Ah, Florida - words fail me II

Huckleberry

Hall of Fame
Nov 9, 2004
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Jacksonville, FL
Florida Rep. Joel Rudman files bill to allow open carry, repeal state's 'red flag' law


If guns are going to be allowed on college campuses and polling locations (and just about every other public place), perhaps open carry should apply to the state capitol and the governor’s mansion as well.
 
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Huckleberry

Hall of Fame
Nov 9, 2004
6,865
14,094
287
Jacksonville, FL

Gov. DeSantis appointee says women should pick motherhood over higher ed


Speaking at the National Conservatism Conference in 2021, Yenor detailed what he sees as the “evils” of feminism, labeled “independent women” as “medicated, meddlesome and quarrelsome” and decried colleges and universities as “the citadels of our gynecocracy” — a form of government run by women.

“If we want a great nation, we should be preparing young women to become mothers,” Yenor said, “not finding every reason for young women to delay motherhood until they are established in a career or sufficiently independent.”

Yenor argued that higher education “delays growing up,” saying that college and universities are “indoctrination camps” that society should de-emphasize in order to make progress on “family matters.”

“Every effort must be made not to recruit women into engineering, but rather to recruit and demand more of men who become engineers. Ditto for med school and the law and every trade,” Yenor said.

“If every Nobel Prize winner is a man, that’s not a failure. It’s kind of a cause for celebration,” he added.
 
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PaulD

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Dec 29, 2006
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near Perry, Georgia, United States

Gov. DeSantis appointee says women should pick motherhood over higher ed

Speaking at the National Conservatism Conference in 2021, Yenor detailed what he sees as the “evils” of feminism, labeled “independent women” as “medicated, meddlesome and quarrelsome” and decried colleges and universities as “the citadels of our gynecocracy” — a form of government run by women.

“If we want a great nation, we should be preparing young women to become mothers,” Yenor said, “not finding every reason for young women to delay motherhood until they are established in a career or sufficiently independent.”

Yenor argued that higher education “delays growing up,” saying that college and universities are “indoctrination camps” that society should de-emphasize in order to make progress on “family matters.”

“Every effort must be made not to recruit women into engineering, but rather to recruit and demand more of men who become engineers. Ditto for med school and the law and every trade,” Yenor said.

“If every Nobel Prize winner is a man, that’s not a failure. It’s kind of a cause for celebration,” he added.
In my 36 years as an Air Force attorney, some of the finest attorneys and military officers (and some combined both roles) were women. As a nation, we can't afford to not take advantage of their God-given abilities, merely because of their gender.
 

Huckleberry

Hall of Fame
Nov 9, 2004
6,865
14,094
287
Jacksonville, FL



A preliminary report from the Florida Auditor General found UF failed to prevent former President Ben Sasse from leveraging his executive privileges to inappropriately spend university funds.


The Florida Auditor General’s report, obtained by The Alligator, revealed new details about Sasse’s spending practices, including that he used more than $300,000 in university funds to charter flights on the University Athletic Association’s private jets for trips with no clear business purposes.

The report spelled out the extent to which Sasse, a former Republican U.S. Senator from Nebraska, swerved the university’s existing regulations and guidelines.

Auditors found UF allowed Sasse to award a large chunk of his inner circle — including members of his former Capitol Hill staff — salaries far exceeding the university’s market-rate averages and without soliciting competing applications from other candidates.

The audit also raised concerns over the university’s decision to let Sasse keep his $1 million salary for a continued role as a professor and adviser to the UF Board of Trustees chairman. Sasse’s current roles “appear to be significantly less in scope” than his duties as president, the auditors’ report read. As such, “the public purpose of such a salary is not readily apparent.”
 

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