Meet The Wealthy And Powerful Women Institutionalizing Gender Ideology | Jennifer Bilek

 

Wealthy, influential, and powerful women are using their influence to institutionalize transgenderism, an ideology that normalizes dissociation from our biological reality.

Bina Aspen Rothblatt’s drive to move humanity out of its roots in biology appears as determined as that of her spouse, Martine (formerly Martin). Bina has been by Martine’s side since he drafted the ideology of gender identity in his book, The Apartheid of Sex and created the legal structure for the gender bills used across the Western world.

The roots of female power in the gender industry trace back to a woman named Rita Erickson, who adopted the male name Reed. In 1964, after inheriting her father’s wealth, Erickson established the Erickson Educational Foundation, which funded early efforts to normalize transsexualism. Her foundation supported the gender clinic at Johns Hopkins Medical Center and other programs focused on transgender issues. Erickson was a patient of Dr. Harry Benjamin, whose organization later became WPATH (World Professional Association of Transgender Health).

The women of the Pritzker clan, all billionaires, have given large donations to universities and LGBT organizations.

The late Joan Jacobs, with her husband, contributed $100 million to University of California-San Diego (UCSD) Health Center. The center was named for them and helped UCSD Health become a leader listed in the LGBT Healthcare Equality Index in 2018. UCSD Health offers “gender-affirming care.”

Rep. Sara Jacobs, Joan’s granddaughter, is playing her own political role in advancing the narrative that trans-identifying individuals need special legal considerations.

Pat and Ronda Stryker are part of the sibling triad who are billionaire heirs to the Stryker Medical Corporation fortune. They have worked hand-in-hand with their brother, Jon Stryker, who is founder of the Arcus Foundation, a Goliath LGBT organization. Pat Stryker has worked closely with Tim Gill, the mega-donor to LGBT causes in Colorado.

Other major female power brokers behind gender ideology include MacKenzie Scott, funding millions upon millions of dollars to LGBT organizations, and Beth Brooke-Marciniak, named one of Forbes “World’s 100 Most Powerful Women” ten times.

Media legend Oprah Winfrey won the GLAAD Media Award in 2024 for her interview with actor Elliot Page. Winfrey oversees Harpo Productions, featuring documentaries such as “Becoming Chas” and “I am Jazz,” among other LGBT content.

In addition to the powerful women mentioned, there are lesser-known figures working quietly to advance gender ideology. Scholars such as Nicholas Matte, a female studies professor at the University of Toronto posing as a man, and Chase Strangio, a lawyer at the ACLU, also posing as a man, are prominent voices in academia and activism. Matte is affiliated with the sexuality center funded by the gay billionaire Mark S. Bonham.

Similarly, Aaron Devor, a sociologist and sexologist posing as a man, has been instrumental in advancing “transgender” studies in Canada, receiving funding from the Pritzkers.

Between 2007 and 2009, a female professor emeritus of equalities law at Manchester Metropolitan University who renamed herself Stephen Whittle to pose as a man, was president of the World Professional Association for Transgender Health (WPATH).

Whittle was part of the team of human rights lawyers who drafted and adopted the Yogyakarta Principles in 2006. . . Whittle was also involved in the development of the nonprofit organization Transgender Europe.

It’s time to bring these elite women to the forefront, as their role in shaping the future of gender ideology cannot be ignored.

Source: Meet The Wealthy And Powerful Women Institutionalizing Gender Ideology

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