Derp or propaganda?

Man, 66, Says He Was Barred From Donating Blood After Refusing To Answer If He Was Pregnant

A 66-year-old Scottish man who has donated blood for years says he was turned away after refusing to answer if he was, or had recently been, pregnant.

Leslie Sinclair has donated over 125 pints of blood in the last half century, according to the Daily Mail. But when he most recently showed up to do his part to save lives, he says he was told to fill out a form asking if he was or had been pregnant anytime within the past six months.

“I indicated to the staff that I could not be in this position, but they told me that I must answer, otherwise I would not be able to donate blood,” Sinclair, of the central Scotland town of Stirling, told the Daily Mail. “I told them that it was stupid and that if I had to leave I would not come back and that was it, I got on my bike and left.”


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“It makes no sense and makes me angry because there are vulnerable people who are waiting for blood, including children, and are in desperate need of help,” he said. “But they were denied my blood because of the obligation to answer a question that cannot be answered.

“They were denied my blood because of an obligation to answer a question that cannot be answered,” he said.

Under the new, radical gender ideology increasingly embraced by the Left, men can become pregnant. That’s because biological women may identify as men while still retaining their ability to reproduce. Apple, Google, and Microsoft have all demonstrated their belief that men can become pregnant by adapting versions of the “pregnant man emoji” that was approved last year by the Unicode Consortium as part of
Emoji 14.0
 
Under the new, radical gender ideology increasingly embraced by the Left, men can become pregnant. That’s because biological women may identify as men while still retaining their ability to reproduce. Apple, Google, and Microsoft have all demonstrated their belief that men can become pregnant by adapting versions of the “pregnant man emoji” that was approved last year by the Unicode Consortium as part of Emoji 14.0
I'm not sure whether it's gender ideology. More than once I've had these forms asked non-applicable gender specific things. And well before this whole gender funfair was a thing.
 
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