The trans activist group Among Dragons and Dragqueens is now burdening the Swedish police force with no less than 106 reports against individuals who are critical of men in women’s clothing with vulgar names reading stories for children with minority sexual content.

“It’s time to put our foot down,” says Petter Wallenberg in an interview with the LGBTQI+ oriented site QX. What he wants to fight for is the attention-grabbing phenomenon where men dressed as caricatures of women and with names like “Shameless Whore” read stories with minority sexual content to the youngest children.

“Hatred and threats” to criticize

According to Wallenberg, it is considered “hatred and threats” to criticize the phenomenon. He and the other activists in the group Among Dragons and Dragqueens have filed no less than 106 police reports against as many individuals. Five of those reported are local SD politicians.

“These are elected politicians in Askersund and Lilla Edet who use the same hate rhetoric against LGBTQ people as the terrorist-classified Nordic Resistance Movement. It’s incredibly frightening for the whole society,” Wallenberg comments to QX.

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In a few cases, the comments can be interpreted as threatening. But the majority consists of critical value judgments where it is argued that what the fairy tale-reading transvestites engage in touches or exceeds the boundary of pedophilic sexual offenses.

According to Wallenberg, it is instead contemptuous and offensive, bordering on illegal, to have such opinions about so-called drag queens who read what they describe as fairy tales for children but which many consider to have highly inappropriate content for young children.

SD politicians reported – want to see age limits

Regarding the SD politicians in Askersund who are reported to the police, it concerns a motion to the municipal council where it is stated, among other things, that “They have used small children as spectators for adult men to be satisfied by taking the stage.” The essence of the motion is that they want the municipality to prohibit “joint events for meetings between transvestites and children up to 15 years of age“.

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It is now the police’s and possibly the prosecutor’s and court’s headache if they want to protect children from such activities and consider them to belong to the adult world.

Compares Sweden to Uganda

Wallenberg argues that Sweden is now approaching Uganda in its view of sexual minorities and that individuals belonging to these groups are therefore at risk of their lives.

“I never thought I would see this in Sweden. We must put a stop to it before it grows,” he tells QX.

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Wallenberg also claims that far more police reports should have been made against the fairy tale-reading transvestites than the current 106. According to him, this is not because the criticism falls within the constitutionally protected freedom of speech and opinion, but because the transvestites who have been criticized are afraid to report for fear of reprisals.

“Many are afraid of the repercussions of filing a police report,” he says. “It’s scary and it comes at a high price.”

He hopes that the 106 police reports that the group Among Dragons and Dragqueens are now filing will be the starting point for a broad wave of police reports.

Responds to the accusations

In a feature on Riks, one of the reported to the police – opposition councilor Frej Dristig (SD) in Lilla Edet municipality – defends himself against the accusations. He believes it is a culture of easily offended within the group.

“The fact that they chose to report me to the police indicates that they are incredibly easily offended. That’s mostly how I see it.”

What he has been reported for is hate crimes and incitement to ethnic hatred. He believes it stems from him saying that it is inappropriate for adult men to dress in women’s clothing in front of children.

“They have no business doing that, in my opinion. The children don’t have that need, so I don’t think we should impose it on them.”

Watch the full interview with Frej Dristig (SD) below.

READ ALSO: Protested against male priest reading fairy tales in women’s clothing – charged with incitement to ethnic hatred