I logged onto the internet in 1997 when I was only 11 years old; please show some respect. Amer-I-CAN of Filipino descent. Stop trying to curtail my fREEEEEdom!
Happy belated birthday to me, $BBY
As we advance into the meta-modern age, let’s avoid throwing the #BBY out with the bath water 🫶🏼🤟🏽👌🏽♾
Also, thank you for your service, veterans 🇺🇸✌🏽🕊☮️
#signal
.@RepAnnaEshoo @SenAlexPadilla@LaphonzaB, the Affordable Connectivity Program (ACP) is helping millions of Americans connect to the internet. Congress must act quickly to keep this critical program funded so it doesn’t go away.
When I blow up and people start getting jealous and talking about how I don’t deserve all the good things I end up getting, I’ll cite this tweet.
I know. Success, fame, and fortune is like winning the lotto. I know. People who met me when I first embarked on this journey…
Neerja Bhanot was a flight attendant on Pan Am Flight 73 when it was hijacked in Pakistan by Palestinian terrorists on September 5, 1986. She helped the pilots escape, saved American passengers from execution, and opened the emergency door so hundreds could jump to safety. Ultimately, she was killed while shielding three children from gunfire.
Twenty-two-year-old Indian air hostess Neerja Bhanot was always a woman of courage and convictions. Despite the traditions of her culture and her family's protests, she left her arranged marriage when her husband proved abusive. Then she struck out on her own and began working as both a model and a flight attendant for Pan Am. But shortly after she began her new career in the skies, disaster struck when a flight she was working was hijacked by four terrorists in 1986. Though she was new to the job, she proved to be the greatest hero of the entire ordeal. Over the course of 17 harrowing hours, she helped both the pilots and hundreds of passengers to escape. In the end, she was killed while using her body to protect three children from gunfire.
Bhanot was posthumously awarded medals of bravery from India, Pakistan, and the United States. And one of the children she saved grew up to be a pilot himself and credited Bhanot for his decision.
@EE_MON_EE@mhdksafa Do what you want with your money, but I don’t agree with this plan. It’s one thing to buy a meal for someone in need who goes into a restaurant for food, but I think there are superior methods to feed the hungry instead of buying as many dollar menu burgers you can.
@hankgreen Yeah CEOs are gross, weak babies 🤮🤮 I hate them; please reconsider your life’s work
I’m visualizing your cancer cells being obliterated right now; you better be, too. Maybe your tiny CEO brain can’t handle visualizing things tho. Sleep well, weak loser