Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Candace Owens Schooled After Doubting Trans People Existed In Indigenous Culture

Candace Owens
Jason Davis/Getty Images

After being confronted about the existence of trans people historically in Native American culture, Owens questioned whether we 'should be taking our cues' from them considering they were also 'cannibals.'

Far-right commentator Candace Owens was highly criticized for making racist and anti-trans remarks in response to a question about Two-Spirit people at a speaking engagement.

The incident occurred when an audience member asked Owens about her views on transgender identities and their portrayal in the media, referencing the long history of Two-Spirit Native Americans.


Two-Spirit serves as a broad term within Native American communities, encompassing individuals whose gender identity doesn't align with their assigned sex at birth and is thought to encompass both male and female spirits.

Traditionally, Two-Spirit people held roles as healers and spiritual leaders, but colonization played a part in their exclusion from these positions. Today, efforts are being made in several communities to reinstate their revered roles.

Owens acknowledged her lack of awareness regarding Two-Spirit individuals and responded by making disparaging remarks about Native Americans.

You can hear what Owens said in the video below.

Owens inquired whether Two-Spirit individuals were linked to Native American groups associated with substance use and spiritual practices. Additionally, Owens made inaccurate assertions about Native Americans, including an unfounded claim of cannibalism.

She said:

“I don’t know what you’re talking about with Two-Spirit people. Is this like a Native American tribe, like high smoking and talking about your spirit?"
"I’m asking you seriously, because when I think of Native American tribes talking about their spirits, I know that they used to smoke a lot, they used to do drugs, they also were cannibals who used to eat people, so I don’t know if we should be taking our cues from cannibals.”

In response, the audience member educated Owens about Two-Spirit people and the presence of diverse terms across Native American tribes to describe individuals whose gender identity aligns with what is now considered transgender. She also noted that these designations have existed for "thousands of years."

Owens then challenged the historical understanding of transgender Native Americans:

"Well, what you're saying is that some Native American tribes had people who would be considered trans today [which is] something we can't fact-check because they're dead." ...
"It's historical knowledgee that there were trans Native Americans? I really don't think that's historical knowledge but here's what I'll answer: I don’t think that there were trans native Americans."

The audience member fired back with the following response:

"Well, I'm telling you that there were. If you could educate yourself a little more, you would know that."

Owens was swiftly criticized for her remarks.



Owens has a long history of making transphobic statements.

In 2017, Owens stated she was in favor of banning transgender individuals who are undergoing sex reassignment surgery from serving in the United States military, but said that she did not oppose fully transitioned transgender individuals serving in the military.

Last year, she falsely promoted the conspiracy theory that a mass shooter at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas could be transgender and baselessly said that he was "cross-dressing." Owens claimed this could be evidence the shooter "was mentally disturbed."

Around the same time, she claimed a series of shootings in Memphis were spurred by the fight for transgender equality and "celebrating mental illness" by encouraging others to "mutilate their bodies."

Owens has only doubled down on her views, at one point saying she would beat her hypothetical grandkids with a cane if they came out to her as transgender.

More from News/lgbtq

Piotr Szczerek snatching a hat from a young fan of Kamil Majchrzak at the U.S. Open
ESPN

CEO Who Snatched Tennis Player's Hat From Kid At U.S. Open Speaks Out To Apologize

Piotr Szczerek became the internet's latest super villain a few days ago thanks to a viral video showing him snatching a tennis player's hat from a young fan.

Szczerek, the CEO of Polish paving company Drogbruk, was shown wresting the hat that tennis player Kamil Majchrzak had autographed for the boy at the U.S. Open, sparking major outrage.

Keep ReadingShow less
Riley Moore; Tim Walz
Dominic Gwinn/Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images; Stephen Maturen/Getty Images

MAGA Rep. Dragged After Falling For Obviously AI-Generated Video Of Tim Walz Mocking Trump

West Virginia MAGA Republican Representative Riley Moore was mocked after he flipped out online over an obvious deepfake video of Minnesota Democratic Governor Tim Walz disparaging MAGA's Dear Leader, Republican President Donald Trump.

Moore joins other gullible individuals who have fallen for AI-generated false representations of prominent Democrats. The depictions are so ludicrous, only someone easily fooled would fall for them.

Keep ReadingShow less
Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

RFK Jr. Gets Hilariously Brutal Reminder After Asking People What Their First Jobs Were

Health and Human Services Secretary (HHS) Robert F. Kennedy Jr. was widely mocked after he published a post on X on Labor Day asking people to share what their first job was—a rather odd question from a man who faces regular criticism for being utterly unqualified for his role overseeing the nation’s public health apparatus.

Kennedy wrote the following on X:

Keep ReadingShow less
man singing on stage
Austin Neill on Unsplash

Jobs That People Romanticize Too Much Until They Actually Do Them

As children, most of us try on different future identities and occupations. As a 5-year-old, I thought being either a firefighter or a nun would be ideal.

My plans changed as I got older.

Keep ReadingShow less
Kristi Noem
CBS News

Kristi Noem Dragged After Making Wild Claim About How Trump Saved LA By Sending In Troops

Longtime MAGA acolyte Kristi Noem lied on Face the Nation in a desperate bid to justify Republican President Donald Trump's retaliatory act of sending the National Guard and active duty Marines to Los Angeles without cause.

Public perception has largely been against Trump's targeting of major cities in states governed by his political rivals.

Keep ReadingShow less