Sioux Falls Pride 2025 was hosted by drag queen Candy Babylon, the 2013 Miss Gay Midwest Icon At Large, and an avid tarot card reader.
The "all ages drag show" featured several performers including Inanna Miss, who holds the title of Miss Gay Portland, and Toyona Diamond, known as the "little pocket Asian princess."


In deference to the LGBTQ cult’s commitment to diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI), the drag show also included drag king Romeo DeMornay Sanchez: the "Midwest’s Godfather of Decadence".



According to an earlier promo image on SD Pride's Facebook page, "SD Pride Ultimate Entertainer" Oliver Clozoff was also supposed to perform.
According to her Facebook profile, Oliver is a drag king, cosplayer, and a renaissance festival performer. Oliver's Facebook comments on her exclusion from the drag show raise questions about Sioux Falls Pride's commitment to DEI orthodoxy.
In addition to the drag performers, there were also organizations on hand to lure children into the LGBTQ cult. The Transformation Project specifically targets children with radical gender ideology and provides funding to minors seeking out of state gender-affirming care through the SD Trans Resilience Fund.
The Gay Straight Alliance (GSA), also known as the Gender and Sexuality Alliance, has nearby chapters registered online at Roosevelt High School, South Dakota State University, Augustana University, and the University of South Dakota. They boldly declare that “hundreds of millions of people can attest from personal experience that gay people often know their sexual orientation during the first 10 years of life.”
SDSU caused quite a controversy back in November of 2022 when the GSA sponsored a “kid-friendly” professional drag show that encouraged the whole family to bring $1 or $5 bills to tip the performers.
But the most vivid example of child grooming I witnessed at this year’s Pride Festival was during a pro-abortion speech by members of the Justice Empowerment Network. A despondent young boy, dressed in drag, stood at the foot of the stage.
His mood brightened at the sight of the drag queens he idolized, and his mother encouraged the boy to dance for them.
Fortunately, the stage obscured my view of this depraved display. But the boy’s mucky mimicry solicited high fives of approval from the drag queens.
Sioux Falls Police officers were standing twenty yards away from this indecency. But they didn’t intervene. They were too busy manning their booth.
After all, the Sioux Falls City Council passed a resolution recognizing June as Pride Month back in June 2022, so the city leadership seems to support queering the culture.
There were also five “churches” occupying booths. But they weren’t there to protect kids or liberate those enslaved to sin. They were there to encourage sexual idolatry. That’s the subject of the next article.