American: So there are terrorists causing problems in your country, right?
Nigerian: Yes.
American: That's terrible. Is the government at least doing something about it?
Nigerian: Well, our president addressed the issue.
American: Oh. What did he say?
Nigerian: He spoke about the law of lawf in the holy book
American: ...The law of love?
Nigerian: I guess
American: Okay. Did you send the military after them?
Nigerian: Hmm... at times.
American: What do you mean "at times"?
Nigerian: Sometimes we've heard the military went after them. In some cases, the terrorists ended up killing military personnel.
American: Wait. They killed your soldiers?
Nigerian: Yes.
American: Okay, so then your government retaliated and finished them off, right?
Nigerian: Mm... nah.
American: What do you mean "nah"?
Nigerian: Well, our president also gave an example from the Bible about the prodigal son on how we should accept them with love.
American: Hold on. The prodigal son?
Nigerian: Yes.
American: I'm confused. So you're telling me terrorists killed military personnel, and the response was a Bible lesson?
Nigerian: Something like that.
American: So you guys aren't doing anything?
Nigerian: No, no. We're doing something.
American: Okay. What are you doing?
Nigerian: We're rehabilitating the ones we catch.
American: You're... rehabilitating them?
Nigerian: Yes.
American: Not prosecuting them?
Nigerian: Not according to our president, no.
American: WTF WTF WTF
Nigerian: I never even tell you anything, you don dey cry
Homelander losing his powers was the most cliché ending The Boys finale could've gone for.
What happened to the sheer destruction expected from a villain that's apparently immortal?
Even if he lost his powers in the end, was it supposed to be this easy?
Let me fill you on the Avatar the last Airbender issue
- Hundreds of artists worked all through even with the constant fear of losing their jobs
- people were excited because it was going to be on the big screen
- Production is done
- Paramount says nahh guys we are putting on our streaming platform instead
- people filed petitions,…crickets
- In the last 48 hours, an hacker group leaked the whole movie for free
- millions of people have watched it
- the videos have been taken down from X, but people are sharing links to download
- it is everywhere!!!!!
- the only way to come back is for Paramount to release this on the big screen or lose out big time
- it’s so sad to see people’s work just dumped online with no respect to creators, the corporations are evil but please the Animators that worked on this deserve a chance for their work to be shown properly.
#avatar #movie #avatarthelastairbender
In 2022, Kazuki Takahashi, the creator of Yu-Gi-Oh!, drowned off the coast of Okinawa while trying to save a woman, her child, and a U.S. soldier who were caught in a violent rip current.
Witnesses saw him jump into six-foot waves and swim toward the struggling swimmers as the water twisted into a whirlpool.
The soldier managed to pull the victims to safety, but Takahashi was overwhelmed by the current and disappeared.
His body was found two days later, still wearing snorkeling gear, and investigators confirmed he died during the rescue attempt.
A Swedish court has ruled that the Eritrean migrant who raped 16-year-old Meya Åberg won’t be deported because the rape didn’t last long enough.
The rape took place on September 1st last year when Meya missed her bus and was walking through a pedestrian tunnel after finishing her shift at McDonald’s.
Meya and her family immediately reported it to the police.
The 18-year-old Eritrean migrant, named Yazied Mohamed, was sentenced to 3 years in prison for rape.
Mohamed is a citizen of Eritrea, and the prosecutor sought his deportation.
However, the Court of Appeal noted that the man has refugee status. Under Swedish law, deporting a refugee requires that the crime committed constitutes an “exceptionally serious offense” and that allowing them to remain in Sweden would pose a “serious threat to public order and safety.”
The rape of 16-year-old Meya was not deemed serious enough to justify deportation, with the Court of Appeal citing, among other factors, the “duration” of the rape in its assessment.
“Rape is, in many cases, considered an exceptionally serious offense that could lead to the deportation of a refugee, but an assessment must be made based on all circumstances in the individual case. Given the nature and duration of the offense in question, the Court of Appeal finds that while the crime is serious, it does not constitute an exceptionally serious offense that would warrant a deportation order for Yazied Mohamed. The request for deportation is therefore rejected,” the Court of Appeal for Upper Norrland wrote in its ruling.