Quota Whipped

To do my part in helping Federal Wayans connect the dots of unsavory Establishment types, who are somewhat outliers that would like nothing better than to have a Kaepernickian, radical left politics in America, with an economic status quo that's not populist, in other words, not advancing the Common Man's economic interests much, if at all; I will have to keep calling out names on this blog, and of course the seemingly servile-to-feminists political columnist that writes for the Federal Way Mirror, Bob Roegner, a.k.a. "Rogue-ner," is high on the list of the influential Establishment in Federal Way.  

Though, Roegner wrote "others' Christmas wish" for strong women, everybody could read between the lines that it was his Christmas wish, too, in essentially advocating for gender-based quotas and criteria for political positions, and in this or his recent other writings, giving a wink and a nod to being OK with political ethnic-and-race-based quotas and criteria as well, which is often an opinion or position that is fuzzed up with the word "diversity."  

So the question is did Federal Way vote in Johnson and Tran to the City Council in order to diversify it, as "Rogue-ner " apparently thinks, or did they vote based on those candidates' viewpoints and overall political caliber?  I am the last person to defend the recent F.W. election since I didn't vote for anybody that won, but "Rogue-ner" seems to think that "affirmative action" had more to do with it than innate talent.   

I think most Americans still vote on caliber and how closely the candidates' political viewpoints matches their own (take Detroit for example, the predominately black city just recently re-elected their white mayor), although merit-based judgments do seem to be mixed with a racial or gender equation sometimes, since some people tend to think that if a candidate matches their ethnic and/or gender identities, that candidate probably thinks, at least, somewhat like themselves.  That's a high stakes political bet.

"Rogue-ner's" affinity for gender and racial quotas ties in neatly with his Kaepernickian views on "taking a knee" (he thinks a certain island should consider that), and his servile, pusillanimous nature, especially, so it appears, in regards to strong women, or at least to the particular ones that he likes.

- Mark Greene for Representative (Website) -  (U.S.M.C. Veteran)

[Revised on 12/26/17.]

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