Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Over 15,000 Christians Sign Open Letter Slamming Mississippi Mayor For Censoring LGBTQ Books

Over 15,000 Christians Sign Open Letter Slamming Mississippi Mayor For Censoring LGBTQ Books
Faithful America; Mississippi Public Broadcasting/YouTube

Amid a wave of conservatives and evangelical Christians banning scores of books about race, gender, and sexuality from school systems across the country, one group of Christians in the Deep South is fighting back.

More than 15,000 Christians in Madison County, Mississippi signed their names to an open letter excoriating the mayor of the town of Ridgeland after he called for a ban on LGBTQ-themed books from the county's libraries, citing them as against "Christian beliefs."


The 15,000 Christians disagreed, and have demanded that Mayor Gene McGee release the $110,000 of library funding he has been holding hostage unless the libraries agree to ban the books.

According to Madison County library director Tonja Johnson, McGee told her the books "went against his Christian beliefs, and that he would not release the money as the long as the materials were there" and that "the library can serve whoever we wanted, but that he only serves the great Lord above."

Christians in the community were unsparing in their criticism of McGee's astonishing overreach. In the open letter and petition they assembled, they sharply criticized what they described as his misunderstanding of what it means to be a Christian.

The letter reads:

"As your fellow Christians, we object to your decision to withhold taxpayer funding from the Madison County Library System over its display of books that tell LGBTQ stories, including books by Christian authors."
"Reading about LGBTQ issues is not a threat to Christianity nor to patrons of a public, secular library. All people, including our LGBTQ neighbors, are made in the image of God, and we are to love and include them just as Jesus did."

The citizens also expressed anger over the way McGee was making Christianity appear to people in the community.

"Moreover, as a public servant, you make our faith look mean and short-sighted -- pushing people further away from Christ -- when you claim that serving God means you cannot join the library in serving all Ridgeland residents as mayor."

They closed by accusing McGee of censorship and saying it was his "civic duty" to reverse his ban.

On Twitter, people applauded the letter, and it soon gained nationwide attention.








As McGee's antics continued, citizens in the area also launched a fundraiser to replace the withheld $110,000 in library funding. It exceeded its goal within days of launch.

More from Trending

Pedro Pascal; JK Rowling
Toya Sarno Jordan/Getty Images for Disney; Dave J Hogan/Getty Images

Pedro Pascal Opens Up About Why He Called Transphobe JK Rowling A 'Heinous Loser'

Actor Pedro Pascal recently explained why he said Harry Potter author and anti-trans activist JK Rowling behaves like a "heinous loser," and suffice it to say he has absolutely no regrets.

The comment came in reference to Rowling gloating over the U.K. Supreme Court's recent decision to define what exactly constitutes a "woman" in the eyes of U.K. law, a decision that subjects trans people to violence, among other problems.

Keep ReadingShow less
JD Vance
Johannes Simon/Getty Images

Vance Dragged After Making Cringey Middle Finger Joke About 'Pink-Haired People' At GOP Dinner

Vice President JD Vance was criticized profusely after he attempted to make a joke mocking liberals during his appearance at the Ohio Republican Party dinner this week—only to have people calling out his lack of class for holding up his middle finger as he delivered the punchline.

Vance was in the middle of giving the event's keynote speech when he said the following:

Keep ReadingShow less
Donald Trump
Beata Zawrzel/NurPhoto via Getty Images

Trump Ripped After Posting Disturbing Parody Music Video About His Attack On Iran

President Donald Trump is facing harsh criticism after he shared a music video featuring the 1980 song "Bomb Iran"—a parody of The Regents song "Barbara Ann" that is best known for being covered by the Beach Boys—amid a ceasefire between Israel and Iran that could further inflame tensions in the Middle East.

The controversial parody song by Vince Vance & the Valiants plays over footage of B-2 stealth bombers, the same aircraft used to drop 14 GBU-57 bunker-buster bombs on Iranian nuclear facilities, including the Fordow enrichment plant, Natanz complex, and Isfahan site.

Keep ReadingShow less
Donald Trump; Zohran Mamdani
Omar Havana/Getty Images; Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images

Trump Just Tried To Slam Zohran Mamdani's Looks And Voice—And It Was Projection At Its Finest

President Donald Trump lashed out at Zohran Mamdani after the 33-year-old democratic socialist handily defeated former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo in New York City's Democratic mayoral primary on Tuesday—only to be called out for projecting his own feelings of inadequacy onto the star candidate.

Mamdani ran a campaign centered around economic populism, arguing that the city, a global financial center, has grown unaffordable for everyday residents, citing soaring rents and grocery prices, and outlining policies aimed at reducing the cost of living.

Keep ReadingShow less
salad
Anna Pelzer on Unsplash

Doctors Explain Which Seemingly 'Healthy' Foods Aren't All That Good For Us

Every day it seems like some new health fad pops up.

Eat this, don't eat that.

Keep ReadingShow less