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Target Partners With Satanist To Push Trans Agenda Increasing ESG Rating

Target Partners With Satanist To Push Trans Agenda Increasing ESG Rating

(Chaz Anon) The push of “PRIDE” month is already here, and the big corporations are feeling the heat from conservatives. Republican Senator Tom Cotton has slammed retailer Target’s move to sell transgender themed clothing and apparel, some of which is aimed at kids and designed by admitted Satanist Abprallen.

Cotton shared an image of one of the items, tweeting “Even by the standards of woke corporations, @Target‘s partnership with a satanist to push the trans agenda on children is remarkable.”

In a repeat of his infamous words to the woke Kroger CEO last year, Cotton added “The next time @Target comes begging for help, Republicans should respond, ‘best of luck.’”

Cotton followed up “I’m confident most @Target employees and customers are horrified by this.”

Like almost every big corporation these days, Target has gone all in on the ‘Pride’ theme, with massive sections of their stores devoted to trans and LGBTQ kids clothing, including ‘tuck-friendly’ swimwear for kids and even chest binders:

This kind of move didn’t go so well for Bud Light’s partnership with trans attention whore Dylan Mulvaney.

Fearing a massive backlash and a boycott, Target has reportedly massively scaled back the displays in stores after an emergency meeting.

A Target insider told reporters “We were given 36 hours, told to take all of our Pride stuff, the entire section, and move it into a section that’s a third the size. From the front of the store to the back of the store, you can’t have anything on mannequins and no large signage.”

These moves by big corporations are related to the push for ESG, which stands for Environmental Social and Governance, and refers to the three key factors when measuring the sustainability and ethical impact of an investment in a business or company.

The Environmental Social and Governance factors are a subset of non-financial performance indicators which include ethical, sustainable, and corporate governance issues such as making sure there are systems in place to ensure accountability and manage the corporation’s carbon footprint.

Because of the push by Blackrock and Vanguard, two of the biggest financial players in the world, the number of investment funds that incorporate ESG factors is increasing by the day and is expected to continue rising significantly over the next decade.

ESG’s three central factors are:

Environmental criteria, which examines how a business performs as a steward of our natural environment, focusing on:

  • waste and pollution

  • resource depletion

  • greenhouse gas emission

  • deforestation

  • climate change

Social criteria, which looks at how the company treats people and concentrates on:

  • employee relations & Diversity

  • working conditions, including child labor and slavery

  • local communities; seeks explicitly to fund projects or institutions that will serve poor and underserved communities globally

  • health and safety

  • conflict

Governance criteria, which examines how a corporation polices itself – how the company is governed and focuses on:

  • tax strategy

  • Executive remuneration

  • donations and political lobbying

  • corruption and bribery

  • board diversity and structure

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