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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
5 w

'Would you let your child wear this?': Is this mom 'overreacting' to a Target dress?
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www.upworthy.com

'Would you let your child wear this?': Is this mom 'overreacting' to a Target dress?

There seems to be a constant war between children’s clothing retailers who want to push the boundaries of modesty and parents who push back, saying they are sexualizing children. On top of that, when young girls believe they are supposed to wear clothes that are tight-fitting and revealing, it's very damaging to their self-esteem and body image. So what is a parent to do?“I think it’s one thing that the girls’ clothes are very fitted and small, and it’s another that they’re in such direct contrast to what you find on the boys’ side, and those two things send a pretty strong message about what they’re supposed to look like, dressed to be slim and to be fit,” Sharon Choksi, a mom of two and founder of the clothing line, Girls Will Be, told CNN.The topic came up again recently when Meghan Mayer, a mother of 2 and a 7th-grade school teacher, posted a video on TikTok about a dress she saw at Target that received over 1.6 million views. Meghan was reacting to a smock-style patterned dress with balloon sleeves that appeared modest at first glance. But after closer examination, it has holes on the waist on both sides, revealing the girl’s midriff and possibly more. @thecrazycreativeteacher Thoughts? “My oldest daughter and I are at Target, and there’s some cute spring stuff,” Mayer started the video. "I am a little bit more conservative when it comes to my kids’ clothing, so maybe I’m overreacting, but let me know what you think of these dresses.”She added that the dress may be okay for a 12-year-old but was inappropriate for a 6- or 7-year-old. Mayer asked her followers what they thought of the dress. “Like I said, I know I’m a little bit more conservative. I don’t usually even let my girls wear bikinis, but maybe I’m overreacting, I don’t know. Thoughts?”For reference, she then showed the sizes of the dresses to show they were for kids, and then revealed the holes in the sides. “Look at these little slits on the sides of these dresses, right at the hips on all these dresses,” she said.Most people commenting on the video thought the dress was a bit much for such a young girl to wear and that it was inappropriate for someone that age to expose themselves. Walking down the aisle in a target.via Mike Mozart/Flickr"You're not overreacting. You're parenting properly," Paper Bound Greetings wrote. "No, no. There is no reason for those holes to be there. They should have pockets! Not holes!" Anna wrote. "I think retailers are trying to mature our kids too fast. I agree with mom!" HollyMoore730 commented.But some people thought that that dress was acceptable and Mayer was overreacting."Unpopular opinion, I think they’re cute," Dr. Robinson wrote. "When I was a kid in the ‘70s I wore halter tops and tube tops; they were not seen as big deals. I don’t think this is scandalous," Kimberly Falkowsi added. "Overreacting. Both my girls have the blue and white, you can’t even tell much. It’s not that big of a hole. The dresses are so cute," LolitaKHalessi commented."Fun fact… you don’t have to buy it, Bethany wrote. "Idk I think it’s cute and that everyone just making it weird when it really isn’t," Wisdomdeals added. "Nothing wrong with the dress. It’s sold out in my area. Luckily if you don’t like it or think it’s inappropriate, you don’t buy it for your child," Maddison commented. The front of a Target.via Mike Mozart/Flickr Some commenters told Mayer that she should buy the dress and have her daughter wear a shirt beneath it so it doesn’t show skin. However, Mayer believes that it would support Target in making questionable kids' clothing."No, I'm not going to buy it and have them wear a tank top with it, because then that's showing Target that it's OK," she told Today.com. "And over time, the cutout will get bigger and bigger."This article originally appeared last year.
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Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
5 w

The Cure albums Robert Smith hates: “Nowhere near what I wanted”
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faroutmagazine.co.uk

The Cure albums Robert Smith hates: “Nowhere near what I wanted”

"I was very pissed off."
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Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
5 w

“That is not what music is about”: The one moment Billy Joel thought killed rock and roll
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faroutmagazine.co.uk

“That is not what music is about”: The one moment Billy Joel thought killed rock and roll

The ending of a golden age.
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Nostalgia Machine
Nostalgia Machine
5 w

5 Things You Didn’t Know About ‘In the Heat of the Night’
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www.remindmagazine.com

5 Things You Didn’t Know About ‘In the Heat of the Night’

Star Carroll O'Connor was never shy when it came to his feelings about the show.
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
5 w Politics

rumbleRumble
VICTIM POLITICS Dinesh D’Souza Podcast Ep1085
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
5 w

Will Sunday be Romania’s Independence Day?
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spectator.org

Will Sunday be Romania’s Independence Day?

Călin Georgescu, winner of Romania’s presidential election last November, was cancelled, then banned from running again. Now the regime faces a 38-year-old firebrand, George Simion, leader of a nationalist party, AUR — openly supported by Călin Georgescu in a powerful partnership. Challenging them is a Soros construct, Nicușor Dan, the mayor of Bucharest. The election will be held this Sunday and represents a national awakening. (RELATED: Stop the Steal in Romania: A Sinister Case) Let me explain… Twenty-two years ago, in early 2003, a Washington, D.C. neighbor — a think tank guy who taught at Yale and Georgetown — stopped by to say he was planning a research trip to Bucharest, Romania. Knowing I was born there, he asked: Would I come along to help with translation and getting around? Considering he was delightful company, I agreed to join up, leaving my art gallery in an assistant’s hands. (His wife was a museum curator, and the three of us had bonded over long discussions about the arts.) Once in Bucharest, I quickly saw my friend, General William Odom, in a new light. He was researching the country’s political leadership, ostensibly for a chapter about the ongoing post-Communist transition. But considering his credentials — former director of the National Security Agency under President Ronald Reagan; Russia specialist for decades; decorated 3-star general — national politicians were sure he was a powerful emissary in disguise, so they were dying to meet him. Any door he pointed to immediately opened. Every politician was eager to know what the United States needed, and they promised to deliver. They were especially eager to join NATO, which Odom helped deliver a year later. I’m going back to that visit in my mind as we await results of this Sunday’s election because I think it explains a lot that Western media insists on ignoring. Subservient Political Class To understand the current political atmosphere in Romania, it’s crucial to have a sense of how utterly subservient to Western interests the country’s elite became in three phases: after Communism fell, after 9/11, and after Washington and NATO set their eyes on Ukraine as a target to pull into its orbit. For about 35 years, Romania’s political class complied unconditionally with any requests from the West, rarely consulting its citizens. Dramatically, last Nov. 24, Romanian voters rejected this chronic subservience and voted for Călin Georgescu, a #RomaniaFirst candidate. Shocked, the establishment cancelled the democratic process, just two days before the final round, rather than cope with an unwanted victor. (RELATED: Biden’s Last Gasp Subverted Romania’s Democracy) Rejecting a political establishment in power for 35 years was a form of revelation. Georgescu used transcendent language around identity, nature, and ancestral traditions, which called forth new pride and a recommitment to the national project. It was so much more than a political campaign. (RELATED: Romania’s Trump Explained: Rejecting ‘Forever Wars’ and Woke Politics) You can call sovereignist (their preferred descriptor) candidates “far-right” or “ultra nationalist” as Reuters, BBC, and the New York Times do, but Romanian voters are simply demanding that national priorities replace foreign agendas — a healthy response to a self-serving ruling class. Picking Presidents Returning to General Odom’s tour, I’ll recount an eye-opening moment. We went to see the mayor of Bucharest, Traian Băsescu, a former sea captain and a favorite of the U.S. embassy. (The embassy was already engaged in a campaign to sabotage the leading presidential candidate, Prime Minister Adrian Năstase, to benefit Băsescu.) An over-confident man overflowing with bravado, Băsescu assured Odom (in good English) that he could deliver exactly what the U.S. Embassy said it wanted: a national anti-corruption program benefiting U.S. products and services. At one point, he pulled out polling commissioned by his rival, Năstase, and claimed the numbers showed he could beat Năstase in the upcoming election. (I was fixated on the fact that Băsescu obviously had moles in Năstase’s inner circle.) It felt like Băsescu was selling a product — himself — to Odom Alone at dinner, Odom told me he was not snowed by Băsescu’s big anti-corruption pitch: “He can say whatever he wants, Washington knows who he is,” the general cryptically reassured me, “and that makes him appealing.” With U.S. government support, Băsescu became president in 2004 and, in 2009, won reelection. He was an ethically disastrous leader: Friends and family — a brother, daughter, alleged mistress, and other close associates — were convicted of various serious corruption offenses. He was impeached, then saved when the infamous Constitutional Court ruled in his favor on a technicality. But Băsescu was a gold star partner when it came to American military interests: He agreed to establish American military bases on the Black Sea in 2005 and signed a deal to host a U.S. missile system in 2011. After he left office, it emerged that he never qualified to serve as president because he was an active member of the Communist secret political police (Securitate), a group barred from holding federal office! So, he lied twice to become president. German Leader Next The country’s next president, Klaus Iohannis, served a decade-long stint like Băsescu. An ethnic German whose entire family moved to Germany after communism ended. He, too, came into office promising to clean the proverbial stables. Unfortunately, once elected, he seemed utterly detached from the country’s plight — miserably low wages, insufficient opportunity, broken health and education systems, and the ongoing flight of millions abroad for work. One of many examples of Iohannis’s subservience to foreign interests came during the war in Ukraine. By accepting Ukrainian grain imports, Romania’s domestic market faced collapse in 2023. What really outraged the public, though, was Iohannis’s profligate spending: Long journeys to Africa and South America on private jets (26 trips in 2023 alone) and endless vacations. Meanwhile, he classified as “secret” his expenditures, rarely spoke to the press, and avoided public appearances. He cared about advancing U.S. and NATO military interests, though. Under his leadership, Romania bought more military equipment than it could afford: Between 2020 and 2024, Romania purchased $30 billion worth of weapons. Its national debt last November was 198.8 billion USD, 54.6 percent of GDP. Iohannis allowed NATO to expand its footprint decisively by constructing the biggest base in Europe, on the strategically sensitive Black Sea coast where Romania, Ukraine, and Russia all meet (together with Bulgaria, Moldova, Georgia, and Turkey). The U.S.–Romania–NATO alliance was personalized in the 2019 elevation to NATO deputy secretary general of Romanian politician Mircea Geoană, a former ambassador to Washington, D.C. Insight From a Guru To understand what I’ve witnessed for over 20 years, I sought out a wise man who was a decisionmaker during the period when I visited Romania with General Odom: Colonel Larry Wilkerson, who served as assistant to 4-star General Colin Powell when Powell was chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (1989-1993) during the Gulf War and then chief of staff to Secretary of State Powell (2002-2005). “You may not believe this, but we established a policy that said to the CIA, to NED [National Endowment for Democracy], National Democratic Institute, all those NGOs in 2002, 2003, to help elect governments, that were very very inimical to Moscow and very very favorable to NATO and to us,” Wilkerson recounted. “And it was incredibly successful. We got governments elected from Norway to Romania to Poland. We cultivated Jens Stoltenberg [secretary general of NATO] to begin with.” Wilkerson said the purpose was to “reestablish our hegemony over Europe,” which was slipping at the time: “We wanted people in Europe to be subservient to us, to be subservient to NATO, and to hate Moscow. We created that. We did that.” He continued, “It was a major success, except it was wrong in my view. Now Trump is going to try to unwind that. I don’t know how successful but that’s what he’s saying he wants to do.” Another source confirms the CIA’s tactics include media, not just presidential candidates. Amaryllis Fox Kennedy, a 10-year CIA veteran, told Tucker Carlson, “The playbook is going into countries and finding underfunded newspapers, radio stations, and TV shows. Then a benefactor would arrive with funding, and all of a sudden that mouthpiece is presenting stories in a light that aligns with U.S. foreign policy.” Ambassadorial Confirmation Even Romania’s current ambassador to the United States, Andrei Muraru, a close adviser to Iohannis, underscored the success of the U.S. strategy of subservience in a recent interview with a popular Romanian journalist. He bemoaned that his country is devoid of diplomacy: “Our big problem is that we invest very little or nothing in diplomacy. It seems we don’t understand why such an investment is important.” He continued, “The brand that was built in the last 35 years was NATO, strategic partnership with the U.S., and relations person to person … Romania never had Op Eds in the American media to promote the country’s touristic beauties, for example.” And in frustration, he shockingly reveals, “Romania is the fifth major contributor to the CIA on the planet. The other 4 are Great Britain, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand…. It seems to me so bizarre that a country [Romania] that shares its most sensitive secrets with American partners does not have any guarantees that its citizens can travel to the U.S.” This Sunday’s presidential election has shaped up as a referendum on the puppetry that has characterized Romanian politics for decades. Knowing the deep state continues to control so many levers of power, I can’t predict an overthrow of what the West crafted, but I’m praying for the renegades. READ MORE from Victor Gaetan: Stop the Steal in Romania: A Sinister Case Biden’s Last Gasp Subverted Romania’s Democracy Romania’s Trump Explained: Rejecting ‘Forever Wars’ and Woke Politics Victor Gaetan is a senior international correspondent for the National Catholic Register, a contributor to Foreign Affairs magazine, and the author of God’s Diplomats: Pope Francis, Vatican Diplomacy, and America’s Armageddon (Rowan & Littlefield, 2021). The post Will Sunday be Romania’s Independence Day? appeared first on The American Spectator | USA News and Politics.
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
5 w

Macron, Starmer Blast ‘Unacceptable’ Russian Stance In Talks, Zelensky Urges More Sanctions
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www.infowars.com

Macron, Starmer Blast ‘Unacceptable’ Russian Stance In Talks, Zelensky Urges More Sanctions

Ukraine is likely to continue pushing for Europe and the US to ramp up the sanctions campaign, and to commit more money and weapons.
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
5 w

James Comey’s public call to action, demanding the assassination of President Trump is a catalyzing event that will accelerate the destruction of the globalist order.
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www.sgtreport.com

James Comey’s public call to action, demanding the assassination of President Trump is a catalyzing event that will accelerate the destruction of the globalist order.

James Comey’s public call to action, demanding the assassination of President Trump is a catalyzing event that will accelerate the destruction of the globalist order. DOJ sources confirm to Infowars that the indictment of Comey is imminent and that is why the disgraced FBI… pic.twitter.com/IWeEmcGI2W — Alex Jones (@RealAlexJones) May 16, 2025
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
5 w

Can Trump Slip the Grip of the Neocons?
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www.sgtreport.com

Can Trump Slip the Grip of the Neocons?

by Rep. John J. Duncan Jr., Lew Rockwell: During the 1988 campaign, George W. Bush came to the Courthouse in Maryville, TN to speak at a rally for his Dad. As we were leaving, I told my friend and later Chief of Staff, Bob Griffitts, “Bob, he is better than his Dad.” When he ran […]
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
5 w

Israel’s Influence Over US-Iran Nuclear Talk in Serious Decline
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www.sgtreport.com

Israel’s Influence Over US-Iran Nuclear Talk in Serious Decline

from Activist Post: On Thursday, it was reported that US President Donald Trump has chosen to sever direct communication with Benjamin Netanyahu, the Prime Minister of Israel. The deterioration in the relationship between the US and Israel seems to stem from Netanyahu’s administration’s inability to provide a definitive proposal concerning Gaza, as well as a […]
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