Friday, 18 October 2024

Canadian High School Hosts Drag Queen Performer Without Parents Knowledge


Draq queen

A canadian high school kicked of Pride Week with a sneaky drag performance by ‘Edmonton’s bearded beauty’ Gogo Fetch, without notifiying the students parents.

The drag queen best known for risque performances performed at Ross Sheppard High School in Edmonton.

He rolled around on the ground, gradually removing clothing while dancing in front of teenagers.

Rebel News reports:

The event, meant to “kick off Pride Week,” was announced only three days before with flyers around the school and a message played in students' homerooms. No notification was given to parents, something typically provided by the school in the form of social media announcements.

Our source confirms both the drag queen and the dance instructor hired for Wednesday's Pride Week activity, a “vogue dance workshop,” were paid for their services, although the cost is currently unknown. Meanwhile, the school’s science department budget is set to be cut next schoolyear due to a lack of funding.

Inside sources reveal Ross Sheppard high principal Rick Stanley was adamant the “performance” went ahead, no matter who disagreed. Upon receiving internal backlash, Stanley relayed a message to the drag queen to “tone down” the show to avoid further flak.

This isn’t the first time this school’s reputation has been tainted.

Back in 2012, a teacher at Ross Sheppard High awarded zeros to students for work that wasn't handed in or tests not taken, even though it went against the school's “no zeros” policy. The teacher was subsequently fired.

Principal Stanley promoted this event with a poster featuring the drag queen at the bottom left and openly gay NDP MLA Janis Irwin on the right, a radical proponent of the LGBT agenda who was the master of ceremonies at this year's Pride Month kickoff.

Alberta Education Minister Demetrios Nicolaides' office was contacted about the performance and responded that the minister does not have the authority to intervene with Pride Week events because schools were given autonomy to plan and host Pride Week activities.


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