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MAXEY CHRONICLES' 2022 PERSON OF THE YEAR ,That Bumbling Kewpie Doll Totem of Toxic Diversity- Karine Jean Pierre

Dear Readers, this Blogger assures you that the choice of White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre, as the MAXEY CHRONICLES’ 2022 Person of the Year, is not a frivolous one  nor  a glib one.  She is a quintessential totem; a  totem is defined as a person regarded as being  symbolic  or representative of a particular quality or concept. Karine Jean-Pierre is that symbolic  totem; a symbol of an incompetent Black, lesbian, Haitian migrant/colonizer,  a kewpie doll, uplifted above American natives; a kewpie doll uplifted above more qualified American Blacks, to represent the Republic. Hence she is an appropriate choice for  the PERSON OF THE YEAR,  in anno Domini 2022. She is truly a kewpie doll, for "kewpie dolls symbolize willful immaturity."   She represents, symbolizes, embodies the toxic Diversity running rampant in Western Civilization; toxic Diversity is the new religion, which believes that Diversity, in and of itself, is a magic elixir which can replace competence

2022 Literature Nobel Prize Winner Annie Ernaux Wants Men to Change NOW; Men Are, Y CHROMOSOME DISAPPEARING

2022 Nobel Prize Winner, for Literature,    French author Annie Ernaux, demands that Men change NOW; to jettison their biases against women, their toxic masculinity, their male chauvinism.    It seems that Males, men have heard that clarion call, and are changing. The Y Chromosome is disappearing from    Men. The human species will soon consist of only variations of the women on THE VIEW. Take that THE HANDMAID’S TALE.    That disappearance of the Y Chromosome puts the human species at risk, but it does get rid of male toxicity.   "Nobel Prize laureate, Annie Ernaux…..this year’s  Nobel Prize for Literature  winner spoke about the need for men to change their attitudes now, ahead of her receiving the prize on Saturday.   ….Ernaux won the award for blending fiction and autobiography in books that delve into her own experiences as a working-class woman exploring life in France since the 1940s. She said she was “old enough to have been an activist in the 1970s for freedom in France,