Anonymous ID: 513bb3 Nov. 22, 2021, 7:01 p.m. No.111271   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1274 >>1303 >>1325

Now for some good news

Kicker makes history as first player with Down syndrome to score in a college football game

 

<read the jersey, read it again

 

https://www.lifesitenews.com/news/kicker-becomes-first-player-with-down-syndrome-to-score-in-a-college-football-game/

 

NELSONVILLE, Ohio (LifeSiteNews) – On September 11, Caden Cox became the first known person with Down syndrome in history to play and score a point in a college football game.

 

Caden’s mother, Mari Cox, told ESPN College Football that despite being told by a special needs counselor when Caden was in first grade that he would never go to college or even graduate from high school, she and her husband always encouraged Caden to “go for it” when it came to his interests.

 

From an early age, Caden was already practicing taekwondo, and he now has a black belt, his mother said. He played percussion in band, threw the shot put and discus in track and field, was on his high school dive team and football team, and he “was instrumental in helping start” a high school “inclusion club.”

 

“He’s always loved football,” said his father, Kevin Cox.

 

Mari Cox shared how, having already played for his high school football team, “Caden was like, hey, why not try [college] football?”

 

Caden’s “natural choice” was Hocking College, where his mother works, his dad coaches, and older brother Zane once kicked. It is the only junior college in Ohio with a football program.

 

Hocking College head coach Ted Egger said his first question was, “Can he kick?”

 

“And we saw that he could do that, and he was one of those young men that deserved an opportunity to get his degree and play football while doing it,” Egger said.

 

In games, Caden wears No. 21, which represents the 21st chromosome characteristic of Down syndrome.

 

It was during the third quarter of a home game against Sussex Community College on September 11 when Caden was given the opportunity to attempt an extra point that “made history.”

 

“He was beaming. He said, ‘I did it, mom!’” Mari Cox recounted. Caden shared how people told him it “was an awesome kick.”

 

Caden went on to finish the season “a perfect 4 for 4 in extra points,” and he “already had a name, image and likeness endorsement.”

 

He currently has his sights set on Ohio State University after he earns his associate’s degree.

 

“He has set a benchmark showing the parents of all these children born with these disabilities, anything’s possible,” Kevin Cox said. “That kid’s living proof.”

 

In 2015, the pro-life Charlotte Lozier Institute estimated that abortion reduces the Down community in the United States by 30%. It has been estimated that 90% of babies in Great Britain who receive a Down syndrome diagnosis are aborted, 65% in Norway, virtually 100% in Iceland, and 95% in Spain.

 

Despite the challenges of Down syndrome, a 2011 study published in the American Journal of Medical Genetics found that 99% of people with Down syndrome described themselves as “happy,” and only 4% of parents with Down children expressed regret about having their child. Yet around the world, Down syndrome is seen as a justification for aborting preborn children.

 

Earlier this year, the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals upheld Ohio’s “Down Syndrome Non-Discrimination Act,” reversing an earlier ruling that had struck down the law. The Act “prohibits abortions chosen on the basis of a prenatal Down syndrome diagnosis.”

 

The sponsor of a similar law in Utah, state Rep. Karianne Lisonbee, told Deseret News as the bill was being considered, “In recent years there has been a shocking increase in abortions performed for no other reason than because a prenatal test identified the potential for a trait a parent didn’t like. For a society that claims to uphold tolerance and inclusiveness, it appears we still have a long way to go.”

Anonymous ID: 513bb3 Nov. 22, 2021, 7:05 p.m. No.111272   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1275 >>1281 >>1303 >>1325

>>111270

>When it's visceral, that's hard. Whole new level. For muhself, gotta really pray, keep pushing out the boundaries of what i understand as possible

Agreed - kundalini every time read your reply just now

Hold the line. Found this article interesting earlier, timing etc:

 

Exorcist says Satan’s time is running short

Fr. Chad Ripperger said Satan told him during an exorcism session that God 'is about to take my power away.'

 

https://www.lifesitenews.com/news/exorcist-says-satans-time-is-running-short/

 

https://youtu.be/CVc-XK9BoB0

Anonymous ID: 513bb3 Nov. 22, 2021, 7:44 p.m. No.111285   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1287

>>111283

>>111282

> "if you have a problem with that, that's YOUR problem not mine."

Right, have used that approach for a long time, replied to someone with it just yesterday.

Kek

Simplified form: Deal with it

Anonymous ID: 513bb3 Nov. 22, 2021, 8:03 p.m. No.111289   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1291 >>1303 >>1325

Kevin Spacey ordered to pay more than $40m for ‘House of Cards’ losses

 

https://archive.vn/O6wIF

 

Los Angeles: Kevin Spacey and his production companies must pay the studio behind House of Cards nearly $US31 million (nearly $43 million) because of losses brought on by his firing for sexual misconduct, according to an arbitration decision only just made final.

A document filed in Los Angeles Superior Court requesting a judge’s approval of the ruling says that the arbitrators found that Spacey violated his contract’s demands for professional behaviour by “engaging certain conduct in connection with several crew members in each of the five seasons that he starred in and executive produced House of Cards.”

 

MRC, the studio behind the show, had to fire Spacey, halt production of its sixth season, rewrite it to remove Spacey’s central character, and shorten it from 13 to eight episodes to meet deadlines, resulting in tens of millions in losses, the document said.

“The safety of our employees, sets and work environments is of paramount importance to MRC and why we set out to push for accountability,” MRC said in a statement.

The arbitrator issued a reward of more than $US30 million, including compensatory damages and lawyers’ fees.

A representative for Spacey did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment. His lawyers argued that the actor’s actions were not a substantial factor in the show’s losses.

The ruling came after a legal fight of more than three years and an eight-day evidentiary hearing that was kept secret from the public, along with the rest of the dispute.

Spacey appealed the decision to a panel of three more private arbitrators, who found for the plaintiffs, making the decision final, and public, on Monday (Tuesday AEDT).

“MRC stood its ground, pursued this case doggedly, and obtained the right result in the end,” plaintiff’s lawyer Michael Kump said in a statement.

 

The 62-year-old Oscar winner’s career came to an abrupt halt late in 2017 as the #MeToo movement gained momentum.

Actor Anthony Rapp, who has appeared in Rent on Broadway and film as well as in Star Trek: Discovery on television, said Spacey made a sexual advance on him when he was 14 at a party in the 1980s.

At the time, Spacey issued a statement saying he didn’t remember the encounter but apologised.

Several other accusers followed. Some, including Rapp, have filed lawsuits.

Independent investigations found widespread sexual harassment of those who worked under him.

Spacey was fired or removed from several projects, most notably House of Cards, the Netflix political thriller where for five seasons he played lead character Frank Underwood, a power-hungry congressman who becomes president.

The one criminal case brought against him, an indecent assault and battery charge stemming from the alleged groping of an 18-year-old man at a Nantucket resort, was dismissed by Massachusetts prosecutors in 2019.