Obscene Acts

Folks, you’ve got to get over to Twitter. Matt Walsh is performing unconventional sexual acts on the management of Fox News. He’s giving it to them every which way. It’s almost embarrassing to watch. But really fun, too.

11 thoughts on “Obscene Acts

  1. It’s so funny that libs still claim that this woke nonsense is exaggerated, that it’s just silly college students.

    On a separate note, I’ve been trying to find a post of yours about DEI trainings. It was about how these are totalitarian in the sense that they want to access the innermost recesses of your mind, your most private thoughts, and force you to deny those them. I’d love to read it again and send it to my friends if you have a link. Do you remember it?

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    1. Oh, I’m so glad! Which one did you read? I’ve read all of them and can recommend.

      She’s divine. Such understanding of human nature, it’s incredible.

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        1. I just started rereading that one! It’s very good.

          The Chimney-Sweeper’s Boy is the best she wrote under the name Barbara Vine, so if you can get that one, it’s very good.

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          1. First time I’ve ever read a mystery novel written in that order– we start with the murderer, spend half the book figuring out who was killed, then wrap it up by contemplating motive. All of which is dang near irrelevant up against the sheer brilliance of the way she does character development.

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            1. Her characters are everything. She does this thing where people crack a tiny little bit and then start unraveling. The slow but inevitable descent into insanity – nobody depicts it better.

              She also has a bunch of books that demonstrate better than anything else what happens when people confuse an ego-driven obsession with love.

              I’m so, so glad you enjoyed this author!!

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              1. With that book, the descent into insanity part was gripping. But I was also blown away by the first-person perspective of a middle-aged (older?) woman dipping into her own memory, contemplating current perspective vs. the perspective of childhood, young adulthood… re-interpreting memory, and coming to conclusions the reader may not share. In fiction. That’s an amazing feat.

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