Towelie⚔
7.8K posts

Towelie⚔
@Towelie4420
https://t.co/ZXdvpbQkEY
South Park, Colorado Katılım Ocak 2011
1.4K Takip Edilen1.8K Takipçiler

@mobinfiltrator A whole festival full of cultural appropriation, imagine that!
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My beautiful baby girl, look how far you’ve come. So many milestones in such a short time. They warned us it would be two steps forward and one step back, but look at you now shining brighter than ever.
Your sweet face is full of color again, and that sparkle in your eyes says it all. It’s been 24 hours since your EVD was removed and 72 hours since they clamped it. We’re trending in the right direction after your cranioplasty. The incisions are healing beautifully. Even the neurosurgeons commented this morning on how wonderful you look and how impressed they are with your progress.
At this rate, we should be heading back to the rehab facility this afternoon. And starting tomorrow, my Maya Bear can finally have her showers again ❤️
I believe in you with all my heart. Your strength is unmatched, and you continue to amaze me every single day. You’re already doing incredible things, and I know even greater ones are ahead.
I love you so much, my beautiful girl.
Forever proud of you,
❤️

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@spikedtea4u The sleeves! Now stretched to the limit. Unbelievable 😲
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Time for another side by side…The once flowy dress is now hardly able to contain the growing mass! 😱
You’d think this would be a wake up call but nope! Enjoy UR foodapalooza foodie UR only fooling…hurting URSELF!
#FoodieBeautyAnimalAbuser
#FoodieBeauty
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@tatvonb It will never happen. She has outstanding debt, but that aside, he has ZERO to offer, no skills, and a very bizarre way of communicating with women, to put it politely. Her passport is a red flag, pointing
In the direction of sleeper cell, proudly rolling with terrorists? ❤️🇨🇦
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🇨🇦
Paul Manning@mobinfiltrator
Chips and gravy are a staple diet in #England. It was invented in England in 1902 by Frank Mosley, from Burnley, and his wife Anne. To add cheese curds is diabolical. Horrific. It’s food pandemonium. Now I’ve moved to #Canada I want you all to change your way of life, and stop putting cheese in chips and gravy. If you don’t change your culture immediately I won’t feel welcome, and you are all racists. #FuckPoutine
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@mobinfiltrator The immaturity is next level, honestly! Who hires these idiots?
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Police enforce a warrant on your home and afterwards you notice dents in the side of your vehicle.
Why do this?
What’s the thought process?
#police #policebrutality
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@MC___MC___ @StuffKSaid That's her big "O" face lover boy sees when he surfs on ther gunt
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@mobinfiltrator If i was to dig into someone's information, i would be fired immediately. They actually do audits, that could be a start, eh? Or how about informing the members of the public if or when their name is searched outside of an investigation?
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Did a bit of digging last night.
Across the #UK, #Canada, the #USA, and #Australia, one issue keeps coming up again and again.
Unauthorised access to police databases.
Not organised crime, or dramatic CSI worthy cases.
Just officers using police systems to look up people they shouldn’t. Ex-partners, neighbours, acquaintances, the hot guy at the gym, or the completely unknown girl who just pulled up next to you in traffic, for personal reasons.
2012 I once watched a SSgt called Glenn Jarvie @hamiltonpolice, jump on someone's else system in the CID office while they were in the washroom, and run a name.
The 'phone book' came back on this guy. Dozens of offenses. So why show me? He then told me this was his daughters boyfriend, and he wanted to somehow get her away from him.
So I quizzed, "Why are you running him?"
It was just second nature. And he did it on someone else terminal. Why? Because it doesn't even come back to him if there's an audit.
He never thought, "This is a crime!" He thought, "I've used this system for 30 years, and it's mine to do with what I will."
An entitlement.
Perk of the job.
It's mine to do with as I wish!
And this might be the most common form of police misconduct globally.
Why?
Because it’s easy. Because the access is there. Because the temptation is constant. And most importantly, even though in every one of those countries it's considered a criminal offense, it has never been treated with the same weight as other misconduct.
That’s the uncomfortable bit, no?
A lot of these cases don’t end in criminal charges. Many are dealt with internally, warnings, discipline, sometimes dismissal, but Im struggling to find any of those.
Now compare the risk. You’re talking about access to some of the most sensitive information the #Governement holds.
So now when forces start using AI to monitor internal behaviour, people call it intrusive.
And they’re not wrong.
But at the same time, this is exactly the kind of misconduct those systems are designed to catch.
So where do you land?
Leave it unchecked, and you quietly erode public trust.
But trust is rapidly eroding in the wake of a public release that an #Ottawa cop got a demotion for scores of these illegal searches.
People are done. Fed up, with blatant corruption going unpunished.
Now, over-monitor it, and you erode trust inside the job.
If someone misuses police systems to access personal data, it shouldn’t end with a quiet warning.
It should mean criminal charges, dismissal, and a clear message.
Access to that level of information is a privilege, abuse it, and you lose the job and go to prison.
#onpoli #cdnpoli #UKpoli #USApoli
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