Anonymous ID: 6745e1 Sept. 13, 2021, 7:35 a.m. No.14570408   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Thought the term "Stealth" was interesting.

Removal? Sounds kinda like Declass

 

California Becomes The First State To Pass ‘Stealthing’ Bill, Making Nonconsensual Condom Removal Illegal

 

The California legislature has passed a bill that makes it illegal to remove a condom without permission during sexual intercourse, an act known as stealthing. The bill, named AB-453, deems stealthing as a form of sexual battery in the California Civil Code. California is now the first state to pass a law banning stealthing.

 

The bill was introduced by Assemblywoman Cristina Garcia, who told the New York Times that the passing of AB-453 will “make it clear that this is not just amoral, but also illegal.” Garcia had been trying to get this bill passed since 2017.

 

“It is a big week for victims,” Garcia said. “It is a big week for discussions around these issues, and it is a big week to talk about consent.”

 

Now that AB-453 has been passed unanimously, the last step is for Governor Gavin Newsom, to sign it. He has until October 10, to do so. Newsom hasn’t commented on the bill and his pending signature. After being signed, people who remove condoms without consent can be sued.

 

Stealthing gained more attention after Alexandra Brodsky published a paper on it titled Rape Adjacent: Imagining Legal Responses To Nonconsensual Condom Renewal in 2017.

 

Stealthing is highlighted in Michaela A. Coles’s HBO series I May Destroy You. In one scene, Arabella, the main character played by Cole, hooks up with a guy she is dating. She tells him to put on a condom, which he does. During intercourse, he removes the condom without her knowing after he asks her to change positions. When she realizes he took it off, she confronts him. His response is that he thought she knew and would be able to feel the difference once he took it off.

 

The New York State senate has also tried to pass a stealthing bill, S4401, but they haven’t been successful.

 

https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/california-becomes-first-state-pass-120014183.html

Anonymous ID: 6745e1 Sept. 13, 2021, 8:06 a.m. No.14570576   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0580

>>14570558

Yeah, we all know, now how about putting an end to the Mandates for Children?

That was my red line, and it was crossed the moment 2 of my grandchildren were forced by the "other side", behind our backs to get it.

Anonymous ID: 6745e1 Sept. 13, 2021, 8:12 a.m. No.14570594   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>14570580

Wow, thanks for the double insults.

While you may believe that it was "small minded" and "self centered," you're entitled to your opinion, however misguided.

Anonymous ID: 6745e1 Sept. 13, 2021, 9 a.m. No.14570781   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0794 >>0818 >>0852

After officials destroyed the second Asian giant hornet nest of 2021, a third one was found in Washington state.

 

The Washington State Department of Agriculture tweeted Saturday that it planned to eradicate the third nest and would have more updates in the next week.

 

The year's first Asian giant hornet nest was destroyed in August after it was found at the base of a tree in Whatom County. Agriculture department employees had put trackers on three of the hornets in hopes it would lead them to a nest.

 

The nest was found 2 miles from a nest found in 2020, and almost 1,500 hornets were found in various developmental stages, according to a news release from the agriculture department.

 

The department is asking people to report sightings of the invasive species. The hornets were first reported in the U.S. in 2019 near Blaine, Washington.

 

Asian giant hornets are the largest hornets in the world, up to 2 inches long, and got their "murder hornet" name for being the cause of up to 50 deaths a year in Japan where they are commonly found. "Murder hornets" also will kill bees and other insects.

 

No murder hornet deaths have been reported in the U.S.

 

https://www.yahoo.com/news/third-asian-giant-murder-hornet-123639225.html