- The singer had questioned minors’ rights to receive gender-affirming care
- He was nevertheless called out for his comment
American singer, NeYo has apologized to the LGBT community for controversial comments he made about children and gender identity during an interview.
In a recent interview with VladTV, the RnB singer spoke on transgender children and the parents that raise them. He also questioned minors’ rights to receive gender-affirming care.
‘I have no issue with LBG — I have no problem with nobody. You love who you love, you do what you do,’ he prefaced.
READ MORE: My 14-year-old transgender son took his own life after telling us he no longer wanted to be a girl
‘I just personally come from an era where a man was a man and a woman was a woman.’
He then went on to say, ‘There was two genders, and that’s just how I rocked. You could identify as a goldfish if you feel like, I don’t care. That ain’t my business.
‘It becomes my business when you try to make me play the game with you. I’m not gonna call you a goldfish. But if you wanna be a goldfish, you go be a goldfish. We live in a weird time, man. We do.’
The father of seven later expanded on that point, saying: ‘I feel like parents have almost forgotten what the role of a parent is. If your little boy comes to you and says, ‘’Daddy, I want to be a girl.’’
‘And you just let him rock with that? He’s 5 … If you let this 5-year-old boy decide to eat candy all day, he’s gonna do that. When did it become a good idea to let a 5-year-old, let a 6-year-old, let a 12-year-old make a life-changing decision for themself? When did that happen? I don’t understand. He can’t drive a car yet, but he can decide his sex?’
Interviewer Gloria Velez appeared to agree with the singer, responding with, ‘And he can cut off his pee-pee.’
After being called out for his comment, Ne-Yo issued an apology on social media, this time not leaving out the ‘T’ n ‘LGBT’.
‘I’ve always been an advocate for love and inclusivity in the LGBTQI+ community, so I understand how my comments could’ve been interpreted as insensitive and offensive,’ he wrote.
‘Gender identity is nuanced and I can honestly admit that I plan to better educate myself on the topic, so I can approach future conversations with more empathy.’
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