



The cold chicken was inedible We called and explained the problem to the manager. An older lady with short hair was equally as rude as the blonde, insisting that my order was complete. The young blonde with no customer service ability was rude beyond belief. Earlier this month, I decided to give you guys and ordered the family dinner.

This was not the case and the chicken was cold. The third time I requested a hot chicken fresh off of the grill. The next time tasted like cold rubber, obviously left over from the prior day's business. “I’m sorry, I don’t think that goes far enough.The first hot chicken I ordered was wonderful. “Basically, what it said was you shouldn’t be able to talk about gender before third grade,” Haley said at a town hall in Exeter, N.H., last month, according to Fox News. Nikki Haley (R) criticized the DeSantis maneuver in Florida as not going “far enough.” Republicans have also sought to take control of the narrative on education, with established and potential presidential hopefuls seeking to outdo each other with education policies.įormer South Carolina Gov. The proposal would not need legislative approval and is set to be voted on by the state Board of Education next month, according to the Associated Press, setting up a possible extension of a law that has drawn applause from conservatives but has been criticized as a move that stifles free speech and targets the LGBTQ community.ĭeSantis has tapped into cultural issues, including questions of identity and sexual orientation, as he ponders jumping into the 2024 presidential race, a move that is widely expected. The current law prohibits the teaching to students in pre-K to third grade. The proposal to expand the ban on classroom instruction on the topics was proposed by the state Education Department, and would ban such lessons in grades 4-12, unless it is expressly required by state academic standards or part of a reproductive health course which a parent has the option to opt out of. Ron DeSantis’s (R) administration is proposing an expansion of a law - dubbed “Don’t Say Gay” - that prohibits classroom instruction on sexual orientation and gender identity to all grades in the state.
