There has to be something wrong with someone who constantly asks others about their sex lives. Personally, I believe it’s pretty gross. Senator Mazie Hirono (D-HI) is one, and others believe asking others is just not normal. She must have a sad sex life.
Lawrence Diggs, Roslyn, is an author and professional public morality speaker,v told the Aberdeen News. “What makes people obsess over the sex lives of others?”
I have a hard time understanding why some people are so interested in the sex lives of other people I don’t know why some people feel the need to discuss, examine and pass judgement on the sex lives of others. What kind of mind obsesses so much that they actually write and pass laws dictating what other people can do sexually? It all seems to come from sick minds, but I am trying to understand it.
Mazie seems to concentrate on the sex lives of men. When talking about Christine Blasey Ford’s claims against Justice Kavanaugh during his confirmation hearings, she said, “Of course, it helps that there are women on that committee. … But really, guess who’s perpetuating these kinds of actions? It’s the men in this country. And I just want to say to the men in this country: Just shut up and step up. Do the right thing for a change.
During the 2020 confirmation hearings of Amy Coney Barrett for the Supreme Court, Mazie Hirono asked Barrett a question about kinky sex:, ‘Since you became a legal adult, have you ever made unwanted requests for sexual favors or committed any physical or verbal harassment or assault of a sexual nature?”
Georg-a Grace, a professional sex coach, told GQ.
Before we get any further — I want to assure you that you’re not cheating, and wandering thoughts aren’t abnormal. And secondly, indulging in fantasies actually serves a specific and often helpful purpose: to arouse you. Having a little daydream can even boost confidence and libido, allow for greater sexual creativity, and help you plan for future sexual encounters. As you might’ve found, it can also help you get in the mood if your current sexual encounters aren’t quite hitting the spot.
Ah, Mazie isn’t getting enough at home. That is why she is asking others about their kinky sex.
During the recent round of confirmation hearings, any hearing she participated in, her first words were that question about kinky sex, ‘Since you became a legal adult, have you ever made unwanted requests for sexual favors or committed any physical or verbal harassment or assault of a sexual nature?”
She asked:
- Pete Hegseth
- Pam Bondi
- Doug Burgum
- Kash Patel
The strange part is she never asked a close colleague who could have given her a real story:
Daniel Inouye, then a Democratic senator representing Hawaii, had engaged in a pattern of sexual assault.
Lenore Kwock, the senator’s hairdresser for 20 years, said she had been forced into nonconsensual sex back in 1975 and had suffered persistent gropings since then.
Kwock’s story became public after she was tricked by a campaign worker for Inouye’s 1992 Republican opponent into telling her story into a tape recorder. The tape was briefly used in a political ad until Kwock demanded it be withdrawn. Kwock told reporters she had “forgiven” Inouye, even as she stood by her story. But she nonetheless spoke cautiously: “It could cost me my business, and so I speak with tact and diplomacy.”
(…). Mazie Hirono, then considered a protégé of Inouye’s as a member of the State House, maintained a studied and consistent silence.
Maybe because she saw Inouye as a father figure, Mazie thought asking him about kinky sex was too creepy.
Mazie has real issues going through her warped mind. She likes to ask about the sex lives of others, but not an old guy in the middle of a sex scandal, and according to the lessons of a sex coach, her husband may not be satisfying her sexually.
So folks when Mazie asks her dumb questions during a senate hearing give her a break, she has a sad life.