For those of us interested in truth and reality, the current society in which we live can be maddening if not taken with a small dose of humor. The leftists who consistently perpetuate this idea that every word, every definition, every meaning can be subverted and manipulated to fit a political narrative is by definition insane yet ideologically brilliant.
The constantly shifting levels of appropriateness is a tactic to maintain social control over a growing majority of the population who seeks to live a simple life without confrontation — and those who actually believe this garbage.
Here’s proof:
NEW: Twitter has censored @RepJimBanks for calling HHS' Rachel Levine a man. He will be locked out of his account until he deletes the tweet, "The title of first female four-star officer gets taken by a man." pic.twitter.com/6wdDqJ36kH
— Mary Margaret Olohan (@MaryMargOlohan) October 23, 2021
In all seriousness, however, this is the true definition of satanism: a deliberate shifting of reality in an attempt to bend the world to one’s will.
The result of this satanism is what many of us refer to as a “clown world,” meaning we’re essentially forced to believe the sky isn’t blue by the liberal agitprop monopoly taking over all of society.
Our latest bit of proof that we are in fact living in a clown world is the release of USA TODAY’s ‘Woman of the Year’ nominations. Turns out, you don’t even have to be a woman to find yourself on this list, as proven by Biden’s assistant secretary of Health and Human Services, Dr. Rachel Levine.
Levine was nominated as “Woman of the Year” along with some biologically accurate honorees like Melinda French Gates, Simone Biles, and Vice President Kamala Harris, amongst others. Of course not a conservative lady in sight.
What about Virginia’s newly elected lieutenant governor Winsome Sears, a black women who clawed her way to the top through education and hard work?
The news outlet set out the criteria for nomination alongside publication of the list:
USA TODAY’s Women of the Year lead and inspire, promote and fight for equity, give others a place to seek help and find hope.
They are strong and resilient women who have been champions of change and courage, often quietly, but with powerful results. And often despite their own challenges.
USA TODAY cited the 64-year-old, who is the first openly transgender four-star officer in the Uniformed Services, on the back of promotion to “the highest-ranking openly transgender official when the Senate confirmed him as assistant secretary of health.”
His Senate confirmation was not without controversy, however. Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky pressed Levine on how to approach the current craze of transgender kids, whether they should be allowed gender reassignment medical treatments, which he obviously dodged.
Sen. @RandPaul presses @SecretaryLevine, who is transgender, on her views on giving children hormone blockers and "surgical destruction of a minor's genitalia." pic.twitter.com/G6aE28bkrd
— Washington Examiner (@dcexaminer) February 25, 2021
Sen. @RandPaul: "You're willing to let a minor take things to prevent their puberty, and you think they get back?! …
None of these drugs have been approved for this. They're all being used off-label… There's no long-term studies. We don't know what happens to them!" pic.twitter.com/jI9zQlmNN4
— Washington Examiner (@dcexaminer) February 25, 2021
Levine was responsible for Pennsylvania’s response to coronavirus since the pandemic took hold in March 2020 — and we all know how that turned out. The uber-liberal state was racked with brutal lockdown restrictions which is no way ported to science. Levine is a trained pediatrician; he’s by no means a virologist.
Levine caught intense backlash that year after it was revealed her 95-year-old mother was moved from a nursing home despite departmental advice, which initially urged nursing homes to admit “stable” coronavirus patients into the facilities.
Bottom line: she’s a man. Pretending to be a woman doesn’t make her a hero or particularly qualified for the position Biden nominated him for, nor does he belong on any ‘Woman of the Year’ list. However, he’s obviously bright, smart enough to place himself in positions of advancement and power.
Author: Elizabeth Tierney