Seems I have no other choose...but things are working themselves out
#allthesefacts as someone who had to develop his personality in a vacuum (I was never a popular kid(and an even less a popular adult)) my confidence comes from the things I know I am...Not who I wise I was or feel I need to be to impress other ppl who will still look down on you because of who they are not or really wish they were...When I speak truth I speak it confidentially...When I state facts I do so with the knowledge of said things...When I smile it's because I know what joy that produces that smile and I won't dim it just to appease your sense of self worth....I don't even know how i got on this soap box..Where am I... Who's got my hot cocoa ...Why am I at work right now..All these questions and more on the next Dragon Ball super
@Regrann from @time - The officer stands calmly as a group of white supremacists act out behind him. The provocative scene one Saturday afternoon in #Charlottesville, shot with an iPhone, was shared online with a modest public following but would attract a wide audience. "A picture worth a thousand words," one commenter wrote on Aug. 12, 2017. "A black police officer protecting a group of men who wish him harm. Incredible,” wrote another, prefacing that remark with a question common during breaking news: “Who took this photo?” And when was it taken?⠀ ⠀ The picture went viral in recent days as the Virginia college town was rocked by unrest over the planned “Unite the Right” rally. As intense images emerged of the street clashes between white nationalists, neo-Nazis and Klansmen who faced off against counterprotesters, this one stood out. But as the retweets entered into the tens of thousands, doubts emerged that this image was from Saturday. In the uncomfortable haze of live breaking news it became the latest in a long line of images to be grabbed and shared online without credit or context.⠀ ⠀ And so began a search for the photographer, a hunt that started on Twitter and wound through Google, Reddit and Facebook until stopping on Instagram, where it appeared on the feed of Jill Mumie (@lil_mooms). That's where the story behind this photo begins.⠀ ⠀ Read an interview with the photographer and the officer in the picture on TIME.com.⠀ ⠀ Photograph by Jill Mumie (@lil_mooms)
Nah!!!
You have to watch this till the end... But send the Grimm Reaper for me cause I'm #dead 😂😂⚰️⚰️⚰️
I don't have all the answers because I didn't make the test!
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