Dylan Mulvaney, no longer feeling safe in the United States and worried about his mental health(!), has fled to Peru for some alone time, which he is not spending alone.
Dylan Mulvaney has fled to Peru for some much-needed solo travel and soul searching after she complained she no longer felt safe in the US.
The trans influencer, 26, has been at the center of scandals this year – having caused a storm of outrage after partnering with Bud Light in April, knocking millions off the value of the beer company.
After addressing the ordeal publicly on her TikTok last month, Mulvaney has announced she’s solo traveling in South America to reconnect with herself – and filmed herself frolicking with llamas.
She told fans in a series of videos, which included posing with a llama: ‘Okay surprise! I’m in Peru! I’m at Machu Picchu. Isn’t this so beautiful.
First of all: There’s no evidence, none whatsoever, that Dylan Mulvaney is under any threat of bodily harm from legions of disaffected former Bud Light drinkers. He is a chronic attention-seeker, though, and has proven to actually be quite good at keeping the camera on himself. And that’s what he’s doing here.
‘I came here to feel something. And I definitely have. I have done shaman ceremonies that were like 10 years worth of therapy, it was wild.
‘I’ve seen a lot of llamas. The people here are so kind. I feel very safe here.
‘it’s a little sad that I had to leave my country to feel safe but that will get get better eventually.
So, is Dylan Mulvaney really safer in Peru than in the United States? Equaldex.com examines the state of LGBTQ++ rights around the world and makes it easy to directly compare the United States with Peru. The results are revealing. As an overall rating, the United States comes in at 85/100, while Peru rates only 57/100.
- 52 percent of Peruvians disagree with allowing adoption by same-sex couples.
- 65 percent of Peruvians find homosexuality “not justifiable.”
- Almost 72 percent of Peruvians disapprove of same-sex marriage.
For comparison, those same numbers in the US are 13 percent, 9.6 percent, and 24 percent.
You can see a comprehensive comparison of the two nations here.
Mulvaney goes on to list reasons for leaving the US:
The 26-year-old on Instagram addressed the debacle, which has seen Anheuser-Busch lose $20million in market cap value since the advert for March Madness.
Speaking to her 1.8million followers, she said: ‘I was waiting for the brand to reach out to me, but they never did. I’ve been scared to leave my house.
‘For a company to hire a trans person and then not publicly stand by them is worse than not hiring a trans person at all.
‘Because it gives customers permission to be as transphobic and as hateful as they want. There’s should be nothing controversial or divisive about working with us.
‘I have been ridiculed in public I’ve been followed and I have felt a loneliness that I wouldn’t wish on anyone.’
There is no evidence offered for Mulvaney’s having been followed or threatened in any way; we are expected to take the word of a serial attention-seeker. And let’s be honest: It’s pretty certain that Dylan Mulvaney does not and never has suffered from gender dysphoria. He has been and continues to seek attention by taking a social fad to the extreme, a grown man dressing up as a twelve-year-old girl and prancing around squealing like a cheap cartoon character, in a parody of “girlhood” that many find offensive; Megyn Kelly described it very well.
Peru or the United States, or anywhere else, Dylan Mulvaney is past his sell-by date.
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