@MattWalshBlog This is an excellent post. It deals with a current issue in our society (status of pets), it is well reasoned, the right amount of internet snark to rile up those looking to take offense at everything and it's hilarious!
My patience for other people's dogs is zero. If I'm inconvenienced or disrupted by someone's dog for even one second, it's unacceptable. Your dog should just not ever be my problem. But children are human beings. They are the next generation. We need them to exist and be participants in society or else human society goes extinct. Therefore the baseline patience we have for kids, even when they're slightly disruptive, should be INFINITELY higher than our baseline patience for dogs. And yet a lot of people, because they're retarded and selfish and worship their pets, have this exactly reversed.
Nothing to see here, just a nice upside down flaming star with a circle around it amidst more flames and blood red spotlights. Probably just an oversight...
#Olympics2026
@JerrySeinfeld, my wife and I attended your recent show at @CasinoRamaLive, it was amazing! I laughed so much my face was sore, my tear ducts were empty and my voice was hoarse. Thanks for making the trip, and sharing your gift with us Canadians!!
BREAKING: Canadian Press forced to retract three separate “erroneous statements” from one story alone.
It was another false hit piece now thoroughly discredited.
Remember that next time they attack me.
China: Birth rate hits all-time low: 6.77 births per 1,000 people.
Singapore: Birth rate has reached a record low in 2022 with only 35,605 babies born throughout the year.
U.S: Population Flatlining As Birth Rate Stagnates.
Italy: Birth rate drops to historic low.
Japan: Birth rate declines for 7th consecutive yr in 2022 to record low.
South Korea: Birth rate remains alarmingly low.
In Canada, healthcare services mandate that for an individual to be eligible for organ transplantation, they must have received their Covid-19 vaccinations. Yet, it simultaneously allows the organs of unvaccinated individuals, once deceased, to be harvested and given to vaccinated recipients. This policy delineates a striking paradox that raises pressing ethical and logical concerns.
A dichotomy of this magnitude seems to impose a form of biological segregation, inherently suggesting that the health of vaccinated individuals is superior to that of the unvaccinated, a claim that lacks substantial scientific backing. The health of an individual cannot, and should not, be determined solely based on their vaccination status.
Moreover, the policy's readiness to utilize the organs of the unvaccinated upon their death further magnifies the inconsistency. The organs of unvaccinated individuals, seemingly undesirable while they live due to the vaccination policy, suddenly become a sought-after resource upon their demise.
This policy seems to have lost sight of the fact that health is a multifaceted construct, and vaccination status is only one piece of the puzzle. This flip-flop stance is inherently contradictory and lacks a sound logical foundation.
Is it not a glaring oversight to dismiss the health potential of unvaccinated individuals while they live, only to covet the same in death?