Colorado’s Jefferson County Public Schools had 61 male athletes on girls’ sports rosters.
Not one. Not a handful. 61.
Biological males taking roster spots, wins, scholarships, and safety from actual girls, all while the district cheered it on.
This isn’t “inclusion.” It’s erasure of girls’ sports.
How many more districts are hiding the same numbers?
@WallStreetApes She also doesn't know how to use a seat belt. Her 2 brain cells are working overtime multitasking making the video and driving at the same time.
@EricLDaugh Queue the lefty complaints: But what about the homeless, where did they go? No graffiti is racist. Clean water is white supremacy. Orange man bad.
@EndWokeness The city is conveniently waiting to release the cop names and pictures so the cops, their families, and friends have plenty of time to scrub their online activities. I bet they had some incriminating posts.
@EndWokeness The city is conveniently waiting to release the cop names and pictures so the cops, their families, and friends have plenty of time to scrub their online activities. I bet they had some incriminating posts.
@EndWokeness The city is conveniently waiting to release the cop names and pictures so the cops, their families, and friends have plenty of time to scrub their online activities. I bet they had some incriminating posts.
@EndWokeness The city is conveniently waiting to release the cop names and pictures so the cops, their families, and friends have plenty of time to scrub their online activities. I bet they had some incriminating posts.
@LisaJaneSpencer This is funny. She showed her true colors though when she dumped the trash in a nice neat pile. That's not how it really would have been done.
The E. Jean Carroll case against President Trump is one of the strangest civil cases in American history. The foundational problem is this: Carroll could not identify when the alleged incident occurred — not even the year with any precision.
That should have killed the case as dead as a skunk on the road right there.
Without a temporal anchor, no defendant — regardless of guilt or innocence — can mount an alibi defense. Trump, who has maintained detailed calendars and staff records for decades, was denied the most basic tool of self-defense: the ability to establish where he was. That is not a technicality. It is a due process violation at the constitutional level.
Then Carroll produced the one piece of physical evidence she claimed corroborated her account — the dress she wore during the alleged incident. It was subsequently established that the dress was designed after the incident could have occurred. The sole corroborating evidence falsified her timeline.
The case proceeded anyway.
The resulting verdict was then weaponized in a defamation suit — where Trump was held liable for denying the allegation, while being procedurally barred from defending against it, because it was already "proven" in another court, regardless how flawed the procedure was. He was punished, in effect, for asserting his own innocence.
Compounding everything: coordinated professional and physical threats so thoroughly intimidated the legal community that attorneys refused these cases regardless of available fees. When you systematically destroy a defendant's ability to retain counsel of choice, you forfeit the right to a legitimate verdict.
An allegation is not evidence. Process without substance is not law. And a verdict produced under these conditions carries no legitimate authority — whatever its formal status.
Not only is it the right move to investigate Carroll, but every other person involved as well. Trump is owed serious damages here, and there may be a few people who belong in prison for their roles in the case.