Opinion Why Are Seemingly Functional Adults Falling for the ‘Furries’ Myth?

NYT: Why Are Seemingly Functional Adults Falling for the ‘Furries’ Myth?


By Michelle Goldberg
April 4, 2022, 7:43 p.m. ET

A Nebraska state senator, Bruce Bostelman, last month warned of an alarming new variety of deviance making its way into the state’s schools. “It’s something called furries,” he said. Schoolchildren, Bostelman claimed, were identifying as cats or dogs. “They meow and they bark.” And educators, indulging them, “are wanting to put litter boxes in the schools for the children to use,” said Bostelman.

Perhaps needless to say, none of this was true. Bostelman later apologized for spreading falsehoods, saying, “It was just something I felt that if this really was happening, we needed to address it and address it quickly.”

What interests me is why he thought this was really happening, and not just in decadent enclaves like New York City or San Francisco, but in his own Midwestern backyard.

Part of the answer is surely social media. As The Associated Press reported, the rumor, a mockery of transgender identification, has persisted in a Facebook group called Protect Nebraska Children. The same rumor has cropped up in Iowa, where a school superintendent had to send out a letter to students and parents debunking it; in Michigan, where a parent brought it up at a school board meeting; and in Wisconsin, where it was spread by a conservative radio host.

The deeper question is why apparently functional adults find these outré suburban legends plausible. My theory is this: The current freakout over sex and gender identity in schools is a generational conflict, one driven in large part by older adults’ fear and bafflement at the sexual mores of the young.

The “satanic panic” of the 1980s, a frenzy of accusations of ritual child abuse that resulted in the conviction of dozens of innocent people, was driven in part by deep anxiety over working women and day care. Four decades later, the country is once again in a moral panic about monstrous things being done to children, with teachers and entertainers accused of “grooming” them for abuse. And once again, it’s driven in large part by unease over rapidly changing gender roles and norms.

Arguing for Florida’s so-called Don’t Say Gay bill last month, a Republican state senator, Dennis Baxley, described speaking to his psychiatrist son about the number of school kids coming out as L.G.B.T.Q. “Am I crazy or what?” he said. “All the sudden we’re having all these issues come up about this topic of their sexuality and gender, and I said, ‘I don’t understand why that’s such a big wave right now.’”

Baxley concluded that experimentation was being encouraged by schools. “There’s something wrong with how we’re emphasizing this,” he said.

Baxley is correct that there’s been a great evolution in how students think about gender and sexuality. You can see it in video from the student walkout at Florida’s Pembroke Pines Charter High School protesting the Don’t Say Gay bill, in which ebullient teenagers wave rainbow flags and chant for gay rights. Such a scene would have been unimaginable when I was in school decades ago.

Many of the goofy, moshing Pembroke boys look, on the surface, a lot like the jocks I remember hurling anti-gay slurs. It’s obvious that more kids are going to come out in high schools where they’ll be accepted and celebrated than in those where they’ll be bullied and abused.

There is, of course, an even bigger generational shift with trans issues. Many middle-aged liberal parents I know have different ideas about gender than their more radical adolescent kids, and I assume the gulf must be even larger in many conservative families. Christopher Rufo, the right-wing activist leading a crusade against Disney for its opposition to the Don’t Say Gay bill, told me a friend of his sent his middle-school daughter to an all-girls choir camp over the summer, “and a third of the girls came back saying that they were nonbinary or queer or gender nonconforming.”

Faced with a gender landscape that they find unnerving or worse, conservatives are trying to use schools to turn the tide. The result has been an explosion of book-banning and educational gag orders, including proposals even more extreme than Florida’s. While that state’s Don’t Say Gay bill sharply limits what teachers can say about gender and sexual orientation, a proposal in Tennessee would ban public school classroom materials “that promote, normalize, support or address lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender (L.G.B.T.) issues or lifestyles.”

Some of this stuff, no doubt, is purely cynical. The Trumpist website American Greatness recently celebrated the term “groomer” as a right-wing attempt to do “what the left always does: coin a novel political epithet.”

But the school culture wars are also driven by alarm and confusion. Last year, I wrote about a sexual assault in a Virginia high school bathroom that was attributed, falsely, to trans-friendly bathroom policies. The victim’s family was interviewed by the conservative website The Daily Wire, and the ending has stayed with me. The girl’s mother, fighting against progressive policies on trans kids in the name of her daughter, complained that the girl herself had grown increasingly progressive.

“Where does she get these ideas? From school, obviously,” the mother said. “It’s not from our home.”
 
(((Michelle Goldberg)))

Didn't read, but coincidence detected.


Here's an ms word tempate about why this %topic% degeneracy that nazis are speaking of is literally just imaginary and even if it weren't, allow me to explain why %topic% is not degenerate in any way, also I'm putting my name right up top
 
>michelle goldberg at the new york times says your child is perfectly safe in public school

Whew, I'm so relieved!
 
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Clearly a voice of opinion that needs to be heard.
 
Furries are a very subtle tool for grooming kids. You think they're just dressing up as cute animals, but the whole community underneath is a bunch of degenerates that fuck puppies only because they can't fuck babies.
As evidenced by this rare news clip of a pedophile priest being outed as a degenerate furry pedo and the local sheriff is sent to arrest him. When the priest realizes he's been outed he reverts to his fursona and attacks the sheriff
 
Oh there is so much more to Michelle Goldberg than her last name.

From her early teens she was active in the abortion rights cause, escorting a pregnant 13-year-old friend to an abortion clinic when she herself was 13 and participating in protests and abortion-clinic defense as a high-school senior.[5] In an opinion column titled, "Rant for Choice," published in the student newspaper at SUNY Buffalo in 1995, Goldberg, wrote of on-campus anti-abortion demonstrators, "spit at them. Kick them in the head." Goldberg later told the Buffalo News, "Just like someone who says, 'I'm going to kill you,' I didn't mean it literally. I didn't call the article 'A Call to Arms.'" [6][7]

"Goldberg's first book, Kingdom Coming: The Rise of Christian Nationalism (2006), was a finalist for the 2007 New York Public Library's Helen Bernstein Book Award for Excellence in Journalism."

She was one of those "Mittens Romney is a literal nazi" hysterics:

In 2012, Goldberg criticized a column written by Ann Romney, wife of politician and businessman Mitt Romney, in USA Today; Romney wrote that there was "no crown more glorious" than the "crown of motherhood." Goldberg responded that such phrases reminded her of "pronatalist propaganda of World War II-era totalitarian regimes."
 
Are there really people out there who have never heard of furries before and think they were made up by the right just to discredit trans issues? Is the average person (including writers for the New York Times, apparently) really this sheltered?
She's a writer for the New York Times; she's not sheltered, she's just dishonest.
 
Furries have been around since I was in high school at least, and probably longer. They have well documented and publicized conventions. These journalists are getting dumber gaslighting ideas by the hour.
Anyone who was around in the late 90's as the internet was reaching maturity to the point you could access it from home is lying to you if they say they never encountered at least one on Web 1.0.

Arguably, they were the first group to benefit from the un-cancelable nature of internet presences at the time. Everyone was still getting used to the new ROE of the info age, and merely taking someone off a mailing list and kicking them out of the weekly club meetings for being a creep was no longer enough to get them out of the fandom, let alone out of your hair if they were determined to remain. Since there was no "big tech" and according Facebook jail and censorbots, there was no way to get rid of them once they reached an online critical mass.

This was probably exhibited best by the inability to keep a determined furry degenerate from bringing Tiny Toons to a slightly-premature end by tripping over his schlong while attempting to stalk Babs' VA. The idea that ONE weirdo in a basement could single-handedly wreck a TV SHOW, short of murdering the cast? Only 4 years prior, people would have LAUGHED at that notion. But now, thanks to technology, horny losers were here to stay AND have an outsized ability to fuck innocent things up for everyone. After one or two abortive attempts, the Furry community descended into diaper fetishism and the real chance a fat, smelly, 20-something neckbeard NEET would show up on your doorstep with his suitcases hoping his "Friends in the fandom" would be eager to let him take their spare bedroom and being genuinely puzzled why the cops got called, for good

I will actually give a "modern" 20-something journo a slight pass for not knowing what "furry" is, only because their "internet" usage is severely limited to only pre-approved people and ideas and they never go out into the wild where they're just as prevalent as ever. Unfortunately.
 
There isn't really anything "mythical" about furries... They exist, and have existed for decades. The internet's full of them, they have conventions, there's tons of artwork made by them both SFW and NSFW... Shit, we have an entire sub-board here dedicated to documenting their social ineptitude and degenerate behavior. And Poe's Law shows how warped the American educational system has gotten that we now have people second-guessing if litter boxes and other absurdities may actually be a thing in school bathrooms.
 
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