What is Arizona doing to solve the drought brought on by the Climate Crisis?
Perhaps contraception is sincerely secondary when the priorities to the people are sincerely CORRECT.
Maybe it is too difficult a topic for Ms. Lesko.
While numerous (click title to entry - thank you) winter storms have passed through Arizona during the past month, precipitation totals have continued to be much lower than normal for this time of year. Most of the storms have brushed across northern Arizona, leaving the rest of the state dry. Only a small area of northern Navajo County has received enough precipitation to show improvement from extreme drought back down to severe drought.
Perhaps contraception is sincerely secondary when the priorities to the people are sincerely CORRECT.
Maybe it is too difficult a topic for Ms. Lesko.
The truth of the situation is the GOP has not got a clue how to solve the nation's problems so attacking women is their one bastion of hope for a political footprint.
I am quite confident Ms. Lesko knows the seedy side of birth control intimately. I mean she isn't a virgin, is she? According to women that like to victimize other women, now, want to make contraception a dirty, seedy side of life. I mean, are women allowed to have sex ever in their lives for the pure pleasure of loving?
While numerous (click title to entry - thank you) winter storms have passed through Arizona during the past month, precipitation totals have continued to be much lower than normal for this time of year. Most of the storms have brushed across northern Arizona, leaving the rest of the state dry. Only a small area of northern Navajo County has received enough precipitation to show improvement from extreme drought back down to severe drought.
Elsewhere in the state, the continued dryness led to an expansion of severe drought to the western edge of Maricopa County and into southern Yavapai County; expansion of moderate drought across all of Mohave County; and expansion of abnormally dry conditions over Yuma County.
At this time, the only part of the state with no drought is a sliver of northern Apache County. The dryness is affecting the green-up of winter annual vegetation in the lower deserts. As March begins on a dry note, with warmer than average temperatures in the forecast, conditions are likely to continue to deteriorate.