ERASING GENDER

Eliminating Biological Reality
The agenda to eliminate innate biological gender represents a critical phase in global social engineering. Through complex sociological frameworks by Judith Butler and Michael Foucault, the architects of this cultural shift introduced a deceptively straightforward narrative: that gender is not a biological reality, but merely a fabricated social construct.
By untethering human identity from biology, they promoted the dangerous idea that fundamental boundaries can dissolve and identities can be fabricated at will. The ultimate goal of this agenda is explicitly stated by Butler herself:
"Indeed, the task of the international lesbian and gay agenda is nothing less than the recreation of reality, the reconfiguration of the human being, and the mediation of the question of what is and what is not liveable."¹
To achieve this radical reconstruction, the natural distinction between men and women had to be systematically dismantled. What began as a historical movement to protect women's rights morphed into an ideological assault on traditional womanhood, spearheaded by radical feminists like Betty Friedan.
In foundational texts such as The Feminine Mystique and Beyond Gender, systematic propaganda was deployed to devalue motherhood and homemaking. These natural institutions were framed as markers of a second class existence. Friedan notoriously argued that traditional domestic life was inherently oppressive, stating:

"The only way for a woman, as for a man, to find herself, to know herself as a person, is by creative work of her own. There is no other way."²
The Philosophy of Deconstruction
This agenda relies heavily on the post-structuralist philosophies of thinkers like Michel Foucault, who argued that commonly accepted notions of gender are simply artificial systems of authoritarian power.
By adopting Foucault's belief that language shapes reality and destroys traditional will, modern activists continually manipulate terminology.
Words like "gender" have been deliberately stripped of their historical, biological meaning and rebranded as a fluid, psychological spectrum.
By changing the language of a culture, these academics successfully changed how the culture perceives fundamental reality.
The Trojan Horse of "Equality"
This radical deconstruction is frequently institutionalized under the guise of protecting human rights. International agreements, legal frameworks, and educational policies often act as Trojan horses for this ideology.
By weaponizing terms like "gender equality," activists subtly introduce mandates that eradicate traditional customs, dismantle parental authority, and promote radical gender theories to vulnerable youth.
Sources:
¹
Judith Butler, Undoing Gender (London: Routledge, 2004), 30.
²
Betty Friedan, The Feminine Mystique (New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 1963), 344.



