Right, so this takes a lot of background, so I don't know if it'll all connect as it stands.
Anke Ehrhardt had a lot of influence on government, LGBT and left-wing institutions compared to Money himself. She even managed to get a job working for Fauci during the AIDS epidemic. Her influence extended to the Ford Foundation, who made her a board member.
Speaking of the Ford Foundation...
American author, conservative philosopher, and critic of feminism Christina Hoff Sommers, criticized The Ford Foundation in her book The War Against Boys (2000) as well as other institutions in education and government.[69] Sommers alleged that the Ford Foundation funded feminist ideologies that marginalize boys and men.
Moving back to my original premise, and what connects it all together. Sally Miller Gearhart, who created the essay I quote ad infinitum, was the first ever creator of a gender studies curriculum.
There, she was able to develop one of the first women and gender studies programs in the United States.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sally_Miller_Gearhart
I'm sure I don't need to explain that gender studies is based on Ehrhardt's work, and that the study was published in 1972, with less than 12 months between it and Gearhart's "revolutionary" gender studies curriculum.
Unless someone has a copy of the curriculum themselves that disproves it, my theory that Gearhart was actively involved in normalizing transgenderism holds up.
Right, so this takes a lot of background, so I don't know if it'll all connect as it stands.
Anke Ehrhardt had a lot of influence on government, LGBT and left-wing institutions compared to Money himself. She even managed to get a job working for Fauci during the AIDS epidemic. Her influence extended to the Ford Foundation, who made her a board member.
Moving back to my original premise, and what connects it all together. Sally Miller Gearhart, who created the essay I quote ad infinitum, was the first ever creator of a gender studies curriculum.
There, she was able to develop one of the first women and gender studies programs in the United States.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sally_Miller_Gearhart
I'm sure I don't need to explain that gender studies is based on Ehrhardt's work, and that the study was published in 1972, with less than 12 months between it and Gearhart's "revolutionary" gender studies curriculum.
Unless someone has a copy of the curriculum themselves that disproves it, my theory that Gearhart was actively involved in normalizing transgenderism holds up.