I find it really interesting that sites like Breitbart keep saying that the biological female who identified as a man (per articles on Christian Post and elsewhere) was in fact a biological male who identified as a woman.
Interestingly enough, the pics are of the giant Asian hornet, vespa mandarina—but the article is talking about the Asian hornet, v. velutina. They’re not the same thing.
In this case, I think you can blame formatting problems from the original poster. The actual article does include a dateline that says, “South Bend, Ind.”
The headline says Indiana, and the article’s excerpt references the Indiana State Police. South Bend, Indiana, is the county seat of St Joseph County, Indiana.
Since the guy was a deacon in a Baptist church (Antioch Revival Center seems to be a congregation in an association of Holiness Baptists), he isn’t clergy. Does that tracker still apply?
What I find most troubling is that most of the coverage Japanese media give now (at least English-language ones like the Mainichi or JapanToday) is about Japanese politicians who have connections to the Moonies. Abe’s assassin targeted him because of a supposed connection to the Moonies, and because the assassin blamed the Moonies for ruining his family because of the large donations his mother, a member, made. But even so, it seems like the J-media is playing right into the assassin’s hands by scrutinizing politicians for connections to that cult.
The 4xe Jeeps are plug-in hybrids, but Stellantis has talked about bringing out battery-electric vehicles in the future. There’s been a couple of battery-electric Jeep Wrangler prototypes at the Easter Jeep Safari the past few years (Magneto and Magneto 2.0).
I have to admit I keep saying the same thing every time I read an article about the baby formula shortage. “You have breasts!” Like, what did mothers do before baby formula was invented? Let their babies starve?
When I was in college (I didn’t go to Taylor, but I grew up about half an hour away), the view was there were pretty much two kinds of people who went to Taylor: devout Christians, and people there on sports scholarships who made a point to be conspicuously, devoutly non-Christian.