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Wednesday, January 04, 2023

Its preferred pronouns are now was/were

BONNE TERRE, Mo. - A Missouri inmate was put to death Tuesday for a 2003 killing, becoming what is believed to be the first transgender woman executed in the U.S.

19 comments:

  1. "Pretender-gender meets its ender"
    I'll see myself out....
    - WDS

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    1. Gender pretender meets it's ender and they're allies are leftward benders...

      Delete
  2. If criminals were put to death using 5 lbs of C4 executions would be worth watching.....

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    1. Five pounds of tanerite. Put him in an arena with it strapped to his groin.

      Delete
  3. HE was executed. HE was a transvestite man with mental illnesses, neuroses including body dysphoria. There is no such thing as "trans-gender". Except for extremely rare birth defects and mutations, you are male or female. And you don't get to change it. End of story

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    Replies
    1. HE was a sicko who tried to scam the mentally ill and failed

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  4. Finally Russel Crowe meets his maker! RIP.

    Chutes Magoo

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  5. I am all in favor of mercy to human beings, but there are some acts - such as raping a child - which take you out of that category.

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  6. I'm surprised a baby-raper lasted twenty years.

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    Replies
    1. This guy stalked raped and then stabbed to death his ex girlfriend even though she had a restraining order on him and then tossed her in a river. Not a pedo from what I’ve read.

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  7. I hope they used ac/dc....

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  8. IT'S HISTORIC!

    I don't mean to shout, but speaking on behalf of diversity, equity and inclusion folks it really is wonderful that the trans crowd has broken this very important glass ceiling.

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  9. Bye, Felisha!

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  10. I suspect most of can agree that this was one last scam to beat the system. He rolled the dice hoping that his new trans status would get his sentence changed. It appears that some people bought his grift and are laying out flowers as we speak. They'll forget him as soon as another cause gives them a enticing wink, probably tomorrow.

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  11. He-she-or in between, that sort of crime calls for the ultimate punishment. The article mentions briefly of a very troubled childhood, but personally I would have been unswayed. While my father's side of the family's history was not a traumatic as this person's was, it was still harsh. My grandfather lost everything I was told in the Depression and he turned to drink to the point my grandmother had to take her children to go back to her parent's house to live. There were also several episodes. In one instance, my grandfather discovered his oldest son still a child, had mangled to save away $6. Now I have no idea what $6 would have purchased in the early 30's, but it wasn't money to sneeze at.. My grandfather I was told, took a tomato basket and beat this son until the son relinquished the money. The oldest child, a daughter, at the age of 16, got into an argument with my grandfather, pulled a knife on him and left the house, never to return.
    So what happened the these children, including my father? The oldest at the age of 16, married a long distance truck driver had a son, who she pretty much raised by herself. This son went on to college on a USMC ROTOC scholarship at Yale, from which he graduated. The son who was beaten until he coughed up his own money? While he didn't go to college , he married his high school sweetheart and stayed married to her until her very untimely death in the '70s. He was a manger of a hardware store, a forerunner of Home depot or Lowes, and was so good at his job, corporate sent him to its problematic stores along the East Coast to sort things out.
    My father, who witnessed the hardship, went to college on the GI Bill earned his accounting degree and CPA creds. so the point of al this is at least in my family, the children suffered, but they rose above it all and I never heard them blame any shortcomings on their childhood.

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    Replies
    1. $6 in 1932 would be $130 today.
      Shows you how much we've been robbed.

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  12. Equal opportunity executions.
    Next, we fry a woke.

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