DEM created TRANSGENDER EPIDEMIC among children -numbers have doubled in just 5 years

Wave that bigotry flag proudly, pEarl!

Sure, wave that non-acceptance flag that trans are not freaks who are committing a sin.

Acceptance of perversion is evil.

We are admonished not to accept perversion.

These loons who believe in accepting perversion will never accept that it is perversion...but it is.
 
Sure, wave that non-acceptance flag that trans are not freaks who are committing a sin.

Acceptance of perversion is evil.

We are admonished not to accept perversion.

These loons who believe in accepting perversion will never accept that it is perversion...but it is.

You're nothing but a sanctimonious asswipe, pEarl. Go stuff your Nazi flag down your throat so we don't have to look at it. Thanks.
 
Colavito was one of my people, of course, and I'm old enough to have seen him play in person several times here in Boston.

He had a great throwing arm as well as home run power, and the trade with Detroit for Harvey Kuenn in 1960 was a stupid one for the Indians to make.

Totally agreed about renaming the team for bridge statues. Beyond stupid

Boston, Chicago, Cleveland, and Detroit--not even the Yankees--
were charter member American League teams going back to 1901--
and the idiots had to do that? To one of the original four? Disgusting, and I can't imagine any sane indigenous American being offended by the original name.

Washington Redskins was one thing...they may as well have said Washington Niggers.
But Cleveland Indians? Please.

Some are offended by "Indian" because the indigenous Americans were not from India; the word is often used as a slur much like "wop" or "spic." As you know it's a misnomer from that countryman of yours who got all the credit for "discovering" America.

It's amusing how bigoted Reichwingers like Toxic Top believe that corporations should be able to do whatever they want, until it comes to changing an old name or logo or brand out of 21st Century sensitivity to customers' perceptions. Remember the big kerfluffle recently about Aunt Jemina's image on the syrup bottles? I heard the racists bought up all the containers before they were changed. Cost 'em millions. :laugh:
 
Take a hike, you must be a sin filled trans freak, pendeja.

Poor pEarl, so angry, so filled with hate, so pathetic, lying there in the dust of history. Don't worry though. You'll be dead soon and you won't have to hear anymore about trans ppl, or non-white ppl, or uppity women who make more money than you and have the right to control their own bodies. How it must suck to be a poorly-aging angry white "Christian" male.

 
Poor pEarl, so angry, so filled with hate, so pathetic, lying there in the dust of history. Don't worry though. You'll be dead soon and you won't have to hear anymore about trans ppl, or non-white ppl, or uppity women who make more money than you and have the right to control their own bodies. How it must suck to be a poorly-aging angry white "Christian" male.


You have already been dismissed, trans freak.

That's a sin, trans freak.
 
You have already been dismissed, trans freak.

That's a sin, trans freak.

The dry cleaners called, pEarl. Your whites are at their whitest! Hurry or you'll miss your meeting!

EpmPrac.jpg
 
Colavito was one of my people, of course, and I'm old enough to have seen him play in person several times here in Boston.

He had a great throwing arm as well as home run power, and the trade with Detroit for Harvey Kuenn in 1960 was a stupid one for the Indians to make.

Totally agreed about renaming the team for bridge statues. Beyond stupid

Boston, Chicago, Cleveland, and Detroit--not even the Yankees--
were charter member American League teams going back to 1901--
and the idiots had to do that? To one of the original four? Disgusting, and I can't imagine any sane indigenous American being offended by the original name.

Washington Redskins was one thing...they may as well have said Washington Niggers.
But Cleveland Indians? Please.

No Indians were offended...I will never call them Anything else...
 
Yeah, please don't weeport me for posting your personal info, Eula Jean. Honestly, it's hard to tell which one is you. The one next to the burning cross, with the box of matches? :laugh: :rofl2: :laugh:

You post a self-portrait and won't identify yourself, trans freak.
 
Colavito was one of my people, of course, and I'm old enough to have seen him play in person several times here in Boston.

He had a great throwing arm as well as home run power, and the trade with Detroit for Harvey Kuenn in 1960 was a stupid one for the Indians to make.

Totally agreed about renaming the team for bridge statues. Beyond stupid

Boston, Chicago, Cleveland, and Detroit--not even the Yankees--
were charter member American League teams going back to 1901--
and the idiots had to do that? To one of the original four? Disgusting, and I can't imagine any sane indigenous American being offended by the original name.

Washington Redskins was one thing...they may as well have said Washington Niggers.
But Cleveland Indians? Please.

No Indians/indigenous people were offended...I will never call them Anything else...
 
Some are offended by "Indian" because the indigenous Americans were not from India; the word is often used as a slur much like "wop" or "spic." As you know it's a misnomer from that countryman of yours who got all the credit for "discovering" America.

It's amusing how bigoted Reichwingers like Toxic Top believe that corporations should be able to do whatever they want, until it comes to changing an old name or logo or brand out of 21st Century sensitivity to customers' perceptions. Remember the big kerfluffle recently about Aunt Jemina's image on the syrup bottles? I heard the racists bought up all the containers before they were changed. Cost 'em millions. :laugh:

I understand your point of view, but not being afflicted with that level of hypersensitivity,
it's really difficult for me to empathies with those who are,
perhaps.

In my eighth decade as a baseball fan, I'm also offended by the name change from Indians to Guardians,
especially in a time when we purists are being driven away
by the largely unsuccessful effort to attract younger fans.

Sometimes, Owl, we get to put ourselves first,
especially when nobody else is doing it.
 
Atlanta would never allow it...

When I was a very little boy, before the Braves moved to Milwaukee on their way to Atlanta, they played here in Boston.
1952 was their last year here.

I went to my first game in 1953, when Ted Williams returned home from Korea [it was a huge deal at the time]
and immediately joined the team without waiting for the next season.

Thus, I was a Red Sox fan from the beginning.

Historically, the upstart Red Sox [1901] of the new American League were the team of the immigrant Bostonians
due to the number of Catholics on the team [like 19-year-old Babe Ruth, for example]

while the Braves [ formed 1871, in the defunct league that was the predecessor to the National League]

were the team of the old blue blood Bostonians.

Ted Williams, one of the greatest individual players of all time although his teams never won anything,
of the Red Sox was too big an attraction in the forties and fifties for the Braves to compete.

If I tolerated kids a little bit better, I could have been a history teacher.
Alas, they tend to give me a rash if they're not my own,
plus I'd have to teach more than baseball and boxing.
 
I understand your point of view, but not being afflicted with that level of hypersensitivity,
it's really difficult for me to empathies with those who are,
perhaps.

In my eighth decade as a baseball fan, I'm also offended by the name change from Indians to Guardians,
especially in a time when we purists are being driven away
by the largely unsuccessful effort to attract younger fans.

Sometimes, Owl, we get to put ourselves first,
especially when nobody else is doing it.
Ah, come on Niffty, reading your posts, I bet you put yourself first quite often.
 
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