White people are terrified of being seen as racist.
If white guilt permeates the online world and our schools, then our adults will feel guilty too.
This helps neither whites nor ethnics.
My ARC speech:
One of the most thought provoking speeches I've seen in a while.
@Miss_Snuffy on how raising a generation to see the world through oppressors and the oppressed is changing the West.
If you don't have time, bookmark it. It's worth every second.
WATCH:
Sad to hear Anthony Head has passed away.
The Gold Blend “will they, won’t they” ad campaign was a cultural phenomenon, an ongoing saga that lasted for 6 years, captivating audiences of 30 million. The inevitable kiss even made front page news. A landmark TV moment.
RIP Anthony
BBC Question Time hosts an AI special tonight, though something about the programme, the panel, and possibly even the audience feels suspiciously… generated.
{satire}
"Freddie wanted to look as normally dressed as he could for this show, but couldn’t resist a tiny bit of showmanship and found this leather armband amongst his jewellery. He wanted to know if it would be talked about, and sure enough it has been since the show in 1985."
- Peter Freestone 😉
#FreddieMercury #LiveAid
@GiGiOrlandoFL Good luck my friend take care and as always be true be you and be that wonderful beautiful unique person we have all known and love and we will hold you dearly in our minds and hearts no matter where you are. ❤️
I can't help thinking that if the British Government brought the energy it has to prevent the "far right" from entering the country to preventing illegal immigrants from entering the country there might not be a "far right" in the first place.
On September 11, 2001, 24-year-old Welles Remy Crowther was working on the 104th floor of the World Trade Center’s South Tower when Flight 175 hit the building.
He was trapped 27 floors above the impact zone a place almost nobody survived.
But instead of only trying to save himself, Welles stayed behind to help others escape.
Before heading into the smoke, he left his mom a voicemail:
“Mom, this is Welles. I want you to know I’m OK.”
Welles was also a volunteer firefighter back home in New York, and he always carried a red bandana his father gave him as a kid.
Survivors later remembered seeing a man with a red bandana covering his face, leading people to safety, carrying injured victims down stairs, and going back up again and again to help more people.
He reportedly saved at least 18 lives before the South Tower collapsed.
For months, nobody knew who “the man in the red bandana” was.
Then in 2002, his mother read survivor stories in a newspaper and realized they were talking about her son.
Welles Remy Crowther will always be remembered as a real hero. ❤️
💥Censorship and mainstream editing.
Watch the before and after editing on an Australian show about 'Long Covid'! And see how the MSM protect the narrative by editing the live audience, their comments and questions.
So you see what they do ?
Who do you think controls the MSM ?