Barbara butch the new gay testament
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Oh yes! As long as it doesn’t move people, it’s not art for me,” he said, saying the depiction of the Last Supper “is not a provocation. Appalling decision.”
And to give you some idea of the scale of the offense caused, my opinion has so far had 11 million views and been “liked” 163,000 times — by far the biggest response to anything I’ve posted in several years.
The comments were almost universally furious, and I fully understand why.
As I wrote, it’s unthinkable that Olympics chiefs would have allowed other religions like Islam, Judaism or Hinduism to have been so crudely ridiculed in this way.
So why did they allow the world’s biggest faith to be singled out, especially in a country like France, where 50% of the population are Christians?
It was so obviously repellent that not only did Christian leaders express outrage, led by a statement from French Catholic bishops which raged against the “scenes of derision and mockery of Christianity, which we deeply deplore,” but leaders of other faiths issued statements of solidarity, including Egypt’s Al-Azhar, the highest seat of Sunni Muslim learning, which attacked the decision to “depict Jesus Christ in an offensive manner, disrespecting his honorable person and the high status of prophecy in a reckless barbaric way that does not respect the feelings of believers in religions and high human morals and values.”
It’s been wrongly reported that Olympics organizers have since “apologized’” for the sickening skit.
They haven’t.
Instead, they just pretended they never meant to upset anyone.
“There was clearly never an intention to show disrespect to any religious group,” said Paris 2024 spokesperson Anne Descamps.
Of course, by helping them evade consequences for their illegal actions, they created an obligation to support and vote for the political groups supporting them.
Right is right, wrong is wrong, and fair is fair. Do you think anyone takes that seriously?” he said.
He also took issue with the statement that the intention was to celebrate community and tolerance, saying there is tolerance “except for those pesky 2.6 billion Christians on the planet.”
“Everyone’s welcome, everyone’s tolerated, all this lovely diversity, until you get to anyone that disagrees with your ideology, like these 2.6 billion people.
This obvious interpretation is supported by statements from the participating artists,” the German bishops said.
While they reiterated their respect for artistic freedom and creativity, the bishops voiced their belief that “critical comments are appropriate and necessary when the representations touch on central elements of our faith and other religions and the religious sensibilities of believers are seriously violated.”
“In the weeks ahead, we hope for events in the spirit of fair competition and peaceful understanding between peoples and cultures.
Music sounds better with all of Us!”
Butch posted an image of the drag parody of the Last Supper above an image of Da Vinci’s original painting to her Instagram account with the comment, “Oh yes! They realized years ago that they would never get the changes they wanted through congressional legislation, so they rationalized creating a gigantic problem to force the nation to contend with the illegal aliens by overwhelming the laws, facilities, and systems to accommodate legal immigration.
We didn’t make fun of the painting at all … it’s really just because it’s queers and drag queens who use that representation that it bothers,” he said.
Similarly, Barbara Butch, a lesbian who donned a silver headdress and low-cut dress while portraying the figure of Jesus in the Last Supper parody, said the opening ceremony was intended to bring people together.
According to her Instagram profile, Butch is “a Love activist, Dj and producer based in Paris.
The only time that I see a live police person is at stores or events that rent them. Would they have mocked any other religion like this? During this pivot, we saw — not a big loaf of Eucharistic bread — but a nearly naked Papa Smurf-like Dionysus (Bacchus) figure.
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I continually hear about how long a call for service takes and still see a multitude of expired license plates.In Thursday’s New York Times there is a report of Denver’s traffic stops in 2022 being down 62% and road deaths up 21% since 2019. You know what women are like … hanging around, doing their makeup.”
Sacré bleu!
Has there ever been a more disgraceful example of sexism perpetrated by a human being in the history of Planet Earth?
Well, yes, there has.
In fact, at the very same time feminists are frothing from their lipsticked mouths in rage about Ballard’s lame but tame joke, women around the world are drooling in a sexually charged manner on social media about Dutch male swimmer Arno Kamminga’s revealing flesh-colored trunks.
As is true so often these days, rhetorical sexism rules only apply from men to women, not the other way around.
But the far greater hypocrisy to me is why the hapless Ballard, a veteran of 40 years of elite athletic commentary, had to be instantly thrown to the virtue-signaling wolves, yet nobody’s been held accountable for one of the most egregious acts of deliberately offensive taunting that I’ve ever witnessed at an international sporting event.
Honestly, I could barely believe what I was watching as the Last Supper drag parody played out on Friday night.
The Olympics are supposed to be a unifying global event, yet here were the organizers brazenly insulting 2.4 billion Christians in the most flagrant manner imaginable.
I posted a photograph of it on X, with my reaction: “Btw, what the f–k was all this about?
Even with my backwoods education, I immediately discerned central figures in colors and poses reminiscent of Leonardo da Vinci’s 15th-century painting “The Last Supper.” Olympics organizers reported that Jan van Bijlert’s “The Feast of the Gods,” painted over a century later, was the purported muse for this production.
This was followed by an infusion of Greco-Roman mythology.
Chief Ron Thomas is a good guy but maybe he should start kicking some rear-ends.
Jim Hannifin Sr., Denver
Skimpy women’s uniforms raise questions about respect
Have we lost our sense of dignity, respect, and honor for the professionals who work so diligently to prepare themselves to be worthy of performing for the world’s greatest audience?
So don’t give me this business about tolerance and diversity,” he said.
Referring to Descamps’s statement that their goal of celebrating tolerance was achieved, Barron asked rhetorically, “I wonder what planet they’re living on if they think that harmony and peace and all this was achieved by this clear affront to Christians.”
Barron also condemned the wording of the apology as condescending, saying the tone does not read apologetic, but rather says, “if you’re so simple minded and stupid to have been offended by this wonderful expression of French culture, well, we’re sorry about that.”
“Christians were offended because it was offensive.
Rewarding illegal aliens for their proficiency at breaking our laws is neither right nor fair.
Gordon Carleton, Pueblo West
Dwindling police presence, traffic enforcement
Re: “Cities scaled back traffic stops, and road deaths soared,” New York Times news story, Aug. 1
I’ve come to think that the Denver Police Department has become a public Rent-a-Cop operation.
I am referencing the nearly naked volleyball women participants as well as the barely there swimsuits in certain swimming competitions.
A drag queen mockery of the Last Supper at the Olympics?