‘Transgender’ activist honored by Trudeau calls Charlie Kirk a ‘hatemonger’

Morgane Oger, an LGBT activist who identifies as a “transgender woman,” responded to the public assassination of Charlie Kirk on X by mocking his widow Erika and their two small children.

Oger wrote:

I am so deeply saddened for the survivors of an extreme right hatemonger who found out today.

Nobody deserves to lose their breadwinner. And nobody deserves to be married to someone whose death is ironic karma embodied.

There’s a lesson here: never f*** hatemongering bigots.

Oger’s statement that Charlie Kirk “found out today” is likely a reference to the crude phrase “f*** around, find out.” In short: Kirk opposed transgender ideology, publicly and eloquently. He “found out” that he should not do that when he was shot in the throat. As it turns out, he was allegedly killed by a young man with a trans-identifying lover.

There have been many vile hatemongers venting their spleens on social media since Kirk’s murder, as I have already noted. But Oger deserves special mention, because the Trudeau government honored Oger with the “Meritorious Service Decoration” on December 7, 2023. Oger was granted the award by the Governor General of Canada. The citation for the award read:

Morgane Oger is a champion of diversity who has changed perceptions around 2SLGBTQI+ rights and has worked tirelessly to see those rights enshrined in law. She forged alliances across party lines that propelled changes to provincial and federal legislation protecting individuals against discrimination based on gender identity or expression. Her courage, vision and perseverance have helped redefine the fundamental issue of equality and have advanced inclusiveness for gender-diverse Canadians.

The tireless work that Oger had engaged in involved spearheading a campaign in 2019 to get Vancouver Rape Relief, a shelter for victims of sexual assault, stripped of city funding because it refused to admit trans-identifying men for safety reasons. Vancouver Rape Relief was the country’s oldest rape relief center. Oger’s campaign was successful. In March 2019, the Vancouver City Council cancelled its $34,000 annual grant unless it changed its policies.

In August 2019, the shelter was vandalized multiple times, and at one point a dead rat was nailed to the door. The phrase “Kill TERFS, trans power” was scrawled on the windows (“TERFS” refers to so-called “trans-exclusionary radical feminists.”) Vancouver Rape Relief stated that the removal of funding was “discrimination against women in the name of inclusion” and stated that the campaign was trying to “coerce us to change our position,” noting that the women they served felt unsafe if trans-identifying men were admitted.

Oger, predictably, was unmoved by the attacks on the rape relief shelter. “Regrettably, but predictably, VRR choosing to ignore Canada’s civil rights law causes blow-back,” Oger wrote at the time. “I empathize VRR feel threatened by the predictable response to their conduct. As I have previously offered, I am ready to help VRR get out of their mess if they wish to.” In other words: You got what you asked for, bigots.

Thus, it is no surprise that Oger greeted the news that a 31-year-old father was murdered, leaving a small daughter and a toddler son without their daddy and a grieving widow without her husband by suggesting that the real lessons people should learn is that disagreeing with transgender ideology is inadvisable and that Erika Kirk should have been wiser than to marry a “hatemongering bigot.” In this country, Oger has been given awards for “Meritorious Service” for such sentiments.

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