National Park Service Wipes 'Transgender' From Stonewall Monument Following Trump's Gender EO

Justine Brooke Murray | February 14, 2025
DONATE
Text Audio
00:00 00:00
Font Size

America is finally healing as President Donald Trump frees our nation from the shackles of identity politics. 

The U.S. The National Park Service has wiped the concocted word “transgender,” and all other references to the ideology, even from its website for New York City’s Stonewall National Monument.

The monument was built to credit the 1969 “uprising,” otherwise known as the Stonewall riots, for jumpstarting the modern gay rights movement. 

“Before the 1960s, almost everything about living openly as a lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, or queer (LGBTQ+) person was illegal,” the website read on Wednesday, according to the New York Post

Related: Two Teenage Boys Sue Trump For Barring Boys From Girls' Sports

Now the site states, “Before the 1960s, almost everything about living openly as a lesbian, gay, bisexual (LGB) person was illegal.”

It’s a move that recognizes the progress made toward civil rights by communities that were actually oppressed at the time, without virtue signaling to the delusions of a cult-like ideology that rejects science and demands victim status for anyone who makes up a special identity. 

The decision aligns with Trump’s recent executive order, reiterating biological truth by affirming there are only two genders: male and female.

Following MRCTV on X!