I think I've been sick more times here than I have anywhere else. Not fun. Maybe I'm just getting older. Maybe it's stress, since I STILL DON'T HAVE MY FUCKING RETIREMENT ORDERS.
Yeah. And my guys are working their ass off on this.
Blah. I hate being sick. I hate sitting around feeling like shit.
Now, on to a question being asked: Why is Democrat-controlled California making it easier for sex traffickers to traffic children?
To ask the question is to answer it, yes?
You might wonder, at this point, who actually benefits from SB 357. Sergeant Campos wonders, too. Not the communities, he said, for whom a rise in trafficking brings more gun violence, which often attends prostitution. Not the sex workers, many of whom rely on police officers for help in escaping their pimps. “I think if anything, it probably helped the sex traffickers the most,” Campos said.
Which is oddly enough what so many of the Democrat Party seems to enjoy. Oh, and the gay guy who proposed this bill also pushed a bill through that decriminalized giving someone HIV by not telling them you're positive. He also pushed this:
Consider the Wiener-authored SB 145, a 2020 measure that amended the sex-offender registration laws in California, so that an adult having anal or oral sex with a minor could avoid getting placed on the sex-offender registry, as long as the child was at least 14 and the adult was no more than a decade older.
Tell me, why make it easier for a 24 year old to have sex with a 14 year old? Anyone? Yep. let's go back to The Last Closet, a book I've mentioned many times, especially this quote:
What sets gay culture apart from straight culture is the belief that early sex is good and beneficial, and the sure knowledge (don’t think for a second that they DON’T know) that the only way to produce another homosexual is to provide a boy with sexual experiences BEFORE he can be “ruined” by attraction to a girl.
But we're not allowed to talk about that. Homophobic, donchaknow.
I'm going to get another dose of Mucinex going and maybe take a nap.
That was my trigger for leaving California. On the January 1st when that law (which made the unwilling and unknowing transmission of a potentially fatal disease into a misdemeanor, worth a max of six months in county jail) went into effect, there was an article in the local paper that reported on debate in the State Assembly about making it a felony for a restaurant worker to offer a diner a plastic straw without having been asked, with a minimum of a year and a day in state prison.
ReplyDeleteWe started looking out of State the very next day.