The Navy? No. The Gavy
Go Gavy! Say, is that a...Rear Admiral standing over there, checking me out? Bwa-ha-ha-ha-ha! Sorry, couldn't resist that one. By the way, my pronouns are "caveman"/"Neanderthal" mister!
And to think: the U.S. Marine Corps is part of the U.S. Navy! The purpose of castrating the U.S. military is to...to...anyone? Lose wars? Just asking. That must be it: to lose wars. The Chinese must be laughing hard right now.
The Jewish lesbian/tranny activist Leslie Feinberg (1949-2014) was a pioneer of the use of "gender-neutral pronouns" (circa 1990) which are all the rage today. Even 6-year-olds have pronouns now! Thanks, Leslie. But why would your pronoun(s) matter to people who don't even know you? They shouldn't! If I don't know you, why would I care? This is pure narcissism. But then, homosexuals love to be the center of attention and activity. "Look at me!" I'd rather not look at you. Regardless, anything related to homosexuals was pioneered by Jews. It's rather eerie. There must be something in their genes.
News headline: "Navy Training Sailors to Announce Their Pronouns, Claim It Will Create a 'Safe Space'"
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[1] "gender" originally applied only to grammar, e.g., masculine nouns and feminine nouns. The earliest political corruption of the word "gender" that I have found is by Dr. Robert Jesse Stoller (who was a Jew), a psychoanalyst who coined the term "gender identity" in 1964. Today, Big Fag has corrupted "gender" to mean "an internal awareness of whether you are male or female regardless of your genitals" which is total BS. You were either "born male" or "born female." No, you weren't "assigned" your sex by some unknown doctor although he may have noted for the record that you had a penis. You are male or female from the womb. Period. At least, 99.999 percent of us are. A few are hermaphrodites, etc.
[2] "It was not until the mid-1990s that use of the term gender began to exceed use of the term sex in APS (American Physiological Society) titles, and today gender more the doubles that of sex. The term gender appears to have undergone appropriation by some scientists as a politically correct way to talk about sex. This may be because some scientists are sensitive to the verity that discussing sex often means discussing difference and gender may be construed as a less loaded term." -- from an editorial titled "Sex and Gender: What is the Difference?" in The Journal of Applied Physiology, September 1, 2005.
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