April 20, 2023 Edition
Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick
Kudos to Lt. Gov. Patrick and Republican State Senators!
CRTX NEWS
Texas Legislative Update
-Steven F. Hotze, M.D.
April 20, 2023
Bring Back Mr. Rogers’ Normalcy
The Democrat Party is the party of perverts and pedophiles. Here is proof.
DeSantis Commercial Mocks Perverted Male Athletes Who Compete in Women’s Sports. You Have to Admire Desantis’ Boldness in Opposing the Woke Trans Movement
Team DeSantis
They Won’t Let Him Gender Transition His Dog
This exposes the absurdity of trans sex procedures (Hilarious)
J.P. Sears
Students Act out Lesbian 'Wedding' in Class
Peter Labarbera, World Net Daily (WND), April 17, 2023
Pastor Artur Pawlowski’s son detained in Calgary for preaching against drag show targeting kids.
Life Site News
Christians can you see that the noose is being tightened around your neck? Are you going to wring your hands, or rise up and fight to protect your children and your God-given Christian freedoms?
Operation Millstone:
Florida House Backs Death Penalty In Child Rape Cases
The Day the Music Died
Bill Bennett
“By the rivers of Babylon, there we sat down and wept when we remembered Zion. Upon the willows in the midst of it, we hung our harps. For there our captors demanded of us songs, and our tormentors’ (laughter) mirth, saying, ‘Sing us one of the songs of Zion.’” (Psalm 137:1-3 NASB)
A popular song in the ’70s, American Pie, included the phrase “the day the music died.” (1) It has always reminded me of this Psalm. Though Don McLean’s song was about a different time, place, and reason, it too was about “the nostalgia that comes with closing a chapter in time” (Ethan Reese). Reese says the song describes the end of “A chapter that was good, youthful, and innocent.…For McLean, it was lost when he discovered that his favorite musicians, Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens, and J.P. ‘The Big Bopper’ Richardson, had died in a plane crash—the day the music died. And for America, it came when the utopia of the 1950s was exposed as a veneer, giving way to the more socially conscious, but turbulent 1960s.” (2)