I keep forgetting that the word “woman” apparently means nothing these days. Grant Sikes, a 23-year-old male-to-female transgender student at the University of Alabama became popular over the summer when he decided to rush for a spot in a Bama sorority. He documented his journey on TikTok and gained millions of views and followers. But
Month: November 2022
Documentarian Ken Burns took his book tour to PBS’s Amanpour and Company on Tuesday where he hysterically warned that “authoritarianism” and “nationalism” are on the rise in America putting everything from elections to the independent judiciary in trouble. With analysis such as that, it should not be surprising Burns was both short on facts and
On Tuesday, Jimmy Kimmel used his mundane monologue to mock some prominent right-wingers in a strikingly intolerant manner. Kimmel remarked, “Speaking of head injuries, polls are showing Herschel Walker in a dead heat with the incumbent Senator Raphael Warnock in their runoff.” That’s really funny, considering Democrat John Fetterman had a stroke, and Joe Biden
Weeks after the midterm elections, Arizona seems to have created more controversy than it did the first week after Election Day. While much of our attention has been focused on Maricopa County, there’s plenty of drama to go around. Maricopa, as you know, has been the subject of a lot of contention, due to how
New York City Mayor Eric Adams is getting desperate about the city’s mentally ill homeless crisis. He has now directed police and emergency personnel to hospitalize more mentally ill people even if they don’t appear to present a threat to themselves or others. “The common misunderstanding persists that we cannot provide involuntary assistance unless the
In my home state of Georgia, we’ve had a front-row seat to watch Brian Kemp grow from a solid Republican candidate into a formidable governor. His first term as governor has brought so many victories for conservatives in the Peach State. I’ve been a fan of Kemp since his first campaign. I initially backed a
In 2016, Canada passed a medical assistance in dying (MAID) law that broadened the parameters of assisted suicide to include severely or terminally ill and disabled people who choose to die by either euthanasia (lethal drugs administered by a physician) or physician-assisted suicide (the doctor prescribes lethal drugs which are then taken by the patient).