Twitter Gone Wild: Herds Of People Take To Platform To SLAM Oklahoma Capitol Insurrection

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There were hundreds of Trans Lives Matter protestors who took over the Oklahoma Capitol building on Monday as they protested a restriction of gender transition procedures for minors recently passed in that state.

Twitter users have been mocking and going after those protesting against the legislation. Gov. Kevin Stitt, R-Okla., gave a State of the State Address in which he called for the legislature to pass a law that would ban gender transition procedures for minors in Oklahoma. He said the following: Minors cant vote, cant purchase alcohol, cant purchase cigarettes. We shouldnt allow a minor to get a permanent gender-altering surgery in Oklahoma..

He then asked the legislature to send me a bill that bans all gender transition surgeries and hormone therapies on minors in the state. This statement outraged some on the far left, and the protestors stormed into Oklahomas capitol building. They are outraged that he would even consider such a move.

Those on Twitter slammed the protestors at the Oklahoma Capitol building. Still, they also went after the media for not reporting on it as they did on January 6. TPUSA founder Charlie Kirk tweeted the following about it:

So can radical protesters now occupy government buildings without being accused of an insurrection?

Matt Walsh tweeted:

Trans activists stormed the Oklahoma state capital to defend their right to castrate, sterilize, and mutilate children. [This is not] only an insurrection but easily the most bizarre and disgusting one in history.

Clay Travis also took issue with the situation by saying:

Trans activists took over the Oklahoma state capitol because @GovStitt is passing legislation to prevent gender reassignment surgery for kids under 18, he said. In most states, you cant get a tattoo before 18, but 15-year-olds can get their breasts removed? Crazy.

YouTuber Nuance Bro noted how much the country has changed in just a decade and said:

Trans Lives Matter [being] chanted from [the] inside of the Oklahoma State Capitol. Could you imagine such a sight a decade ago? He continued, It used to [just] be a few weirdos on [college] campus. Now its large crowds in deep red states.

Many people have noticed how different something like this compares to the breathless media coverage of the January 6 events.