Well, the mask slipped—literally and figuratively—on Monday night at the University of South Carolina, when a trans activist accidentally proved what most of us already know: this entire movement is built on make-believe and weaponized victimhood.
Congresswoman Nancy Mace (R-SC) was speaking at a Turning Point USA event—hardly Berkeley—when she was confronted by a 20-year-old student named Harley Hicks. Hicks is a biological male who insists on going by “she/they” pronouns and, apparently, has nothing better to do than harass a sitting member of Congress over the word “babe.”
Yes, “babe.” That’s the big crime.
Hicks stormed up to the stage demanding an apology from Mace for referring to him—who was dressed as a woman and using a feminine voice—as “babe.” He even tried to get snarky, asking, “Does your husband call you ‘babe’?” To which Mace casually replied that she isn’t married. That should’ve been the end of this low-budget tantrum, but Hicks wasn’t done.
“Then I want you to apologize because it is derogatory!” Hicks huffed, digging deep into the activist handbook of manufactured outrage.
That’s when Mace flipped the script and dropped a bomb of reality. “Is tranny derogatory?” she asked. And just like that, Hicks’s entire feminine persona dissolved into a guttural, unmistakably male shout: “Well, yeah! Of course it f**king is!”
Boom. The high-pitched activist voice vanished and was replaced by a voice deeper than most radio DJs. It was like watching a reverse Cinderella story—only instead of the clock striking midnight, the truth did.
Mace, never one to back down, mockingly repeated the word “tranny,” triggering Hicks even further. In a moment of pure unhinged rage, Hicks picked up a potted plant like he was about to go full Antifa before security wisely intervened.
And this wasn’t even the first encounter Mace’s had with aggressive men in lipstick lately. Just days earlier, she shared that a man in Daisy Dukes and a full face of makeup confronted her in a cosmetics store, ranting about her town hall schedule. Classy.
Let’s be clear: this isn’t about pronouns or tolerance. It’s about intimidation, narcissism, and a generation raised to believe that feelings trump facts. Hicks showed up to a conservative event hoping to shame a congresswoman and ended up blowing his own cover by literally yelling in his real voice.
No amount of foundation or pronoun policing can cover up the truth. You can cosplay all you want, but at the end of the day, biology isn’t bigotry—and calling someone “babe” doesn’t justify a meltdown.
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