1. You read this post by Peter Greene. His twin sons tested negative for COVID.
2. You read the post yesterday about the disastrous performance by Travis Scott in Houston. A tenth person—a 9-year-old child—died, trampled at the Travis Scott show.
CNN)The 9-year-old boy who was injured at the Astroworld Festival died Sunday, according to family attorney Ben Crump.
The death toll from the chaotic concert now stands at 10. Funeral services for some of the victims began over the weekend as dozens of lawsuits have been filed over the tragedy.
The boy, identified as Ezra Blount by his family, had been in a medically induced coma in an attempt to overcome brain, liver and kidney trauma, according to a statement from Crump.

Let us not forget Kenosha. What will it’s effects be? Will there be rioters? How will they be portrayed? Thugs? Protectors of property? Law and order? Mix with Covid, CRT, let simmer.
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Don’t know why I can’t figure out typing the difference between it’s and its.
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Autocorrect insists on it’s, and you have to change it manually to get “its.”
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Its incorrect to type its when you mean it’s
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Travis Scott is getting sued into the ground. Couldn’t happen to a nicer guy.
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Another Update. Texas Is Gearing Up To Silence CRT and Climate Change. Students in the petro-chemical state may die from climate change but they sure aren’t going to study it or prepare for it. At the end, “They will never know what hit ‘em”.
When the 15 members of the Texas State Board of Education meet at its regular quarterly meeting this week, the elected group is expected to talk about how climate change and sexuality are taught to middle school students. It’s part of a regular process that takes place every eight years.
The Texas State Board is also set to vote on new science standards for middle schoolers with the most attention being drawn to what eighth graders are learning about climate change.
The last time the state board adopted new science standards in 2009, the chair at the time said climate change was a “bunch of hooey.” Over a decade later, the current board made changes to its high school curriculum last year with climate change being addressed in some high school courses and now moves to do the same in middle schools.
Under the proposed eighth grade science guidelines, students are expected to learn how “natural events and human activity CAN impact global climate.” For Texas Freedom Network’s Dan Quinn and scientists, that’s where the problem lies. Human activity and natural events do, have and will continue to impact global climate. There is no “can,” he said.
On Nov. 4, climate scientists across the state sent a letter to the state board urging that they revise the proposed curriculum to reflect that human activity such as the release of greenhouse gases have affected the climate.
https://www.click2houston.com/news/texas/2021/11/16/texas-education-board-considers-how-middle-schools-teach-climate-change-and-sexuality-as-officials-fight-over-library-books/
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