Newlyweds Jonathan Joss and Tristan Kern de Gonzales held each other in their final moment together Sunday.

Joss, 59, the voice actor best known as John Redcorn on “King of the Hill,” had just been shot in the head in front of their San Antonio home.

“I didn’t want him to struggle and everything, so I decided to tell him I loved him. And despite the severity of everything, he was able to look up at me and acknowledge what I was saying, so I know he heard me,” said Kern de Gonzales, 32. “I just kept telling him: ‘It’s OK. You need to cross over. You don’t need to keep struggling. You need to go ahead and cross over easy.’”

Kern de Gonzales said Joss’ killer also had final words for the actor. He called him and his husband “jotos,” a Spanish slur for gay people.

“I’ve been called that word while I was sitting on a bench with Jonathan, eating lunch,” Kern de Gonzales said. “And I got called that holding Jonathan while he died.”

Shortly after, police arrested one of the pair’s neighbors, Sigfredo Alvarez Ceja, 56, in connection with Joss’ killing.

  • Basic Glitch@lemm.ee
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    15 小时前

    What?

    The mistake was giving supreme court justices appointments for life, but the government should definitely not be given easier access to make amendments to the constitution.

    The point about Roe v Wade is that people need to understand history, and how they have been used to further an agenda. They need to know that many of these issues, were never actually issues most Americans were divided over.

    They were turned into divisive issues by wealthy shadow men controlling the narrative, and treating government issues like advertisement campaigns.

    I had no idea until very recently that before the Heritage Foundation used it as an opportunistic platform, the southern Baptist leadership actually had a favorable viewpoint regarding Roe v Wade…

    I grew up in the southern Baptist church, and I didn’t know that because barely anybody in this country knows that, and absolutely nobody in the southern Baptist church fucking knows that.

    You want to get people to wake up, and stop falling for whatever the next “issue” is (whether it’s DEI, immigration, govt bureaucracy, AI regulations), you need them to understand the history and reality of who is actually creating the narrative and manipulating them.

    • LilB0kChoy@midwest.social
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      15 小时前

      the government should definitely not be given easier access to make amendments to the constitution.

      Do you understand how government and law works in the US?

      Case precedent, as demonstrated with Roe, can be overruled by a majority of SCOTUS.

      A law goes through the house, senate and then is signed by the President and becomes law.

      A US Constitutional amendment requires a 2/3 vote in the house and senate and then 3/4 of the state legislatures to ratify.

      Each one of those offer greater security of whatever issue is at hand.

      Nothing I said makes it easier to amend the conversation but relying on case precedent is the same as relying on a “verbal” contract.

      • Basic Glitch@lemm.ee
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        15 小时前

        You understand that this goes both ways? The more we accept constitutional amendments as the norm, the more we place our liberties and constitutional rights most people just kind of assume are always guaranteed, at risk.

        Look at how Trump handles executive orders. Imagine what he would do if people just accepted constitutional amendments no big deal.

        I live in Louisiana, and I’m watching this happen right now with my governor and the state constitution. The amendments were worded in a very confusing way, and even legal experts agreed that it was unclear what the repercussions of the amendments passing would be.

        In a surprising outcome, the state shot down all 4 of the proposed constitutional amendments, because people are recognizing this guy is a tyrant trying to abuse his executive power.

        Pretty clear that people don’t want those amendments right? Cool, so problem solved let’s move on. Nope, he’s making us vote again on the same amendments because he’s, hoping that he can word it just right, and pad it with enough things that will please his voter base, so eventually voter apathy will kick in for the opposition and allow his amendments to pass.

        • LilB0kChoy@midwest.social
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          15 小时前

          State ≠ Federal

          The harder it is to do, the harder it is to undo. That’s why you enshrine it in law or a constitutional amendment.

          When you don’t then (currently) 5 people can decide to completely change decades of accepted practice.

          I’m not sure how to explain it any simpler.

          Same-sex marriage is a better example because there’s been rumblings from the SCOTUS about revisiting Obergefell however, with the Respect for Marriage Act passed under Biden, same-sex marriage is protected by law. Revisiting Obergefell won’t change that; it would require Congress.

            • LilB0kChoy@midwest.social
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              13 小时前

              Right, and who is in control of Congress right now?

              100 Senators and 435 Representatives.

              Any amendments they’ve brought up lately?

              First sentence of your article, “A Republican Representative has claimed that a proposed amendment to the Constitution to allow presidents to serve more than two terms has “a lot of support” among GOP colleagues.”

              I bet they make that claim; might even be true. Do they all? Does 2/3 of the House and 2/3 of Congress? Do 38 state legislatures support it?

              First you accuse me of somehow arguing to make constitutional amendments easier, which I haven’t. Then you provide an article where a GOP Representative has claimed something and act like all the additional hurdles of making a constitutional amendment don’t exist.

              I’m done with this argument. There is no logical or factual basis where case law precedent is better than enacting a law for explicitly protecting a woman’s right to choose. Your example of Roe literally demonstrates the point.