I have to get this off my chest before heading into the new year but folks, I am sick to death of antis. I’m tired of watching them use the language & rhetoric of social justice and hiding behind moral righteousness to behave like bullies, often just to score points in ship wars.
@theoceanblooms Listen, some of this also feels like trying to rig the games, in addition to the racism and xenophobia so while it sucks for the team, I hope the US gets run to ground at every turn.
Apple Intelligence in the Passwords app on OS 27 platforms will agentically change your passwords that are exposed in data breaches and update then in the Password app for you
Never have to worry about going out of your way to change your exposed passwords
@thedakotahoward@nadiaface@PopCrave IDK, but as much as I love her, out of an abundance of caution I would never invite her to step across the threshold of my house.
During his eight years in Spain, playing for Real Madrid, the Brazilian forward Vinícius Júnior has been a frequent subject of racist abuse, at least 20 times, by his count. Through Vinícius, and Brazil at large, we can see how players with roots in the African diaspora helped create the multibillion-dollar enterprise that is soccer today, writes Peter L'Official (@apostropheoh). The sport’s first global superstar, Pelé, was a Black man from southeastern Brazil, which makes it remarkable that one of his heirs, so many years later, has become a focal point for so much racist abuse.
Why? “The simple answer is he has never been the only one,” writes L’Official. As Vinícius prepares to take the field for Brazil at the World Cup — an event that will showcase on the global stage the ubiquity and virtuosity of Black footballers, representing nations as demographically different as Austria and Japan — it’s clear that soccer’s fraught relationship with race is both stuck in time and haunted by the sport’s ever more cosmopolitan future. FIFA likes to say that “football unites the world,” but Vinícius’s experience suggests football alone can do no such thing.
Read L’Official on how Vinícius can serve as a study for how to combat racism in soccer: https://t.co/oR6lpR5Fuc
@RossSchumann@EvelynNiessner@Acyn Just because you and your fellow cult members say this is the fault of the Biden administration doesn’t make it so. The timeline you laid out doesn’t even support that argument. I dgaf about Biden either. Your guy has to take the L for this.
@RossSchumann@EvelynNiessner@Acyn Central America isn’t the United States, Ross, so whatever was going on w/screwworm in Central America in 2023 doesn’t have anything to do w/screwworm being detected in the US in 2026, 3 years later overall & 2 years after the Trump admin cut funding for detection and mitigation.
Cardi B talks about the NY Knicks losing their game last night, the dark energy in the air because Donald Trump was in the building, seeing how tall Wemby is in person, secret service, hiring security after Pop Smoke’s death, her son Wave enjoying the game, and hosting a pray circle for the Knicks on Wednesday via Instagram live.😭
Being #OnHere as this happened and getting the different accounts and video POVs of it in real time was so beautiful and moving. I teared up just reading Alex’s recounting of it.
Me apareció en recuerdos la foto que fue LA FOTO del pride de 2024: un señor portugués abrazando una bandera LGBT.
El señor estaba parado en la puerta de su casa viendo pasar la marcha en Porto, sosteniendo una bandera portuguesa lo cual inicialmente asustó a varios porque agitar la bandera nacional en ese contexto puede ser señal de protesta nacionalista anti-LGBT. La gente en la marcha se detuvo, preocupada por lo que podría pasar. Pero resulta que el señor estaba agitando la bandera portuguesa porque no tenía una bandera arcoíris y quería participar de alguna forma.
Una chica llamada Lily se acercó. El hombre intercambió su bandera portuguesa por la bandera que Lily traía sobre los hombros. Lo que ven en la foto es el momento exacto en que él la recibe y la abraza.
Alguien se sintió visto y parte de algo más grande ese día. Eso es el orgullo: dejar de ser invisibles. 🏳️🌈❤️✨
Me apareció en recuerdos la foto que fue LA FOTO del pride de 2024: un señor portugués abrazando una bandera LGBT.
El señor estaba parado en la puerta de su casa viendo pasar la marcha en Porto, sosteniendo una bandera portuguesa lo cual inicialmente asustó a varios porque agitar la bandera nacional en ese contexto puede ser señal de protesta nacionalista anti-LGBT. La gente en la marcha se detuvo, preocupada por lo que podría pasar. Pero resulta que el señor estaba agitando la bandera portuguesa porque no tenía una bandera arcoíris y quería participar de alguna forma.
Una chica llamada Lily se acercó. El hombre intercambió su bandera portuguesa por la bandera que Lily traía sobre los hombros. Lo que ven en la foto es el momento exacto en que él la recibe y la abraza.
Alguien se sintió visto y parte de algo más grande ese día. Eso es el orgullo: dejar de ser invisibles. 🏳️🌈❤️✨
@lostinacanyon@Marycel74536655@monocular@jmontforttx They weren’t ���fleeing” anything. They left where they were and he followed them. That’s not fleeing and eluding.
It’s bad enough that you’re caping for law enforcement at all, but you’re also being dishonest as you do so. So now you’re two things — and they both suck.
@lostinacanyon@Marycel74536655@monocular@jmontforttx It wasn’t a traffic stop. Listen, if you’re going to tap dance for law enforcement, at least *get your facts straight* so you’re not embarrassing yourself on multiple levels. He had not stopped them. He had not approached them or activated his lights.
@lostinacanyon@monocular@jmontforttx How have you already decided the driver was a criminal? Just because a cop was “suspicious”? Why are you making up a hypothetical that has no bearing on what we know about this case just so you can bootlick the police? Just say cops can do no wrong in your eyes. It’d be quicker.