Voters weary of pride campaigns: ‘You can’t even open up social media without seeing some 50-year-old guy twerking’

New polling data show voters are growing weary of corporations pushing LGBT narratives.

A Summit poll conducted June 15-19 showed 73% of voters desire businesses to simply stick to their products and services and avoid politics and cultural issues.

Lucas Miles, a Summit faculty member, told the Washington Examiner that the “level of aggressiveness of the pride campaigns is going very quickly and pushing very fast, and it seems to be playing into a lot of the fears and concerns that people have.”

“You would think that if the goal is to really be subversive, to push these ideas into society, that you would slowly capture the attention of America and kind of win over your particular agenda,” Miles said.

Instead, Miles said that “you can’t even open up social media without seeing some 50-year-old guy twerking half-naked or completely naked in your news feed through these news stories that are coming through.”

Miles said those who criticize conservatives’ efforts for holding events, such as Brave Books and Kirk Cameron’s library story hours, miss a distinct difference between those and pride-themed gatherings.

“Typically we have very appropriate behavior, things that are truly family-friendly,” Miles said of conservatives’ gatherings. “There’s not nudity. There’s not anything that’s sexually explicit, and so, you know, although they may be talking about faith or singing about Jesus, this allows people to decide if they want to participate in this or not. And if you’re just walking by this, there shouldn’t be anything that is inherently offensive to you or that feels judgmental or hateful.”

The Summit poll also indicated that 61% of voters believe introducing children to LGBT narratives hurts their emotional and psychological development in comparison to 39% who believe it is beneficial to children’s development.

The poll was conducted in partnership with McLaughlin & Associates, polling 1,000 likely general election voters with an overall margin of error of plus or minus 3.1%.

Miles is the author of Woke Jesus, a book seeking to expose the infiltration of woke ideology into the modern Christian church.

* Article From: The Washington Examiner