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Top 10 Most-Offensive Things About Anti-Gay Tennessee Senator Campfield (That You Didn’t Already Know)

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Republican Senator Stacey Campfield, the now-infamous Republican Tennessee state senator who made headlines last week by claiming it is “virtually impossible” to contract HIV/AIDS from heterosexual sex and who claims that gays live a significantly shorter life than straights, it turns out, has strong ties to newly-converted Roman Catholic Newt Gingrich.

Yes, the man who has basked in the media anti-gay spotlight, the man who has seemingly enjoyed spreading dangerous lies about both gay people and the dangers — or, apparently, according to him — lack thereof, of unprotected sex, Stacey Campfield, is the man behind Tennessee’s “Don’t Say Gay” bill that seeks to ensure homosexuality is not even mentioned in public schools, much less taught that it exists. Senator Campfield draws a comparison to bestiality and homosexuality, saying, in defense of his indefensible “Don’t’ Say Gay” bill,

[Homosexuals] do not naturally reproduce. It has not been proven that it is nature. It happens in nature, but so does beastiality That does not make it right or something we should be teaching in school.

Despite recent anti-gay bullying teen suicides in Tennessee, Senator Campfield says, “That bullying thing is the biggest lark out there.”

In the same interview in which he said it is “virtually impossible” to contract HIV/AIDS from heterosexual sex, Campfield said that “most people realize that AIDS came from the homosexual community — it was one guy screwing a monkey, if I recall correctly, and then having sex with men. It was an airline pilot, if I recall….”

And with that, we give you…

Top 10 Most-Offensive Things About Anti-Gay Tennessee Senator Campfield (That You Didn’t Already Know)

1. Campfield is actually Newt Gingrich’s Tennessee deputy state director and campaign co-chairman.

2. Last year, Campfield — possibly illegally — demanded $1000 plus expenses to “debate” LGBT activist and well-known writer Del Shores on Homosexuality and the Bible.

3. Campfield in 2008 wrote, “illegals, they are similar to an invading military and are not, and in my opinion should not, be given the same rights and privileges as citizens or visitors.”

4. Campfield, who is a real estate investor/owner/landlord, made news in 2009 for having one of his rental properties condemned, yet it was inhabited at the time. The tenants, according to a local news source, “allege the Republican lawmaker has dragged his heels making repairs, threatened to sue them if they break their lease and pumped raw sewage out of the basement that went into a storm drain.”

5. In 2007, Campfield, according to the New York Times, “introduced legislation that would require death certificates for aborted fetuses, which would be likely to create public records identifying women who have abortions.” The Times added that the “chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, called Mr. Campfield’s proposal “the most preposterous bill I’ve seen” in an eight-year legislative career.”

6. In 2008 Campfield created a fund that funneled money people overpaid on their taxes into an abortion prevention fund.

7. Campfield has also proposed a bill to drug test people in Tennessee who get public assistance.

8. Campfield has proposed a bill that would reduce payments to parents on state assistance (TANF) if they have children who fail to maintain “satisfactory” progress in school.

9. Campfield has proposed a bill that would force voters to register for a party that most closely represents their views.

10. In 2005, Campfield tried to join Tennessee’s legislative Black Caucus, and when they refused him (Campfield is not Black) he said, “My understanding is that the KKK doesn’t even ban members by race.” MSNBC reported Campfield said that the KKK “has less racist bylaws” than the black lawmakers’ group. Campfield then penned, “I too dream…,” in which he reprinted Martin Luther King, Jr.’s “I Have A Dream” speech.

Bonus:

11. On both of his own personal Facebook pages, (one, two, a violation of Facebook rules?) Campfield posted this strange quotation, under Favorite Quotations.

12. In 2006, Campfield reportedly called supporters of his opponent, asked them why they had lawn signs in their yards for his opponent, and asked them if they were going to vote for her.

13. Campfield was the subject of much scorn in 2006 after news broke that he may have been living with a sex offender who had raped a 13-year old girl. Campfield claims he only rented property to him.

 14. In 2008, Campfield sponsored a bill that “would allow teachers and personnel at K-12 schools to bring weapons if they had gun permits,” and would allow guns on college campuses in Tennessee.

There is a recall Senator Stacey Campfield petition on Facebook.

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‘Fundamental Miscalculation’: Columnist Says Democrats Have ‘Little Chance’ in Midterms

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Democrats made a “fundamental miscalculation” in the redistricting wars and now have “little chance” in the November midterms, argues Eric Garcia at The Independent.

Calling the Virginia Supreme Court’s nullification of a voter-led ballot initiative that allowed the creation of four Democratic congressional districts a “massive body blow,” Garcia also points to the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision “virtually nullifying the Voting Rights Act” by requiring Louisiana to redraw its congressional map. There is also the Tennessee legislature turning majority-Black Memphis into another GOP seat — erasing the only Democratic seat in that state.

“And this does not count the redrawing of congressional districts in Missouri and North Carolina before the Supreme Court decision, or Alabama, which is under a court order to not redraw its map until 2030,” Garcia says. He notes that California has been the only state to respond, doing so by adding five Democratic seats to the state.

Zachary Donnini, the head of data science at VoteHub, a political news outlet, “put it bleakly for Democrats.”

Donnini says that now, instead of having to flip just three seats to take the majority in the House, Democrats will have to flip an additional nine seats — a total of twelve in all.

Democrats tried to “lead by example,” but, Garcia says, they turned their states into “laboratories for democracy” by creating “unilateral” disarmament “on behalf of the Democrats” — an act, he labels, a “fundamental failure.”

But he offers Democrats a little hope.

Texas’s redistricting plan relied on Hispanic voters, “after flirting with Trump,” to stay aligned with the GOP. That might have changed. The situation is the same in South Florida, “where the state’s normally conservative Cuban Americans have been caught in the Trump immigration dragnet.”

Pointing to inflation, the economy overall, and Trump’s Iran war, Garcia says Republicans holding on to the House might be “even more difficult.”

Democrats, however, made a “fundamental miscalculation,” Garcia concludes. “By creating guardrails and rules, Republicans did not see a reason to compromise and meet them halfway. It made them targets for weakening. Now, Democrats have put themselves in a bind. They only have themselves to blame.”

 

Image: Public Domain by Architect of the Capitol via Flickr

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Trump Is Bored With His Iran War — Iran Isn’t: Columnist

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President Donald Trump is “bored” with his Iran war, but Iran is not — and isn’t ready for the war to be over, argues Jonathan Lemire at The Atlantic.

The president, now in a “bind,” is tired of the war he started, and has declared victory several times, while Iran “does not want the war to come to a close.”

Trump’s GOP “is warily watching rising gas prices and falling poll numbers,” while the president “doesn’t want to be bogged down in a Middle East conflict like some of his predecessors were. He doesn’t want it to upend his high-stakes summit next week in China. He is ready to move on.”

“The president, five aides and outside advisers told me, is convinced that he can sell any sort of agreement as a win. But at least for now, the man who wrote The Art of the Deal can’t even get Iran to the negotiating table.”

Iran hasn’t even responded to Trump’s one-page memo “that is far more of an extension of the cease-fire than a treaty to end the conflict.”

Trump, Lemire says, did not expect the war to go like this. After his successful excursion into Venezuela, he “set his eyes on Iran, telling confidants that it would ‘be another Venezuela,’ a pair of outside advisers told me.”

It has not been that.

Trump expected his Iran war to last days, or maybe a week or two. It has now been months.

And while administration officials believe the blockade will be successful, experts say Iran can withstand it for months, time the president, with the midterms coming, does not have.

“It then becomes a matter of pain: Which side can withstand the most economic hardship?” Lemire asks.

Trump, impatient, has debated declaring victory and moving on.

“Secretary of State Marco Rubio went so far as to say earlier this week that the war was over,” Lemire notes. “But doing so now would leave the conflict’s goals, as outlined at various times by the president and his aides, unfulfilled.”

The president, says Lemire, “wants the war to end. He wants a deal. But deals take two parties, and there’s no evidence that Iran is interested in bailing Trump out of a dilemma of his own making.”

 

Image via Reuters 

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Lauren Boebert Knows What Aliens Really Are: ‘Fallen Angels’ — and Possibly Demonic

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U.S. Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-CO) says that aliens from outer space are actually “fallen angels and Nephilim” from the Old Testament of the Bible, according to Right Wing Watch. On Friday, President Donald Trump released declassified government UFO files.

“God is the creator of the universe,” Congresswoman Boebert says in recorded video published Friday by Right Wing Watch. “He’s never not going to create.”

The Colorado Republican lawmaker said that it’s “always been something in my mind to say, ‘Well, how can we be the only ones?’ Like, God’s not going to stop creating just with us.”

“But the more I look into this,” she continued, speaking from inside a car, “the more I see the Old Testament and what was told to us there, of fallen angels, and Nephilim.”

She defended her take by saying, “this is in the Bible,” and there’s “nothing that says that fallen angels, that Nephilim just disappeared. And so I believe that this could be an aspect of it.”

Boebert went on to say that “things that we have seen…could resemble portals,” although in the video she does not explain further.

“And, you know, I mean, this is, we serve an infinite God, a God of the universe. And to say that this is the only realm, is ignorant.”

She denied that aliens are a “Marvin the Martian kind of thing.”

“But I do believe that this is more spiritual, and if you really want to go there, demonic.”

 

Image via Shutterstock 

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