Vitamin C was first isolated in 1928 and the chemical structure was identified in 1933.1 It wasn’t until the early 1970s that Dr. Linus Pauling recommended that the optimum daily intake of vitamin C was 2,000 milligrams (mg) and everyone should consume at least 200 mg to 250 mg per day.2
However, as “modern” medicine and the pharmaceutical industry ramped up the health care machine, vitamin C quickly fell out of favor as it is inexpensive, easy to administer and has very few side effects. In other words, as effective as vitamin C is in prevention and treatment, you can’t make money prescribing or manufacturing it.
It’s important to note that most mammals can make vitamin C in the body,3 but humans and guinea pigs must get it from their diet. Vitamin C is an essential factor in many enzyme reactions and several studies have shown that it’s associated with a lower risk of cardiovascular conditions such as stroke, high blood pressure and coronary heart disease.
Vitamin C has always been vital to immune function, but research data also show that it plays an important role in the treatment of several health conditions, including cancer. Research suggests that IV vitamin C could extend survival,4 even in people with pancreatic5 and ovarian cancers,6 which are among the deadliest types of tumor growth.
Throughout the early years of the COVID pandemic, researchers and doctors who used vitamin C to help treat the infection were ridiculed and “modern” medicine organizations tried to sideline them. In the following three years, information about vitamin C continued to be shared but many suffered at the hands of Big Pharma.
Vitamin C — A Historical Perspective
Since vitamin C cannot be patented, it’s a significant threat to the pharmaceutical industry and Western medicine’s disease model of care. An Australian independent journalist, Just Call Me Jack from Totality of Evidence, published a deep-dive history of vitamin C,7 how it’s been used and suppressed.
He intends to identify and capture significant data points throughout history that have led up to the COVID-19 pandemic and document what has happened since, including to “discover incremental changes through time, which on their own may seem laudable or benign, but watch them morph and put them together and the Totality of Evidence reveals a picture of ever-increasing centralized control and influence.”8
Vitamin C has played a role in this influence.9 In 2002, Dr. Thomas E. Levy published the book “Vitamin C, Infectious Diseases, and Toxins: Curing the Incurable.” By 2011, research and publications identifying ways in which vitamin C might be used were reaching the media. Dr. Suzanne Humphries published a special report on the treatment of whooping cough and Orthomolecular Medical News proposed intravenous vitamin C as a cancer therapy.
Vitamin C and Sepsis
In November 2013, “Clinical Guide to the Use of Vitamin C” was revised and republished. The book recorded the clinical experiences of Dr. Frederick R. Klenner, who used vitamin C in the treatment of polio, which I discuss below. In 2014, Alpha Fowler from Virginia Commonwealth University and his team published Phase 1 safety trials for the IV administration of vitamin C in patients with sepsis.
The goal was to move to Phase 2 trials and when Dr. Paul Marik, former chief of pulmonary and critical care medicine at Sentara Norfolk General Hospital in East Virginia, was asked if he wanted to participate, he declined since vitamin C had already become his standard of care after the Phase 1 trial was published.10 Marik further developed the treatment protocol, adding thiamine and steroids, which was published in the journal Chest in 2017.11
Some physicians joined Marik in using the early sepsis protocol while others dragged their heels, waiting for larger clinical trials despite knowing the treatment doesn’t have significant side effects or make patients sicker.
In a 2018 review12 of the protocol, the writers noted the reception for the treatment was mixed, which means your ability to receive this potentially life-saving treatment depends on the hospital where you end up. One of the anticipated larger studies was the Vitamin C, Thiamine and Steroids in Sepsis (VICTUS) study sponsored by Emory University and published in JAMA.13
Initially, the researchers, including Fowler, hoped for 2,000 participants but finalized the study with 501. In a presentation at the Fralin Biomedical Research Institute, Fowler describes the positive effects of vitamin C on sepsis.14
However, the VICTUS paper came to a negative conclusion — that the treatment “did not significantly increase ventilator- and vasopressor-free days within 30 days”15 — because he was told he to make it negative. In this video16 of the presentation, you can see Fowler’s reaction to the negative conclusion he and the team were asked to make.
He notes that $1 billion spent on clinical trials had not produced anything that enhanced survival, but in the VICTUS trial they “have shown an outcome difference.”
[…]
In 2022, Marik’s paper in the journal Chest came under attack in a series of unsubstantiated allegations of fraud from Australian doctor Kyle Sheldrick.18 The journal then launched a thorough review of the study and in April 2023, stated there were no methodological errors. Marik and the FLCCC followed up with a defamation suit against Sheldrick and, as a result, Sheldrick had to publicly acknowledge regret for questioning Marik’s integrity.
Polio, Multiple Sclerosis and Vitamin C
One of the important threads that winds its way through polio and COVID history is vitamin C. During the polio epidemic of 1948 to 1955, many people avoided crowds and public gatherings19 in much the same way as during the COVID pandemic, without mandates to do so. In a biography on Klenner, Andrew Saul, assistant editor for the Journal of Orthomolecular Medicine, discussed some of the pioneering work by Klenner during the polio epidemic.20
Klenner began with vitamin C treatments for patients with viral pneumonia, the details of which he presented in 1948 in the Journal of Southern Medicine and Surgery. Before the polio vaccine was released, Klenner treated polio patients with high doses of vitamin C administered intramuscularly.
In 1949, Klenner summarized his work with polio at the annual session of the American Medical Association. He was from Reidsville, North Carolina, and had no national credentials, research grants or experimental laboratory, but declared in front of this group of authorities that “When proper amounts are used, it [vitamin C] will destroy all virus organisms.”
Although Klenner found the most effective route was intravenous, he had determined that intramuscular injections were satisfactory at a dose of 25,000 to 30,000 mg for an adult delivered at 350 mg per kilogram of body weight every two hours. He operated under the premise that the sicker the patient, the higher the dose should be.
He treated 60 cases of polio with the administration of massive doses of vitamin C and cured everyone. None of his patients were paralyzed and all were well within three days.
Levy discussed the remarkable case of a 5-year-old girl who already had lower limb paralysis for four days by the time Klenner treated her. She only received massive doses of vitamin C and massage. By day 19, the girl had a complete return of sensation and motor function and no long-term impairment. Yet, this simple, effective and inexpensive treatment was not well-published, and Klenner did not receive any acknowledgment for his results.
Saul also describes the vitamin-based cure for multiple sclerosis that Klenner went on to develop. Following the doctor’s death in 1984, his son was implicated in the murders of five people, a tragedy that became the subject of a 1988 book and a 1994 made-for-TV movie. Yet, true to how the media treats the pharmaceutical industry, it was the son’s crimes that were reported far more than the father’s cures.21
[…]
Vitamin C, Inflammation and Oxidative Stress
The antiviral capacity of vitamin C was successfully paired with quercetin during the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic and included in the initial MATH+ protocol released in April 2020. I reported that in the early months of COVID-19, the FLCCC Alliance recommended a combination of vitamin C, quercetin, zinc, melatonin and vitamin D3 for prophylaxis.
To date, the preventive protocol for COVID, flu and RSV includes antimicrobial mouthwash, vitamin D, vitamin C, zinc and melatonin.
Flushing our waste is, well, wasteful, accounting for nearly a third of indoor water use in US homes, according to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). In many parts of the world, the use of water toilets has become increasingly fraught as climate change ushers in extreme droughts and flooding, which backs up sewers and overflows septic tanks.
Social engineers want us to use “dry toilets” instead:
Users layer the contents of the toilet’s bin with peat or sawdust after doing their business; once full, they move the excrement to a larger airtight container over the course of several months so that any microorganisms die out.
The remaining material, rich in nitrogen and phosphorus, can be used as natural fertilizer rather than the usual greenhouse gas-emitting synthetic kind.
Environmental engineer Kelsey McWilliams became “hooked” on sanitation solutions after participating in the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation “Reinvent the Toilet Challenge” while at the University of Delaware, she said.
That would be the same Bill Gates who has been conspiring along with George Soros and the Biden Regime to blot out the sun because global warming.
Even CNN admits that dry toilets have disadvantages:
Waiting up to a year for waste to be safely recycled will deter many people — and the ick factor may be hard to shake.
That’s why dry toilets will first be subsidized, then be made mandatory, following the strategy for electric cars. Real toilets will be progressively strangled out of existence through regulation.
A few regulations are actually beneficial. Progressives will get rid of these. Consider a RecoLab waste water recycling plant in Sweden:
As of now, the plant does not recycle graywater, due to strict Swedish government regulations on repurposing wastewater for drinking. But [aptly named RecoLab business developer Amanda] Haux is hoping that will change, particularly in municipalities where water shortages may become more common due to climate change.
Lots of liberal hopes hang on climate change. After all, if temperatures don’t happen to trend warmer, global warming hoaxers will have to make fools of themselves by telling us cold weather is caused by warm weather.
The modern toilet was developed by white guys like the also aptly named Thomas Crapper. Therefore, toilets are racist in addition to being offensive to the climate. Prepare to do without them.
Hidden files are typically used by the operating system and apps you use to store data. You don’t normally need to access them, but it can be helpful. Photograph: Getty Images
Your phones and computers hold more than you might realize. The files that you can view by default on Windows, macOS, Android, and iOS are by no means everything that’s stored on those systems.
These hidden files are typically used by the operating system and the applications you’re running to store data that you don’t normally need access to—indeed, data that can interfere with the smooth running of your device if it’s edited in the wrong way or deleted.
User settings and app configurations are often saved as hidden files, for example. Programs need these files to run, but users don’t really need access to them. Hidden file caches are common as well, temporary stores of data to speed up software operations.
This guide comes with a warning then—you edit or delete hidden files from your devices at your own risk, and you really shouldn’t have to do anything with these files anyway.
Viewing them can be useful, though, in terms of troubleshooting problems you might be having with your phone or laptop, or for trying to work out exactly where all your digital storage space has got to. Here’s how to make these files visible.
Windows
Some Windows files are more hidden than others. Screenshot: David Nield via Microsoft
You can view hidden files on Windows by opening up a File Explorer window, switching to the View tab on the ribbon bar, and checking the Hidden items box. Windows will remember your choice until you uncheck the box again, even if you close down File Explorer or reboot your computer.
Hidden files and folders appear with slightly faded out thumbnails in File Explorer, so they’re easy to see at a glance, and they’ll also show up in searches once you’ve made them visible. To make a file hidden, or to unhide a file, right-click on it and choose Properties and General: You’ll see the Hidden check box at the bottom.
There is another category of hidden file on Windows: Even with the Hidden items box checked, Windows still keeps key operating system files out of sight so they can’t be tampered with. To see these files, from the View tab in File Explorer click Options, open the View tab, and uncheck the Hide protected operating system files (Recommended) box in Advanced settings.
macOS
You can get to the hidden macOS Library folder from Finder. Screenshot: David Nield via Apple
The easiest way to see hidden files on a computer running macOS is to use the Finder app. Open it up, then use the keyboard shortcut Cmd+Shift+. (that’s the period key) to unhide files and folders (or to hide them again). The setting stays in place until you change it (across reboots and so on).
You’ll see that hidden files and folders look a little grayed out compared with normal files and folders, making them easier to identify. To actually change the status of a file or folder, you need to open up the Terminal utility, input the command “chflags hidden” (to hide files) or “chflags nohidden” (to unhide files), then drag the relevant items on to the Terminal window from Finder.
macOS also has an entire hidden folder called the Library folder, where all kinds of user accounts settings and file caches are kept. To see this folder in particular, launch Finder, open the Go menu and pick Go to Folder, then enter “~/Library” as your destination.
Android
The default Android Files app can show hidden files. Screenshot: David Nield via Google
If you’re looking for files on Android, then the built-in Files app is the obvious place to go: It helpfully splits files up into categories (including downloads and images, for example), so you can find what you’re after more easily.
You’re not seeing everything by default, though. Tap the menu button (three horizontal lines, top left), then choose Settings: That will lead you to a Show hidden files toggle switch that you can turn on to see files and folders that aren’t normally visible (typically files used by apps that you don’t really need to know about).
Most third-party file managers for Android also have a hidden files setting available somewhere. In addition, you can go to Storage from the main Android Settings screen to see a breakdown of how much space each app is taking up, including any hidden files that are associated with them.
iOS
The iOS files app won’t show you hidden files. Screenshot: David Nield via Apple
iOS is the odd one out in this list, because Apple’s mobile operating system doesn’t actually let you view hidden files. Hidden files stay hidden, out of reach of users, and remain solely for the use of the OS and the apps running on top of it.
Open up the Files app on iOS, choose On My iPhone, and you can see everything that’s saved to the phone itself. The folders you see here will typically be divided up by app, and they hold files relating to user settings, downloads, saved files, and so on.
From the main iOS Settings page you can also choose General and iPhone Storage to see which types of files are taking up room on the device. If you scroll right down to System Data you’re able to see how much space these hidden files are using up—but you can’t actually view the files themselves.
David Nield is a tech journalist from Manchester in the UK, who has been writing about apps and gadgets for more than two decades. You can follow him on Twitter.
A sacrilegious funeral service was held for a man who was an open homosexual, a cross-dresser, pro-LGBT activist and avowed atheist inside of Saint Patrick’s Cathedral, in New York City on February 15. Cross-dressed attendees filled the cathedral with obscenities and blasphemies. In fact, the sacrilegious “service” looked like a Drag Queen Show. It was an act of defilement of “America’s Parish Church,” as Saint Patrick’s is affectionately known.
Mocking everything sacred, attendees at the funeral of notorious pro-transgender activist known as “Cecilia” Gentili (a man) gave a gross mockery of a funeral. The New York Times reports on what took place at Saint Patrick’s Cathedral:
“The service on Thursday [February 15] was an event that most likely had no precedent in Catholic history. The pews were packed with mourners, many of them transgender, who wore daring high-fashion outfits and cheered as eulogists led them in praying for transgender rights and access to gender-affirming health care.” (NYT, Feb. 17, 2024)
Breitbart further explains:
“An image of Gentili with a halo, surrounded by the Spanish words for ‘whore,’ ‘transvestite,’ ‘blessed,’ and ‘mother’ was placed at the foot of the altar for the Feb. 15 event, which was attended by some 1000 people, many of whom appeared in drag [i.e., cross-dressed in a gaudy way].” (Breitbart, Feb 19, 2024)
According to the Catholic News Agency:
“Throughout the liturgy, the presider, Father Edward Dougherty, referred to Gentili with feminine pronouns and described the trans-identifying man as ‘our sister’ […] while attendees frequently and approvingly referred to Gentili as the ‘mother of whores.’ ” (CNA, Feb. 16, 2024)
“A rendition of the ‘Ave Maria’ by the cathedral cantor was interrupted when an attendee shouted ‘Ave Cecilia!’ and danced down the center aisle.” (CNA, Feb. 16, 2024)
The New York Times adds:
“The Rev. James Martin, a well-known Jesuit writer who advocates a more inclusive approach from the church, said it was ‘wonderful’ that St. Patrick’s had agreed to hold Ms. Gentili’s funeral.” (NYT, Feb. 15, 2024)
This is a terrible blasphemy, and one we cannot ignore. As faithful Catholics, we must firmly resist every effort to normalize blasphemy and homosexual sin inside the Holy Catholic Church, even when our shepherds do nothing to stop it. We must protect the integrity of the truth and stand with the teaching of Our Lord Jesus Christ.
Please sign our petition against this attack on the integrity of the Faith.
Sign your petition now!
15000 Goal 47.27% 7091 Signatures
To: Cardinal Timothy Dolan Archbishop of New York
With sorrow and disgust, I heard about the public sacrilege held inside St. Patrick’s Cathedral on February 15, 2024. The funeral “service” for a pro-LGBT activist and avowed atheist, which included lewd drag queens applauding sin and mocking the Church, defiled the house of God as never before in history.
I prayerfully hope Your Eminence will formally repair the blasphemy and sacrilege committed against Jesus and Mary with real and lasting measures, including acts of public reparation to God.
When a company announces a recall, market withdrawal, or safety alert, the FDA posts the company’s announcement as a public service. FDA does not endorse either the product or the company.
Company Announcement Date: February 23, 2024 FDA Publish Date: February 23, 2024 Product Type: Food & Beverages Reason for Announcement:
Recall Reason Description
Product contains yellow oleander, a poisonous plant Company Name: G.A. Mart dba H&Natural Brand Name: Product Description:
Product Description
Brazil Seed Pure Natural Semilla de Brasil & Tejo Root, Raiz de Tejocte
Company Announcement
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE – February 22, 2024 – San Luis, AZ, G.A. Mart dba H&Natural, is voluntarily recalling 2 lots of H&NATURAL TejoRoot, 10g pills and 2 lots of H&NATURAL Brazil Seed, .167g Seeds to the consumer level. The products have been found via random FDA testing to contain yellow oleander, a poisonous plant native to Mexico and Central America.
Risk Statement: Ingestion of yellow oleander can cause neurologic, gastrointestinal and cardiovascular adverse health effects that may be severe, or even fatal. Symptoms may include nausea, vomiting, dizziness, diarrhea, abdominal pain, cardiac changes, dysrhythmia and more.
The company has received one report of gastrointestinal illness, including painful symptoms in conjunction with internal bleeding in connection with H&NATURAL TejoRoot and has not received any reports of adverse events in connection with H&NATURAL Brazil Seed.
The recalled dietary supplements can be identified by the H&NATURAL logo and the following descriptions:
Tejo Root, Raiz de Tejocte, H&Natural, Healthy and Natural, Dietary Supplement, 10g pills, is packaged in a box or bottle, with UPC (196852946921)
• Brazil Seed Pure Natural Semilla de Brasil, H& Natural, Healthy and Natural, 0.167g seeds, packaged in a box or bottle, with UPC (195893047529) (196852820641) (195893698721) (195893236893)(196852134618) (195893336975)
Recalled lots are labeled with the following expiration dates, 3/24 and 5/24.
G.A. Mart is notifying its customers by email and customers can request a refund of all recalled products by contacting G.A. Mart dba H&Natural. Consumers that have the recalled H&NATURAL TejoRoot or H&NATURAL Brazil Seed lots should stop using the products and discard. Consumers should contact their physician or healthcare provider if they have experienced any problems that may be related to taking or using this drug product.
Consumers with questions regarding this recall can contact G.A. Mart by phone at (928)389-4805 or ag@gamartgroup.com on Monday through Friday from 9 am to 5 pm, MST.
Adverse reactions or quality problems experienced with the use of this product may be reported to the FDA’s MedWatch Adverse Event Reporting program either online, by regular mail or by fax.
Regular Mail or Fax: Download form or call 1- 800-332-1088 to request a reporting form, then complete and return to the address on the pre-addressed form, or submit by fax to 1-800-FDA-0178
This recall is being conducted with the knowledge of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
The US leader’s offensive comment only proves that Moscow is better off with him in the White House, the Russian president has said
US President Joe Biden’s recent insulting remarks are proof that it would be better for Russia if he stayed in office, Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Thursday.
Speaking at a fundraiser in California on Wednesday, Biden had called Putin a “crazy son of a b*tch.” Russian journalist Pavel Zarubin asked the Russian president to comment on this.
“When you asked me our preference for the next US president, I said we would work with any, but for us, for Russia, Biden was better,” Putin replied. “Judging by what he said, I was absolutely right.”
“That’s the appropriate reaction to what I said,” Putin continued. “It’s not like he could say ‘Good job, Volodya, thank you for the helping hand’. We understand what is going on there, in terms of internal politics.”
Biden’s insulting comments “mean I was right,” Putin said. In terms of who Moscow would like to see in the White House, he added, “I can say it again: Biden.”
In an interview with Zarubin last week, Putin described Biden as “a more experienced and predictable person…a politician of the old sort” and waved off claims of the US president’s much-discussed apparent dementia.
Putin is visiting Russia’s Republic of Tatarstan. Zarubin caught up with him after the Russian president took a Tu-160M strategic bomber for a spin.
Earlier in the day, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov condemned Biden’s comments as “shameful” and said he had brought “great disgrace” to the US.
Ahead of the 2016 US presidential election, Putin had complimented Republican candidate Donald Trump, who had campaigned on “getting along” with Russia. After Trump defeated their candidate Hillary Clinton, the Democrats invented a conspiracy theory about “Russian meddling” in the election and accused Trump of “Kremlin ties,” using both to sabotage Trump’s presidency.
The Russian president recently commented on the 2020 US election – which Biden officially won with the most votes ever – by describing it as questionable in terms of legitimacy.
The Biden White House has already denounced Putin’s “endorsement” of their commander-in-chief, with National Security Council spokesman John Kirby insisting that Russia “should just stay out of our elections.”
When a company announces a recall, market withdrawal, or safety alert, the FDA posts the company’s announcement as a public service. FDA does not endorse either the product or the company.
Company Announcement Date: February 12, 2024 FDA Publish Date: February 21, 2024 Product Type: Food & Beverages Foodborne Illness Reason for Announcement:
Recall Reason Description
Potential for Listeria monocytogenes contamination Company Name: Rico Brand Brand Name: Product Description:
Company Announcement
Brand
Product Name
UPC
Size Rico Cheese Enchiladas with Red 4/pkg, 65366006001 14.5 oz Rico Cheese Enchiladas with Green 4/pkg, 65366006002 14.5 oz Rico Chicken Enchilada with Rice & Beans/Green 65366006015 14 oz Rico Chicken Enchilada with Mole, Rice & Beans, 65366006016 14 oz
Rico Brand of Salt Lake City, Utah is voluntary recalling Ready-to-eat Enchiladas made with Queso Fresco containing cheese as part of the voluntary recall from Rizo-Lopez Foods, Inc. due to potential contamination with Listeria monocytogenes, an organism which can cause serious and sometimes fatal infections in young children, frail or elderly people, and others with weakened immune systems. Although healthy individuals may suffer only short-term symptoms such as high fever, severe headache, stiffness, nausea, abdominal pain and diarrhea, Listeria infection can cause miscarriages and stillbirths among pregnant women.
Rico Enchiladas were distributed in northern Utah Supermarkets (Smith’s, Harmons, Macey’s The Store, Fresh Markets).
Recalled products include the products below. They are packaged in a in a Deep Meal tray – Plant Fiber – Film 800.
With the following lot numbers and expiration dates: Lot. 0234 02/13/24, Lot. 0264 02/16/24, Lot. 0304 02/20/24, Lot. 0334 02/23/24. These codes can be found attached to the main label on a white label.
No illnesses have been reported to date in connection with these products.
Customers who have purchased this product are advised to dispose of it or return it to the place of purchase for a full refund. Additionally, customers can contact Rico Brand at 801-433-9923 from Monday to Friday, 8:00 am to 5:00 pm. MST, or send an email to jorge@ricobrand.com for further assistance.
The National Multiple Sclerosis Society finally apologized for firing a 90-year-old volunteer who failed to use preferred pronouns while celebrating the diversity, equity, and inclusion movement.
In a rather lengthy statement from the non-profit organization, the MS society wrote that it had apologized “to our longtime, dedicated volunteer Fran Itkoff” after the group asked the volunteer to “step down from her role as a group leader because of statements made that we viewed as not aligning with our recently implemented diversity, equity and inclusion policy.”
“We realize now that we made a mistake, and we should have had more conversations with Fran before making this decision,” the statement read.
“While we acted at the time with the best intentions, we did not have clear protocols in place,” the statement added. “We should have spent more time with Fran to help her understand why, as an organization, we are dedicated to building a diverse and inclusive movement where everyone has equitable access to the care, connections, and support they need to live their best lives. “
“We apologized to Fran directly and reached out to her to find a way to continue to work together,” the statement continued. “In the spirit of continuous learning, we are focused on evaluating our processes and fortifying our learning to ensure our team members are equipped on the best ways to implement all of our policies…”
BREAKING: National Ms Society just released a statement backtracking on the entire story saying they were WRONG and APOLOGIZE to the 90-year-old volunteer who they forced to step down over pronouns.
Itkoff — who’s been offering her time and services to the non-profit for more than 60 years — was let go recently because she “did not understand pronouns,” as previously reported.
Her story ended up going viral after she did an interview with Libs of TikTok documenting her experience. The former volunteer said she received an email claiming she had failed to “abide by [the MS Society’s] Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion guidelines,” which resulted in her being let go.
Speaking to LOTT creator Chaya Raichik, Itkoff said, “I was confused. I didn’t know what it was and what it meant,” when asked about including her pronouns in her email signature.
“I had seen it on a couple of letters that had come in after the person’s name. But I didn’t know what that meant,” she added. “So when I finally talked to [a colleague], I asked what does it mean… And she said that it meant they were all-inclusive, which didn’t make sense to me. Because it sounds like you are labeling for females, not males, if you are just putting in she/her.”
The long-time volunteer said she was asked to step down a few days later. “I was completely shocked,” she said. “I couldn’t believe that … I had to read it a couple of times to see if I’m getting what she said.”
Itkoff told Libs of TikTok she started volunteering, in part, because her husband had MS, a degenerative disease impacting the brain, spinal cord, and optic nerves, and continued to volunteer long after his death 20 years ago.
I have created this site to help people have fun in the kitchen. I write about enjoying life both in and out of my kitchen. Life is short! Make the most of it and enjoy!
There are two ways to be fooled. One is to believe what isn’t true; the other is to refuse to believe what is true. —Soren Kierkegaard. "...truth is true even if nobody believes it, and falsehood is false even if everybody believes it. That is why truth does not yield to opinion, fashion, numbers, office, or sincerity--it is simply true and that is the end of it" - Os Guinness, Time for Truth, pg.39. “He that takes truth for his guide, and duty for his end, may safely trust to God’s providence to lead him aright.” - Blaise Pascal. "There is but one straight course, and that is to seek truth and pursue it steadily" – George Washington letter to Edmund Randolph — 1795. We live in a “post-truth” world. According to the dictionary, “post-truth” means, “relating to or denoting circumstances in which objective facts are less influential in shaping public opinion than appeals to emotion and personal belief.” Simply put, we now live in a culture that seems to value experience and emotion more than truth. Truth will never go away no matter how hard one might wish. Going beyond the MSM idealogical opinion/bias and their low information tabloid reality show news with a distractional superficial focus on entertainment, sensationalism, emotionalism and activist reporting – this blogs goal is to, in some small way, put a plug in the broken dam of truth and save as many as possible from the consequences—temporal and eternal. "The further a society drifts from truth, the more it will hate those who speak it." – George Orwell “There are two ways to be fooled. One is to believe what isn’t true; the other is to refuse to believe what is true.” ― Soren Kierkegaard
Following in the spirit of Britain's Queen Boudica, Queen of the Iceni. A boudica.us site. I am an opinionator, do your own research, verification. Reposts, reblogs do not neccessarily reflect our views.