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The situation in Loudoun County, VA, has become a point of national interest over the last year as it has come to represent ground zero for the fight against Critical Race Theory and transgender ideology in schools. Parents have stood up at school board meetings and pushed back on policies allowing boys in girls’ bathrooms, books that promote pedophilia, and other perverse directives.

Back in June, one such meeting exploded with multiple arrests after the cowardly school board declared an unlawful assembly. Police officers with no care for the rights of parents grabbed and threw one man to the ground who refused to leave. In what became a viral moment, the man was dragged out with his pants around his ankles.

Smith was given a no-trespassing order prior to the meeting that forbids him from telling his story. This was all part of an elaborative cover-up by the school district to not publicize the rape of his daughter. In fact, when Smith showed up at the school to complain about what had happened, they essentially accused him of lying and called the police, not on the transgender rapist, but on Smith himself for causing a scene. Luckily, he was able to get his daughter a rape kit that evening that confirmed the crime.

read more:

https://redstate.com/bonchie/2021/10/11/horror-in-loudoun-county-implicates-local-and-federal-officials-n455371

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    • Lynn...

      There were no Federal mental Hospitals open to the general public.   States Chartered and licensed hospitals, Asylums and Mental Hospitals.. some were private but most were state, county, or city-run medical facilities.  Insane asylums or mental hospitals were state facilities.  Reagan did not shut them down... Congress cut funds for such institutions and the states refused to continue operating them... would not increase their funding.  Stop blaming Reagan ... Presidents do not fund anything... Congress does.

      The Federal Government did not operate medical facilities in States except for Military posts, Indian Health Services, and in Territorial possessions...stop blaming Reagan for closing down mental hospitals.. most all of them were State institutions, and the States, Counties, and CIties closed them choosing instead to fund drug rehab, abortions, gender reorientation programs... etc.

  • Turn that kid over to a bunch of Arab Terrorists as a "Gift" for their cooperation, given or not.

    Lynn Bryant DeSpain

  • Marlene, I very well remember the shame of Regan when he closed certain "Mental Health Facilities." The overwhelming bulk of these housed those of I.Q.s below those of Teenagers, Down Syndrome Clients from birth, and Extreme Handicapped. 24/7 Care, recreation and humane contact was provided for these people normally until their Natural Deaths. These environments were the only homes they knew, and were provided appropriate education, entertainment, exercise, food, lodging, medical care, adventure and a family atmosphere of fun and adventure. When Regan Closed these Facilities under the guise of Cruel and Unnecessary Confinement, over 65% died within the First Year, unable to cope in their New World. Another 10-12% perished the following year. The Third year the States subsidized the "Care" of the remaining to Private Concerns. Even in the current Society of the United States, A Citizen's Constitutional Rights in "Trial" demand that when a question of "Sanity" arises the person must be "Placed" (confined) for observation/determination of Worthiness to Stand Trial/Conviction as a Sane Person. If not Sane, Facilities "Must" be made available for the person to be protected from harming or being harmed by Society. This is who and what we are.

    Lynn Bryant DeSpain

    • Exactly Marlene... 

      Too many parents dump their mentally challenged children on the state... taking resources from individuals with serious mental health issues. The limited resources of the State should be used to care for the dangerous and more difficult cases with mental health issues, not those with low IQs or who need assisted living environments. The latter group simply need to be cared for by family members and in low-income families, some financial support may be appropriate... especially if it helps to avoid institutionalizing them at huge costs to the state.

    • A Beautiful Mind is a 2001 American biographical drama film based on the life of the American mathematician John Nash, a Nobel Laureate in Economics and Abel Prize winner. The film was directed by Ron Howard, from a screenplay written by Akiva Goldsman. It was inspired by the bestselling, Pulitzer Prize-nominated 1997 book of the same name by Sylvia Nasar. The film stars Russell Crowe, along with Ed Harris, Jennifer Connelly, Paul Bettany, Adam Goldberg, Judd Hirsch, Josh Lucas, Anthony Rapp, and Christopher Plummer in supporting roles. The story begins in Nash's days as a graduate student at Princeton University. Early in the film, Nash begins to develop paranoid schizophrenia and endures delusional episodes while watching the burden his condition brings on his wife Alicia and friends.

      A Beautiful Mind was released theatrically in the United States on December 21, 2001. It went on to gross over $313 million worldwide and won four Academy Awards, for Best Picture, Best Director, Best Adapted Screenplay and Best Supporting Actress. It was also nominated for Best Actor, Best Film Editing, Best Makeup, and Best Original Score.

      A fantastic movie, I remember watching it when it first came out. It was so well done, we sat there stunned as the people began to leave the theater, we were still trying to digest it.......but it was a movie, little resemblance to the real life of the man and his wife who lived it.

      I have a nephew with schizophrenia, he works, talented, smart, mostly dependable, but even with medication his life is far from normal, and when he is off meds, his life is more like a movie. Recently he flew to the Philipines to marry a woman he met online. He has property in Alaska just south of the Arctic circle where he'd like to live and raise a family......for over twenty years now time hasn't altered the plan.
      He went up there to look at his property, the Indians he met on the river gave him the wrong landmarks so he buried the things he took up there for his future house on the wrong property, but while there, and since he was hungry, he killed him self a moose and ate well until several days later the Indians found and joined him, and told him they made a mistake.......his place was further up the river.
      He came back home and is still dreaming about moving to Alaska, but the years, decades go by, and now he is waiting for his Philippino wife who is older by about a decade, to eventually arrive. Yes, we could write a book, it could be a movie. Would he be better off in an institution? He probably would get violent if he was locked up and controlled, otherwise he is usually pretty easy going, reasonable, as long as he is allowed to live a fairly nomadic life.

      Biographical film
      A biographical film, or biopic (; abbreviation for biographical motion picture), is a film that dramatizes the life of a non-fictional or historicall…
    • Mental health issues are not the responsibility of the Federal Government ... they are State Issues and I don't recall ANY FEDERAL MENTAL HOSPITALS in my home state during the years of Regan.  If there is any shame to be distributed for the abuse of our mentally ill it goes to the STATES who also neglected PUBLIC HEATH for years.ll causing many of the early problems with mobilizing for the COVID Pandemic.

      I think you have SELECTIVE MEMORY and forgot how the public health system worked in the '50s and early '60s... there was no federal Department of Health and Human Services until May 4th, 1980.  Reagan was President  1981 - 1989 the DHHS in existed when he took office.  Previously it was the DEW Department of Education and WELFARE... with very little emphasis on Health.  The states were the primary vehicle for providing care for the mentally ill and indigent.  Families were expected to bear the burden of support for their own... a unique concept in today's dependent social order.

      The closing of Mental Health facilities was overwhelmingly the work of States which no longer wanted the fiscal burden of providing care for the mentally ill... they would rather house DRUG ADDICTS, care for indigent illegal aliens, and the criminally insane, than care for the low IQ, disadvantaged and chronically mentally ill.

    • I agree, low IQ should not become a state problem... families should care for these disadvantaged individuals.  However, low-IQ is often accompanied by serious physical and MENTAL issues and in those cases, institutionalization may become the only rational means to care for them, as their families prove unable to provide the needed care... 24/7. 

  • Steven, We all know what our Grandparents and Great Grandparents would have done. The Community would have ended the Evil, Comforted and Repaired the Young Girl, Ostracized the Parents, and assured than none of the "Incidents" were Reported or Recorded. History may be best served repeated.

    Lynn Bryant DeSpain

     

  • States still have Mental Facilities available for those deemed by the Courts "Mentally Unfit" to stand trial or be sentenced.

    Lynn Bryant DeSpain

  • What would our grand parents have done?

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