On The Road To "Newspeak"

California for ya. Soon....they'll demand that all maps have California's Southern border shown not as "________" but instead as "_ _ _ _ _ _ _ " to show their doors are open for immigrants.
 
It says Tony Mendoza. How do you get "Jerry Brown" out of "Tony Mendoza"?

Do you read your own links?

I do. Try reading the very first line of the piece.

Moreover it's not a "ban".

Try reading the second line of the piece.

Actually reading that very line is where I got both of those points.

To wit
>> SB 432, introduced by State Sen. Tony Mendoza (D-Artesia), removes the term “alien,” previously defined as “any person who is not a born or fully naturalized citizen of the United States.” <<
Again, how exactly does M-E-N-D-O-Z-A spell "Jerry Brown"?
Again, where does the name "Jerry Brown" -- or "anybody Brown" -- appear in the story at all?
Again, what's the difference between "ban" and "remove"?

Are you fuckin' stupid?
 
It says Tony Mendoza. How do you get "Jerry Brown" out of "Tony Mendoza"?

Do you read your own links?

I do. Try reading the very first line of the piece.

Moreover it's not a "ban".

Try reading the second line of the piece.

Actually reading that very line is where I got both of those points.

To wit
>> SB 432, introduced by State Sen. Tony Mendoza (D-Artesia), removes the term “alien,” previously defined as “any person who is not a born or fully naturalized citizen of the United States.” <<
Again, how exactly does M-E-N-D-O-Z-A spell "Jerry Brown"?
Again, where does the name "Jerry Brown" -- or "anybody Brown" -- appear in the story at all?
Again, what's the difference between "ban" and "remove"?

Are you fuckin' stupid?

No, but you define it. "Introduced" does not make law. "Signed" makes law.

"California Gov. Jerry Brown signed a law Monday that bans the word “alien” from the state’s labor laws."
 
It says Tony Mendoza. How do you get "Jerry Brown" out of "Tony Mendoza"?

Do you read your own links?

I do. Try reading the very first line of the piece.

Moreover it's not a "ban".

Try reading the second line of the piece.

Actually reading that very line is where I got both of those points.

To wit
>> SB 432, introduced by State Sen. Tony Mendoza (D-Artesia), removes the term “alien,” previously defined as “any person who is not a born or fully naturalized citizen of the United States.” <<
Again, how exactly does M-E-N-D-O-Z-A spell "Jerry Brown"?
Again, where does the name "Jerry Brown" -- or "anybody Brown" -- appear in the story at all?
Again, what's the difference between "ban" and "remove"?

Are you fuckin' stupid?

No, but you define it. "Introduced" does not make law. "Signed" makes law.

"California Gov. Jerry Brown signed a law Monday that bans the word “alien” from the state’s labor laws."

This isn't a law; it's an amendment to an existing law.
All it does is change terminology and leaves the law intact. It got no opposing argument at all.

Now how does that amount to a "ban" on any word at all?

It's a triviality, and Dimbart splashed it to snare the gullible with nothing more important to do. As the other guy noted, nothing more than a way for a legislator "to get his name in the paper".

It worked. I never heard of Mendoza before. Then again maybe it didn't work since you even got his name wrong.
 

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