On Monday, the University of California, Davis hosted a “Menstrual Mutual Aid” workshop for so-called “non-cis menstruators,” i.e., girls who think they’re either dudes or non-binary.
The event was hosted by the school’s LGBTQIA Resource Center, which announced it in an Instagram post published on Jan. 12.
“Join us for Menstrual Mutual Aid, a hands-on workshop that centers the experiences of non-cis menstruators while promoting sustainable, inclusive menstrual and pelvic care in alignment with Menstrual Health and Awareness Day,” the Jan. 12 post read:
View this post on Instagram
The post continued by letting interested parties know what they’d learn at the event.
“Participants will learn to sew their own reusable cloth pads, explore topics like product maintenance and inclusive language, and build community over food and conversation,” the post read.
“All attendees will also receive a reusable pad to take home – empowering everyone with practical skills, affirming care, and a sustainable approach to menstruation,” it continued.
The LGBTQIA Resource Center’s website says it “provides an open, safe, inclusive space where people of all sexes, orientations, gender identities and gender expressions are welcomed and celebrated.”
According to Campus Reform, the Center hosts other similarly weird events like a “Queer Book Club,” a workshop titled “Queer Advocacy 101,” and an “LGBTQIA+ Non-Traditional Student Mixer.”
Campus Reform further notes that the “Menstrual Mutual Aid” event was basically managed by the university’s Love Lab, a university-sponsored contraceptive distributor.
“The Love Lab is a mobile cart stocked with external condoms, internal condoms, dental dams, water-based lubricant, and silicone-based lubricant available to UC Davis students at no charge,” a description of the Lab reads. “It also provides pads and tampons, in addition to educational materials, buttons, and stickers.”
Sadly, these sorts of ridiculous and perverse events are a dime a dozen on college campuses nowadays.
Last March, California State University, Northridge sponsored a sick event called “Kink Workshop: Kink Across Diverse Bodies.”
A year earlier, at Indiana University–Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI), students were exposed to an “Introduction to Bondage Workshop”:
This is an actual event taking place in @IUPUI. An “Introduction to Bondage Workshop” where they will learn about rope bondage, BDSM, and s*x play.
These people want us to pay off their student loans. pic.twitter.com/yNtT6SUJZY
— Libs of TikTok (@libsoftiktok) February 6, 2024
That same year, the University of Chicago’s Student Wellness division hosted a “kink and consent workshop.”
“A flyer touting the event and posted on campus states the workshop is designed to teach students ‘an introduction to exploring kink safely’ and that a ‘kink-friendly student wellness therapist’ will be on hand,” The College Fix reported.
“The online sign-up sheet for the workshop states it aims to help students understand ‘how to take care of yourself and others while engaging in safe practices is a crucial aspect of sexual health’ and added ‘there will be no hands-on learning or demonstrations of any specific kink practice,'” the reporting continued.
Also, that year, the University of Rhode Island reportedly let a porn star teach a class on “How to Please a Woman” as per its “Sex Fest”:
STATE-FUNDED PORN: When public universities like the University of Rhode Island aren’t indoctrinating students with Marxist ideologies they are helping them break into the porn industry and improving their lesbian sex skills. Seriously, the UofRI paid Sinn Sage to fly from Vegas… pic.twitter.com/cFRcIu6GsY
— @amuse (@amuse) September 25, 2024
Meanwhile, it was only last summer that the Association of Mature American Citizens (Amac) ran a report about how whistleblowers were exposing “universities for sexual perversion in [the] classroom.”
The report spoke of a Santa Clara University graduate student, Naomi Epps Best, who blew the whistle on a Jesuit Catholic School professor who had shown pornography to his students.
“Best said she walked out of a required class [last spring] after Professor Chongzheng Wei showed a ‘sexual bondage activity’ video to students,” according to Amac.
“When the lights came up, the professor smiled and asked if we wanted to try it ourselves,” Best later wrote for The Wall Street Journal. “Maybe it was a crass joke to break the tension, but I didn’t want to find out if a live demonstration was next.”
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