At first it sounds like something out of The Onion: Republican politician decries “woke” schools for tolerating students who identify as cats. You chuckle as you scroll past it on your social media feed. Because nobody could actually believe such a wild story, right?
Except it’s true — the part about Republicans’ spreading the claim, that is, not the part about kids’ telling their teachers they want to be treated like cats. That part is entirely made up and has been debunked repeatedly.
But that’s the thing: The lie keeps getting repeated, to the chagrin of school districts around the country. At this point it’s clear that this is less a funny bit of GOP nonsense than part of the party’s larger broadside against LGBTQ kids and their rights and against public schools in general.
At this point it’s clear that this is less a funny bit of GOP nonsense than part of the party’s larger broadside against LGBTQ kids and their rights and against public schools in general.
In the last week we’ve heard two Republican candidates running for governor — Minnesota’s Scott Jensen and Colorado’s Heidi Ganahl — claim that kids are showing up for schools dressed as cats. Moreover, they say these schools are not just accommodating students who identify as animals, but also encouraging them. Of course, neither candidate’s campaign was able to identify just which schools were doing this despite being asked multiple times.
I was shocked when I read those stories — not because of what they were saying, but because I’d heard it all before. I first became aware of this bizarre rumor in March, when a video of Nebraska state Sen. Bruce Bostelman, a conservative Republican, went viral. “They meow and they bark and they interact with their teachers in this fashion,” he told his fellow legislators. “And now schools are wanting to put litter boxes in the schools for these children to use. How is this sanitary?”
If you, like me, are a millennial who grew up on the internet, it quickly became clear that he was referring to a bizarrely literal version of “furries.” For the uninitiated, furries are a subculture whose members, to varying degrees, identify with animals — their “fursonas,” as it were. For some people it’s a sexual kink; for others it’s just a way to express how they feel inside and enjoy having pictures of their fursonas drawn for them. It’s absolutely not something that teachers are dealing with as a major issue.
Bostelman, to his credit, apologized and retracted his claims after being mocked from one side of the internet to the other. I figured that would be the end of this particular moral panic. How wrong I was.
It was easy to overlook the subtext of what Bostelman was saying because of the sheer absurdity of it all. But fast-forward six months and Jensen, the gubernatorial candidate in Minnesota, was much more explicit about why he was relaying the story to his audience:









