Tim Walz Signed a Bill Redefining the Term "Sexual Orientation" to INCLUDE PEDOPHILES.
🧵A Thread 🧵
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On 02/13/2023, Leigh Finke, a trans identified male, Introduced H. F. No. 1655, which redefined "Sexual Orientation."
Link to the amendment:
In this amendment, Finke CROSSED OUT the section that expressly precluded pedophiles from falling under the definition of "Sexual orientation."
In the old bill, the definition "Sexual orientation" delineated which people were were protected under the Minnesota Human Rights Statute, making it a violation to discriminate against those falling under that definition. This old definition EXPLICITLY EXCLUDED pedophiles through the addition of this phrase to the definition: "Sexual orientation" does not include a physical 1.20 or sexual attachment to children by an adult.
The bill then passed the committee was adopted.
Link to Minutes:
Link to the video stream of the hearing:
The amendment to 2022 c 52 art 19 s 44, (yes, this includes the section crossing out the pedophile exclusion), is characterized by Finke in the committee hearing as "modernizing" the terminology to reflect more contemporary understandings of sexual orientation and gender.
The most disturbing part of this bill, is that it went through MULTIPLE revisions, and in EVERY. SINGLE. REVISION., they kept the pedophile exclusion crossed out.
These amendments were signed into law by Tim Walz, by virtue of their inclusion in the "Take Pride Act," which was an act included in the Judiciary and Public Safety bill.
As such, Tim Walz signed a bill into law that included an amendment that REMOVED the clause that excluded pedophiles from 2022 c 52 art 19 s 44.
Link to the Minnesota Department Human Rights announcement and list of things the bill included:
This bill included the Take Pride Act, which is where Finke's amendment, HF1655, the amendment that modified 2022 c 52 art 19 s 44 to exclude the section that excepted pedophiles from civil rights protections under the Minnesota human rights code.
To reiterate, Tim Walz signed a bill into law through which, removed the pedophile exclusion that excepted pedophiles from the civil rights protections that are afforded to those protected identities or classifications that fall under the definition "Sexual orientation."
This opens the door for the law to protect pedophilia as a "sexual orientation" under the Minnesota human rights legislation, especially when there is language in the bill expressly saying the provisions are to be construed "liberally."mn.gov/mdhr/news-comm…
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For further clarification about this amendment, the "Sexual orientation" definition change was included in the HF 1655 amendment, which amended 2023 c 52 art 19 s 46-48, and passed into law by Tim Walz.
Here is the link that shows JUST the definitions, of which apply to 2023 c 52 art 19 Chapter 363A, and were passed in the 2023 legislative session, with the corresponding legislative history version highlighted for which the new "Sexual Orientation" definition corresponds:
Here is the link to the full text of the bill, which IS current law and includes the subsection 44 "Sexual orientation" definition amendment that was included in HF 1655. As a reminder, HF 1655 was part of the "Take Pride Act," which was signed into law by Tim Walz on May 30, 2023 per its inclusion in the Judiciary and Public Safety bill:
Here is how the "Take Pride Act" and HF 1655 relate to Judiciary and Public Safety bill signed into law by Tim Walz.
The Judiciary and Public Safety bill is also named SF 2909.
Navigation Note: these screenshots were taken after clicking the "chronological" tab which is under the "Actions" subtitle.
The below photo, which can be found on the same webpage as the above (also under the "chronological" tab) includes the record of Tim Walz having signed it the bill into law.
Here is a link to page where you can see the list of actions:
As referred to above, SF 2909 (a.k.a. the Judiciary and Public Safety bill), includes the HF 1655 amendment, which is apart of the "Take Pride Act" introduced by Finke.
The below photo shows the page where you can access the entire text of the bill, which includes annotations whenever the legislators added or removed components of the bill. You can see the below bill name (SF 2909) matches the above bill name, also SF 2909, which is also known as SF 2909.
If you "control+F" on the above page using the term "subdivision 44," you will see the below revised text which is the revised definition of "Sexual orientation" that Leigh Finke proposed in his HF 1655 amendment.
This post is continuing from the last webpage mentioned (the full text annotated SF 2909 bill), as discussed above in 5/x, and is for those who still happen to be confused about how the amendment, the act, and the bill relate to each other.
I will use dates here to make it more obvious that the HF 1655 amendment included in the "Take Pride Act" introduced by Finke, is contained in the SF 2909 bill, a.k.a the Judiciary and Public Safety bill, which was signed by Tim Walz into law.
As shown below, the annotated full text of the SF 2909 bill, as mentioned and shown in 5/x, was published to the Office of the Revisor of Statutes' website on 05/31/2023 08:51am.
As previously mentioned in post 3/x, the announcement of the signing of the SF 2909 bill, aka the Judiciary and Public Safety bill (which was signed by Tim Walz on 05/19/2023), was announced on the Minnesota Dept. of Human Rights' website on 05/30/2023.
I will link to this website again for convenience:
It get's better y'all. They had around half a dozen organizations endorse the "Take Pride Act," which REMOVED the pedophile exclusion!!!
- The Girl Scouts
- The Minnesota Council of Nonprofits
- National Council of Jewish Women
- The Minnesota Catholic Conference
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Since people are now accusing me of being “dishonest” and “intentionally misleading” for accidentally mixing up a single organization’s “nay” with another’s “yay” in post 7/x, let me clarify:
Thanks to your very *gracious* notification and your very *honest* characterizations of my supposed “maliciously intended deception,” I now humbly realize that I mistakenly included the Catholic organization’s “nay” by confusing it with another nonprofit’s “yay.”
The other three organizations are correctly identified as “yays,” so despite your suspicions, those characterizations are accurate.
I spent several hours sorting through 10,000 pages of PDFs and annotated code only to be accused of “intentional dishonesty” for accidentally mixing up one document out of thousands.
So, please accept my 1,000 prostrations and the sacrifice of my firstborn child as penance for this utterly unforgivable error.
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Here is a video of Leigh Finke on ABC News yesterday discussing how integral and involved Tim Walz was in LGBTQ+ legislation, the “Trans Refuge Bill,” and through his collaboration with the “queer caucus.”
Also that last line is a lot creepier when you interpret it in lieu of the above developments: “[Tim Walz] wants Minnesota to be the best place to raise a family, and he knows that means all families.”
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The following is an explanation of how this new definition, if interpreted to include pedophiles as a protected sexuality, would roughly interact with the Minnesota Human Rights Act (MHRA), existing federal and state laws pertaining to sexual offenses against children.
Obligatory Disclaimer: The following description is based on a hypothetical interpretation of Minnesota Human Rights Code 2023 c 52 art 19 s 44, wherein “sexual orientation” is interpreted to include adults sexually attracted to minors as a protected sexual orientation. This interpretation is hypothetical and for illustrative purposes only and does not reflect current legal standards or practices. I am publishing this solely for discussion. This is not legal advice. I am not your attorney, and no attorney-client relationship is formed by your reading or reliance on this content.
Minnesota Human Rights Code 2023 c 52 art 19 s 44
This section hypothetically redefines “sexual orientation” to include adults sexually attracted to minors as a protected class. This hypothetical interpretation would primarily affect civil protections in the following areas:
Application to Registered Offenders
Under current blackletter law, protections against discrimination based on a special class apply even if other characteristics, such as criminal history, are present. If the hypothetical redefinition of sexual orientation under Minnesota Human Rights Code 2023 c 52 art 19 s 44 were to include pedophiles, it could extend non-discrimination protections to registered sex offenders whose registration status arises from this protected class.
Thus, non-discrimination protections under the MHRA could apply to registered sex offenders if their registration status is a result of their membership in a protected class. This protection would not shield them from legal requirements like registration but would prevent discrimination in employment, housing, and other civil contexts.
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Protections Under Minnesota Human Rights Act (MHRA) Chapter 52
This section hypothetically redefines “sexual orientation” to include adults sexually attracted to minors as a protected class. This hypothetical interpretation would primarily affect civil protections in the following areas:
1. Employment (Minn. Stat. § 363A.08)
• It is an unfair discriminatory practice to refuse to hire, to discharge, or to discriminate in terms, conditions, or privileges of employment because of a person’s sexual orientation.
• Impact: Employers would be prohibited from discriminating against individuals based on this expanded definition of sexual orientation, meaning they could not refuse to hire or fire someone solely based on their sexual attraction to minors.
2. Housing (Minn. Stat. § 363A.09)
• It is an unfair discriminatory practice to refuse to sell, rent, or lease housing; to discriminate in the terms, conditions, or privileges of the sale, rental, or lease of housing; or to discriminate in the provision of services or facilities in connection with the sale, rental, or lease of housing because of a person’s sexual orientation.
• Impact: Landlords and property sellers would be prohibited from discriminating against individuals based on this expanded definition of sexual orientation in renting or selling housing.
3. Public Accommodations (Minn. Stat. § 363A.11)
• It is an unfair discriminatory practice to deny any person the full and equal enjoyment of the goods, services, facilities, privileges, advantages, and accommodations of a place of public accommodation because of a person’s sexual orientation.
• Impact: Places of public accommodation, such as restaurants, hotels, and stores, would be required to provide services to individuals based on this expanded definition of sexual orientation.
4. Public Services (Minn. Stat. § 363A.12)
• It is an unfair discriminatory practice to discriminate against any person in the access to, admission to, full utilization of, or benefit from any public service because of a person’s sexual orientation.
• Impact: Public services, including public transportation and government services, would need to ensure non-discriminatory access based on this expanded definition of sexual orientation.
5. Education (Minn. Stat. § 363A.13)
• It is an unfair discriminatory practice for an educational institution to discriminate in the admission or access to, or in the treatment of, a student in any aspect of the institution’s program because of a person’s sexual orientation.
• Impact: Schools and educational institutions would be required to provide equal access and treatment to individuals based on this expanded definition of sexual orientation.
6. Credit (Minn. Stat. § 363A.16)
• It is an unfair discriminatory practice to discriminate in the granting of credit because of a person’s sexual orientation.
• Impact: Financial institutions would be prohibited from discriminating against individuals based on this expanded definition of sexual orientation in lending and credit services.
7. Business Discrimination (Minn. Stat. § 363A.17)
• It is an unfair discriminatory practice for a person engaged in a trade or business or in the provision of a service to discriminate in the provision of services because of a person’s sexual orientation.
• Impact: Businesses would be required to provide services without discrimination based on this expanded definition of sexual orientation.
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A broader definition of sexual orientation under this new bill hypothetically would not apply to state or federal prosecution of pedophiles BUT it would make discrimination against them a civil violation and an actionable offense in terms of the"affected" individuals having a valid cause of action and their ability to receive civil damages.
18 U.S.C. § 2422: Coercion and Enticement (Federal)
Text of the Law:
This statute criminalizes knowingly persuading, inducing, enticing, or coercing any individual to travel in interstate or foreign commerce with the intent to engage in prostitution or any criminal sexual activity. It also criminalizes attempts to do so.
Relationship to the Protected Group:
•Civil Protections: The classification of pedophilia as a protected class under the Minnesota Human Rights Code would primarily affect civil matters, such as anti-discrimination protections in housing, employment, and public accommodations. However, these civil protections do not extend to shielding individuals from federal criminal prosecution.
•Federal Prosecution: Federal law, particularly 18 U.S.C. § 2422, would preempt state civil protections in cases involving interstate or international travel aimed at engaging in illegal sexual activities. This preemption is supported by the Commerce Clause, as highlighted in Gonzales v. Raich, 545 U.S. 1 (2005).
•Non-Minor Specific: This statute applies broadly to any individual, not specifically targeting minors. Therefore, the federal government can prosecute individuals engaging in such activities irrespective of state-level civil protections.
State Law Analysis
Minnesota Statute § 609.342: Criminal Sexual Conduct in the First Degree
Text of the Law:
This statute criminalizes sexual penetration or sexual contact with a person under 13 years of age by an individual more than 36 months older.
Relationship to the Protected Group:
•Civil Protections vs. Criminal Conduct: While the hypothetical classification of pedophilia as a protected class under Minnesota’s Human Rights Code would grant civil protections against discrimination in areas such as employment and housing, it does not negate the enforceability of criminal laws. The conduct prohibited by Minn. Stat. § 609.342 remains criminal regardless of civil rights protections.
•Public Policy: Minnesota’s public policy, as reflected in its criminal statutes, prioritizes the protection of minors from sexual exploitation and abuse.
Minnesota Statute § 609.343: Criminal Sexual Conduct in the Second Degree
Text of the Law:
This statute criminalizes sexual contact without penetration with a minor.
Relationship to the Protected Group:
•Enforcement: The enforcement of Minn. Stat. § 609.343 would continue unaffected by any hypothetical civil rights protections.
•State vs. Civil Protections: Even if pedophilia were hypothetically classified as a protected sexual orientation under the state’s human rights code, such classification would not extend immunity from criminal prosecution for actions that violate state laws protecting minors.
The following include case law where Minnesota courts have interpreted statutes when an exclusion is removed.
A deliberate exclusion is generally accepted to be interpreted as an intent to INCLUDE. They KNEW what they were doing.
Here is the response I got from lexis.
Additionally, I provided a link to the list of caselaw cited in the response I got. I downloaded the 30+ citations generated from the query and uploaded them to drive so it can be accessible.
The Community notes on the Musk Post is spreading false information using lies perpetuated by the above duplicitous “fact-checker” apparatus to spread said lies
There have now been TWO successful attempts to approve a note that contains false info
He was convicted of robbing, kidnapping, sodomizing and sexually abusing a woman he didn’t know btw, and her excuse for halving the sentence was “he fell through the cracks [as a black man] in this society.”
“Off the record, the defendant was speaking to Ms. Zgonjanin [the victim] and stated, ‘I will see you in 20 years, b****,’” Judge Davis read aloud. “On the record, in front of the entire court, he stated, ‘D**** s*****, f**** y’all kids, and f**** y’all’s dead loved ones.’ In addition to that, speaking directly to the court, he said, ‘Eat my d****, b****. I’m going to pop your *** and s*** my d***, b****.’”
Additionally, below is the exchange that preceded Judge Davis’s decision to forgo the jury’s recommended sentence in favor of a lighter sentence (mind you he was telling the court this while she was actively handing out the sentence):
Thompson: “I don’t have sympathy for nobody.”
Judge Davis: “If you come in here and you show the court –"
Thompson: “I don’t have sympathy for you, the victim, the victim’s family.”
Judge Davis: “We don’t need your sympathy.”
Thompson: “I don’t care.”
Judge Davis: “That’s fine.”
This particular judge also has an incredible history lmao
In 2019, Davis was charged with a felony for “making a false statement to receive benefits,” when she applied for food stamps and Medicaid, according to court records. The records say her statement allowed her to receive a combined $15,909 in overpayments.
On Sept. 2, 2019, records show she was charged with reckless driving and driving under the influence – at 6:59 in the morning − after a deputy sheriff saw her “swerving all over the road” and “crossing all lanes” on Interstate 71.
She failed three field sobriety tests given to her by a Louisville Metro Police officer, according to her citation.
Davis was also sued in 2019 by a woman who provided management services for her unsuccessful 2018 campaign for district court and who alleged she failed to pay a $22,000 bill. When the sheriff’s office attempted to serve her with the suit six times at her home, Davis avoided service each time, according to court records.
Steavon Deonna Stokes, the plaintiff, eventually won a default judgment against Davis, which she appealed, saying she had never been served with the lawsuit.
In a 2021 unanimous decision, the Court of Appeals affirmed the judgment against Davis.
But wait. It gets even better.
The central factor in Judge Tracy E. Davis’s victory was the vulnerability of the incumbent, Judge Mary Shaw, the only sitting circuit judge in Jefferson County to face a challenger in the election. Shaw had signed the warrant that led to the 2020 police search of Breonna Taylor’s home, during which Taylor was fatally shot by a detective after her boyfriend, believing the couple was being robbed, fired a single shot that struck a detective in the leg.
In 2011, my papa was laid off from a Whirlpool manufacturing plant, the kind that had for so long made America great. In the wake of the financial crisis, the C-suite had decided to offshore operations to Mexico.
The plant they shuttered was a 1.2 million sq ft manufacturing plant, and overnight, 1,000 people lost their jobs. Many of whom had been working there for decades.
My papa was 57 years old when he got laid off. He had worked at that very same plant for over 30 years, and snap just like that, it was all gone.
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When I was a little girl, from as far back as I could remember, my papa woke up at 3:30 am and drove the 40 minutes to the plant from the rural 1,200-person town every single day. And for 30 years, he worked what were often 10-12 hour shifts with no complaints.
I grew up a Navy brat, so I didn’t get to see my grandparents except for a few months during the summer, but I remember my papa exerting the last drop of his energy so he could spend time with us going to the creek, building us a tree house, riding horses, and playing cowboys and Indians.
Every evening, starting from when I was in grade school, my papa and I would sit in the living room and watch the History Channel, Animal Planet, and Bill O’Reilly and hee-haw together about what the Democrats were doing, as much as an eight-year-old can.
My papa and my nana had been together since they graduated high school; they got married at barely 18 and had my mom less than a year later and my aunt soon after that.
They had a small homestead, owned most of what they had outright, and they were poor, but poor doesn’t have to mean that much when you can work the land.
My nana worked as the local school’s secretary, and my papa had good benefits with his manufacturing job. They only ever went out to eat on special occasions. McDonald’s was a birthday-only type of affair. They had a one-acre garden, a few head of cattle, would can fruits and vegetables at the end of every summer, and freeze chopped okra, blueberries, meat from wild hogs and venison in an old chest freezer in the workshop.
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Despite never having been on a plane and seldom ever having been outside of Arkansas, they managed to put both my mom and aunt through college and graduate school without requiring them to incur even a dime of debt. This was the 1990s.
Then at the age of 57, my papa and 1,000 of his coworkers were thrown away like a piece of trash after giving that company decades of their lives. And what were they told to do? What was their consolation prize?
Learn. To. Code.
My papa and nana were born in the 1950s in a place that was quite literally the Wild West just mere decades before their birth.
Growing up, neither of them had running water—they drew water from a well, washed up in a tin tub heated over a fire, and went to the restroom in an outhouse. They were both educated in a one-room schoolhouse and both came from families that relied on their farm’s livestock to feed themselves. People like my grandparents built this nation. They built this nation for their children.
But because the thing they sought to build wasn’t a stock portfolio or real estate portfolio, the preservation of their homes and communities was not something that Wall Street nor Washington saw as having enough value to be anything more than apathetic about blowing up.
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