Well, this is certainly one way to describe a congressional race. Cameron Kasky, the 25-year-old Parkland shooting survivor who helped spark the March for Our Lives movement, just announced he's running for Congress in New York's 12th district. But forget the typical campaign launch rhetoric - Kasky went on The Don Lemon Show and described the crowded field of candidates as "a very, very crowded race of quirked-up white boys who have twinkish qualities about them." His exact words? "There is a cadre of twinks right now. It makes you feel like you are on the ferry to Fire Island Pines getting ready to go dance with a lot of people and it's exciting." For those unfamiliar with Kasky, he was just 17 when he survived the 2018 Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School massacre in Parkland, Florida. In the days that followed, he co-founded the Never Again movement from his living room and helped organize one of the largest youth-led protests in American history. Time Magazine named him one of the 100 Most Influential People of 2018. He came out as queer in 2021, writing openly about his journey toward self-acceptance and crediting queer activists of color for paving the way. Now he's hoping to win this "twink-off" and take his activism to Congress. May the best twink win.