I find this take so interesting. Cause don’t they have to make us wet 🤷🏾♀️. The idea that a man should just be hard is kinda childish. Make that man horny
Breaking: White supremacist group Patriot Front is marching around Washington, DC this morning. They were seen at union station and in Capitol Hill neighborhoods.
D.C. will be hotter than 99 percent of the planet on Friday.
Only parts of Africa's Sahara Desert, the Middle East, China's Gobi Desert and a few spots in the Desert Southwest will be hotter.
Jaylen Brown on his Twitch stream, about “anonymous sources”:
‘I’m tired of these damn anonymous sources, like, anonymous executive — Colin Cowherd, Bobby Marks, Stephen A. Smith — I think yall are the sources”
LMAOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO…I’m excited about this upcoming season 😂
Do you know what everybody seems to be missing?
If he uses the inheritance his father left him to pay off his sisters' $300,000 in student loans, he would not only be disregarding his father's explicit wish that they never benefit from his wealth, he would also be participating in the very betrayal that led to their exclusion from the will.
That is, to me, a betrayal of the dead.
His sisters sided with their mother while she was cheating on their father. They saw nothing morally wrong with what she had done. Their father lived and died with that disappointment.
His response was to ensure that the daughters who supported that betrayal would never share in the wealth he had built through his own labour. He left everything to his son, entrusting him not only with assets, but with the responsibility of preserving that final decision.
If the son truly believes his father was wronged, then he must also respect the father's chosen consequence for those who enabled that wrong.
To pay off his sisters' debts with money his father intentionally withheld from them would not be an act of generosity. It would amount to overturning his father's final judgment.
In doing so, he would no longer be standing with the man who suffered the injustice. He would be withdrawing his support after his father's death.
That, would make him a participant in the betrayal his father sought to condemn. And it would place him beneath his sisters in moral standing. They betrayed a living man. He would be betraying the dead. That is the deepest form of dishonour a man can descend to.
They chose their cheating mum and her partner over their own father, the father was right to leave them with nothing. They should go and meet their mum’s partner to pay the debt for them.