PING!
TDS - It rots the brain.
“Never Trumper Utah Governor Is Mental”
I have yet to hear of any NeverTrumper being normal? After all, they claim that they support conservatives in power, but then do EVERYTHING in their power to prevent exactly that, by going after 90% of the Republican base. Go figure.
The tie with the overdone golden hue gives me bad vibes.
Thanks for bringing back the word mental, as in mental case. I’ll add it to my word rotation immediately.
Mormon.
From his wikipedia page:
“Cox said early on that increasing the speed of the state’s vaccine distribution was his administration’s top priority. As of April 2021, Utah had administered more than 85% of the doses that it has received, according to CDC data.[19]”
He’s useless. A mutt wannabe.
He is related by marriage to the Osmonds, and related to pretty much everybody in Utah politics. If the WASPs had become Mormons, they might still be running the country.
People who have TDS caused by lack of mental control have other issues not hard to spot they live in their own world.
This guy looks like a butt nut. A greasy dingus. A half-wank. A moist weanus.
Did he do too much LDS?
So if you want to win elections, you must be a Republican.
I would guess that half the politicians in Utah who outwardly identify as Republican are secretly woke, and TDS has exposed them for who they really are.
Guy looks and acts like a flaming homosexual, in my humble opinion.
Affirmation, the oldest support group for LGBTQ members, assembles for its first in-person international conference in three years. HBO documentary about “Under the Banner of Heaven” creator Dustin Lance Black premieres next week.
Affirmation wins acclamation
When Spencer Cox was 2 years old, a band of gay Latter-day Saints began huddling quietly at Provo’s Brigham Young University with dreams of forming a national organization.
Forty-five years later, Affirmation, with thousands of followers across the country and the world, stands as the oldest support group for LGBTQ Latter-day Saints, and Cox sits as Utah’s governor.
In that capacity, Cox welcomed Affirmation — no longer relegated to private meetings but now publicly celebrated — to Salt Lake City last week for its first in-person international conference in three years.
“We recognize the important work this organization is doing to foster greater understanding and cooperation among residents of our state,” Cox wrote in his formal greeting. “You encourage our communities to have relevant and vital conversations about how to support and understand each other.”
The first-term Republican governor said Utahns “greatly benefit” from diversity, adding that his state seeks to “sustain a culture of hope, love, understanding, service and respect.”
Cox closed his letter, read to conferencegoers by Affirmation Vice President Laurie Lee Hall during the opening session, by reminding the attendees that they are “loved, appreciated and accepted in the state.”
Nathan Kitchen, Affirmation’s outgoing president, deemed the three-day gathering a “great success.”
“So much optimism and joy,” he wrote in an email. “After three years of pandemic restrictions, this reminded us all why in-person connection is vital for the wellness of our community.”
He sure sounded rather light in his loafers to me, even if he is married with 4 children.
Gaydar ping.