This. Country shows a lot. Of hate and. No love , definitely not gods guidance or intentions theirs judgement good and bad as human race. Its. Being Shown many ways we needto. incorporate others feelings as well. @congressdotgov#loveislandusa#wwenxt
Nous les homosexuels ont souffrent trop dans ce monde 💔
Quant'est ce que vous allez nous laisser vivre en paix ?
Quant est ce que vous allez comprendre que l'homosexualité c'est pas de la perversion mais l'amour entre 2 personne de même sexe 🥹
#LGBTQ+,Gay, Homosexuel, Senegal
kauê said that ‘spring day’ by bts was one of the first lyrics he translated and is a song that helps him in more difficult moments of his life, giving motivation to continue
“my comfort song” 🌻
🚨 “I don’t care, I’ll take a cripple.” That’s what 70-year-old Steven Dana said before trying to drown a 21-year-old on crutches.
Dana confronted a group of young men using the residents-only boat ramp at Lake Maspenock in Hopkinton, Massachusetts, yelling it was “time to go.” When one of Matthew Duffy’s friends asked if he was going to “beat up a cripple,” Dana replied with that exact line.
He then slapped the 21-year-old (who walks with crutches from a recent severe accident) and held his head underwater during the struggle. Bystanders pulled Dana off. Duffy said he feared for his life and couldn’t fight back because of his injuries.
Dana was charged with attempted murder, two counts of strangulation/suffocation, and assault and battery on a disabled person. He has an extensive criminal history and was held without bail. Police called it “senseless violence” and said residents should contact proper authorities for bylaw issues instead of taking matters into their own hands.
When a rules dispute escalates into an attempted drowning of someone who can barely defend himself, it shows how quickly “I’ll handle this myself” can turn deadly.
What happens when people decide they get to play judge and enforcer over minor access disputes especially against the vulnerable?
Literally posting this dream I had days ago The Beast out of the Sea
13 The dragon[a] stood on the shore of the sea. And I saw a beast coming out of the sea. It had ten horns and seven heads, with ten crowns on its horns, and on each head no coincidence
🚨 “I don’t care, I’ll take a cripple.” That’s what 70-year-old Steven Dana said before trying to drown a 21-year-old on crutches.
Dana confronted a group of young men using the residents-only boat ramp at Lake Maspenock in Hopkinton, Massachusetts, yelling it was “time to go.” When one of Matthew Duffy’s friends asked if he was going to “beat up a cripple,” Dana replied with that exact line.
He then slapped the 21-year-old (who walks with crutches from a recent severe accident) and held his head underwater during the struggle. Bystanders pulled Dana off. Duffy said he feared for his life and couldn’t fight back because of his injuries.
Dana was charged with attempted murder, two counts of strangulation/suffocation, and assault and battery on a disabled person. He has an extensive criminal history and was held without bail. Police called it “senseless violence” and said residents should contact proper authorities for bylaw issues instead of taking matters into their own hands.
When a rules dispute escalates into an attempted drowning of someone who can barely defend himself, it shows how quickly “I’ll handle this myself” can turn deadly.
What happens when people decide they get to play judge and enforcer over minor access disputes especially against the vulnerable?
Pennsylvania Mayor slams ‘Love Island USA’ contestant Sean Reifel for quitting his police job to be on the show:
“Our police department spent a lot of time training and we paid thousands of taxpayer dollars to send him to the police academy. We are disappointed he left as we now have another vacancy in our department that is impossible to fill until next year. I never thought I’d see the day in America where reality show participation wins out over being a police officer.”