Pony Ping debut. If you want off or on the list, please ask.
Probably a low volume list.
John Edwards is starring?
Isolated society? Check! Forced reeducation? Check!
Then civil war breaks out!
Childish innocence isn’t for adults. Retarded adults with regressed maturity, yes, but not normal functioning adults.
The contemporary My Little Pony is one of the best children’s series ever. The characters and stories are excellent.
Furry convention!
My daughter loves that show! I’m now glad it’s a show for conservatives.
ping
yeah put me on the list. my kids and i have been fans since they were toddlers.
Gayest post of the day!
Thanks for this and for your bravery in posting it.
I am always looking for children’s media that impart some of these big truths. My little daughter has some tiny pony dolls but I don’t believe we’ve seen the shows. Now I will look for them.
I really love children’s books and have amassed quite a large collection, having homeschooled 3/4 kids. But there was one hardbound book with expensive illustrations that I refused to donate: I just threw it out. It was pure Communism. It’s called The Rainbow Fish and it deserves to be in landfills or burnt. In it, a little fish is covered with beautiful rainbow scales (done in metallic glittery paper to look very special indeed). People get jealous and mock him, and he goes to a wise creature for help. The wise one tells him to share all of his pretty scales equally among the other fish children, which he does, and then each child has exactly one fancy scale, including him. And everyone plays happily because they are all the same. ABSOLUTE GARBAGE.
Jon Meis, the hero at Seattle Pacific University, had on his facebook page a like to “My Little Pony”! (Along with assorted weapons sites, etc. Ever since I saw that I have been careful not to judge people based on “My Little Pony”. (They might just kick the crap out of me!)
He was recently awarded the “Citizen Service Before Self Award” by the Congressional Medal of Honor Foundation:
Excerpt:
The 2015 Citizen Honors recipients, selected for their acts of courage and selfless service, are:
Jon Meis of Renton, Washington, was selected for his heroism on June 5, 2014, when he disarmed and subdued a shooter on the campus of Seattle Pacific University.
Meis is selected for his singular act of heroism during a violent and deadly shooting spree at Seattle Pacific University on June 5, 2014. While serving as a student-building monitor and teaching assistant, John Meis risked his life when he pepper sprayed the shooter as the shooter stopped to reload his shotgun. Meis tackled the assailant and with the help of others subdued him until police arrived.
Although one student was killed and three others were injured, the casualties could have been much worse if Meis had not acted to protect others. In recognition of his selfless act, Seattle Pacific University has established a scholarship in Meis name.