The LGBT activist community loves to proclaim that they're hated. The transgender community loves to claim they're so hated that they're hunted in the streets. And according to the activist community, no one hates the LGBT community more than Republicans...and yet gay people seem to love to live in red states according to new data.
According to the Williams Institute at the University of California, a great deal of the LGBT community lives in blue areas. Washington DC has an LGBT population of 14.3 percent, the largest in the nation. California harbors over five percent of the nation's LGBT community at 1.5 million people, the largest number in the nation.
But here's where the data gets interesting.
The state of Texas, one of the most Republican states in the nation, has a massive LGBT population of over 1 million people. Florida, another blood-red state, has 850,000 LGBT people living in its borders, and according to the left, it's the political armpit of conservatism itself.
In fact, according to the data, 35.9 percent of America's population lives in the South, the states that typically lean heavily Republican.
You could ask quite a few questions about claims made by the LGBT activist community off of this data alone, but the chief one is the most obvious. If Republicans hate the LGBT community so much and the LGBT community lives in fear of them...then why do they live so comfortably in red states?
Gee, it's almost like Republicans aren't as hateful as the left claims they are and that members of the LGBT community can live safely and prosperously in red states without fear of danger. It's almost as if the "live and let live" philosophy of the vast majority of right-leaning Americans creates an environment where gays and lesbians can simply live their lives.
To be clear, most do. After speaking with enough people in that community over the course of years, I can safely say that the LGBT community and the LGBT activist community aren't necessarily one and the same. Many, in fact, vehemently disagree with the activist community that claims to represent it and have no problems or qualms with Republicans. In fact, many are Republicans themselves.
This naturally leaves the activist community with some questions it has to explain, but you'd have more luck pulling teeth out of an angry badger than getting these activists to answer for these obvious challenges to their narrative.
LGBT activists, especially transgender activists, aren't interested in understanding or equality as they claim. They're a supremacist movement. Their goal is to force themselves on society so they can not only have power over it but also create more of themselves with indoctrination in schools and workplaces.
(READ: Trans Activists Don't Understand Why People Don't Like Them...Allow Me)
Their claim is that they deserve special treatment because of how marginalized and hated they are. They make claims that there is a bloodbath of transgender people happening at the hands of American society, and as such, they should have the ability to lord themselves over all that they see as recompense.
These claims are demonstrably false. In fact, as I made clear in previous research, transgender people are some of the least murdered people in the U.S. and when they do die, it's usually by their own hand or by members of their own community. You can watch my video below for some quick details on this.
All in all, the LGBT community isn't in danger. It's not being hunted. Republicans aren't its biggest threat.
In fact, I'd say the LGBT community's biggest threat is the LGBT activist community, which continues to perform radical acts while claiming to represent the LGBT community as a whole. This creates tension and resentment.