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BBC Radio Scraps Irish Singer Róisín Murphy After She Called Out Puberty Blocking Drugs


The BBC has removed an Irish singer from a prepared feature radio broadcast following leftist backlash over her opposition to children being put on puberty-blocking drugs.


Róisín Murphy, an Irish singer-songwriter formerly of the pop duo Moloko, has become the latest figure of hate for the woke transgender movement after a private post on Facebook criticising the radical practice of prescribing hormone-altering drugs to children was leaked onto social media by a friend last month.


“Puberty blockers are f—ing, absolutely desolate, big pharma laughing all the way to the bank,” Murphy wrote. “Little mixed-up kids are vulnerable and need to be protected, that’s just true.”


“Please don’t call me a TERF, please don’t keep using that word against women,” she added in reference to the increasingly common slur (Trans Exclusionary Radical Feminist) used by the woke left against women who oppose the trans movement.


After her post was leaked, a wide backlash ensued, with the left-wing Guardian newspaper declaring that Murphy’s latest release had been “compromised” for many fans over her views, adding that “for many fans, particularly queer fans, this album is DOA [dead on arrival].”


The paper went on to defend the usage of the often life-altering drugs, without acknowledging the growing amount of evidence of physical harm caused and that countries such as the UK have recently placed heavy restrictions on providing them to children.


Then this week, BBC’s Radio 6 scrapped a planned five-hour set of Murphy’s songs, concert recordings, and interviews, replacing her feature with rapper Little Simz, The Telegraph reported. The BBC has claimed that the decision was not inspired by the controversy surrounding the Irish singer, but rather to promote upcoming spoken word and rap programming.


A BBC spokesman said that such features are frequently changed in order to “reflect station-wide initiatives as they get confirmed.”


“Little Simz was scheduled to reflect 6 Music’s Way With Words programming, which celebrates poetry, rap and spoken word, and airs the following week, tying in with National Poetry Day. There was no other reason for the change.


“Roisin Murphy has been played on 6 Music recently and her Artist Collection remains in rotation.”


For her part, Murphy issued a grovelling apology late last month for her supposed wrongthink before the woke mob, writing on social media: “I have been thrown into a very public discourse in an arena I’m uncomfortable in and deeply unsuitable for.


“I cannot apologise enough for being the reason for this eruption of damaging and potentially dangerous social-media fire and brimstone. To witness the ramifications of my actions and the divisions it has caused is heartbreaking.”


“I will now completely bow out of this conversation within the public domain. I’m not in the slightest bit interested in turning it into ANY kind of ‘campaign’, because campaigning is not what I do… My true calling is music and music will never exclude any of us.”


The pop singer’s quick capitulation was also widely criticised, with anti-transgenderism activist and author Oli London writing: “You should never cave to the woke trans mob. Why would you apologize for speaking up for kids? Bad move.”



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