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|    az.general    |    What goes on in exciting Arizona...    |    2,973 messages    |
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|    Message 1,435 of 2,973    |
|    Leroy Blue to All    |
|    Karma catches up to a activist lesbian -    |
|    08 Nov 14 05:46:45    |
      XPost: ba.politics, dc.media, soc.penpals       XPost: alt.burningman       From: leroyblue@sjrb.ca              Terminal payback for degenerate gay activist child molesters is       so refreshing.              The cyclist killed in a crash Friday morning in downtown Seattle       was a new mother and well-regarded attorney from the law firm       Perkins Coie.              Sher Kung, 31, was riding in the bike lane along Second Avenue       when she was struck by a truck making a left turn. She died at       the scene.              Perkins Coie released a statement Saturday calling Kung “one of       our brightest young lawyers.” Kung, who the firm said was       heading to work, was “an exceptional lawyer and a wonderful       comrade, with boundless energy, legal brilliance and relentless       optimism ... Our hearts go out to her partner and their child,       her extended family, and her many friends.”              A photo on her Facebook page from February 2013 shows Kung down       on one knee, proposing to Christine Sanders during a snowshoeing       outing. “Will you stop hamming it up for the camera and look at       the ring, because I’m actually proposing,” reads a post on the       page from Kung.              The couple had a daughter this year, according to Facebook       postings.              At Perkins Coie, according to the firm’s website, Kung was an       associate working in the litigation group, focusing on       intellectual-property issues, and maintained an active pro-bono       practice.              In 2010, she was part of the ACLU trial team that successfully       challenged the military’s “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy. ACLU       Washington spokesman Doug Honig said she helped the ACLU       represent Air Force Maj. Margaret Witt, a decorated flight nurse       dismissed from the military for being gay.              The case in U.S. District Court for Western Washington helped       set a precedent that the military would need to prove sexual       orientation had a negative impact on morale in order to dismiss       someone, and made it possible for Witt to return to her position.              http://seattletimes.com/html/localnews/2024429100_crashvictimxml       .html              Dear Karma, please work Ellen DeGeneres into your schedule. You       can do it.                             --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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