Look, I honestly do not care what someone does in their bedroom. I don’t care what clothes people wear. I don’t care if someone identifies as a member of the opposite sex. All I ask is that you leave my kids out of it.
I know there are a lot of people who have much stronger opinions about the subject, and that’s ok too, because on the right, we don’t ‘cancel’ people because we may disagree about an issue.
Now, when it comes to business, the moment you stop giving people what they want your business starts to die. That appears to be exactly what Sports Illustrated is doing with this years swimsuit eddition.
I’m sorry, but men buy this magazine to look at beautiful women, nearly naked. Like it or not, that is the truth. While some people may want to see biological men in female bathing suits, that niche is much smaller than ‘men who want to look at beautiful women, nearly naked.’
These are just facts. Trying to force all men to … desire … biological men as they do women is not going to happen … for the vast majority of SI’s customers. Forcing this issue is only going to hinder the ‘acceptance’ of transgendered people and piss off their customer base … who, again, came to see nearly naked biological female models.
Christina Laila of The Gateway Pundit reported:
Get woke, go broke.
Sports Illustrated Swimsuit featured a transgender model on its cover for the first time.
27-year-old Leyna Bloom, a biological male from Chicago, was featured on the cover of SI as part of “three history-making covers.”
“The wait is finally over. Megan Thee Stallion, Naomi Osaka, and Leyna Bloom are your SI Swimsuit 2021 cover models. The three legends were photographed separately in locations across the U.S. from Florida to California. The result is three separate history-making covers showcasing three groundbreaking women.” Sports Illustrated wrote.
“If there’s one thing that our cover models have in common, it’s that they don’t have one thing in common. They look different, have different upbringings, have different passions and inspirations. But each is a reminder that beauty comes in many forms,” says Sports Illustrated Swimsuit editor-in-chief MJ Day.
Meet Your #SISwim21 Cover Models: @naomiosaka, @theestallion and @leynabloom! https://t.co/93XYiWUzTi pic.twitter.com/pnCPnMeT10
— Sports Illustrated Swimsuit (@SI_Swimsuit) July 19, 2021
Leyna Bloom, the transgender model featured, (below) is using this platform to speak out about acceptance.’