reality of these leftoids even all the way back at Occupy Wallstreet. Attention. The west is unironically being screwed over by a bunch of circle-jerking attentionwhores. They crave the clicks, the likes and the affirming comments.

Be it journo, teacher or even elite, they crave the applause. When it comes to E-fame, people will do everything they can to remain relevant. Which lines up with how the SJWs/Leftoids/Groomers are doing more and more extreme shit.
 
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Writing a kid's book is the easiest way to grift woke points out there. It's maybe a couple dozen pages long, almost entirely pictures, and you're not expected to have any kind of consistent output like you are with a YouTube channel or webcomic. You can get a picture book printed relatively cheaply and sell it yourself. Doesn't matter if the kids like or understand it. You did a thing and will be celebrated for it.

Unbelievably, most publishers and literary agents will not touch a rhyming children's book now. They all have to be prose and have diverse characters or you may as well just print one for your kids and hope they enjoy it, since no one else is ever going to see it. No rhyming may be the single most frequent restriction from publishers and agents in that world.
 
No rhyming may be the single most frequent restriction from publishers and agents in that world.
They must've gotten triggered by poems or something to continuously turn down one of the best introductions to literacy you can teach a child.

Or did they start doing this because Dr.
Seuss rhymed and he's literally Hitler?
 
I think it's because they haven't caught up to phonics being back in. Rhyme and rhythm are the best reading exercises but they're highly conducive to phonics. The no rhymes rule showed up when phonics was outre...I think there's also an element of people thinking free verse is modern and structured rhyming verse is old fashioned.
 
So on the other side of the coin, are there any books that are gender critical for children in this age group? Things that aren't super Jesus-y? I'm having a helluva time, although luckily there's still a few "girls can be anything!" kind of books to counteract all the retro-transing they're doing with all female heros.
 
So on the other side of the coin, are there any books that are gender critical for children in this age group? Things that aren't super Jesus-y? I'm having a helluva time, although luckily there's still a few "girls can be anything!" kind of books to counteract all the retro-transing they're doing with all female heros.
There are. The trick is to look for those books pre-2016. 2008 if you wanna get technical as it was around that time when the SJW insanity kicked off.

Store Bought Doll.jpg

I can easily recommend this one. The Store Bought Doll.

Its about a little girl who loves playing with dolls. She plays with a doll that her mother sewn for her. The little girl takes this doll everywhere. Whether its doing chores, climbing trees, playing tea party on the countryside. Everywhere. As the doll is made of rags, it can take abuse. Then one day, after her dad helped a well-to-do gentleman, said gentleman gives her a doll. A fancy model from the store. She sets aside her raggedy doll and starts playing with the pretty doll... until she realized that she'd screw up the doll with the daily activities. So in the end, she favors the rag doll her mother made over something that was mass-produced. The story has alot of subtle touches in making the little girl be feminine. She is helpful, kind and surprisingly, remains feminine despite being outdoorsy.

These old books, especially the "Little Golden Book" series have much going for them. They can teach lessons without clubbing you over the head. What also helps is that the artwork is really good. Same cannot be said of modern books where the art is ugly and it wastes no time in slugging you with the morals. Subtlety and SJW simply do not mix.
 
There are. The trick is to look for those books pre-2016. 2008 if you wanna get technical as it was around that time when the SJW insanity kicked off.

View attachment 5842967

I can easily recommend this one. The Store Bought Doll.

Its about a little girl who loves playing with dolls. She plays with a doll that her mother sewn for her. The little girl takes this doll everywhere. Whether its doing chores, climbing trees, playing tea party on the countryside. Everywhere. As the doll is made of rags, it can take abuse. Then one day, after her dad helped a well-to-do gentleman, said gentleman gives her a doll. A fancy model from the store. She sets aside her raggedy doll and starts playing with the pretty doll... until she realized that she'd screw up the doll with the daily activities. So in the end, she favors the rag doll her mother made over something that was mass-produced. The story has alot of subtle touches in making the little girl be feminine. She is helpful, kind and surprisingly, remains feminine despite being outdoorsy.

These old books, especially the "Little Golden Book" series have much going for them. They can teach lessons without clubbing you over the head. What also helps is that the artwork is really good. Same cannot be said of modern books where the art is ugly and it wastes no time in slugging you with the morals. Subtlety and SJW simply do not mix.
Love the Little Golden Books. Most of them. Some have some pretty hilarious morals to them if you think in it. But generally yeah they're a great bet.

That book sounds lovely, and I'll check it out. But I'm also hoping for books with a message along the lines of "girls can be anything, but girls don't have penises." It doesn't have to be explicit about that last point, I just don't want it casually tossed in there. And SO MANY do that nowadays.

I'm reading Irreversible Damage and am hoping to pre-load my kid with messages that just because she's not a stereotype, she's still a girl and that womanhood is something to cherish. I'll definitely check out books that are pre-2006. Thanks..
 
There are. The trick is to look for those books pre-2016. 2008 if you wanna get technical as it was around that time when the SJW insanity kicked off.

View attachment 5842967

I can easily recommend this one. The Store Bought Doll.

Its about a little girl who loves playing with dolls. She plays with a doll that her mother sewn for her. The little girl takes this doll everywhere. Whether its doing chores, climbing trees, playing tea party on the countryside. Everywhere. As the doll is made of rags, it can take abuse. Then one day, after her dad helped a well-to-do gentleman, said gentleman gives her a doll. A fancy model from the store. She sets aside her raggedy doll and starts playing with the pretty doll... until she realized that she'd screw up the doll with the daily activities. So in the end, she favors the rag doll her mother made over something that was mass-produced. The story has alot of subtle touches in making the little girl be feminine. She is helpful, kind and surprisingly, remains feminine despite being outdoorsy.

These old books, especially the "Little Golden Book" series have much going for them. They can teach lessons without clubbing you over the head. What also helps is that the artwork is really good. Same cannot be said of modern books where the art is ugly and it wastes no time in slugging you with the morals. Subtlety and SJW simply do not mix.
If we're all giving boomer recommendations, may I also recommend Enid Blyton?
There *has* been some censorship over the years (notably all references to Golliwog dolls being expunged) but they are still very traditional as far as I am aware.
 
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Great choice.

Not gender critical, but some books I loved as a kid were Rudyard Kipling's Just So Stories (1902) and Encyclopedia Brown (1963-2012).
Once she's reading chapter books, we're off to the races. I've saved all my Ramona Quimby and Fudge books for exactly this occasion. But toddler books have been absolutely run ravage by woke shit and now knowing I have to start countering this genderfeels nonsense by the time she starts Pre-K (because that's when they start this shit in my state, apparently) I'm feeling less prepared than I thought I was.

She has no interest in gender or sexuality, of course, because she's a literal toddler. But I guess I need to shoehorn in some preventative information about womanhood before she goes hearing that girls don't play sports or like math.
 
Once she's reading chapter books, we're off to the races. I've saved all my Ramona Quimby and Fudge books for exactly this occasion. But toddler books have been absolutely run ravage by woke shit and now knowing I have to start countering this genderfeels nonsense by the time she starts Pre-K (because that's when they start this shit in my state, apparently) I'm feeling less prepared than I thought I was.

She has no interest in gender or sexuality, of course, because she's a literal toddler. But I guess I need to shoehorn in some preventative information about womanhood before she goes hearing that girls don't play sports or like math.
Aesop's Fables are timeless. That stuff's millennia old and still beloved.
 
So on the other side of the coin, are there any books that are gender critical for children in this age group? Things that aren't super Jesus-y? I'm having a helluva time, although luckily there's still a few "girls can be anything!" kind of books to counteract all the retro-transing they're doing with all female heros.
Here's an old one. William's Doll. It's about a normal boy who also wants a baby doll. Everyone freaks out because it's a girl toy and he's a boy and boy's have to play with boy toys and girls have to play with girl toys! Until the grandmother just gets him a baby doll. The father is upset, but the grandmother explains that it's a perfectly good gift for William because someday he'll be a father too.

Here's a musical cartoon version
 
Once she's reading chapter books, we're off to the races. I've saved all my Ramona Quimby and Fudge books for exactly this occasion. But toddler books have been absolutely run ravage by woke shit and now knowing I have to start countering this genderfeels nonsense by the time she starts Pre-K (because that's when they start this shit in my state, apparently) I'm feeling less prepared than I thought I was.

She has no interest in gender or sexuality, of course, because she's a literal toddler. But I guess I need to shoehorn in some preventative information about womanhood before she goes hearing that girls don't play sports or like math.
Encyclopedia Brown is good for someone who's just starting out with chapter books. Sally Kimball was the muscles of the duo, acting as Brown's bodyguard and sidekick. She offers a female perspective that proves crucial to solving some of their cases.
 
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