It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
4) This raises to issues with the First Amendment that I have not seen a legal position on, namely:
a) Does an adult (teacher) have the right of free speech to a child (student); e.g. to discuss CRT, Sex, Transgenderism, violence, BLM, Antifa, etc. etc.? And does that right differ inside/outside of a teaching setting?
b) This seems to me to lead to an inevitable discussion on different standards being required for what you can say to children and adults?
c) I don't know what the answer is but it would appear there IS a need for standards in relation to the adult/minor status of the person being spoken to?
d) Maybe an answer lies in the region of what actions a child can take at different ages? For example, you can't talk to a child about smoking until they're legally allowed to smoke? Likewise with Sex, Driving, Drugs, etc.
In May 1967, however, the Queen granted herself a short getaway to Normandy to visit stud farms. She then stops with her suite at the restaurant "Le Caneton" in Orbec where she tastes a terrine of poultry liver.
originally posted by: Guyfriday
All this said, Moulard Duck Foie Gras is quite good, and I can imagine a terrine made from it would be both a waste of a great liver, but also would make a great appetizer. Yeah yeah, so judge me, I like good tasting food. I'm not Thomas, eating bread and salt.
originally posted by: AndyFromMichigan
originally posted by: crankyoldman
Why does the right honorable mayor of ChiTown have Male Pattern Baldness? Bold question from the reporter.
Hmm... I've never heard anyone suggest Lightfoot was trans, but that hairline is hard to explain any other way.
Despite her decidedly unfeminine appearance, Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot has been represented to the public as a woman. A new lawsuit may challenge that perception because Lightfoot was quoted as bragging that she has the “biggest d*ck in Chicago.” Hopefully her giant schlong will not be presented as a evidence in the case.
The basic deal here is that the Chicago park District made a deal with an Italian American group to display a Christopher Columbus Statue during a parade. Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot, who was tearing down Columbus statues all over the city, found out about this deal and flipped her wig. Former Chicago Park District deputy general counsel George Smyrniotis is now suing Lightfoot and the city over this.
originally posted by: SMOKINGGUN2012
a reply to: RelSciHistItSufi
PANIC IN DC
Count Saint Germain (also sometimes referred to as Master Rákóczi or Master R) is a legendary spiritual master of the ancient wisdom in various Theosophical and post-Theosophical teachings, said to be responsible for the New Age culture of the Age of Aquarius and identified with the Count Saint Germain (fl. 1710–1784), who has been variously described as a courtier, adventurer, inventor, alchemist, pianist, violinist, and amateur composer
Dr. Raymond Bernard's book The Great Secret – St. Germain is biographical and covers many aspects of the Count's life, including his conflation with Sir Francis Bacon, and the author of the Shakespearean opus. The Great Secret, Count St. Germain purports that St. Germain was actually Francis Bacon by birth, and later authored the complete Plays attributed to Shakespeare. Bernard also contends, as does the Saint Germain Foundation in Schaumburg, Illinois, that Francis Bacon was the child of Queen Elizabeth and Lord Dudley but that it was kept quiet. According to this theory, Francis was raised by the Bacon family, yet knew of his true birth, and left numerous hints throughout the Shakespearean canon of this, in the form of explicit clues in the text of the plays, in pictures, and in the alleged use of Bacon's cipher in the works. Manly Palmer Hall, in his The Secret Teachings of All Ages, describes some of the same attributes as Bernard, including the attribution of the writings of Shakespeare to a great adept like Francis Bacon, who could be amalgamated with the Count of St. Germain.
There are 20 volumes in the Saint Germain Series of Books, which are also referred to as the "Green Books". Another significant work, the Comte de Gabalis, is said to be from the hand of Sir Francis Bacon before he Ascended and returned as Sanctus Germanus or Saint Germain. First printed in 1670, the book includes a picture of the Polish Rider, Rembrandt's famous painting at the Frick Collection in New York City, which is said to be of Sir Francis Bacon, AKA the Comte de Gabalis, or the Count of the Cabala. Lotus Ray King (Edna Ballard's pen name), wife of Guy Ballard, talked about this book having been authored by the Ascended Master Saint Germain in the Round Table Talks of the "I AM" Religious Activity.
originally posted by: F2d5thCavv2
a reply to: Guyfriday
I'm good with steak and potatoes. And, oh yeah, something dry and red from a Mediterranean country that pours into a glass.
Cheers
Firefox does not trust this site because it uses a certificate that is not valid for img.abovetopsecret.com. The certificate is only valid for the following names: abovetopsecret.com, www.abovetopsecret.com