He wears sandwich boards, travels city to city, and stands face-to-face with angry mobs—just to defend children’s bodies.
Billboard Chris, a father of two, is confronting the rising medical trend of giving puberty blockers to kids who say they’re transgender.
He’s not running a campaign. He’s walking into conversations no one else wants to have. And every step of his global fight is aimed at stopping the medicalization of childhood confusion.
What Puberty Blockers Really Do
Puberty blockers are heavy-duty drugs like Lupron, originally approved for prostate cancer and endometriosis.
Today, they’re prescribed to kids as young as 10 who show signs of gender dysphoria. These drugs halt natural development—freezing puberty entirely. There’s no long-term data proving they’re safe for children. And short-term studies show little to no psychological benefit.
Chris points out that most kids, when allowed to grow up without medical interference, eventually outgrow gender dysphoria on their own.
Gender Ideology in the Classroom
Chris argues that gender ideology has turned childhood into a diagnosis.
Schools now teach that if a girl likes trucks or a boy likes dolls, they might be in the “wrong” body. Instead of teaching kids that interests don’t define gender, institutions affirm confusion and fast-track students to clinics. Chris sees this as dangerous.
Kids are now taught to doubt their biology based on clothing, hobbies, and online trends.
Taking the Fight to the Streets
Politicians won’t touch it. The media barely mentions it. So Chris took his message to the sidewalks—literally.
His boards spark conversations everywhere from Canada to the U.S. and beyond. He calmly debates strangers, challenges doctors, and shares real stories from families in crisis. His strategy? Keep it public, keep it peaceful, and never back down. The global reach of his activism proves that this issue crosses borders—and parents are starting to pay attention.
The Mission That Won’t Stop
Billboard Chris isn’t slowing down. As long as clinics continue offering puberty blockers to kids, he’ll keep walking, talking, and showing up. His global fight isn’t about politics or parties. It’s about protecting children before their confusion becomes a lifelong prescription.
That mission—unapologetic, relentless, and deeply personal—continues to fuel Billboard Chris’s global fight against puberty blockers for kids.