Tuesday Reads

Aberrant sexual practices and grooming children for pedophilia are why sex education should not be allowed to be taught in schools without a drastic, drastic overhaul of the curriculum.

This Tatchell character is an infamous pervert or pervert apologist, and sexual perversions have no place being taught in schools, to say nothing about crimes against children, things that are advocated by queer theory.

Queer theory needs to be legally barred from being taught in academia, from pre-school on up to postgraduate level.  It advocates for pedophilia and therefore it is a matter for law enforcement.
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Why Kamala Harris can't get elected dogcatcher outside of California:


Harris' networks, especially in high society, expanded rapidly while she was going out with one of California's most powerful politicians. The association also had major financial benefits, which Harris talks about reluctantly.

Aside from handing her an expensive BMW, Brown appointed her to two patronage positions in state government that paid handsomely — more than $400,000 over five years. In 1994, she took a six-month leave of absence from her Alameda County job to join the Unemployment Insurance Appeals Board. Brown then appointed her to the California Medical Assistance Commission, where she served until 1998, attending two meetings a month for a $99,000 annual salary.

“These jobs were created before I was born,” Harris says. “Whether you agree or disagree with the system, I did the work. I worked hard to keep St. Luke's Hospital [in the Mission] open. I brought a level of life knowledge and common sense to the jobs. I mean, if you were asked to be on a board that regulated medical care, would you say no?”

This article is from 2003--sixteen years ago--but it is relevant today.  Harris can never, ever get elected president with that track record.
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The last solar eclipse of the decade was in South America today.

In case you missed it, here is a link where you can play it back.

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Obituary:  I should probably make this a separate post, but I won't at this late hour.  Auto icon Lee Iacocca, 94, who headed Ford and Chrysler and also helped to develop the Ford Mustang, has died.    He was known all over the world.  He got fired from Ford but bounced back heading Chrysler, being bigger than he ever was.  He could have been president, but he wasn't delusional like Donald Trump.

Iacocca suffered from Parkinson's disease.

ut admirers called him a bold, imaginative leader who landed on his feet after his dismissal and, in a 14-year second act that secured his worldwide reputation, took over the floundering Chrysler Corporation and restored it to health in what experts called one of the most brilliant turnarounds in business history.

He accomplished it with a controversial $1.5 billion federal loan guarantee, won by convincing the government that Chrysler was vital to the national economy and should not be allowed to fail, and with concessions from unions, new lineups of cars, and a new national spokesman — himself — featured in a decade-long television advertising campaign.

He was married three times, but only the first marriage lasted worth a damn.  His first wife died in 1983.

The article is a long read, but Iacocca was a major figure in American business.
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