Sarah Hoyt explains…
…about the bubblegum pig and why telling lies is not a good idea.
She also explains what it’s like to be a person born to write fiction, which reminds me once again of one reason I wasn’t all that good at it. The people in my head were always real.
I had seen that phrase “bubblegum pig” and thought it was a polite way to say, “tar baby.”
For those young who never saw “Song of the South” the tar baby was literally a baby made of tar. One particular character gets angry at it because it won’t speak, and hits it, and gets a hand stuck. Then, to get the hand out, a foot gets stuck. And so on . . . . Nowadays using the term is raciss.
In today’s world the case of Congresswoman Ilhan Omar using Minnesota’s liberal voting laws to cheat on a massive scale is a tar baby, in that no one wants to touch it. The Secretary of State, the Attorney General (both Soros creatures) and the county attorney have all passed, leaving . . . the Minneapolis Police Department.
Oh, and the why of it: Ilhan Omar can have sex with a dog in front of the apartment towers in Cedar-Riverside, AKA Little Mogadishu, and still easily win, because so many liberal whites vote for her out of whatever reason. But here’s the deal: the accusation is up to 80,000 Somali votes. Now some would already vote for her. Cut it in half, then again, and again. Now you’re talking about 10,000 votes.
Hillary Clinton won Minnesota in 2016 by 8,000 votes. Most statewide offices are decided on margins like that (currently all Dems). Al Franken won the recount by just 300 votes. See, it’s not Ilhan that needs them. It’s the rest of the ballot.
Sarah Hoyt makes an excellent point. This virus has been treated as if it were the Black Death. Even for those of us in the 70s and above, the death rate doesn’t come close to that, although our risks are higher. Having shut down the country over an over-hyped infectious disease, Hoyt asks, how can the “authorities” expect us to believe them the next time a disease comes calling?
I like Sarah Hoyt. Her head is screwed on right.
Hoyt is always fun to read, but it’s hard to keep track of her layered parentheticals.
She has flaws in her soul progress,but is doing the best she can. We’ll see which class she graduates to or whether she has to repeat this grade.