Friday, September 29, 2017

J. Edgar's “Who's Your Daddy” Chicken


Here is a great chicken dish that could have come from an Five star restaurant. Baked with a blend of mustard and fruit that will fill your home with an aroma to make anyone hungry! 
 

During the second half of the 20th century one man held unknown power to control the lives of ordinary citizens and the highest elected officials in the country. Learn some things about J. Edgar Hoover in the short article that follows.


What You'll Need:
  • ½ teaspoon salt + ½ teaspoon black pepper
  • 4-6 chicken thighs
  • 2 tablespoons mustard
  • 2 tablespoons brown sugar, divided
  • 1 tablespoon cornstarch
  • 1 (16-ounce) can whole berry cranberry sauce (upside down label)
  • 1 can pineapple chunks in syrup
  • 1 orange sliced
What To Do:


  1. Preheat oven to 375 degrees F. Line a roasting pan with foil and spray it. Evenly sprinkle salt and pepper over chicken.


  2. In a small bowl, combine mustard and 1 tablespoon of the brown sugar.
     
  3. Rub mixture over chicken then place chicken in pan meaty skin side down; cover with aluminum foil.
  4. Bake 30 minutes.


     Meanwhile, in a bowl, drain the pineapple chunk syrup. Mix in the cornstarch and brown sugar. 


     
  5. Stir in the whole berry cranberry sauce and the pineapple chunks. Mix well.


  6. Uncover chicken and flip the pieces over, skin side up. Pour cranberry mixture over it; arrange with orange slices and return to oven and bake, uncovered, 30 to 35 additional minutes, or until juices run clear. Place chicken on a serving platter and garnish with the fruit and sauce.
Note:
  • Any leftovers make a great special fruity chicken salad. Just cut the chicken into chunks and toss with Plain Greek style yogurt.


Serve with a side of green vegetables.
What a healthy delicious meal for your Master


For our music: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bSvWLri9zZ0


Serving my wonderful Master:
socialslave

To satisfy and restore.
To nourish, support and maintain.
To gratify, spoil, comfort and please,
to nurture, assist, and sustain
..I cook!

Please buy slave's cookbook:

The Little Black Book of Indiscreet Recipes 

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J. Edgar Hoover's war on Gay “Sex Deviates”


J. Edgar Hoover, left, with his ” assistant” Clyde Tolson


Hoover’s chief aide and lifelong special “friend” was Clyde Tolson. Hoover and Tolson worked closely together during the day, ate all their meals together in the evening, were seen socializing in nightclubs, and took vacations together. When Hoover died in 1971, Tolson inherited Hoover’s estate, and accepted the flag that draped Hoover’s coffin. Tolson’s grave is just a few discrete yards away from Hoover’s in Congressional Cemetery.

It is rumored that Hoover enjoyed putting on a dress & make-up but no proof remains.

If these things raise alarm bells on your “gaydar” remember that these two masterminded the largest “pervert witch hunt” in history.

In 1951, then-FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover ordered his agents to undertake the mission: Identify every gay and suspected gay working for the federal government. Only Hoover didn’t describe his targets as gays. He called them “sex deviates.”

Each supervisor will be held personally responsible to underline in green pencil the names of individuals … who are alleged to be sex deviates,” the FBI director wrote in a June 20, 1951, memo to more than 40 of the bureau’s top officials.

The Hoover memos effectively launched one of the FBI’s most extraordinary, and least known, programs: a massive effort to secretly collect the names of thousands of gay and lesbian Americans.

Supervisors were to send the names of each of the suspected gays — in some cases, anonymously (or by “blind memorandum,” the memo states) — to the federal agencies that employed them so they could be fired.

By 1960, the FBI had open, “subversive” files on some 432,000 Americans, occupying nearly 100 cubic feet in FBI headquarters.

All filed under “Sex Perverts in Government Service.”

Field agents were instructed to dig into police records, individual complainants or “any other source” — and file them at FBI headquarters with “the name of the alleged sex deviate as well as any other alleged deviates with whom he associated,” Hoover wrote in another 1951 memo. 
 
Hoover’s “sex deviates” program continued for years and had serious consequences to tens of thousands of federal workers. The FBI recruited informants to spy on the first gay activist groups in the 1950s and 60s. The bureau also expanded its efforts to collect and disseminate the names of gays beyond those employed in the U.S. government.



Hoover built his FBI files into an intimidating weapon, bullying government officials and critics and destroying careers. The files covered nearly everybody — often replete with unconfirmed gossip about private sex lives and radical ties.

In public, Hoover waged a vendetta against homosexuals and kept "confidential and secret" files on the sex lives of congressmen and presidents. But privately, according to some biographers, he had numerous trysts with men, including a lifelong affair with Tolson. 
 
Dissociation -- denying homosexuality, but displaying sexual behavior -- is "not uncommon," according to Dr. Jack Drescher, a New York City psychiatrist.

"We confuse sexual orientation with sexual identity," said Drescher. "Some men do not publicly identify as gay, regardless of their sexual behavior." 
 
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) tracks a group that is labeled "men who have sex with men."

Roy Cohn, the lawyer who served as chief counsel to Sen. Joseph McCarthy denied he was gay, despite an attraction to men.
Cohn, who died of AIDS in 1986, was a friend of Hoover, and is rumored to have attended sex parties together in New York in the 1950s.

Most of our knowledge of the FBIs efforts were finally released by freedom of information act lawsuits in 1985 and 2013.
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