"Din do nuffin!"
Absolutely zero self-awareness. Everywhere they go, they commit more crime than anyone else, they kill each other more frequently than anyone else kills them, they rape at higher rates, they are more welfare-dependent than pretty much everyone else, they behave horribly on public transport and in public spaces, bring with them new and 'exciting' crimes (e.g., frequent armed home invasions, machete fights, horrific pack-rapes, etc) and they turn every place they form a majority in into a no-go-zone.
And then, after all that, they turn around and pretend to have no idea why everyone - EVERYONE - does everything they can to AVOID THEM.
😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱
Video se hace viral, por la agresión violenta de un hombre hacia una mujer en la isla Saona delante de todos en República Dominicana
Se desconocen los motivos de la violencia
🚨HOLY CRAP!!!
A Fourth of July fireworks show in Bartlett, TN turned into a STAMPEDE after a group of "teens" set off fireworks INTO THE CROWD.
People thought it was gunshots, panic broke out, and families ran for their lives.
One of the people caught in it was a young girl named Julia, as the crowd panicked, Julia was shoved into a metal fence, the fence collapsed.
She went down with it and was TRAMPLED.
She was taken by ambulance with severe back and neck pain and temporary loss of vision in her right eye.
Bartlett police then say that the "teens" took over a McDonalds, trashed the insane, and then SH0T FIREWORKS AT THE MCDONALDS BUILDING.
They also allegedly TRASHED A GROCERY STORE.
WHERE ARE THE PARENTS?!!!!!!!
Happy 4th of July.
This was supposed to be a great celebration day but it feels like just a day people use an excuse to light fireworks for spectacle’s sake.
Today was supposed to feel like a yearly reminder of America’s victory but instead something feels missing. The reason for this is that America has lost part of her spiritual and national identity.
The concept that anyone can be an American which is just emotional manipulation to reduce being American to a contract with the federal government has caused tens of millions of hostile foreigners to inhabit America as if it is theirs. The birthright of the bloodline of patriots has been usurped.
Women have led a movement to circumvent the criminal conviction process to tie an innocent’s men name to a crime and now the American government does this with any and all crimes.
The federal government and all state governments failed to enact consumer protection laws and create proper police powers to prevent toxic waste being dumped in nature among other crimes.
James Madison’s original plan has been usurped and now a class of parasites (attorneys, politicians, demagogues and leftists) use the Constitution as an excuse to undermine national sovereignty.
50 million illegal aliens are in America and just as much are in America legally due to birthright citizenship and the 1990 immigration act.
The federal government failed to fund scientific research and to protect scientists. There was recently a case of a dozen scientists murdered.
Presumption of innocence, freedom of association and national sovereignty have beeb wiped out from the legal system.
Instead of writing an inspirational text I am writing a list of grievances that resemble the list of grievances in the Declaration of Independence.
America needs a constitutional upgrade to restore balance by correcting all the wrong which has happened. This 4th of July has a bitter taste but soon everyday will feel like America is alive.
We must be the Resurrection and the Life for God’s Divine Plan for America.
God’s presence must be made alive in America.
@9mmsmg Seems to be a common thing, although in this case they’re getting free food, housing and spending money from either useful idiots, or traitors.
Damn shame what has happened to Europe. Glad I visited it when I did before the replacement started in earnest.
African migrants in Europe are fascinating to watch. They quite literally do nothing all day but loiter. Every waking hour they are just posted somewhere doing absolutely nothing. The motivated ones run scams or rob, but everyone else is just plopped random places doing absolutely nothing.
Zero ambitions in the new land. You never see emotion, just total vacancy. No happiness that that they get to spend their life in comfort without really doing anything. You never see them smile or laugh. When they do show emotion it's only anger.
It actually drains you being around migrant heavy areas.
It's a strange life. Doing nothing every single day all day besides being random bodies shuffling around aimlessly like an NPC in a video game or just plopping down like a seal on a rock by the ocean.
JAVIER MILEI: “I THOUGHT BEING ON THE LEFT WAS A MENTAL PROBLEM. THE EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE IS SO OVERWHELMING THAT IT NEVER WORKED ANYWHERE, AND THEY REFUSED TO ACCEPT IT.”
“BUT WHAT I DISCOVERED IS THAT BEING ON THE LEFT IS A DISEASE OF THE SOUL. THE LEFT IS BUILT ON ENVY, HATRED, RESENTMENT, AND UNEQUAL TREATMENT UNDER THE LAW. THEY ARE VERY VIOLENT, AND SINCE THEY HAVE NO WAY OR ARGUMENTS TO ANSWER, THEY GO FOR PHYSICAL VIOLENCE.”
BREAKING - Hospitals in the U.S. are advertising in Latin American countries, offering “birth packages” of up to $5,000 to foreigners to help them give birth in border states like Texas, allowing their children to be born as U.S. citizens following the new SCOTUS ruling.
When I was a child, my grandfather would sometimes solemnly intone at the dinner table: "The purpose of socialism is to organize scarcity."
As a kid it sort-of didn't register in my brain as meaning anything beyond "socialism bad", but eventually when I was 12 or something, I did ask what he meant by those specific words.
And he said: socialists establish control of valuable resources and then create an artificial scarcity of these resources, so that they can then use them as a tool of control by deciding who gets and doesn't get those resources.
And I thought that was wrong. I mean, are socialists misguided? Sure. But to claim that they deliberately create scarcity as a means of political control? That seemed far-fetched.
But, of course, he was entirely correct.
@pegobry_en ”Socialism is a philosophy of failure, the creed of ignorance, and the gospel of envy, its inherent virtue is the equal sharing of misery.”
-Winston Churchill
In 1974, a twenty-six-year-old waitress in Los Angeles quietly gives her exhausted father one final deadline: three more months of music, then she comes home for good.
She has no idea the call that changes everything is already on its way, arriving three days before her own deadline runs out.
Her name is Stephanie Lynn Nicks. As a toddler, she could not pronounce "Stephanie." It came out "Stevie" instead, and the nickname stuck for life.
Stevie was born May 26, 1948. Her father's corporate career moved the family constantly — Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Utah before they finally settled in California when she was a teenager.
In 1966, she transfers into Menlo-Atherton High School as a senior. At an after-school "Young Life" meeting, a junior named Lindsey Buckingham starts strumming "California Dreamin'." Stevie sits down and starts singing harmony without being asked.
Two years pass before they speak again. Then Buckingham calls, inviting her to sing for his band, Fritz. She says yes.
Fritz opens for Janis Joplin and Jimi Hendrix but never lands a record deal. By 1971, the band collapses, and Stevie and Lindsey — now a couple as well as collaborators — move to Los Angeles to try again as a duo.
In September 1973, Polydor Records releases their album, Buckingham Nicks. Critics like it. Nobody buys it. The label drops them almost immediately.
Stevie takes a waitressing job at Clementine's, a Beverly Hills bar, earning $1.50 an hour. She also cleans houses on the side. Lindsey tours briefly as a backing musician for Don Everly. At night, the two of them keep writing songs nobody has heard yet — including one called "Rhiannon."
Here's what most people miss: by the fall of 1974, Stevie Nicks had essentially given up.
Her father had just undergone open heart surgery. Watching his daughter waitress and clean houses in another state weighed on him. So Stevie made him a promise: three more months. If nothing happened by January, she would come home and go back to college.
She kept the promise a secret from almost no one. She was tired, thin, and scared the music would never work.
Then, in late 1974, producer Keith Olsen plays a track from the failed Buckingham Nicks album for a drummer scouting a Los Angeles studio for new material. The song is "Frozen Love," a seven-minute epic closing the record. The drummer is transfixed.
His name is Mick Fleetwood, and his band, Fleetwood Mac, has just lost its guitarist.
On New Year's Eve, 1974, Fleetwood calls Olsen for the guitarist's name. Olsen tells him: Lindsey Buckingham. But Buckingham and Nicks are a package deal, Olsen warns — take one, you take both.
Fleetwood agrees, mostly because he needs a guitar player and has no particular opinion about the singer. He does not yet know what he has just done.
Stevie doesn't quit her waitressing job right away. She keeps working it for three more days after saying yes, unwilling to leave her boss without notice, unsure the opportunity is even real.
On January 1, 1975, Fleetwood Mac begins rehearsing with its new lineup. The band's next album, self-titled and released later that year, sells 500,000 copies by December and reaches Number 1 on the Billboard 200. Two of Stevie's songs, "Rhiannon" and "Landslide," become instant signatures.
Two years later, the band records Rumours while Stevie and Lindsey's relationship collapses in real time, alongside the marriage of bandmates John and Christine McVie. The album turns their breakups into songs. "Dreams," written by Nicks, becomes Fleetwood Mac's only Number 1 single in the United States. Worldwide, Rumours goes on to sell more than 40 million copies.
Stevie Nicks never went back to college. She stayed with Fleetwood Mac for decades, launched a solo career in 1981 with the album Bella Donna, and built a catalog now credited with more than 120 million records sold worldwide.
In December 2018, she is announced as an inductee into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame for a second time — first as a member of Fleetwood Mac, now as a solo artist — making her the first woman ever inducted twice.
Decades later, a new generation of artists, including Taylor Swift, would cite her as a direct influence. Swift has called Nicks one of her childhood heroes, brought her onstage as a guest, and referenced her by name in a song of her own — a small tribute passed from one generation of songwriters to the next.
None of it happens if that three-month deadline runs out one phone call too early.
The waitress at Clementine's had no way of knowing how close she came to walking away — or how close the answer was to finding her first.
Your 6-hour flight from LA to New York is about to become a 3-hour flight. And it's legal because engineers figured out how to bend sound.
Since 1973 it's been a federal crime for any passenger plane to fly faster than the speed of sound over American soil. That's why your cross-country flight takes the same 6 hours it took your parents in the 80s. Planes got safer and more efficient. They never got faster. The law made faster illegal.
The original reason was real. In the 60s the government flew supersonic jets over Oklahoma City 8 times a day for 6 months to test public reaction. The booms cracked plaster, broke windows, and generated nearly 10,000 complaints. So the FAA banned the speed itself.
Here's what changed. The speed of sound isn't constant. It shifts with air temperature, which shifts with altitude. Fly high enough and fast enough in the right conditions and the shockwave physically bends, curving back up into the sky before it reaches the ground. The boom still happens. It just never lands.
NASA measured what people underneath actually hear: a faint rumble about as loud as normal street noise. No crack. No broken windows.
So the FAA's new rule flips the logic. Instead of banning the speed, it caps the sound allowed to hit the ground. Stay quiet and you can fly as fast as the plane will go. Boom already proved the tech works in a real test flight last year.
The last time you could fly supersonic, a Concorde ticket cost about $12,000 round trip and only crossed the ocean. The next version flies over land, over your house, and you'll never hear it coming.