My future ex wife climbed out of a black hole and continued chasing me with miss lips at her side.

Love Goddesses with true love, brought together for the first time, in order to wink at each other, with no make up on!

This is Hitler on a good day!

When a minimal love goes under, let it sink into minimalism, make pointless points, and beep, beep, beep.

The future will rise from the ashes of corruption. But the media is going beep beep beep. Money is getting better than sex changes and we like real change anyway.

Figure it out.

So back to time: Causal relations that can be mapped by artificial intelligence can not predict everything. Why? Retrocausality!

Why Woke isn't Winning or WWW: - a law allows trans students to compete in sports aligned with their gender identity. In contrast, over two dozen states have passed laws restricting trans athletes from girls’ and women’s sports. - Cultural values clash: States like Texas, Florida, and Idaho often prioritize biological definitions of sex in athletics, citing fairness and competitive integrity. California leans toward affirming identity and access, even amid controversy. - Political polarization: The issue has become a flashpoint in national politics. Trump’s administration recently threatened to pull federal funding from California unless it bans trans girls from girls’ sports — a move California rejected as “dramatic, fake, and completely divorced from reality.” - Public opinion is split: A recent poll found that 75% of Americans believe trans girls should not compete in girls’ sports — including two-thirds of Gen Z. That’s a surprising shift, even among younger voters. 💬 What California Is Doing Differently - The California Interscholastic Federation created a pilot rule allowing cisgender girls to medal alongside trans athletes, aiming to balance fairness and inclusion. - Trans athlete AB Hernandez won multiple events at the state finals, sparking both celebration and protest — but also new policies that may become national models. - The state continues to defend its stance, saying it’s about protecting all students, not erasing anyone’s rights. So what’s “wrong” with the rest of America? Maybe nothing — but they’re walking a different path. California’s approach is bold, empathetic, and controversial. Others are still catching up, resisting, or redefining what fairness means