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KingTigR-II
1.3K posts


@Mappy6984 Cry baby ass white kid thinks the whole world should be given to him boo hoo
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I think something we are all learning as a society is that women are just as deranged and violent as men are they just lacked the positional authority to do it before. As they gain positions of power you could argue they are worse than the men they replaced.
We have a 'Elizabeth Báthory' situation on our hands.

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@kevin_smith45 I’ve seen her pre-makeup and heard her talk in private. It’s not pretty
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How does one pass a positive pregnancy test after 10 days? Technically possible, but the timing is incredibly tight.
KickChamp👑@Kick_Champ
Clavicular broke down in TEARS after finding out his girlfriend he met 10 days ago is PREGNANT, leaving him overwhelmed and in SHOCK after becoming a father at just 20 years old 👀
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@Kachidey4you It's a White-people-is-the-problem-to-this-world movie
I'm sick of woke people
Movie like this is the problem to society
They indoctrinate people since young age with movie like this
This kind of bullshit needs to stop
I hate it and I'm Asian
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What actually happened
A Burger King worker in Canada (Vancouver) who had worked there for about 24 years was fired after taking a small meal home at the end of her shift.
She took a fish sandwich, fries, and a drink
She had asked her manager if she could take food home because she forgot her wallet
There was a miscommunication about what she was allowed to take
The company treated it as “theft” and fired her.

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@FrankJGibbons @histories_arch I watched this episode the other day. Its a good one.
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In 1960, "The Twilight Zone" aired a poignant episode entitled "A Stop at Willoughby." An office worker, harried by an overbearing boss and a shrew of a wife encounters a peaceful village called Willoughby while commuting back and forth by train to work. Everyone is pleasant and kind in Willoughby, and the man looks forward to when his trains makes a stop at Willoughby. You could say that Willoughby is almost like heaven or the place where dreamers go. I won't share any spoilers, but I recommend "A Stop at Willoughby" as one of the best "Twilight Zone" episodes.

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"She stepped in front of a train on Christmas Eve, wearing a pale blue dress, carrying 90 cents and no identification. For 60 years, no one knew her name. The town buried her anyway. Three thousand strangers came to her funeral."
On Christmas Eve, 1933, a young woman in a pale blue dress walked onto the tracks in Willoughby, Ohio, and stepped in front of a moving train. She carried no purse, no wallet, no letter. In her pockets were 90 cents, a railroad ticket to Corry, Pennsylvania, a handkerchief, and a few small trinkets. No name. No explanation. Just a young woman in a blue dress, who had chosen to end her life on a holiday known for coming home. The railroad police searched for identification. They found nothing.
Willoughby was a small town, the kind where strangers were noticed. When the local paper reported the death, people who had never met the woman felt a pull to know her, to mourn her, to give her what she had not had in life: belonging. They raised money for a proper burial. A local undertaker donated a casket. A florist sent flowers. On the day of her funeral, 3,000 residents lined the streets. They had never known her name. They buried her anyway, under a headstone that read simply: "The Girl in Blue."
For decades, her identity remained a mystery. Local historians searched. Families told the story to their children. Every few years, someone would try again, following the faint clues of the railroad ticket, the handkerchief, the faint hope that somewhere, someone remembered her. Then, in 1992, nearly 60 years later, a researcher working with the Lake County Historical Society traced the ticket stub to Corry, Pennsylvania, and from there to a family name. The Girl in Blue had a name: Josephine Klimczak. She was 23 years old.
In 2002, a monument retailer donated a footstone inscribed with her name. It was placed beside the original headstone, finally giving Josephine what the town had always wanted her to have: a name. For the people of Willoughby, the mystery was solved. But the deeper question—what brought a young woman to a train track on Christmas Eve, 90 cents in her pocket, no one to call—remained. The town had not known her, but they had honored her. They had given her a funeral. They had remembered her for six decades without knowing who she was.
"Every soul deserves to be remembered, for every story holds a name." Willoughby did not wait for Josephine's name to mourn her. They mourned her because she was a person, because she had ended her life alone, because something in their own hearts recognized that no one should be forgotten. When they finally placed her name on the grave, they were not doing something new. They were completing what they had started the day they buried a stranger with dignity. Josephine Klimczak is no longer the Girl in Blue. She is a woman whose name we know. But the town loved her long before they knew what to call her.
© Tales Of Past
#archaeohistories

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ALERT: Rapper Ice Spice slapped by a fan inside of a McDonald’s in Los Angeles.
The incident reportedly took place early on Wednesday morning as the rapper was sitting in a booth with a friend.
Ice Spice’s attorney has since responded to the incident, saying:
"The unprovoked attack on my client has been reported to the LAPD and we will be pursuing any and all avenues to hold the perpetrators responsible for their actions, including criminally and civilly. We are also exploring holding the location responsible for their lack of appropriate security." @TMZ
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@Aella_Girl What does "Sexually compatible" even mean? Either you're in the top 20% of attractiveness, or you aren't.
IIMO, there is no "compatible." There is only hot, or not hot.
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