I’ve missed a lot of things I wish I hadn’t in the last 15 months because of this injury but today is, by far, the one I wish I had been there for the most.
He has brought out the best in me as both an ally and a foe. That’s because he is THE best.
When you’re consistently that good for that long, you become undeniable.
Sami becoming WWE Champion was inevitable. He has deserved that moment for a very long time and I am so happy to see him finally get it.
Now enjoy these pictures of me annoying him at various stages of our careers. The last one is him putting on my sock in a hotel room in the middle of nowhere in Texas because I thought I had broken my back the night before and could not move. He had to help me put on my boxers too.
Look how happy he is…
Now tell me he doesn’t deserve to be champion! @SamiZayn
Racist calls cops on a black teen, 280k Lawsuit after false accusations.
They seek a black man they get scared, intimidated and immediately racial profiling him.
When a civilian tells a U.S. Army Corporal 'I can do whatever I want'... and gets hit with 'No can do.' 🫡
This is why we stand. Rank, orders, and chain of command.
Gentleme, please what's the movie title?? 👀
I gotta add it to my list.
When a police officer tries to hand this driver a speeding ticket, he instantly calls out the lie. Armed with cruise control and a rolling dashcam to prove his exact speed, he reveals that he is actually a police accountability activist who has been tracking law enforcement for 20 years.
He didn't hold back a single thought on the system
Cop digs for a way to give a ticket to justify pulling a man over. To cover his corruption it's wild what he gave a citation for.
We are in Wall Township, New Jersey, where a driver Alex Harbour is pulled over by a Wall Township police officer. The reason? The officer claims Harbour failed to use his turn signal when making a turn. But things quickly escalate when the officer tacks on a second violation: New Jersey Title 39:3-74, a statute regarding windshield obstructions—all because of a standard little tree-shaped air freshener hanging from the rearview mirror.
Harbour immediately disputes the claim, stating he knew the officer was following him after making a U-turn near a grocery store, and purposely used his blinker because of it. Believing the stop is an unlawful, racially motivated pretextual stop, Harbour repeatedly asks for a supervisor to come to the scene.
When the supervising sergeant arrives, he attempts to smooth things over, claiming officers were simply routing through the neighborhood to get to local schools for traffic monitoring.
Harbour asks the supervisor to pull the officer’s dashcam footage right there to prove his turn signal was active. While the supervisor explains they can’t review the footage on the side of the road, he notes it will be preserved in the system.
Since the officers knew their backs were against the wall as the narrative fell apart for the original reason for the stop, the officers decide not to write a ticket for the moving violation (the turn signal). Instead unbelievably, they hand him a non-moving citation strictly for the windshield obstruction caused by the air freshener and let him go.
While in my opinion this is beyond pretty and an absolute reach to justify the stop. What many drivers don’t realize is that hanging anything from your rearview mirror—whether it’s a graduation tassel, a parking pass, or a Little Tree air freshener—is technically illegal in more than half of U.S. states under "obstruction of view" laws.
Civil rights groups and legal experts frequently point out these highly specific, minor statutes because they give law enforcement broad legal authority to initiate a traffic stop on almost any vehicle, at any time, to investigate further.
Knowing this info now, I will never hang anything from my mirror again. To think of how readily available these are in stores. They seem so harmless, but we are literally giving officers that want to push, a way to stop you in your tracks.