In November 2018, pop ballad singing icon Celine Dion launched a children’s clothing brand called Célinununu, with the aim of selling apparel designed to be gender-neutral. Many consumers likely would have never heard of the brand were it not for the National Catholic Register website’s fixation with seeing demonic forces at work in marketing efforts.
The Register interviewed a purported Catholic monsignor, John Esseff of Scranton, Pennsylvania — who also functions as the local exorcist — to weigh in on Dion’s new unisex clothing line for a 21 November 2018 article headlined “Exorcist Warns About Celine Dion’s Occult Children’s Clothing.”
In that article, Esseff was quoting as saying, “The devil is going after children by confusing gender. When a child is born, what is the first things we say about that child? It’s a boy, or it’s a girl. That is the most natural thing in the world to say. But to say that there is no difference is satanic.”
That article, and others which were subsequently aggregated from it, were based on some rather far-fetched opinions. None of the clothes in the Célinununu line incorporates demonic imagery. Many feature large plus-signs that resemble the cross on the Swiss flag, some are emblazoned with stars, others bear skulls, while still others carry the phrase “New Order.”
«sSOLO HAY DOSs» géneros, el llamado a la igualdad de género «satánico». Las personas detrás de esto están influenciando a los niños al desorden. Esto es definitivamente satánico. Hay una mente detrás de eso, una mentalidad organizada. «El diablo es un mentiroso y hay muchas mentiras que se dicen», . «Esto se está haciendo por dinero, y hay divisiones que vienen de esto, marcas del diablo».
https://youtu.be/vSdSFKj-hOc