And the protagonist of the scandalous Last Supper parody is also threatening.
The LGBTQ activist at the center of the Olympics' Last Supper parody is filing multiple complaints after receiving threats. While the mockery of the Christian religion was condemned by many, the White House is remarkably silent on the incident.
Barbara Butch is going to sue anyone who's been mean to her after the Paris Olympics opening ceremony.
Sweetheart, that will be all the people in Christendom and most of X. 🤪 pic.twitter.com/vgqugLRsKw— Resistance Kiwi (@ResistanceKiwi) July 30, 2024
French DJ and LGBTQ activist Barbara Butch, who was the central figure of the parody mocking the Last Supper at the opening of the Olympics, "became the target of an extremely violent Internet harassment and defamation campaign," wrote Audrey Msellati, the activist's lawyer, in a statement published on Butch's Instagram profile. According to Msellati, his client "death, torture and rape" . In response to this, several reports are filed - the lawyer is quoted by the American news portal Breitbart.
The performance mocked at the opening of the Olympics turned out to be scandalous
As we reported, a parody of The Last Supper was also performed at the opening ceremony of the Paris Olympics. At the center of the scene was Butch in the role of Jesus, on either side of the apostles were drag queens and transgender performers. The parody caused a general outrage, not only among Christians, but also in the Muslim world.
However, someone was conspicuously silent: US President Joe Biden. At a press conference, White House press chief Karine Jean-Pierre refused to answer the question of what the head of state thought about the performance.
I appreciate the question, but I have nothing to share
- said Jean-Pierre.
Mike Johnson, the speaker of the House of Representatives, was outraged by Biden's silence, reports the American television network Fox News.
The White House had every opportunity to condemn the shameful mockery of the Olympics at The Last Supper, but they refuse to do so. Their silence should be taken as approval. The more than 200 million American Christians should take note
Johnson wrote in his post on X.
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