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Dear @RepScottPerry: Native-born Americans like you are no more American, and no less American, than an immigrant like me. And with every passing year, there will be more people who look like me in the US. You can’t stop it. So take your racist replacement theory and shove it. https://t.co/By1d2OBzv9 Ted Lieu (@tedlieu) April 15, 2021
I got this idea of masculine vs. feminine preferences in discussion from theologian Alastair Roberts, who explained this dichotomy in his eloquent indoor voice in
DUBLIN The
Sunday Times of London has fired the writer of an op-ed article denouncing the campaign by women of the British Broadcasting Corporation for equal pay after the column sparked widespread accusations that it was anti-Semitic and misogynistic.
The move came after the article, by Kevin Myers, an Irish journalist with a record of provocative right-wing statements, was pulled from its website and the editor of The Sunday Times and the editor of the paper’s Irish edition apologized for the column.
Framing his piece as an attack on the push to close the pay gap at the BBC, Mr. Myers wrote:
Motorsport: Shane van Gisbergen s sensational Supercars streak ends
18 Apr, 2021 09:00 AM
2 minutes to read
Jamie Whincup edged Shane van Gisbergen in today s first race. Photo / Getty
NZ Herald
Shane van Gisbergen has had to settle for equalling a Supercars record rather than setting a new one.
After six races of the season, the Kiwi driver was on track to surpass the mark for the best start to a campaign, having equalled that of Allan Moffat (1977) and Mark Skaife (1994). However, it was teammate Jamie Whincup who ended van Gisbergen s bid to etch his name alone in the history books, winning the first of the two Tasmania Supersprint races on Sunday.