I know that in yesterday’s post, I said I would do more content on the God-awful Millie Maven trilogy, but that has been put on hiatus for the time being because there’s something more important to talk about than Millie Maven. Yesterday, me and my mom were doing a mother-daughter day and decided to go to Barnes & Noble to check out their selection and bask in the scent of coffee and paper. As we walked around the store, we soon came to the YA (young adult) section, the section meant for kids between the ages of 12-18, and both me and Mom were shocked at what we saw.
Not only was the YA section much smaller than I had remembered it being, but most of the books blatantly pushing the LGBTQ+ agenda, if not pushing something else, such as CRT (Critical Race Theory) or radical feminist ideologies. There was even one book that I saw in the YA section for self-improvement called The Young Witches Guide to Magick. Absolutely shocked at what I saw, I discretely snapped these pictures to prove to you all that the books your kids are reading may no longer be safe.
The first book my mom and I stumbled upon was this one called Afterlove, and just look at this cover:

Remember this is a book that is being sold to 12–18-year-olds, more specifically, to 12–18-year-old girls, many of whom are probably confused and scared about who they are thanks to the onset of puberty, increased peer pressure in middle school and high school, and the rise of social media in making all women look like catty, vindictive bimbos to be used as objects by perverted men. And this type of content didn’t stop here. It could be found on every single shelf in the very small YA section. On the shelf next to that one, I found this book and I encourage you to read the description, which I also took the liberty to photograph:


Because…you know…it’s not like that type of activity was looked down upon by the Catholic church during the Middle Ages. It’s not like any famous kings were killed for being gay (please ignore the fact that King Edward II was killed partially because of his gay relationship with Piers Gaveston). Isn’t this a wonderfully appropriate sounding book for you 12-year-old, especially in the part where it mentions romantic shenanigans? And we’re not done yet, because I also found these two books:


Several months ago, I considered applying for a job at the Barnes & Noble location that I took these photos at. Now, I look at what they’re putting out and I look at the employees that work there (many of whom look like the Leftist groomers writing these books) and think to myself, “I would’ve been fired on the first day,” because I would be warning everyone about how bad these books are and be trying to move them somewhere else so I could replace them with books that are actually appropriate. I’m not kidding when I say that the only appropriate book that I saw anywhere in the YA section was The Return of the King which I’m not sure was even supposed to be there.
Things got worse when I went to the backside of the shelf and was greeted with this shrine to the holy and infallible LGBTQ+ community, complete with vinyl figurines of the characters (read with sarcasm):

Remember, this is what your 12-year-old is being exposed to. Just as I thought things were bad, they got even worse somehow on the shelf next to this table.

Some of the titles here that stood out to me were: The Black Friend: How to be a Better White Person by Fredrick Joseph; Queer Ducks and Other Animals by Eliot Schrefer (because if animals also do gay stuff makes it right somehow. It’s not like male ducks have been seen doing other things like committing necrophilia with dead ducks); Stamped: Racism, Antiracism and You by Ibram X. Kendi; White Fragility: Why Understanding Racism Can be so Hard for White People by Robin DiAngelo (who is white); Unequal: A Story of America by Micheal Eric Dyson; This Book is Anti-Racist Journal by Tiffany Jewell; The Young Witch’s Guide to Magick, and I there are probably some that I’ve missed. This was found in the self-improvement area for young adults.
My question for the people writing the books about how not to be racist if you’re white is: What if you’re a mestizo or mulatto, but happen to look white? My whole family is mestizo. Some of us look white; some of us look brown. Do we get extra oppression points based off of how dark our skin is? Am I more racist because I look white than my Navajo great-grandmother who has referred to me and my cousins as being “crackers” and “little whities” before?
And what about the people who are racist towards white people, calling us such slurs as “Bleach Demons”, “Milk Monkeys”, etc.? Maybe if you stopped highlighting race so much, we wouldn’t have these problems.
Some more examples of stuff I found in the YA section include these:











I’m not going to continue pointing out everything wrong with these books as looking at the pictures themselves should be pretty self-explanatory. Most of these books are meant for girls, which is why the vast majority of them are romances. Most tween/teen boys aren’t reading these. The only reason I can understand for why this is happening is because the Left knows that girls are more easily swayed into this and poll after poll has shown that young, single women most consistently vote Democrat. Therefore, they know that the earlier they can get them questioning their sexuality and the earlier they can screw them up and change their thinking, the better they can keep them in line with the values of the Democrat party. It’s sick and twisted. For any parents who are reading this, I encourage you to boycott Barnes & Noble and look through the books that your kids are reading. I will be giving more of my thoughts on this as time goes on.
Until next time,
M.J.
Have something to say? Leave a comment! (Verbal abuse and ad hominem will not be tolerated.)