Oklahoma restaurant that won’t serve ‘f*ggots’ gets Internet push as ‘best gay bar’

Oklahoma restaurant that won’t serve ‘f*ggots’ gets Internet push as ‘best gay bar’

haha I love it!

Oklahoma restaurant that won’t serve ‘f*ggots’ gets Internet push as ‘best gay bar’ | The Raw Story

Oklahoma restaurant that won’t serve ‘f*ggots’ gets Internet push as ‘best gay bar’

خليجية

The owner of an Oklahoma restaurant who declared last week that he won’t serve “freaks,” “f*ggots,” the disabled, or people on welfare now finds himself the victim of an online campaign to brand his establishment the “Best Gay Club” in Oklahoma City.

Gary James of Gary’s Chicaros restaurant told KFOR last week that “I really don’t want gays around. Any man that would compromise his own **** would compromise anything.”


The “gays” have responded on Yelp and Facebook by declaring James’s establishment the “[b]est place for hot man sex!”


Another reviewer notes that “Gary does’t serve tube steak. He asks for yours when you walk in the door. But don’t ask to use his backdoor, he saves that for minorities.”


The restaurant’s official t-shirt proudly threatens violence against minorities.


It is not known whether any of the “Yelpers” who claim the establishment is “the best gay and/or BDSM club in or around Oklahoma” have actually dined in the restaurant.


Raw Story attempted to contact Gary James to discern whether there had been an uptake in tickets and tables since this story broke last week, but despite calling during listed business hours, the call went to a voicemail system that indicated that the restaurant could not save any more messages.

Rihanna In Céline – Los Angeles Clippers vs. Oklahoma City Thunder Game

Oklahoma Becomes Second State to Ban Second Trimester Abortion Method

Oklahoma Becomes Second State to Ban Second Trimester Abortion Method

Oklahoma Becomes Second State to Ban Second Trimester Abortion Method

Oklahoma Governor Mary Fallin signed a ban late Monday on intact dilation and evacuation, a common Second Trimester Abortion procedure. D&E is also commonly used in incomplete miscarriages, but the bill’s ******** around that is vague enough that it’s not entirely clear whether or not those are now off the table, too. Kansas banned the procedure last week. This is the new wave of the attack on Abortion rights, and it’s going to be happen very, very quickly.

The bill, HB 1721 in the House and SB 95 in the Senate, is virtually identical to Kansas’s law, in that the final version doesn’t use medical terminology, only a deliberately shocking de******ion of the procedure:

“Dismemberment abortion” means, with the purpose of causing the death of an unborn child, purposely to dismember a living unborn child and extract him or her one piece at a time from the uterus through use of clamps, grasping forceps, tongs, scissors or similar instruments that, through the convergence of two rigid levers, slice, crush, and/or grasp a portion of the unborn child’s **** to cut or rip it off. This definition does not include an Abortion which uses suction to dismember the **** of the developing unborn child by sucking fetal parts into a collection container.

The bill doesn’t specifically make an exception for women having a miscarriage, but it does say an Abortion can’t be defined as the removal of “a dead unborn child.” That should theoretically mean D&Es are still acceptable in the case of miscarriage, but the ******** here is uncomfortably broad.

Like Kansas, the Oklahoma law only makes an exception for health risks so serious it would kill the woman, or would cause “substantial and irreversible physical impairment of a major bodily function, not including psychological or emotional conditions.” Both bills were based off model legislation written by the National Right to Life Committee; earlier this year, anti-abortion website LifeNews promised the new laws would “transform the landscape of Abortion policy in the United States.” Like Governor Brownback in Kansas, Governor Fallin signed the bill quietly, without a public ceremony or even a press release.

In their own press release sent out this morning, the Center for Reproductive Rights decried Oklahoma’s decision.

“With this law, Oklahoma has joined Kansas in an alarming trend toward substituting politicians’ agendas for the judgment and expertise of doctors, and then threatening those doctors with criminal charges if they disagree,” Nancy Northup, the CCR’s president and CEO, is quoted as saying. “Women need to be able to trust their physicians to provide the very best care possible, tailored to their unique needs and circumstances and not dictated under threat of prosecution. It’s time politicians stop passing these dangerous laws and recognize that women’s reproductive health care is a necessity, not a crime.”

The CCR also included a letter from 22 Oklahoma physicians to Congressman Steve Brunk, Chair of the House Federal and State Affairs Committee. They warned that the bill intrudes on the doctor-patient relationship and the safest Abortion method:

Senate Bill 95 represents unwarranted intrusion in the doctor-patient relationship. The bill would restrict the safest and most expeditious way to terminate a second-trimester pregnancy. In many cases, these terminations are necessary for the patient to protect her health or future fertility, and the bill lacks an adequate health exception that would allow physicians to exercise their medical judgment in these circumstances. This legislation could also force physicians to provide substandard care to second-trimester Abortion patients.

Substandard care seems to be the point here, really. The law is set to take effect November 1.

Oklahoma Governor Signs Bill Approving Nitrogen Gas For Executions*

Oklahoma Governor Signs Bill Approving Nitrogen Gas For Executions*

Oklahoma Governor Signs Bill Approving Nitrogen Gas For ExecutionsÂ*

خليجية

On Friday, Oklahoma Governor Mary Fallin signed a bill that allows the state to execute inmates using Nitrogen gas in the event that traditional lethal injection drugs are unavailable. The use of Nitrogen gas, which induces hypoxia, has never been tested on humans, but supporters maintain that the method is both humane and painless.

Fallin said in a statement:

“Oklahoma executes murderers whose crimes are especially heinous. I support that policy, and I believe capital punishment must be performed effectively and without cruelty. The Bill I signed today gives the state of Oklahoma another death penalty option that meets that standard.”

The AP notes that executions in the state are currently on hold while the Supreme Court determines whether or not their “three-drug method of lethal injection is constitutional.” The Bill essentially gives Oklahoma method to execute death row inmates while the state’s preferred method is suspended.

Oklahoma’s three-drug method of execution came under fire following the 2024 botched execution of Clayton Lockett. Lockett was administered an untested mixture of drugs that included a sedative. The state tried to halt the execution when he began writhing and moaning. Lockett died 43 minutes later.

Via the AP:
The problematic execution was blamed on a poorly placed intravenous line and prompted a lawsuit from Oklahoma death-row inmates, who argue that the state’s new drug combination presents a serious risk of pain and suffering. The US supreme court is scheduled to hear arguments later this month.

Under the new law, lethal injection would remain the state’s first choice for executions and Nitrogen gas would be its first backup method […]