Celebrities’ ‘Misery Chic’ Aesthetic Flows From Their Spiritually Poverty
The cultural and spiritual wreckage around us makes clear that finding our true selves will not make us happy.
The actress formerly known as Ellen Page, now Elliot Page, boldly claimed that the rights of gay individuals have been eliminated across the world with "devastating" results.
Appearing at the 2024 Juno Awards, a Canadian music industry awards show, Page presented the Humanitarian Award in her hometown of Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.
Dressed in an all-black men's suit, Page announced that she would be presenting the award to two "icons of Canadian music" who are both "devoted and tenacious change-makers." The "community," Page added, is one that "we should all be fighting for."
"We are at a time in history where the rights of 2SLGBTQ+ people are being revoked, restricted, and eliminated throughout the world, and the effects of which are devastating," Page claimed. She would not cite any examples, however.
Speaking on the CBC, Canada's state broadcaster, Page praised the Tegan and Sara Foundation. The organization is run by twin 43-year-old Canadian singers who are both lesbians.
Tegan Quin and Sara Quin started the foundation in 2016, with its stated goal of raising funds and fighting for "LGBTQ+ equality and justice through our flagship programming and support of grassroots organizations, activists and communities that often go unrecognized."
It is unclear why the organization's website did not include "2S," which stands for two-spirit, in its mission statement despite the identity being frequently noted by both Page and the twin sisters at the award ceremony.
"The Tegan and Sara Foundation has one simple mandate: to provide safety and community for 2SLGBTQ+ people," Page continued. Page also claimed that the foundation has continued to "create roads towards queer joy" by "funding initiatives such as health care access, educational programming, and summer camps for two-spirit, trans, and queer youth."
Alluding to the issues as life-or-death situations, Page closed her remarks by saying that the foundation has allowed young people to "show up authentically," while showing a commitment to ensuring that those with obscure sexualities have lives that are "happy, healthy, and most importantly, long."
The Quin sisters spoke after receiving their award and called it a "reflection of the complexities [their] community" faces.
"If the world were not so hostile to 2SLGBTQ+ people, we would see ourselves purely as musicians," the twins, also wearing suits, claimed.
"Advocating for our community's rights is a great privilege, and we are dedicated to confronting any form of discrimination that threatens the well-being of our community."
"Threats like the Alberta government's attempt to prevent trans youth from accessing vital care," they specified.
The musicians were referring to new legislation in Alberta, Canada, that banned gender reassignment surgeries for minors and puberty blockers and cross-sex hormones for children under 16 years old.
Before concluding their time on stage, the twin sisters exclaimed that they "love being gay" and encouraged viewers to "try it out."
The Tegan and Sara Foundation boasts initiatives on its website, including providing community grants for "LGBTQ+ people who have faced economic and healthcare inequality since before COVID-19."
This also included race-based grants to "black-led, LGBTQ+ organizations addressing systemic racism by organizing to end police violence."
In addition, the foundation also advocated for "LGBTQ+ Summer Camps," "Queer Health Access," and of course providing reading materials about gender and sexuality to children. The latter showed very young children as its stock image.
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Elliot Page — the actress formerly known as Ellen Page — has released a memoir, and the media buzz around its content has left Lauren Chen feeling sorry for the transgender actor.
The book is called "Page Boy," and in some new excerpts from the book, she alleges that people in Hollywood not only groomed her, but actually assaulted her on set.
Page told the Guardian that the director of "Hard Candy" had groomed her, taken her to dinner, stroked her thigh under the table, and told her that she had to “make the move.”
“That is disturbing, and I can only imagine how often this must happen in Hollywood,” Chen says, “because as if one person being attached to that film trying to molest her wasn’t bad enough, there are also other people on the same film set who were apparently looking at her like she was a piece of meat.”
Before Page turned 18, a member of the "Hard Candy" production team had also apparently forced himself on her, as well as told her he wanted to perform a sex act on her.
According to Page, this left her “feeling numb.”
Chen believes that this is why Hollywood is so into the “me too” movement.
The reason, Chen alleges, is “because everyone in Hollywood is actually a sexual predator. Like all of the extreme feminist BS we see coming from liberal women — perhaps it’s simply because they are surrounded by liberal men.”
Chen says that these liberal men cause the women to “assume due to their ideology that ‘no, it’s not just feminist men that are bad, it’s actually all men that are bad.’”
“It’s not just that they’re men, it’s not just because they’re white or whatever other power dynamic the left might tell you,” Chen continues, “it’s because of your disgusting ideology.”
Page was also targeted by a female crew member, who grabbed her after offering to take her house-hunting.
“I know I’ve been very harsh talking about Ellen Page because of her brain-dead liberal progressive takes — especially when it comes to gender — but ultimately as an individual I feel sorry for her,” Chen says.
Page revealed in an interview with the Los Angeles Times that she realized she was trans when she started hearing and then talking to a voice in her head following a psychotic episode of self-harm.
Days later, a doctor gave her approval for her breasts to be removed.
“Chopping off perfectly healthy breasts when you’re a woman, that’s simply a medically approved way to engage in self-harm,” Chen says.
“I think we’ll look back on this period in history and a lot of us will be ashamed that we actually were glorifying mental illness,” she adds.
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Twitter has done it now! It's declared war on Jordan Peterson over a tweet about Elliot Page. We come to his defense and share the ridiculous tweet that got Peterson suspended. Also, Disney's "not-so-secret gay agenda" is made evident as Baymax shops for tampons. And we're really adding more countries to NATO?
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Transgender actor Elliot Page said that wearing a suit to the 2022 Oscars ceremony was pure "trans joy" after having to endure the pain of wearing a dress to the prestigious awards shows back when he was a woman, the Daily Mail has reported.
Page, who previously went by Ellen Page, was nominated for best actress for the lead role in 2007's "Juno" and appeared at the 2022 Oscars ceremony to commemorate the film's 15-year anniversary.
Page, 35, said that being able to wear a suit on the red carpet was a "special, wonderful, joyful moment" of "trans joy."
"I feel the best I've ever felt like, like, I feel the way that I really actually never thought was possible," Page said of coming out as transgender in 2020. "Just the degree now that I can feel present, simply that I can feel present in a space without this incessant underlying anxiety or some sort of feeling like I need to flee."
Of seeing himself in pictures from the 2022 awards ceremony — and most notably wearing a suit — Page said, "All those things are really special, wonderful, joyful moments where you're looking at a photograph and it's really cool to see yourself for the first time — or the person you already saw but here they are, like, they're f***ing emerging."
In 2021, Page told Oprah Winfrey that he wasn't able to accurately "express just the degree of pain that I was in" while promoting 2007's "Juno" and having to wear dresses on the red carpet — to the point where he was unable to even look at photos of himself from the time.
He added that having to wear girls' clothing made him feel sick, and once he even collapsed from anxiety following a red carpet event for a 2010 film.
"There was so much press and so many premieres all around the world and I was wearing dresses and heels to pretty much every single event," Elliot explained, noting that his manager at the time offered up three dresses to choose from for a swanky Paris event.
"I lost it, it was like a cinematic moment," he added. "That night, after the premiere at the after-party, I collapsed. That's something that's happened frequently in my life, usually corresponding with a panic attack."
Elliot Page "Coming Out" Demonstrates the HYPOCRISY of the Left's War on Women | Pseudo-Intellectual