Planned Parenthood Targets Children About Virginity, Invents New Definitions of Sex

Planned Parenthood posted a video geared toward young people Thursday pushing propaganda that virginity is a social construct and that sex can be anything they want it to be.
The Planned Parenthood shows a pink-clad woman explaining that rather than observe reality, young people can create their own definition of sex.
“Sex means different things to different people. Generally speaking, society tends to define sex in a very narrow way: penetration — penis into vagina. But where does that definition leave queer people? Or folks who can’t, or don’t, have penis-in-vagina sex, and choose to have oral, anal, or another type of sex instead?” the woman in the video says.
Virginity! What is it? What it isn’t. And what’s the big deal about “losing” it? Let’s talk about it: https://t.co/pOQllDfAHo pic.twitter.com/yANUxTaF8s
— Planned Parenthood (@PPFA) January 25, 2024
“Sex is defined by one thing and one thing only: You! Maybe that’s being fingered for the first time. Maybe it’s having anal sex. Maybe it’s having your first orgasm. Maybe it’s masturbating for the first time, or when you enthusiastically consent to sex,” she claimed.
“That’s the beauty of your sexual journey. You’re in charge, and you can figure it out on your own terms. Choosing to have sex — when, what kind, where, and who with — is something that only you get to define,” she concluded.
Planned Parenthood has long been pushing messaging that “virginity is a social construct“, claiming that the traditional understanding of virginity is “outdated”, “patriarchal” and “hurts everyone.”
The idea of virginity comes from outdated — let’s be real, patriarchal— ways of thinking that hurts everyone. ? pic.twitter.com/QYmNbEZzbw
— Planned Parenthood (@PPFA) June 29, 2023
Texas Responds to Biden’s Demands for Border Access with Demands of Its Own
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton responded to the Biden regime’s demands to access the border in Eagle Pass with demands of his own.
The Department of Homeland Security on Tuesday demanded that Texas officials grant the Border Patrol access to the Shelby Park area where razor wire had been installed along the southern border, claiming that area is federal land.
Paxton responded in a letter to Biden’s White House General Counsel on Friday pointing out that Shelby Park is not federal land, but is in fact “municipal land owned by the City of Eagle Pass.”
Furthermore, Paxton issued a counter-demand that the DHS provide proof of the federal government’s authority to turn a Texas park into a port of entry.
“By February 15, 2024, Texas hereby demands that your agency supply the following documents and information to this office: official plat maps and deeds demonstrating the precise parcels that you believe the United States owns; and your explanation of how exactly Texas officials are preventing access to those parcels by federal agents,” Paxton wrote.
#BREAKING ACCESS DENIED: Texas Attorney General @KenPaxtonTX responds to DHS denying the agency’s demands to get access to Shelby Park in Eagle Pass—Paxton makes a list of counter-demands:
— Ali Bradley (@AliBradleyTV) January 27, 2024
“By February 15, DHS must supply the official plat maps and deeds demonstrating the… pic.twitter.com/VzhoNnekWx
Paxton also demanded DHS provide proof that Eagle Pass or Texas consented to allow Biden’s border patrol to establish “open-border infrastructure” and whether Congress has approved of such an effort.
By February 15, 2024, Texas hereby demands that your agency
supply the following documents and information to this office: any written approval from the City of Eagle Pass or the State of Texas consenting to allow your federal agents to erect the open-border infrastructure hinted at in your letter; and your explanation of where the Congress has empowered your federal agency to pursue this scheme, notwithstanding statutory provisions to the contrary.
“Without clarifying both the metes and bounds of the federal government’s alleged ‘property rights,’ and how its lawful access to such property has been in any way impeded, the State cannot meaningfully assess your demand. But to the extent your agency demands access in order to once again transform Shelby Park into ‘an unofficial and unlawful port of entry,’ your request is hereby denied,” Paxton added.
The dispute follows the Supreme Court’s decision on Monday siding with the Biden administration in allowing Border Patrol to cut the razor wire installed near Eagle Pass to keep out illegal aliens.
Texas responded by doubling down, directing the National Guard to continue installing razor wire along the border.
Meanwhile, U.S. Custom and Border Patrol reports that over 302,000 illegal aliens crossed into the U.S. in December, the highest monthly number ever recorded.
Ultimatum: Biden Promises to Shut Border if Lawmakers Pass Budget Deal to Fund Ukraine & Israel

US President Joe Biden has again urged Republican lawmakers to approve a long-stalled budget deal, vowing to shut down his country’s southern border as soon as he’s given the authority to do so.
Republicans have been blocking the White House’s attempts to push through a $106 billion ‘national security package’ for Ukraine and Israel since October. They have demanded tougher security measures on the southern frontier be included in the agreement.
”For too long, we all know the border’s been broken. It’s long past time to fix it,” Biden outlined in a written statement on Friday.
He described the border deal, now being negotiated in the Senate, as “the toughest and fairest set of reforms to secure the border we’ve ever had in our country.”
“It would give me, as President, a new emergency authority to shut down the border when it becomes overwhelmed. And if given that authority, I would use it the day I sign the bill into law,” Biden vowed.
Under the bipartisan agreement, the administration would, among other things, be required to shut the border down if the number of migrants trying to get into the US illegally on any given day reaches 5,000, the New York Times reported. This threshold had been surpassed “routinely” in recent months, the paper stressed.
Finding common ground on the immigration deal would be “a win for America,” the president insisted. “If you’re serious about the border crisis, pass a bipartisan bill, and I will sign it,” Biden said, addressing the Republican lawmakers.
The Washington Post described the comments as “a remarkable shift” in the Democratic president’s rhetoric on the immigration issue. The media outlet underscored “the urgency” of the situation on the border for his re-election bid.
Biden’s statement came as Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson said on Friday that if the leaks about the deal’s content were accurate, it would be “dead on arrival” in the lower chamber.
The likely Republican presidential nominee, Donald Trump, slammed the border deal earlier this week, warning that it “would be another gift to the radical left Democrats.” The agreement “will be meaningless in terms of border security,” Trump argued, reiterating that the only way to solve the immigration issue would be voting for him in November.
WATCH: Smuggler Caught Illegally In US for 14TH TIME

Texas authorities say they arrested a suspected human smuggler from Mexico who has already been caught illegally present in the U.S. on at least 13 prior occasions.
On Thursday, Texas Department of Public Safety (TxDPS) troopers and Border Patrol agents encountered a group of illegal aliens in the Rio Grande Valley.
After rounding them up, troopers discovered the man allegedly responsible for guiding them across the border had already been busted more than a dozen times on U.S. soil.
“Members of the TxDPS Brush Team & USBP K9 tracked & arrested a smuggling foot guide hiding inside a drainage pipe who smuggled 3 illegal immigrants by raft across the Rio Grande in Mission,” TxDPS spokesman Lt. Christ Olivarez explained in a statement.
“Romaldo Lopez Sanchez, 28, Veracruz, MX, was charged & jailed for felony human smuggling. It was confirmed that he had 13 previous apprehensions for illegal entry.”
#RGV: Members of the @TxDPS Brush Team & #USBP K9 tracked & arrested a smuggling foot guide hiding inside a drainage pipe who smuggled 3 illegal immigrants by raft across the Rio Grande in Mission.
— Chris Olivarez (@LtChrisOlivarez) January 26, 2024
Romaldo Lopez Sanchez, 28, Veracruz, MX, was charged & jailed for felony human… pic.twitter.com/FiubtCbvq7
Lt. Olivarez included footage of voice messages exchanged between Sanchez and his ‘supervisors’ in Mexico being played back on a phone.
“I’m here on top of the wall. I’m just waiting for them to leave so I can pass through the rear. Right now, when they move, I’ll pass with one,” a voice presumably belonging to Sanchez can be heard saying.
U.S. authorities continue to apprehend illegal aliens who have already been caught before, many of whom committed serious crimes while in the country before being removed and reentering.
Last weekend, two male illegal aliens with “alarming felony convictions” were arrested in Border Patrol’s Tucson Sector.
“One for 2nd Degree Murder and Attempted Murder, and the other for Endangering the Welfare of a Child. Both face federal prosecution,” Tucson Sector Chief John R. Modlin announced this week.
Over the weekend, Tucson Sector agents apprehended two migrants for unlawful entry into the U.S. Both subjects have alarming felony convictions. One for 2nd Degree Murder and Attempted Murder, and the other for Endangering the Welfare of a Child. Both face federal prosecution. pic.twitter.com/HNR6a1B4EH
— John R. Modlin (@USBPChiefTCA) January 25, 2024
On Tuesday, Border Patrol agents in Texas caught two convicted child sex predators who illegally reentered the U.S.
1/23: USBP agents in Del Rio, TX & Rio Grande Valley, TX nabbed two child sex offenders with prior felony convictions. These subjects were caught trying to re-enter the U.S. illegally. Agents being out on patrol is what stopped them from getting to your communities. #HonorFirst pic.twitter.com/4yT4H7botR
— Chief Jason Owens (@USBPChief) January 26, 2024
Also on Tuesday, TxDPS troopers arrested a man for guiding illegal aliens into the U.S. and discovered he was wanted for murder in Mexico.
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— Chris Olivarez (@LtChrisOlivarez) January 23, 2024
01/23: As part of a joint anti-smuggling operation, @TxDPS & #USBP apprehended 7 illegal immigrants after illegally crossing the Rio Grande in Mission #RGV, being guided by a smuggling… pic.twitter.com/E5wTgWtOoq
Chaos unfolds constantly along the U.S.-Mexico border, as Infowars regularly reports.
Michael Yon joins Alex Jones to issue an emergency warning to those American and Texan patriots who wish to actively help protect the southern border.
Fuel Tanker Costs Surge on Red Sea Crisis – Report

The cost of shipping fuel by sea has in some cases soared above $100,000 a day due to continued disruptions in the Suez Canal and Red Sea caused by attacks by the Houthi rebels, Bloomberg reported this week.
According to data from the Baltic Exchange in London, the price of shipping oil and refined products from the Middle East to Japan surged by 3% on Thursday alone, to $101,000 a day, the highest cost for that particular route since 2020.
The same trend has been observed for vessels carrying fuel from the Middle East to Europe. Tanker costs on this route have surged to within the range of $97,000-$117,000 per day, depending on the size of the ship.
The Houthis, an Islamist group that controls a large part of Yemen, have been attacking and hijacking ships crossing the vital waterway that handles about 15% of global trade in what they claim is a show of solidarity with the Palestinians. Despite the US and allies having deployed a naval taskforce to the area to safeguard shipping, many freight companies have halted travel through the waterway and instead make the far longer and more expensive journey around the Cape of Good Hope in Africa.
According to an earlier report by the Wall Street Journal, citing data from London-based Drewry Shipping Consultants, the average worldwide cost of shipping a 40-foot container jumped 23% to $3,777 in the week ending January 18, more than double what it cost only a month prior.
Many analysts now warn that the shipping crisis in the Red Sea may cause a new surge in global inflation.
Michael Yon joins Alex Jones to issue an emergency warning to those American and Texan patriots who wish to actively help protect the southern border.
Argentina Paralyzed By Strikes as Thousands Protest Milei’s “Shock Therapy”

Two months after libertarian firebrand Javier Milei was elected president of Latam basket case Argentina, pledging to overhaul the economy and openly warning a period of brutal austerity and pain is coming, the initial euphoria is fading fast and is being replace with the shock and horror of what comes next.
And sure enough, in the biggest show of resistance to date against Milei, Argentinian workers on Wednesday took to the streets for a general strike, bringing swaths of downtown Buenos Aires to a standstill.
In what has been called an “unprecedented mobilization” never before in modern Argentinian history has a mass strike been called less than seven weeks into a new presidency. But leaders from Argentina’s largest labor union – the guys who are used to a steady drip of handouts from the government – said the nationwide protests reflect the urgency they feel as Milei pursues radical economic and political reforms he likens to “shock therapy”.
Thousands of (most labor union) protesters swarmed the square in front of Argentina’s Congress on Wednesday, denouncing Milei’s sweeping plans to overhaul the government, privatize public industries and slash spending. Some banged pots and carried signs accusing Milei of being a “traitor”. Other banners featured the portrait of working-class icon Evita Peron.
Elizabeth Gutierrez made her way to the gathering after working an overnight shift as a nurse. She explained she was motivated by steep increases in food prices since Milei took office.
“Before we used to have asados [barbecues] every Sunday. Not now. Even rice is very expensive,” Gutierrez said. “Rents have shot up. You can’t live off your salary any more: It’s not enough” she raged adding that “the people are here to defend their nation.”
Well, here’s the problem: the nation has been bled dry by corrupt politicians, and the only thing that can save it is the most aggressive belt tightening in decades. And while Milei is trying it, he is about to find out just how much pushback his plans will cause, and how impossible it will be for his ambitious plan seeking to end the government’s parasistism of the economy, to succeed.
Another protester, 63-year-old retiree Alicia Pereyra, voiced opposition to Milei’s efforts to deregulate the economy, including plans to “modernise” labour law and ditch rent regulation. “He wants us to be slaves,” Pereyra said.
Draped in an Argentinian flag, Pereyra worried about her ability to make ends meet in the face of Milei’s reforms. Her retirement income amounts to only 85,000 pesos per month — about $70. She said basic necessities had become so costly under Milei that she is unsure whether she will be able to access the medicine she needs for a chronic illness.
Even small luxuries are now out of reach. Pereyra described how she and her husband opted for orange juice instead of wine to make their New Year’s toast for 2024, breaking a long-running family tradition.
“It’s a horrible feeling of not knowing what’s going to happen tomorrow,” she said. “[Milei] is turning our heads upside down.”
Of course, Argentina had already been suffering from record triple-digit inflation when Milei took office on December 10. Elected on the promise that he would fix the sputtering economy – but not before a period of brutal shock – Milei quickly moved to implement austerity measures that he said were needed to get Argentina’s finances in order.
In his inauguration address, he warned the country that Argentina’s situation would get worse before it got better. And he was right.
One of his earliest measures was to devalue the Argentinian peso by 54%, which only accelerated the already sky-high inflation rates.
According to the National Institute for Statistics and Censuses (INDEC), Argentina ended 2023 with annual inflation of 211% the steepest rate in Latin America, surpassing even Venezuela. The year also clocked the fastest inflation hikes since 1990, resulting in higher prices for consumers.
Santiago Manoukian, chief economist at the consulting firm Ecolatina, told Al Jazeera that December’s price increases will continue hitting consumers’ pocketbooks for the next several months. Salaries will have a hard time keeping up.
“We believe that real wages fell in December more than in any other month since at least 2002,” he said. “Purchasing power is going to continue to go down.”
That trend is expected to slow consumer spending, which Manoukian said will likely result in a recession and an uptick in unemployment and poverty. Four in 10 Argentines were already in poverty when Milei took office, according to national data
Milei coupled his currency devaluation measure with immediate cuts to government spending, including consumer subsidies.
One presidential “mega-decree” in December reformed or overturned dozens of laws and paved the way for the privatisation of state-run companies. Another decree axed 5,000 government jobs. But further changes are on the way. Wednesday’s nationwide strike comes as Congress prepares to consider a slimmed-down version of Milei’s “omnibus law” the following day.
Originally containing 664 articles, the bill sought to reimagine the country’s elections, restructure the lower chamber of Congress and enact tough new restrictions on protests, including through penalties of up to six years in prison. The streamlined version is still massive, with over 500 articles. If passed, it would hand broad legislative powers to Milei’s executive branch for an “emergency” period of one year.
Still, the president dismissed Wednesday’s strike as evidence of backward thinking. “There are two Argentinas,” he told local media. “One wants to stay behind, in the past, in decadence.”
Members of his administration likewise blasted the protesters. On Wednesday, Security Minister Patricia Bullrich — Milei’s erstwhile rival on the campaign trail — called the union groups that organised the strike “gangsters” and “guarantors of poverty”.
“There’s no strike that will be able to stop us,” she wrote on X.
Meanwhile, the establishment – realizing their jobs are about to be rugpulled – is lashing out: Federico Finchelstein, a New York-based historian and fascism scholar, said Milei’s first month in office has demonstrated his “authoritarian style of populism”. He drew parallels to Donald Trump, the controversial — but popular — former president of the United States who sought to claim broad executive authority while in office. Finchelstein likened Milei to a “mini-Trump”.
“It’s a type of populism that looks to undermine democratic institutions,” Finchelstein said, clearly forgetting that it was Argentina’s “democratic institutions” that brought pushed it beyond the edge of collapse.
And indeed, despite the criticism and protests he faces, Milei continues to enjoy broad support among Argentinians. One survey this month, conducted by the pollster Escenarios, found that 55% of respondents believed Milei’s reform measures were necessary to improve the economy.
Political scientist Federico Zapata, the director general at Escenarios, credits those poll numbers to the president’s successful messaging to voters.
“In a way, Milei and the libertarians seem to have won the culture war,” he explained. “They managed to have installed a consensus over the diagnosis of the [economic] crisis, and that’s helping build approval over the slate of measures.”
Zapata added that Milei has also been successful in attributing the economic spiral to his left-wing predecessor, former President Alberto Fernandez. “He says that the economic problems are the complete responsibility of the previous government. Based on that, he’s lowered expectations so that people stick with him for longer than the normal honeymoon period,” Zapata said.
Still, Escenarios’ poll showed a majority of respondents felt any major policy changes should take place gradually, and not all at once.
And Milei could face further challenges to his reforms, beyond Wednesday’s large-scale protest. A top Argentinian court has already invalidated a key component of his “mega-decree”, which had sought to cancel a host of worker protections. Both Gutierrez and Pereyra suggested that opposition to Milei may grow to the point where he is unable to finish his term in office.
“The government could find itself in the eye of the storm in just a few months,” Zapata said.
But Milei’s supporters remain optimistic that the firebrand president will make good on his campaign promises.
Luis Testa, a cab driver who voted for Milei, said he still backs the president, even as he makes cuts in his day-to-day expenses.
“We need to give him a chance. Let’s give him a year,” Testa said. “And if, for a year, all of us have to eat beans, we’ll eat beans.”
Michael Yon joins Alex Jones to issue an emergency warning to those American and Texan patriots who wish to actively help protect the southern border.
