Twenty-two-year-old conservative activist, Ashley Claire, has released a children’s book: “Elephants Are Not Birds”, to fight transgender propaganda.
According to the plot, a vulture named “Culture” (a transparent hint of the left to the brainlessness of trans-culture) convinces the elephant, Kevin, that he is a bird, as he can sing beautifully. Kevin gets artificial wings and beaks from the vulture, but a miracle does not happen. In the end, an elephant realizes that he just needs to be who he really is.
Lefty Marxcist progressive reviewers didn’t keep the public waiting for their twatery. The book was accused of being “Hate Speech” and “beyond evil”!
Conservative children’s publisher Brave Books debuts with ‘Elephants Are Not Birds’.

A new conservative publishing house wants to get the โwokenessโ out of bedtime.
Launching this week, Brave Books will focus exclusively on stories for kids, and offers parents โa conservative alternative to the current cultural activism that our children are being taught in schools, in the entertainment they watch and the books they read,โ according to their website.
Company CEO Trent Talbot, who had his first child a little more than a year ago, conceived of Brave Books when, he said, he started to notice โthat there is a real war going on for the hearts and minds of our kids. And everywhere I looked was propaganda,โ the Montgomery, Texas-based dad told The Post.
An ophthalmologist by trade, Talbot pointed to Ibram X. Kendiโs picture book, โAntiracist Baby,โ which urges parents and kids to โmake equity a reality,โ as content that needs a counterpoint.
โOnce my eyes were open I was seeing it everywhere and I couldnโt unsee it,โ Talbot said. โI thought there was a need for books that could help parents teach the values they hold dear.โ
Brave Booksโ first offering is called โElephants are Not Birds,โ the story of an elephant named Kevin who likes to sing, and then is convinced by a vulture โ named Culture โ that he warbles so well, he must actually be a bird.
Culture gives Kevin a pair of wings and a beak to wear, though his attempts to live life as a bird are less than successful in the ensuing pages.
The book is an unapologetic rebuke of transgender acceptance and the growing number of young people identifying as trans, says author Ashley St. Clair.
โYou get special attention now in the classroom if you say, โHey my name is not Billy, itโs Amanda,’โ St. Clair, 22, told The Post. โI am going to have a little boy in November, and itโs scary to think he could come home and say, โMy friends all identify as something else and thatโs how I feelโ and have my son crying because heโs not put on hormone replacement therapy.โ
Brave Books is eschewing Amazon and only selling directly from its own website, offering parents a book a month for a $12.99 yearly subscription.
Other planned books include, โThe Island of Free Ice Creamโ by former OAN anchor Jack Posobiec, which will tackle Communism. The company is also courting Congressman Dan Crenshaw (R-Texas), to write โFame, Blame, and the Raft of Shameโ about cancel culture.
