Gee Gee
258 posts


Should B.C. allow U.S. alcohol products back on provincial liquor store shelves? castanet.net/news/Poll/6105…
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@EdKrassen This woman has bigger balls than Rubio, Hegseth and Lutnick together!
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@BOSSportsGordo It’s safer to pull out from a parking place into traffic or in the parking lot rather than back out. You can see much better looking forward compared to what you can see backing out.
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Please don’t send this to @realdonaldtrump or his family members. It would be wrong to remind everyone he was a 5-time draft dodger and a coward.

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Should B.C. continue its ban on U.S. alcohol imports? castanet.net/news/Poll/6033…
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An 8-year-old boy noticed what every adult in the restaurant missed — and it changed a family's life forever.
Every weekend, Kayzen Hunter and his family walk into their local Waffle House in Little Rock, Arkansas, and ask for the same section. Not because of the booth or the view. Because of Devonte.
Devonte Gardner is the waiter who greets Kayzen with a high five every single time. The one who already knows his order by heart — scrambled eggs with cheese, no toast, hash browns covered with cheese, and an Arnold Palmer. The one who always has a joke ready, and a smile so big you'd think he was having the best day of his life.
For about a year, the Hunter family — Kayzen, his mom Vittoria, his dad, and his siblings — sat in Devonte's section every weekend. They got to know him. They learned about his wife, Aissa, and his two little daughters, Jade and Amoura. They saw someone who genuinely loved making people feel welcome.
What they didn't know was what Devonte went home to after every shift.
His family's apartment had become infested with black mold and rats. His daughters were getting sick. He had no choice but to move them out — leaving behind most of their belongings because the mold had contaminated everything. The only place they could afford was a motel room at sixty dollars a night.
Every tip Devonte earned went straight to keeping that room. He was walking miles to work and back because the money he'd saved for a car had been swallowed by the emergency move. For months, he kept showing up to Waffle House with that same smile, and no one knew he was barely holding on.
Then one day, Kayzen visited the restaurant with his grandfather. That's when Devonte quietly mentioned he was looking for a cheap car. Kayzen, being Kayzen, asked more questions. He learned about the motel. He learned about the girls. He learned that his favorite person at Waffle House was struggling in ways he couldn't see behind the counter.
He went home and told his mom they needed to do something.
"He kept saying, 'We have to start a GoFundMe and help Devonte get a car,'" Vittoria recalled. "He didn't give up on it. He's a kid with a big heart."
Vittoria helped Kayzen set up the page with a goal of five hundred dollars. In Kayzen's own words, the description read: "Devonte is one of the most joyous and positive people you've ever met. He always greets us with the biggest smile. I hope your heart is as BIG as mine and you will help me spread kindness in the world."
At first, the donations trickled in slowly. Then a local news station in Little Rock ran the story. Then The Washington Post picked it up. Then the whole country saw it.
Within a month, the GoFundMe raised over one hundred and thirteen thousand dollars.
Devonte broke down when he found out. "I started crying," he said. "I'd been quietly struggling and didn't want to ask anybody for anything."
With the funds, Devonte and his family moved out of the motel and into a real apartment. The full year's rent was paid upfront so they wouldn't have to worry month to month. Then Kayzen went with Devonte to pick out a car — a brand new one. They sat in it together, and Devonte told him, "Kayzen, you're gonna be right here. I'll pick you up from school."
Devonte said he planned to save the rest for his daughters. "Everything I'm getting is going mostly towards my daughters to make sure they have a great, great life. Make sure we won't have to struggle anymore."
The Hunters still go to Waffle House every weekend. They still sit in Devonte's section. Kayzen still gets his high five at the door.
But now, when Devonte smiles, it's a different kind of smile.
When asked how it felt to help his friend, Kayzen kept it simple: "It just feels good to help someone else."
He's eight years old. He saw a man who gave kindness to everyone and received very little in return — and he decided, without hesitation, that it wasn't right.
Most adults walked past Devonte's struggle without seeing it.

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Cheeky ‘crash out’ statement has B.C. chiefs’ property rights position going viral ctvnews.ca/vancouver/arti…
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Conservatives are so old. (All together…) HOW OLD ARE THEY? They’re so old that they don’t know the interwebs never forgets!
Melanie 🇨🇦@Mellyfax
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