“There are no breakfast buffets near us. I really miss them.”
What about a hotel? I think Best Western has breakfast buffets.
Georgetown student petitions to rename Reagan National Airport after LGBT ‘Dance Moms’ star JoJo Siwa
More than 20,000 people have signed a Georgetown student’s petition to change the name of Reagan National Airport.
A University of Massachusetts history professor — who said in April that “the problem with academia today is that it has too many conservatives” — supports the move as a “genuinely phenomenal idea.”
“I really did not put too much thought into who it was, but my reasoning for picking JoJo Siwa was related to the fact that Reagan in his presidency did a lot of really terrible things with regard to the LGBTQ communities, specifically with the HIV and AIDS pandemic,” Long explained in his interview with Georgetown student newspaper The Hoya. “I decided to pick JoJo Siwa because she’s been this recent rise as a new LGBT figure.”
https://campusreform.org/article?id=17493
fter suggesting in March that President Ronald Reagan had taken action to help the gay community during the AIDS crisis, a campaigning Hillary Clinton found herself pilloried by gay activists and others certain that he had done nothing of the sort. They were mistaken. In dealing with AIDS, Reagan did what he so often did well—he appointed people who shared his political convictions but could be relied on to make sound decisions based on apolitical facts and solid science. These appointees framed and announced such decisions in ways that would not result in politically polarizing efforts—in this case, efforts to fight a disease that disproportionately afflicted the gay community.
More important, both of the two Food and Drug Administration (FDA) commissioners Reagan appointed during his presidential tenure were doctors who made the right calls in leading the assault on AIDS. As the policies they implemented would demonstrate, both understood that doctors could play an invaluable role in getting the right drugs into patients to beat this dreadful new disease. This marked the beginning of an important learning process that has recently resurfaced. The future of molecular medicine now depends largely on our willingness to give today’s doctors as much flexibility and responsibility as was given to doctors engaged in the early battle against AIDS.
As the gravity of the AIDS threat became clear, the Reagan FDA began writing new rules that spelled out when significant parts of the old rules wouldn’t be fully or rigorously enforced. By doing so, the agency accelerated patient access to desperately needed drugs. Pharmaceutical companies quickly began coming on board once new policies were in place that would speed up the approval of their drugs. In short order, the firms delivered a slew of powerful new drugs, using the new tools for designing precisely targeted ...
https://www.city-journal.org/html/ronald-reagans-quiet-war-aids-14783.html