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Rob Schneider Boycotts Olympics over Drag Queen ‘Last Supper’: ‘Openly Celebrates Satan’

Actor, comedian, Saturday Night Live Alumnus Rob Schneider is boycotting the Paris Olympics opening ceremony, which included a parody of “The Last Supper” featuring drag queens, saying the anti-Christian performance “openly glorifies the devil.”

“I feel bad for all the incredible athletes around the world and wish you all the best, but I can’t stand to see an Olympics that disrespects Christianity and openly glorifies the devil,” Schneider said in a post on Sunday X. “I sincerely hope these Olympics get the same viewership as @cspan.”

“Men exposing their genitals in front of kids?! Drag queens?! I couldn’t tell if I was watching the Olympics or a school board meeting…” Deuce Bigelow Another X post got a star added.

Schneider wasn’t the only celebrity to criticize the parody of “The Last Supper” that was shown at this year’s Olympics.

Actress Candace Cameron Bure called the Paris Olympics opening ceremony “terrible,” adding that it “made me very sad.”

“It is disgusting and very sad to watch such an incredible event taking place over the next two weeks and see its opening ceremony being a total desecration and mockery of the Christian faith with its interpretation of the Last Supper,” he said. Full house Star said.

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As Breitbart News reported, French bishops also issued a statement expressing dismay at the anti-Christian parody of the Last Supper and calling the opening ceremony of the Paris Olympics a performance featuring “scenes of mockery and ridicule of Christianity.”

Meanwhile, First Lady Jill Biden praised the anti-Christian parody, calling it “brilliant.”

Organizers of the Paris Olympics apologised on Sunday to people who were offended by an LGBTQ parody, saying they “wanted to send a message of love and inclusion” and had no “subversive intention”.

“My desire is not to be subversive, nor to ridicule or shock,” said Thomas Joly, artistic director of the Olympic opening ceremony. Said “Above all, we wanted to send a message of love, a message of inclusion, never a message of division,” he said, according to the Associated Press.

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