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The book "Boy Toy" that these woman unanimously voted to keep in the school library:

Plot and Theme: The novel deals with the difficult topic of predatory sexual grooming and abuse. It follows Josh, a 12-year-old seventh grader who is manipulated into a sexual relationship by his young female history teacher, Eve.
 

The book "Boy Toy" that these woman unanimously voted to keep in the school library:


The problem with that guy is his delivery. He behaves like a jerk with the name-calling and abrasive speech, then calling out his "rights" instead of speaking calmly and making his point. He wasted everyone's time and certainly didn't change anyone's mind. He doesn't even realize that HE is part of the problem.
 
The problem with that guy is his delivery. He behaves like a jerk with the name-calling and abrasive speech, then calling out his "rights" instead of speaking calmly and making his point. He wasted everyone's time and certainly didn't change anyone's mind. He doesn't even realize that HE is part of the problem.
There is more to it than that though.

The community has been up in arms over placing that book into the schools. Others had previously tried calmer approaches and every time they got shut down.

It's a fact that schools have become dominated by toxic feminism. Things like books promoting rape and power fantasies are merely the most visible sign of a pervasive problem.

I wasn't shocked to find out people are reaching their limits. One thing clearly demonstrated there is that this entire board is incompetent to hold their positions. It is not their place to make policy decisions based on their "hurt feelings."

The answer to evil is not polite words or euphemism. We can see that here:

 
The Anesthesia Risk After 60 That Nobody Warns You About


I have to say, that video creates fear for no real purpose. People at any age seldom have surgery unless it is necessary, so obviously a person over 60 does not need the additional stress of wondering about anesthesia risks.

I have had a chemo port installed, a mastectomy and an eye surgery "over 60" and none of those was an option if I wanted to live and see, so obviously the anesthesia risk was something I could not avoid. Point being, I had no idea anesthesia was a higher risk for me and I'm glad I was ignorant because I didn't need more stress than I already had to deal with.
 
I have to say, that video creates fear for no real purpose. People at any age seldom have surgery unless it is necessary, so obviously a person over 60 does not need the additional stress of wondering about anesthesia risks.

I have had a chemo port installed, a mastectomy and an eye surgery "over 60" and none of those was an option if I wanted to live and see, so obviously the anesthesia risk was something I could not avoid. Point being, I had no idea anesthesia was a higher risk for me and I'm glad I was ignorant because I didn't need more stress than I already had to deal with.
I agree with this. I have also had several procedures with my heart where an anesthetic was necessary, and would do it again. Actually, I will need the pacemaker replaced in a few years when the battery gets low, and I intend to do that. As Beth says, when it is your life, or quality of life, you do what is necessary.
 
I have to say, that video creates fear for no real purpose. People at any age seldom have surgery unless it is necessary, so obviously a person over 60 does not need the additional stress of wondering about anesthesia risks.

I have had a chemo port installed, a mastectomy and an eye surgery "over 60" and none of those was an option if I wanted to live and see, so obviously the anesthesia risk was something I could not avoid. Point being, I had no idea anesthesia was a higher risk for me and I'm glad I was ignorant because I didn't need more stress than I already had to deal with.

Beth, I read something about this too. There are a lot of seniors having operations, so who knows?
 
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