Burn of the Day
- Donald R. McClarey
Donald R. McClarey
Cradle Catholic. Active in the pro-life movement since 1973. Father of three, one in Heaven, and happily married for 43 years. Small town lawyer and amateur historian. Former president of the board of directors of the local crisis pregnancy center for a decade.
“Cannuckistan” I can’t stop laughing. Since the devil hates being ridiculed, “Cannuckistan will get the job done.
As someone whose family migrated to the US from Quebec in 1832 and who definitely has more Native American Indian blood in them than Elizabeth Warren, I say it’s time to fortify the northern border.
One of the features of the feminist mentality is that institutions must be distorted, disfigured, and diverted from performing their appointed tasks in order to make life more comfortable for women who wish to work in them for whatever reasons they have. There is quite a raft of trades in which women in general have almost no interest and in which only a low-single-digit portion of those working in them are women. (Machine repair, the building trades). Protective services seem to be of more interest to women and (private security excepted) these tend to be public employees. In the States, various contrivances have been implemented to pump up the share of women in the military to 16% and Canada now has a 25% target. People who have done this want militaries and police forces and fire services who act as toy theatres for their social fantasies and not forces which actually do their work with optimal dispatch. One downstream consequence of anti-discrimination law has been the habit of living by lies. If we did not, women in the military and the police would generally be in auxilliary forces with circumscribed functions, with the main force between 96% and 100% male. And women in the military would be those well-adapted to working in predominantly male environments.
She should go back to playing Harold Green. Red’s nephew. Quit a resemblance….but hey ya da all seems to look alike up der don’t cha know.
The only place I would follow that woman to is the nearest exit, to make sure the door was locked behind her.