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....huh. Guess he really DID say the gamer word, it was just too subtle to notice
View attachment 3160946
"I'm eager to hear... nigger hear next"
Top Kek! I'm sure this will have no effect at all on the US militaries actual fighting power, just like the inclusion of women + trannies haven't and won't either. What is morale even.Hold up WTF. I guess this brings a whole new meaning to pozzload the negholes of the locals while on deployment. I cannot wait until the Jap nationalists get wind of the Marines and Airmen raping women end up with those women being HIV+. This is just ooooof.
(Tribune News Service) — A federal judge issued a pair of landmark rulings barring the U.S. military from discharging soldiers who contract HIV and ordering the Pentagon to allow those who have the virus but no symptoms to become officers.
The decisions Wednesday by U.S. District Judge Leonie Brinkema in Virginia pave the way for career advancements for HIV-positive soldiers who have long been blocked by policies barring them from deploying overseas, even when their symptoms are suppressed indefinitely by highly effective drugs.
“The court ruled that the Pentagon’s policies regarding service members with HIV are not only outdated, but unlawful,” said Lambda Legal’s Scott Schoettes, who represented plaintiffs in both cases. The findings are among “the strongest judicial rulings in over two decades for people living with HIV,” he added.
The rulings could impact the Defense Department’s broader policy of barring people with HIV from enlisting. A parallel suit challenging that rule was put on hold in 2020 pending the rulings by Brinkema over deployment of HIV-positive soldiers. The judge in that case denied the Pentagon’s motion to dismiss the suit and said the broader policy appeared to have “no rational basis.”
The Defense Department didn’t immediately respond to a message seeking comment.
Brinkema’s rulings Wednesday granted motions for summary judgment in a pair of 2018 lawsuits, handing victory to the plaintiffs without trial. Her ruling will be kept under seal for a few weeks while the parties agree on a redacted version, she said.
The suit over the officer ban was filed by Nick Harrison, a National Guard sergeant in Washington who claimed the HIV policy violated of the equal protection clause of the Constitution by preventing him from becoming a military lawyer in the Judge Advocate General’s Corps. The Oklahoma native, who deployed to Afghanistan and Kuwait before testing positive, argued there was a disconnect between advances in HIV science and the military’s rule.
“It’s profoundly emotional to know that all service members with HIV will now be able to serve and defend our country without discrimination,” Harrison, 43, said in a statement. “I’m incredibly pleased with the court’s decision, and it’s very reassuring to hear the court recognize that these policies are irrational and based on outdated stereotypes and stigma.”
The other case was filed by two Air Force airmen who were discharged because they tested positive for HIV. The men, who are participating in the case under the pseudonyms Richard Roe and Victor Voe to protect their identities, were told they had to go because their HIV status prevented them from deploying, and because deployment was a key part of their job.
Policy shift
The challenged decisions were seen as a shift in the Air Force’s treatment of HIV-positive personnel, because service members who previously contracted the disease were generally allowed to remain and perform different duties, if necessary, or get waivers. But in both of their cases, the inability to deploy was deemed to be too detrimental to their job.
Medical science is at the center of the disputes. Harrison and plaintiffs in the related case have argued that drugs developed in 1996 to prevent the virus from replicating transformed the landscape of HIV treatment. The drugs reduce the number of copies of the virus that can be detected in a milliliter of a person’s blood to lower than 20, making it technically undetectable.
About 2,000 people with HIV are serving in the military, according to court records filed in the case. Defense Department records say that from 2011 to 2016, the Navy diagnosed 388 sailors with HIV, while the Air Force diagnosed 181 airmen.
Brought to Stripes.com by Bloomberg,, of fucking course.
I give it till the end of the year before he’s so far gone that just a dose of stimulant medication short he drops the gamer word and starts speaking cursive.View attachment 3161000
Unfortunately, since it's so subtle, we won't get to see journo-scum squirm over it, but who knows? Next time, he probably won't be so subtle....![]()
I have to wonder, if you find out your opponent has weaponized HIV positive faggots who will rape you if you're captured, will you: fight harder, or simply leave and go home before they can capture you.Top Kek! I'm sure this will have no effect at all on the US militaries actual fighting power, just like the inclusion of women + trannies haven't and won't either. What is morale even.
Really need a goodI have to wonder, if you find out your opponent has weaponized HIV positive faggots who will rape you if you're captured, will you: fight harder, or simply leave and go home before they can capture you.
Well it's not like there's much of a choice after they "vaccinate" everyone.US military is ordered to allow HIV-positive soldiers to become officers
Have you tested yourself every time you got the sniffles since that last time? Because that's why they keep catching it, they're part of the only demographic that does that.
wow, this bitch is more dirty than I thought.
Hate to break it to you, but the current job market is completely fucked for this exact reason. I've been seeing postings online for remote only jobs that still make taking the jab and tests mandatory, even if you never ever have to set foot into their building. Companies have completely lost their fucking minds with this bullshit, so if you do quit, be prepared to sift through post after post while being unemployed for longer than you anticipate unless you have something else immediately available to you.Yeah, I'm getting ready to quit my job for just that reason. After working from home all this time, now they want everyone back in the office but with regular testing (only for purebloods though).
This is why I fucking hate corporate. Majority of the time it seems to be that the "plebs" are the smarter ones with common sense and the suits up top have no clue what the fuck they are doing.More than once, employees have brought up the question of why the jabbed should be exempt from this if they also catch and spread the virus, and the company is always so desperate to avoid giving a real answer. Each time they just pass the buck and say they're listening to the "experts."
How long before military enlistments plummet and we just see militias instead?Hold up WTF. I guess this brings a whole new meaning to pozzload the negholes of the locals while on deployment. I cannot wait until the Jap nationalists get wind of the Marines and Airmen raping women end up with those women being HIV+. This is just ooooof.
(Tribune News Service) — A federal judge issued a pair of landmark rulings barring the U.S. military from discharging soldiers who contract HIV and ordering the Pentagon to allow those who have the virus but no symptoms to become officers.
The decisions Wednesday by U.S. District Judge Leonie Brinkema in Virginia pave the way for career advancements for HIV-positive soldiers who have long been blocked by policies barring them from deploying overseas, even when their symptoms are suppressed indefinitely by highly effective drugs.
“The court ruled that the Pentagon’s policies regarding service members with HIV are not only outdated, but unlawful,” said Lambda Legal’s Scott Schoettes, who represented plaintiffs in both cases. The findings are among “the strongest judicial rulings in over two decades for people living with HIV,” he added.
The rulings could impact the Defense Department’s broader policy of barring people with HIV from enlisting. A parallel suit challenging that rule was put on hold in 2020 pending the rulings by Brinkema over deployment of HIV-positive soldiers. The judge in that case denied the Pentagon’s motion to dismiss the suit and said the broader policy appeared to have “no rational basis.”
The Defense Department didn’t immediately respond to a message seeking comment.
Brinkema’s rulings Wednesday granted motions for summary judgment in a pair of 2018 lawsuits, handing victory to the plaintiffs without trial. Her ruling will be kept under seal for a few weeks while the parties agree on a redacted version, she said.
The suit over the officer ban was filed by Nick Harrison, a National Guard sergeant in Washington who claimed the HIV policy violated of the equal protection clause of the Constitution by preventing him from becoming a military lawyer in the Judge Advocate General’s Corps. The Oklahoma native, who deployed to Afghanistan and Kuwait before testing positive, argued there was a disconnect between advances in HIV science and the military’s rule.
“It’s profoundly emotional to know that all service members with HIV will now be able to serve and defend our country without discrimination,” Harrison, 43, said in a statement. “I’m incredibly pleased with the court’s decision, and it’s very reassuring to hear the court recognize that these policies are irrational and based on outdated stereotypes and stigma.”
The other case was filed by two Air Force airmen who were discharged because they tested positive for HIV. The men, who are participating in the case under the pseudonyms Richard Roe and Victor Voe to protect their identities, were told they had to go because their HIV status prevented them from deploying, and because deployment was a key part of their job.
Policy shift
The challenged decisions were seen as a shift in the Air Force’s treatment of HIV-positive personnel, because service members who previously contracted the disease were generally allowed to remain and perform different duties, if necessary, or get waivers. But in both of their cases, the inability to deploy was deemed to be too detrimental to their job.
Medical science is at the center of the disputes. Harrison and plaintiffs in the related case have argued that drugs developed in 1996 to prevent the virus from replicating transformed the landscape of HIV treatment. The drugs reduce the number of copies of the virus that can be detected in a milliliter of a person’s blood to lower than 20, making it technically undetectable.
About 2,000 people with HIV are serving in the military, according to court records filed in the case. Defense Department records say that from 2011 to 2016, the Navy diagnosed 388 sailors with HIV, while the Air Force diagnosed 181 airmen.
Brought to Stripes.com by Bloomberg,, of fucking course.
wow, this bitch is more dirty than I thought.
Just like with the White House/Congress and America at large. Funny, ain't it?This is why I fucking hate corporate. Majority of the time it seems to be that the "plebs" are the smarter ones with common sense and the suits up top have no clue what the fuck they are doing.
Well I actually have a couple of months before the changes go into effect, at which point I really would have to just quit without anything lined up. In the meantime I'm looking at online postings like Indeed, staffing agencies etc. So far it doesn't seem like a whole lot of them mention anything about jabs or testing but also I wonder how much of that could vary among different regions. I'm in a red state but unfortunately my current employer's corporate hq is in NYC.Hate to break it to you, but the current job market is completely fucked for this exact reason. I've been seeing postings online for remote only jobs that still make taking the jab and tests mandatory, even if you never ever have to set foot into their building. Companies have completely lost their fucking minds with this bullshit, so if you do quit, be prepared to sift through post after post while being unemployed for longer than you anticipate unless you have something else immediately available to you.
This is why I fucking hate corporate. Majority of the time it seems to be that the "plebs" are the smarter ones with common sense and the suits up top have no clue what the fuck they are doing.
Imagine mixed units like supply companies, those retards already have STD/fungal issues from fucking literally everywhere during deployments. Imagine how it will be when the new guy/gal comes in and doesn't tell anyone that they are HIV+. It'll spread faster than in the California poofter community.Amazing, now when some poor soyboy gets drafted to fight Russia, he can have the joy of being diagnosed with that when his company commander gets red misted by an IFV and it gets in his mouth, before hearing that the suppression drug supply is cut off because its a warzone and they can barely remember to supply enough lubricant for non-fucking reasons, much less specialist drugs.
I don't expect to see this policy survive any actual war declaration, and I wonder if it'll become the gay version of getting pregnant to dodge deployment.
Thing is, I'm pretty sure that they tried this before with hispanics, the problem comes in when that group stops being a reliable DNC voting block. Furthermore, the economic issues we're having right now are going to make this country less and less appealing to illegal immigrants as the crisis continues and worsens. What happens when the illegals in question all want to head to Canada or Europe instead because there's more to mooch off of there?They are getting sky high numbers of illegals in to give them more foot soldiers, rent seek better, get birthright citizenship future voters, punish recalcitrant white and black people in suburban and rural areas with bused and "dark plane" illegals, etc. Its working like a charm. It is not a border crisis, it is not border incompetence, it is the border plan and it is being executed exceptionally well. Record numbers of illegals in America is good for the DNC and the RNC's donor class like Chamber of Commerce and the George W. Bush Insititute and the Koch Brothers who set up something called Alliance for A New Immigration Consensus. Bad for everybody else.
We did it everyone. This is like our generation's moon landing. He finally said the word!!!....huh. Guess he really DID say the gamer word, it was just too subtle to notice
View attachment 3160946
"I'm eager to hear... nigger hear next"
A lot of law school classes don't teach you how to be a lawyer; many of the professors don't know the first thing about that. The classes teach you how to be a law school professor.Nope. Biggest gripe with Con Law was that we weren't taught anything relevant to being a well-developed American attorney.
My guess is that at this point they’re super loading him with whatever drug/s at the cost of crashes coming super quickly and super hard. His body can probably barely take it anymore.View attachment 3161781
God this must be the worst I've seen Biden look. It looks like he's about to get embalmed. Just ghastly.