Allie Beth Stuckey on the set of ‘Candace’ on December 6, 2021 in Nashville, Tennessee. (Getty)
Halloween is often jokingly referred to as “gay Christmas,” but the Tory momfluencer appears to have taken the tongue-in-cheek nickname literally, slamming the spooky holiday as “satanic” and, not to mention, “intertwined with ‘LGBTQ pride.'”
Vanity Fair report Allie Beth Stuckey, a conservative influencer and friend of the late right-wing figure Charlie Kirk, said on a recent episode of her podcast that she did not explicitly say Christians shouldn’t celebrate Halloween, but did warn that “evil spiritual principalities are at work.”
The “evil spiritual principality” she was warning about is, you guessed it, LGBTQ+ people. In other words, we gays love Halloween so much that we ruined it for good, God-fearing, straight people like her.
In a warning to her followers, she said, “Halloween has a lot to do with Pride and LGBTQ pride. People are, in a sense, rebelling against sexual norms through costumes and celebrations.”
This isn’t the first time in recent months that Stuckey has discovered demonic influence. In August, she spoke out against KPop Demon Hunter’s popularity as an example of creeping “paganism.”
During the Halloween episode, she also played a video shared by Christian influencer Forrest Frank, who claimed that Halloween is the “most sublime day” for Satanists and “the deadliest night of the year on Earth.” Needless to say, this is not true. Unless by “human sacrifice” you mean “good-looking guys who sacrifice their virtue behind the milk queen’s back and dress like Velma from the movies.” scooby doo”
Stuckey also cited the widely discredited satanic ritual abuse theory during the Halloween episode. Halloween was a mass panic in the 1980s, with false and spooky news reports claiming that Satanists were preying on children.
At the end of the episode, she admits that even though Halloween is “the number one holiday for the Church of Satan,” she actually allows her three daughters to participate in Halloween, saying, “We allow the kids to dress up in fun costumes. We allow them to go to a select few houses and get candy.”
“We don’t do anything crazy. We don’t make scary movies.” Perhaps she was referring to horror movies, not “movies with gay characters,” but who knows?
Source: PinkNews | Latest lesbian, gay, bi and trans news | LGBTQ+ news – www.thepinknews.com
