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It is difficult to pinpoint exactly when our national obsession with drag queens began. Sometime after they started appearing in libraries for children's story hours but before Target began selling "tuck-friendly" bathing suits would be my guess.
Regardless, it seems impossible to avoid them, whether in advertising, the news media and now, apparently, sports.
In mid-May, the Los Angeles Dodgers baseball team invited an activist LGBTQ+ drag troupe called the "Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence," whose members are known for dressing in drag resembling the black-and-white habits of Catholic nuns, to appear at the team's annual Pride event next month.
The group's members, it's worth noting, use various sexual and blasphemous stage names that really don't bear repeating. They annually host a "Foxy Mary and Hunky Jesus" contest on Easter Sunday — the holiest day of the year for Christians.
According to Minnesota Bishop Robert Barron, who previously served as an auxiliary bishop in L.A., this year's performance included one performer using the cross in a pole-dancing routine.
And as U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio notes, the group's motto, "go and sin some more," is a perversion of Jesus' command to "go, and sin no more."