Exhibit A: North Carolina governor Pat McCrory:
Gov. Pat McCrory addressed the controversial North Carolina bathroom law at a press conference Monday afternoon, explaining why he has decided to sue the federal government for trying to block it.Just five days ago, he related, the Justice Department sent letters to his office that insisted their law requiring government employees use public restrooms that correspond to their birth certificates is in conflict with federal policy and violates the Civil Rights Act. McCrory had a limited time to respond before the agency threatened to strip his state of federal funding.“This was a substantial request and they gave us three business days to respond to this letter,” McCrory explained.His administration asked for additional time, but they refused unless he go on record agreeing with their interpretation of the law. He could not do that – choosing instead to file a lawsuit.He now wants a federal court to clarify what the law actually is.“This is not just a North Carolina issue, this is a national issue,” he said, for it imposes a new law on every private sector in the country.“I think it’s time for the U.S. Congress to bring clarity to our national anti-discrimination provisions under Title VII and Title IX.”
Right now, he continued, the Obama administration is “bypassing Congress” to set bathroom policies for public and private employers across the country.It has taken lest than ten years for post-America to mainstream the tiny, tiny fraction of the population that so resents the DNA it was born with that it will carve up its crotches and stuff itself full of hormones other than the ones nature - and nature's God - set it up with.
And now we have the stinking DoJ codifying it at the point of a gun.
But God has blessed us with good people in the right places who will say, "Not here."
The peanut galleries can scream across the court all they want, but this is the way it works in our government of lawyers, not men. Any lawyer can tell you.
ReplyDeleteEven if we elect an "outsider" the lawyers will be there maneuvering. Trump did not get to where he is without a cadre of vicious barristers.
ReplyDeleteGod bless Pat McCrory.
ReplyDeleteLawyers, schmawyers. The basic issue here is whether post-America is going to completely abandon common sense and a reverence for the way God designed the universe and quit indulging the narcissism of everybody who resents the DNA he or she was born with.
ReplyDeleteGet God out of it, He is silent on all issues which have to work themselves out in time. And none of your business if the people want to be damned. Sure there are basic issues. It is really not an issue of resenting the DNA you were born with. God does make mistakes, if you will. This is a law enacted by a state legislature that is being challenged by a federal law. Lawyers will argue the issue. You can have a preference, but this will play itself out in a court of law. God bless the Universe! Kyrie Eleison, Christe Eleison is an age-old plaint.
ReplyDeleteTed Cruz knows. He has successfully argued numerous cases involving God.
ReplyDeleteTitles VII and IX of the 1964 Civil Rights Act say nothing about "gender identity." That's because that term / concept had not yet been invented by the infantile cultural jackboots that have poisoned post-American culture
ReplyDeleteGood argument!
DeleteYou bet it will play itself out in court. Either for the wrong or for the right
ReplyDeleteAs Mark Levine, another brilliant lawyer, said last night in his customary proto-hysterical fashion, "!!!@#$%^&&*)(*))!!!!"
ReplyDelete