Middle School Doubles Down on Minnesota's Gender Insanity With 'Queer Extravaganza' Drag Show
The school and state proudly promote radical gender ideology in violation of President Trump's executive orders.
North Hopkins Middle School students in Hopkins, Minnesota, can get their education with a side of sexual grooming on June 3 if they stick around after the final school bell.
From 3:30 p.m. to 6 p.m., the school will host a "Queer Extravaganza" event featuring drag karaoke and a potluck. One shudders to imagine what will be on that menu.
A rainbow-embossed flyer posted on the school wall—and now circulating on social media—assures that "all are welcome" to this "safe space for LGBTQ youth and allies."
It remains unclear if that invitation extends to adult men dressed in women's underwear.
Hopkins North Middle School is still at it. Now there's a drag show planned for June 3.
— CrimeWatchMpls (@CrimeWatchMpls) May 18, 2025
Middle school = ages 11-14
Contact: Julius Eromosele, Principal
952-988-4801
[email protected]
General: 952-988-4800 pic.twitter.com/sgAQYeGldm
The flyer advertising the drag show is just one of several promoting radical gender ideology—in addition to racial activism—to have been proudly displayed on the walls at Hopkins North.
Back in February, photos of signs directing students toward the school's "gender inclusive bathrooms" and "gender neutral bathrooms" were published by the LibsofTikTok account on X.
Sent to us by a follower. Hopkins North Middle School in MN reportedly has hallways covered in LGBTQ propaganda, including "gender inclusive bathrooms."
— Libs of TikTok (@libsoftiktok) February 19, 2025
This school should have their funding cut immediately. pic.twitter.com/CXb7zjT249
Other signs outside the girls' bathroom served to acknowledge "gender fluid," "non-binary," and trans-identifying students and encourage respect for their preferred pronouns.
"This school should have their funding cut immediately," LibsofTikTok wrote.
Legal Battles Ahead
Neither the school's principal, Julius Eromosele, nor Hopkins Public Schools Superintendent Rhoda Mhiripiri-Reed responded to a request for comment, though a funding fight could be in the works.
President Donald Trump's Jan. 29 executive order on "Ending Radical Indoctrination in K-12 Schooling" directed the elimination of federal funding for K-12 schools that promote radical gender ideology.
Weeks later, on Feb. 25, U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi singled out Minnesota as one state the administration was monitoring for compliance with Trump's order establishing that only females may participate in female sports.
“This Department of Justice will defend women and does not tolerate state officials who ignore federal law,” Bondi said at the time. “We will leverage every legal option necessary to ensure state compliance with federal law and President Trump’s executive order protecting women’s sports.”
Her comments followed Minnesota's Democrat Attorney General Keith Ellison's issuance of a formal legal opinion declaring that the order on women's sports "does not have the force of law and cannot supersede" Minnesota law.
State law prohibits discrimination in public schools based on gender identity. But in his executive order, Trump noted that federal law, under Title IX, requires that women have equal access to athletic opportunities.
"As some Federal courts have recognized, 'ignoring fundamental biological truths between the two sexes deprives women and girls of meaningful access to educational facilities,'" the directive states.
Bondi has filed lawsuits against other states that defied that order. She warned Ellison via letter that Minnesota could be next if state officials failed to comply.
Ellison, in turn, filed a lawsuit challenging the president's order, claiming Trump was "bullying vulnerable children" in Minnesota.
The Justice Department has yet to respond to the suit.
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