Pudding 🌚
28.4K posts




Florida mom in tears as she is about to lose her Section 8 housing assistance after starting a new job: “I feel like I got punished for trying and getting a job”

Here is a detailed summary of our relation after the night which she mentioned, including the timelines she clearly omitted to fit her false narrative/claim. I won’t stand and watch your false narrative play out to ruin my life and career.

Here is a detailed summary of our relation after the night which she mentioned, including the timelines she clearly omitted to fit her false narrative/claim. I won’t stand and watch your false narrative play out to ruin my life and career.

Later, when she was awake and okay, we had conversations and everything that happened after that was mutual. There was no force or pressure at any point.

Prior to our legal system which has now been involved in this case, taking its course on this particular matter, for the sake of everyone who has ever believed in me or have stood with me in the past or presently;

Prior to our legal system which has now been involved in this case, taking its course on this particular matter, for the sake of everyone who has ever believed in me or have stood with me in the past or presently;

VIDEO 🇧🇷 Alana Rosa, 20, attends the first hearing in a Brazilian trial of a man accused of trying to kill her after she refused to date him. Sampaio allegedly stabbed Rosa more than 40 times with a pocket knife. The case has reignited debate over domestic violence in Brazil

As feministas não lutaram para que as mulheres pudessem trabalhar. As mulheres sempre trabalharam. A luta foi para que fôssemos pagas.

In 1946 the British government introduced free school milk for every child in the country. One third of a pint, every school day, from the age of five to the age of fifteen. The milk was whole. Full-fat. From British dairy herds. It was delivered to the school gate in small glass bottles with foil caps and left on the doorstep in metal crates, where it sat in the sun until morning break if the weather was warm and developed a slightly suspect taste that an entire generation of British adults can still describe with uncomfortable precision. The generation that grew up on school milk was, by every anthropometric measure, the healthiest generation of British children ever recorded. Average height increased. Bone density improved. Dental health, despite the sugar in everything else, improved. Iron deficiency rates among school-age children dropped. The growth charts that the Ministry of Health had been keeping since the war showed a consistent, measurable, year-on-year improvement that tracked precisely onto the introduction of the milk programme. In 1971 Margaret Thatcher, then Education Secretary, cut free school milk for children over seven. The tabloids called her Thatcher the Milk Snatcher. She was vilified. She kept the policy. The next generation of British children, the ones who grew up without the daily third of a pint, were measurably less healthy than the one before. The growth charts show it. The dental records show it. The conscription medicals, while they lasted, showed it. The thing the milk had been providing, the calcium, the vitamin D, the vitamin A, the complete amino acid profile, the conjugated linoleic acid, the fat-soluble nutrients that a growing skeleton requires in order to reach its genetic potential, was no longer arriving at morning break in a glass bottle with a foil cap. It was replaced, eventually, by nothing. Or by a carton of fruit juice. Or by a packet of crisps from the vending machine that appeared in the school corridor in the 1990s. The generation that drank the milk is now in its seventies and eighties. They are, on average, taller, stronger-boned, and longer-lived than the generation that came after them. The milk was not magic. The milk was milk. It was the thing the body needed, delivered at the time the body needed it, at a cost the government considered acceptable until it didn't. The cost of not providing it has been rather higher.


🚨 NEW: Wes Streeting has suggested he supports cutting welfare to fund defence “It’s got to come from somewhere”

@quesadaaa_ I wish the graphic included only the clothing articles without a form. Placing them on bodies that look like they belong to grown women and not children, is a playing right into the problem of adultification and sexualization of black female children









