Target’s VP For Brand Management Serves As Treasurer For LGBTQ Group Promoting Secret Child Gender Transitions, LGBTQ Books In Schools: Report

The vice president for brand management at Target — which has come under fire and lost billions of dollars in in market capitalization after its transgender and LGBTQ merchandise prompted a boycott — also serves as treasurer of an LGBT group that has received millions of dollars in donations from Target and urges trans and nonbinary school students not to tell their parents about their “gender identity.”

Target’s vice president for brand management Carlos Saavedra, 43, was elected to the GLSEN (Gay, Lesbian, and Straight Education Network) executive committee as treasurer in November 2021, according to his LinkedIn page, The Daily Mail reports. GLSEN helps teachers place LGBTQ books in school libraries and hide their students’ so-called gender transitions from parents. GLSEN has sent more than 46,000 books with LGBTQ themes to several thousand schools across the nation

Target boasted last year about donating more than $2.1 million to GLSEN over the past decade, praising its mission to create “affirming, accessible, and antiracist spaces for LGBTQIA+ students.” Target promotes GLSEN on its online store.

“We are grateful to Target for their funding of this retrospective and for their support of GLSEN’s work in student leadership and educator trainings,” former GLSEN executive director Eliza Byard said in a statement several years ago about a documentary the two entities produced. “Together, we have been able to change school climates for LGBT youth.”

GLSEN has sent more than 46,000 books with LGBTQ themes to several thousand schools across the nation, including “posters and supplemental resources” for educators.

 “Staff or educators shall not disclose any information that may reveal a student’s gender identity to others, including parents or guardians and other staff, unless the student has authorized such disclosure, the information is contained in school records requested by a parent or guardian, or there is another compelling need,” one model local education agency policy posted on the GLSEN website said.

GLSEN promotes the LGBTQ movement in every facet of a school’s curriculum. “As teachers teach about data collection and relevance, they should include whether it is beneficial to include gender or biological sex, being sure to reinforce the difference between those two terms,” one article from the organization contended. “When students are creating their own surveys, if they want to include data for biological sex, teachers need to be sure they include both intersex and other as choices, and if the students want to include data for gender, a variety of choices need to be included.”

Ben Zeisloft contributed to this article.

Related: Target Donates To Group That Promotes Secret Child Gender Transitions, LGBTQ Books In Schools

SEE IT: How The French Care For American Graves At Normandy

Every year, French caretakers spend hours preparing the grave markers at the American cemetery in Normandy — nearly 10,000 of them.

In the United States, citizens spend Memorial Day remembering and honoring the service members who paid the ultimate price for the freedoms and liberties the rest of us enjoy – but for those who never made it home, some of the host nations do what they can to honor the Americans who fell defending them.

In Normandy, for example, they routinely bring sand from D-Day’s most brutal landing site — Omaha Beach — and use it to darken the names and dates inscribed in the otherwise plain white marble crosses that cover the landscape.

Every #MemorialDay, I share this video.

French caretakers take the sand from Omaha Beach in Normandy and scrub them into the letters to give them the brown/gold coloring.

They do this for all 9,386 soldiers who died.

France also gave us this land as American soil. pic.twitter.com/TfE6gFD6lD

— Danny Deraney (@DannyDeraney) May 29, 2023

Traditionally, they do the sand-scrubbing just before the anniversary of the D-Day invasion – but for Memorial Day, they mark each grave with both an American flag and a French flag. The land where those soldiers were buried may be located in France, but it is considered American soil.

#HonorThem 🇺🇸#MemorialDay provides us the opportunity to honor the heroes who made the ultimate sacrifice for our nation.

Yesterday, #SkySoldiers participated in a Memorial Day remembrance ceremony at the Normandy American Cemetery and Memorial 🇫🇷 to honor the fallen 🪖 pic.twitter.com/9aRn3agDLl

— 173rdAirborneBrigade (@173rdAbnBde) May 29, 2023

Other American cemeteries across Europe do the same, among them the Henri-Chapelle American Military Cemetery in Plombieres, Belgium. Memorial Day has been observed at that cemetery – where both American and Belgian flags adorn each marker — since 1945, when both Generals Dwight D. Eisenhower and Omar Bradley were in attendance.

#MemorialDay 🇺🇸 at the #HenriChapelle #American #Cemetery, the largest #American #cemetery in #Belgium 🇧🇪🇺🇸. 7,987 servicemen are buried here.
The first #MemorialDay ceremony held at the #cemetery was on 30 May 1945 in the presence of Generals #DwighDEisenhower and #OmarBradley pic.twitter.com/nr7O78UbsN

— Nicole Conroth 🇧🇪🇪🇺🇦🇹🎶💖 (@ConrothN) May 29, 2023

American flags and the flag of the Netherlands mark each grave at the Netherlands American Cemetery in the village of Margraten.

Memorial day at the Margraten American Cemetery in the Netherlands. pic.twitter.com/RMbFaKAFTa

— The Battlefield Explorer (@battlefieldexpl) May 28, 2023

US Memorial Day commemoration at the Netherlands American Cemetery with out @WWIImuseum Easy Company Tour yesterday. A wonderful and impressive experience for the museum’s guests. #ww2travel #educationaltravel #easycompany #bandofbrothers pic.twitter.com/GS6L360NoE

— Edwin Popken (@edwinpopken) May 29, 2023

The Italian flag sits alongside the American flag at the Sicily-Rome American Cemetery and Memorial in Nettuno.

Ambassador Donnelly was honored to speak at the Memorial Day Commemoration Ceremony today at the Sicily-Rome American Cemetery and Memorial in Nettuno. pic.twitter.com/vukvnDOTPf

— U.S. in Holy See (@USinHolySee) May 27, 2023

The Tunisian flag flies next to the American flag at the North Africa American Cemetery in Tunisia.

MG Todd Wasmund joined Commisioner Kemp, @usabmc, and Ambassador Joey Hood, @usembassytunis for a special #MemorialDay ceremony at the North Africa American Cemetery in Tunisia marking the 80th anniversary of the end of combat in Tunisia during #WWII 🇺🇲@DeptofDefense @USMCFEA pic.twitter.com/gIXkjBd2Cq

— U.S. Army Southern European Task Force, Africa (@SETAF_Africa) May 29, 2023

At the American Cemetery in Manila, Filipino flags fly alongside the Stars and Stripes.

#Philippines 🇵🇭

American Cemetery in Manila.
Filipino and American flags at every grave. #MemorialDay@usabmc @USAmbPH pic.twitter.com/NhUx1NIZf3

— 🚶🏻Curtis S. Chin (@CurtisSChin) May 29, 2023