Funny events in anti-woke world

Silvanus

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The number one book being removed from schools is Gender Queer (if you follow the link the teacher was distributing, they link the ALAs top ten list of challenged books with this one at the top.) It has illustrations of a couple using a strap-on to "have your cock in my mouth". Number two is Lawn Boy, which describes 10 year olds giving blow jobs. Number 3 is All Boys Aren't Blue, which has highly explicit descriptions of gay blow jobs.

You might have noticed a pattern here.
Do you object to the presence of any sexual scenes/themes/content in books in school libraries, or just queer ones?


"Me commenting on the climate of censorship and the chilling implications of a rejection of free speech and free association -- me commenting on that is absolutely a political choice. I stand by that," she told CNN, adding that she believes classrooms are political spaces.
"I want to be clear, too; there's a difference between political and partisan," she said. "So I take umbrage and issue with assertions that educators should not bring their politics into the classroom."
She added that the new law is designed as a trap that makes it impossible for teachers to do their jobs.
"It's intentionally designed to stifle the conversations that we need to be having in the classroom, around systemic inequality, around privilege," she said. "It's my desire and the top objective that I have as an educator, to make my classroom as inclusive as possible."
Boismier said she doesn't think she will apply to work at a different school district because there isn't a school in the state that would work with her fundamental beliefs.

In her own words, she doesn't think she can work for any school district because they would not work with her fundamental belief that classrooms are political spaces.
It's a political stance that books in school libraries should not be censored for queer content or themes of inequality/marginalised people, yes.

I would've rather seen that as a simple censorship/ anti-censorship angle rather than "left wing". But if the right wing's interest in free access to information only goes so far as stuff that doesn't challenge their prejudices...
 
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XsjadoBlayde

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Snopes answering the important tough questions.


In the summer of 2022, some social media users shared posts alleging that U.S. President Joe Biden signed an executive order that would replace cash with cryptocurrency, and allow the government to track and control people’s finances and spending.


“Biden Orders US Dollar Replaced with Trackable ‘Spyware’ Version,” announced a rattling headline from a website called Paradigm Press. Paradigm Press reported Biden’s “order” stemmed from Executive Order 14067, titled, “Ensuring Responsible Development of Digital Assets,” signed by Biden on March 9, 2022.

The Paradigm Press story dramatically asserts that Section 4 of the order basically sets up a dystopian, authoritarian regime by eliminating cash in favor of government-issued digital currency, allegedly authorizing the following:

The language in Section 4 makes Order 14067…
…the most treacherous act by a sitting President in the history of our republic.
Because Section 4 sets the stage for…
Legal government surveillance of all US citizens…
Total control over your bank accounts and purchases…
And the ability to silence all dissenting voices for good.
In this new war on freedom, the Dems aren’t coming for your guns.
No, they’re thinking much bigger than that…
They’re coming for your money.
The executive order in question doesn’t make any of those sweeping changes to the U.S. system of government, nor does it “set the stage” for such changes.

It instead lays out the Biden administration’s intent to take a multi-agency government approach to examining the risks and benefits of cryptocurrency. The order, according to the White House, focuses on six areas:

The Order lays out a national policy for digital assets across six key priorities: consumer and investor protection; financial stability; illicit finance; U.S. leadership in the global financial system and economic competitiveness; financial inclusion; and responsible innovation.
We found no language in Section 4 of the nine-section order that calls for replacing the U.S. dollar with digital currency, or takes any of the other drastic, unconstitutional steps listed by the Paradigm Press website.

Section 4 instead instructs various federal government agencies to explore the benefits and risks to the U.S. financial system of issuing digital government currency (central bank digital currencies, or CBDCs), and report how such a system would be implemented. The U.S. Attorney General, for example, is required to report whether and what legislation would be needed to in the event the U.S. government would issue CBDCs.


Section 4 also specifically states that, hypothetically, if the U.S. were to implement a future digital monetary system, it would have to protect the rights of citizens in keeping with, “democratic values, including privacy protections, and that ensures the global financial system has appropriate transparency, connectivity, and platform and architecture interoperability or transferability, as appropriate.”

The U.S. Federal Reserve stated that the potential issuing of CBDCs would entail the expansion of means of payment, not the elimination of one, namely cash.

“The Federal Reserve is committed to ensuring the continued safety and availability of cash and is considering a CBDC as a means to expand safe payment options, not to reduce or replace them,” the agency said.

According to the White House, the move is in response to the rapidly expanding use of cryptocurrencies, with an estimated 16 percent of Americans (about 40 million adults) stating they have used cryptocurrency assets.

“Over 100 countries are exploring or piloting Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs), a digital form of a country’s sovereign currency,” according to a White House fact sheet on the executive order.

According to a tracking tool provided by international policy think tank Atlantic Council, many countries are in various stages of research, testing, piloting, and implementing such currencies.
Apparently MyPillow Wierdo Mike Liddell had a hell of a drug problem back in the day.




Though honestly I'm not convinced he's off the drugs. He acts like he's still totally cranked.
Ah yeah, Lindell's "origin story." We only have his word to go by, and it just doesn't sound particularly believable, though it likely fools a lot of ppl invested in the bootstraps/conversion character arcs who have never done any drugs before. Whatever kernel of truth there may in it, it's certainly evident he's in need of an intervention right the fuck now though. 😉
 

tstorm823

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Do you object to the presence of any sexual scenes/themes/content in books in school libraries, or just queer ones?
I object to any and all blowjobs in schools. If someone was pushing books about heterosexual blowjobs, if anything, I would oppose that more. Schools should not stock any of Steven King's explicit orgy scenes.

I would've rather seen that as a simple censorship/ anti-censorship angle rather than "left wing". But if the right wing's interest in free access to information only goes so far as stuff that doesn't challenge their prejudices...
The winged-ness is relevant to how the story is presented.
 

Silvanus

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I object to any and all blowjobs in schools. If someone was pushing books about heterosexual blowjobs, if anything, I would oppose that more. Schools should not stock any of Steven King's explicit orgy scenes.
3 follow up questions:
- Is it that particular sex act you find objectionable?
- Do you see no role for sex education in school?
- Do the other merits of a work not override those concerns? Historical and cultural relevance for instance.
 

XsjadoBlayde

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BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) — Sarah Collins Rudolph lost an eye and still has pieces of glass inside her body from a Ku Klux Klan bombing that killed her sister and three other Black girls at an Alabama church 59 years ago, and she’s still waiting on the state to compensate her for those injuries.

Gov. Kay Ivey sidestepped the question of financial compensation two years ago in apologizing to Rudolph for her “untold pain and suffering,” saying legislative involvement was needed. But nothing has been done despite the efforts of attorneys representing Rudolph, leaving unresolved the question of payment even though victims of other attacks, including 9/11, were compensated.

Rudolph will meet with President Joe Biden at the White House for a summit about combatting hate-fueled violence on Thursday, the anniversary of the bombing.

Rudolph, known as the “Fifth Little Girl” for surviving the infamous attack, which was depicted in Spike Lee’s 1997 documentary “4 Little Girls,” has been rankled by the state’s inaction.

Speaking in an interview with The Associated Press on Wednesday, Rudolph said then-Gov. George C. Wallace helped lay the groundwork for the Ku Klux Klan attack on 16th Street Baptist Church with his segregationist rhetoric, and the state bears some responsibility for the bombing, which wasn’t prosecuted for years.


“If they hadn’t stirred up all that racist hate that was going on at the time I don’t believe that church would have been bombed,” said Rudolph.

Rudolph said she still incurs medical expenses from the explosion, including a $90 bill she gets every few months for work on the prosthetic she wears in place of the right eye that was destroyed by shrapnel on Sept. 15, 1963. Anything would help, but Rudolph believes she’s due millions.

Ishan Bhabha, an attorney representing Rudolph, said the state’s apology — made at Rudolph’s request along with a plea for restitution — was only meant as a first step.

“She deserves justice in the form of compensation for the grievous injuries, and costs, she has had to bear for almost 60 years,” he said. “We will continue to pursue any available avenues to get Sarah the assistance she needs and deserves.”

Five girls were gathered in a downstairs bathroom at 16th Street Baptist Church when a bomb planted by KKK members went off outside, blowing a huge hole in the thick, brick wall. The blast killed Denise McNair, 11, and three 14-year-olds: Carole Robertson, Cynthia Morris, also referred to as Cynthia Wesley, and Addie Mae Collins, who was Rudolph’s sister.

Three Klan members convicted of murder in the bombing years later died in prison, and a fourth suspect died without ever being charged. The bombing occurred eight months after Wallace proclaimed “segregation forever” in his inaugural speech and during the time when Birmingham schools were being racially integrated for the first time.

The church itself has gotten government money for renovations, as has the surrounding Birmingham Civil Rights National Monument, formed by President Barack Obama in 2017 in one of his last acts in office. “But not me,” Rudolph said.

Ivey, at the time of the apology, said in a letter to Rudolph’s lawyer that any possible compensation would require legislative approval, said press secretary Gina Maiola.


“Additionally, in attorney-to-attorney conversations that ensued soon after, that same point was reiterated,” she said.

No bill has been introduced to compensate Rudolph, legislative records show, and it’s unclear whether such legislation could win passage anyway since conservative Republicans hold an overwhelming majority and have made an issue of reeling in history lessons that could make white people feel bad about the past.

While the Alabama Crime Victims’ Compensation Commission helps victims and families with expenses linked to a crime, state law doesn’t allow it to address offenses that occurred before the agency was created in 1984.

Rudolph has spent a lifetime dealing with physical and mental pain from the bombing. Despite her injuries and lingering stress disorders, Rudolph provided testimony that helped lead to the convictions of the men accused of planting the bomb, and she’s written a book about her life, titled “The 5th Little Girl.”

Rudolph’s husband, George Rudolph, said he’s frustrated and mad over the way his wife has been treated. Victims of the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks were compensated, he said, as were victims of the Boston Marathon bombing in 2013.

“Why can’t they do something for Sarah?” he said.
 
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Silvanus

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So @tstorm823 since you clearly dont think the classroom should be a political space, you're on board with scrapping the ritual of children reciting the pledge of allegiance, right???
There's a point. Children are expected to pledge allegiance to a political entity whenever they start a school day; and I was expected as a kid to recite prayers to a god I didn't believe in. Classrooms have long been political spaces.... in the favour of "mainline" politics.

Conservatives never gave a shit about politicisation of the classroom before. But now there's sudden concerns about neutrality when teachers want to talk about queer people existing.
 

Dalisclock

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There's a point. Children are expected to pledge allegiance to a political entity whenever they start a school day; and I was expected as a kid to recite prayers to a god I didn't believe in. Classrooms have long been political spaces.... in the favour of "mainline" politics.

Conservatives never gave a shit about politicisation of the classroom before. But now there's sudden concerns about neutrality when teachers want to talk about queer people existing.
See, Identity Politics and Virtue Signaling is only when someone else does it. Stuff like Religion and Patriotism being forced on you doesn't count because its the oldest form of both. In some places, like Red America, it's pretty much the same thing.
 

Schadrach

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Do you object to the presence of any sexual scenes/themes/content in books in school libraries, or just queer ones?
Parents tend to get jumpy at illustrations of sex in general, often even text descriptions of sex if they have any detail. But then you're not going to see many folks getting upset at a graphic novel containing a sex scene not being on school library shelves if it's a straight scene - it's only a problem if it's queer.

It's a political stance that books in school libraries should not be censored for queer content or themes of inequality/marginalised people, yes.
K. Again we fall back to the sex scene question: Because the ones censored for "queer content" are arguably being censored for the sex scenes therein. Less "Billy has two moms" and more "GF is sexting Maia at work about getting a strapon so Maia can wear it because Maia fantasizes about having a penis, let's illustrate GF giving Maia a blow job." I am...unsurprised at parents thinking that's a bit much for school, they are generally pretty jumpy about that kind of thing. Stephen King's It was challenged in in the late 80s-early 90s, largely because of the sex scene - though to be fair several of his books have been challenged over the years including Carrie, Cujo, Christine and The Dead Zone though shockingly not Rage (which King ended all future printings of after it had been an element in multiple school shootings).

Snopes answering the important tough questions.

I mean, declaring R&D on an official US cryptocurrency to be of the highest priority might count as paving the way for a central bank run official US cryptocurrency to exist.
 

tstorm823

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So @tstorm823 since you clearly dont think the classroom should be a political space, you're on board with scrapping the ritual of children reciting the pledge of allegiance, right???
Sure, why not? I would make a hefty distinction between having political content determined by the community and having the personal preferences from individual teachers, but sure, why not?
3 follow up questions:
- Is it that particular sex act you find objectionable?
- Do you see no role for sex education in school?
- Do the other merits of a work not override those concerns? Historical and cultural relevance for instance.
Sex education isn't "how to pleasure a lover: the class". There is no reason to teach blowjobs or sex positions. That's about biological functions and health protection methods.

If your culture makes pornography sufficiently relevant that children need to see it, your culture sucks.
 

crimson5pheonix

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Sure, why not? I would make a hefty distinction between having political content determined by the community and having the personal preferences from individual teachers, but sure, why not?

Sex education isn't "how to pleasure a lover: the class". There is no reason to teach blowjobs or sex positions. That's about biological functions and health protection methods.

If your culture makes pornography sufficiently relevant that children need to see it, your culture sucks.
As Schadrach pointed out, there are plenty of books in libraries that involve non-reproductive sex scenes, in extreme detail, that have not been banned. Sometimes they get a looking at, but not nearly all of them and none of them are banned.

Except the gay ones. For some reason.
 

Schadrach

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As Schadrach pointed out, there are plenty of books in libraries that involve non-reproductive sex scenes, in extreme detail, that have not been banned. Sometimes they get a looking at, but not nearly all of them and none of them are banned.

Except the gay ones. For some reason.
Did I do that? I said that parents tend to get jumpy at sex scenes, and generally when a book gets pulled from school library shelves (which is what we're talking about wrt books being banned), it's because parents have complained about them. Folks seem to get extra outraged these days if parents complain about a book with queer content, even if the challenge is over sorts of content that would generally receive complaints without it being queer (imagine if the 7th Harry Potter book had an illustrated scene where Hermione gave Ron a blow job, and tell me you think parents would have been cool with that because it's a straight blow job).
 

crimson5pheonix

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Did I do that? I said that parents tend to get jumpy at sex scenes, and generally when a book gets pulled from school library shelves (which is what we're talking about wrt books being banned), it's because parents have complained about them. Folks seem to get extra outraged these days if parents complain about a book with queer content, even if the challenge is over sorts of content that would generally receive complaints without it being queer (imagine if the 7th Harry Potter book had an illustrated scene where Hermione gave Ron a blow job, and tell me you think parents would have been cool with that because it's a straight blow job).
They may or may not be cool with it. However you brought up a great example in "It", and looking at my local school library site, they do indeed have a book with a detailed underage gangbang in it.
 

XsjadoBlayde

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Get your flags out ready for this one.


The United States may regard itself as a “leader of the free world,” but an index of development released in July 2022 places the country much farther down the list.

In its global rankings, the United Nations Office of Sustainable Development dropped the U.S. to 41st worldwide, down from its previous ranking of 32nd. Under this methodology – an expansive model of 17 categories, or “goals,” many of them focused on the environment and equity – the U.S. ranks between Cuba and Bulgaria. Both are widely regarded as developing countries.

The U.S. is also now considered a “flawed democracy,” according to The Economist’s democracy index.

As a political historian who studies U.S. institutional development, I recognize these dismal ratings as the inevitable result of two problems. Racism has cheated many Americans out of the health care, education, economic security and environment they deserve. At the same time, as threats to democracy become more serious, a devotion to “American exceptionalism” keeps the country from candid appraisals and course corrections.


‘The Other America’
The Office of Sustainable Development’s rankings differ from more traditional development measures in that they are more focused on the experiences of ordinary people, including their ability to enjoy clean air and water, than the creation of wealth.

So while the gigantic size of the American economy counts in its scoring, so too does unequal access to the wealth it produces. When judged by accepted measures like the Gini coefficient, income inequality in the U.S. has risen markedly over the past 30 years. By the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development’s measurement, the U.S. has the biggest wealth gap among G-7 nations.

These results reflect structural disparities in the United States, which are most pronounced for African Americans. Such differences have persisted well beyond the demise of chattel slavery and the repeal of Jim Crow laws.

Scholar W.E.B. Du Bois first exposed this kind of structural inequality in his 1899 analysis of Black life in the urban north, “The Philadelphia Negro.” Though he noted distinctions of affluence and status within Black society, Du Bois found the lives of African Americans to be a world apart from white residents: a “city within a city.” Du Bois traced the high rates of poverty, crime and illiteracy prevalent in Philadelphia’s Black community to discrimination, divestment and residential segregation – not to Black people’s degree of ambition or talent.

More than a half-century later, with characteristic eloquence, Martin Luther King Jr. similarly decried the persistence of the “other America,” one where “the buoyancy of hope” was transformed into “the fatigue of despair.”

To illustrate his point, King referred to many of the same factors studied by Du Bois: the condition of housing and household wealth, education, social mobility and literacy rates, health outcomes and employment. On all of these metrics, Black Americans fared worse than whites. But as King noted, “Many people of various backgrounds live in this other America.”

The benchmarks of development invoked by these men also featured prominently in the 1962 book “The Other America,” by political scientist Michael Harrington, founder of a group that eventually became the Democratic Socialists of America. Harrington’s work so unsettled President John F. Kennedy that it reportedly galvanized him into formulating a “war on poverty.”


Kennedy’s successor, Lyndon Johnson, waged this metaphorical war. But poverty bound to discrete places. Rural areas and segregated neighborhoods stayed poor well beyond mid-20th-century federal efforts.

Tents line a leafy park; some people can be seen chatting outside one tent
Camp Laykay Nou, a homeless encampment in Philadelphia. High and rising inequality is one reason the US rates badly on some international development rankings.Cory Clark/NurPhoto via Getty Images
In large part that is because federal efforts during that critical time accommodated rather than confronted the forces of racism, according to my research.

Across a number of policy domains, the sustained efforts of segregationist Democrats in Congress resulted in an incomplete and patchwork system of social policy. Democrats from the South cooperated with Republicans to doom to failure efforts to achieve universal health care or unionized workforces. Rejecting proposals for strong federal intervention, they left a checkered legacy of local funding for education and public health.

Today, many years later, the effects of a welfare state tailored to
tailored to racism is evident — though perhaps less visibly so — in the inadequate health policies driving a shocking decline in average American life expectancy.

Declining Democracy
There are other ways to measure a country’s level of development, and on some of them the U.S. fares better.

The U.S. currently ranks 21st on the United Nations Development Program’s index, which measures fewer factors than the sustainable development index. Good results in average income per person – $64,765 – and an average 13.7 years of schooling situate the United States squarely in the developed world.


Its ranking suffers, however, on appraisals that place greater weight on political systems.

The Economist’s democracy index now groups the U.S. among “flawed democracies,” with an overall score that ranks between Estonia and Chile. It falls short of being a top-rated “full democracy” in large part because of a fractured political culture. This growing divide is most apparent in the divergent paths between “red” and “blue” states.

Although the analysts from The Economist applaud the peaceful transfer of power in the face of an insurrection intended to disrupt it, their report laments that, according to a January 2022 poll, “only 55% of Americans believe that Mr. Biden legitimately won the 2020 election, despite no evidence of widespread voter fraud.”

Election denialism carries with it the threat that election officials in Republican-controlled jurisdictions will reject or alter vote tallies that do not favor the Republican Party in upcoming elections, further jeopardizing the score of the U.S. on the democracy index.

Red and blue America also differ on access to modern reproductive care for women. This hurts the U.S. gender equality rating, one aspect of the United Nations’ sustainable development index.

Since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, Republican-controlled states have enacted or proposed grossly restrictive abortion laws, to the point of endangering a woman’s health.

I believe that, when paired with structural inequalities and fractured social policy, the dwindling Republican commitment to democracy lends weight to the classification of the U.S. as a developing country.

American Exceptionalism
To address the poor showing of the United States on a variety of global surveys, one must also contend with the idea of American exceptionalism, a belief in American superiority over the rest of the world.


Both political parties have long promoted this belief, at home and abroad, but “exceptionalism” receives a more formal treatment from Republicans. It was the first line of the Republican Party’s national platform of 2016 and 2020 (“we believe in American exceptionalism”). And it served as the organizing principle behind Donald Trump’s vow to restore “patriotic education” to America’s schools.

In Florida, after lobbying by Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis, the state board of education in July 2022 approved standards rooted in American exceptionalism while barring instruction in critical race theory, an academic framework teaching the kind of structural racism Du Bois exposed long ago.

With a tendency to proclaim excellence rather than pursue it, the peddling of American exceptionalism encourages Americans to maintain a robust sense of national achievement – despite mounting evidence to the contrary.
The Conversation


Kathleen Frydl is a Sachs Lecturer at Johns Hopkins University

This article is republished from The Conversation, a nonprofit, independent news organization dedicated to unlocking the knowledge of experts for the public good.
 

Silvanus

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Sex education isn't "how to pleasure a lover: the class". There is no reason to teach blowjobs or sex positions. That's about biological functions and health protection methods.
Oral sex comes into the health aspect- it affects the risk of STDs, and has one or two unique risks associated (the vulnerability to harm of the frenulum, testicles, and urethra; and the dangerousness of actually blowing).

But that aside, there's also the psychological aspect. Communicating with the partner, respecting them and yourself as you navigate what to do. Sex acts like mutual masturbation and oral sex are also often the alternative for people who may be unable or unwilling (maybe for cultural/religious reasons) to do PIV.

If your culture makes pornography sufficiently relevant that children need to see it, your culture sucks.
The books aren't pornography. They're novels and memoirs.
 

tstorm823

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As Schadrach pointed out, there are plenty of books in libraries that involve non-reproductive sex scenes, in extreme detail, that have not been banned. Sometimes they get a looking at, but not nearly all of them and none of them are banned.

Except the gay ones. For some reason.
They should be excluded from the school environment. It shouldn't be in school libraries, barring an appropriately edited version. Also, these books were hardly banned in this case, they were only told to not prominently display them.
The books aren't pornography. They're novels and memoirs.
That happens to have an illustrated pov blowjob.

There are no activist groups pushing cis straight blowjob cartoons in schools. It's not even about gay or straight or anything like that. It's that certain people make being politically transgressive their goal in life. Cause progressive isn't the opposite of conservative, transgressive is. And the list of things that are politically transgressive includes both unique gender/sexuality positions and showing blowjobs to children. They want kids reading gender queer not because it's important on its own merits, but because undermining accepted norms is the goal in and of itself. Don't be that person.
 

crimson5pheonix

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They should be excluded from the school environment. It shouldn't be in school libraries, barring an appropriately edited version.
"And lusted after her paramours there, whose members were like those of donkeys, and whose issue was like that of horses." -The bible

Also, these books were hardly banned in this case, they were only told to not prominently display them.
They weren't and there was still administrative action taken so that excuse doesn't fly.
 

Avnger

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"And lusted after her paramours there, whose members were like those of donkeys, and whose issue was like that of horses." -The bible
Surely you must be taking that out of context. The Bible would never be so pornographic.

Ezekiel 23:11-21 said:
11 Her sister Oholibah saw this, and she became more corrupt than her sister in her lust and in her whoring, which was worse than that of her sister. 12 She lusted after the Assyrians, governors and commanders, warriors clothed in full armor, horsemen riding on horses, all of them desirable young men. 13 And I saw that she was defiled; they both took the same way. 14 But she carried her whoring further. She saw men portrayed on the wall, the images of the Chaldeans portrayed in vermilion, 15 wearing belts on their waists, with flowing turbans on their heads, all of them having the appearance of officers, a likeness of Babylonians whose native land was Chaldea. 16 When she saw them, she lusted after them and sent messengers to them in Chaldea. 17 And the Babylonians came to her into the bed of love, and they defiled her with their whoring lust. And after she was defiled by them, she turned from them in disgust. 18 When she carried on her whoring so openly and flaunted her nakedness, I turned in disgust from her, as I had turned in disgust from her sister. 19 Yet she increased her whoring, remembering the days of her youth, when she played the whore in the land of Egypt 20 and lusted after her lovers there, whose members were like those of donkeys, and whose issue was like that of horses. 21 Thus you longed for the lewdness of your youth, when the Egyptians handled your bosom and pressed your young breasts.
Oh... wait...