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Banana Panda
545 posts

Banana Panda
@BoidPanda
The World's Most Hated Being
At home Присоединился Mayıs 2025
136 Подписки75 Подписчики

@bcgame Who cares bro? This is ultimately for your own profit.
I, on the other, hands gives out money because I want to have a code based of data.
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@BoidPanda This is the new accessory lineup for #GalaxyS26 Series. The all-new S26 accessories are made to fit your needs 🤝 Complete your style with accessories that speak for you―with every choice, synergy comes built in. #GalaxyAI #GalaxyS26Ultra
Reply #stop to opt-out.
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> brother passes away
> immediately goes on stream and starts talking bad about him
These streamers are soulless.
Killa 🌺@KillaKreww
Valkyrae opens up about her brother passing away yesterday & admits that she has mixed emotions due to their conflicted past 😔💔 "I shouldn't have to forgive him just because he died, we never had a relationship”
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@BoidPanda You're in! 🙌 Expect exclusive #GalaxyUnpacked updates, sneak peeks, and first-to-know alerts that will keep you ahead of the curve. #GalaxyAI
Reply #stop to opt-out.
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@ma1ybe This story in no way gives a logical conclusion for why abortion should be allowed. This is a terrible situation. But this doesn't allow for life to end.
When there is a will, there is a way. No matter how difficult it may seem. As we sympathise, we could have helped.
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My classmate was raped on her way back home from university and got pregnant, but couldn’t get an abortion due to the laws. She had to drop out of university where she was studying medicine. Because of pregnancy and childbirth expenses, she couldn’t continue her studies, left college, started working at a coffee shop, lost the fun of her early twenties, and lost the chance to attend international medical conferences she once dreamt of… all just to give birth to a child she never wanted.
People say, “What if the baby you abort grows up and cures cancer?”
Okay — but what if the 19-year-old you deny an abortion to grows up and cures cancer?
Now she can’t afford to get an education. Instead, she has to take care of a baby. What about her? An actual living human being???
“Abortion ends potential life”… So do property disputes, war, and genocide. You only seem to care about lives when women don’t give birth to them.
elyshia@elyshianone
Hit me with the harshest reality truth.
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@kirawontmiss Hunny not everyone can do absolutely nothing and yet serve.
Cardi B has been trying for years and yet fails to succeed
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Becoming famous for being talented at nothing
кєνín@notcee_fan
What will the Kardashian family be remembered for?
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No, it's not entirely true. While love, care, time, and attention can strengthen relationships and lower infidelity risks, studies show cheating often stems from factors like boredom, personal dissatisfaction, opportunity, or emotional needs not fully met. No approach guarantees prevention—it's a choice. Sources: Psychology Today, Scientific American.
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@venom1s Also the reverse is also the case too. What the hell is wrong with society
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@just_the_guyy @DrTruthDissecto Believe what you believe. Just ask around. A simple tweet. Others who have, will tell you. GN
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The Demonization of Male Hairstyles in Africa
There is a quiet but very deep contradiction in African societies.
African men are told to be confident, dominant, original, proud of their roots.
But the moment a man expresses himself physically outside a narrow template, he is punished.
Hair is one of the biggest examples.
1. African Hair Is Treated Like a Crime
Cornrows, dreadlocks, twists, braids, afros.
These are not foreign ideas.
They are indigenous African hairstyles with centuries of history tied to age, status, spirituality, warfare, royalty, and community.
Yet today, an African man with long hair is instantly suspected.
He is called:
irresponsible
unserious
unsermonious
criminal
unserious academically
unserious professionally
In some places, he is searched more often. In others, denied jobs. In others, openly mocked by elders who themselves grew up around these same hairstyles.
So the question becomes:
When did our own hair become evidence of moral failure?
2. Colonial Discipline Never Left Our Heads
This did not start naturally.
Colonial rule did not only control land.
It controlled appearance.
Short hair, neat cuts, military style grooming became associated with:
obedience
discipline
intelligence
civilization
Anything else became “wild”, “pagan”, “rebellious”.
Mission schools enforced it. Colonial armies enforced it. Post-colonial institutions inherited it without questioning it.
So today, African men still unconsciously obey a grooming code written by people who believed Africans needed to be visually controlled to be civilized.
That’s not culture. That’s conditioning.
3. The Masculinity Trap
Here’s the irony.
African masculinity praises strength, dominance, leadership, fearlessness.
But the same society panics when a man does something as simple as grow his hair.
Why?
Because control is safer than confidence.
A man who looks exactly like everyone else is predictable. A man who styles himself differently forces people to confront the fact that masculinity does not require permission.
So instead of asking: “Is this man responsible?” “Is this man competent?” “Is this man disciplined in action?”
We ask: “Why is his hair like that?”
That is intellectual laziness disguised as morality.
4. Why Women Are Allowed and Men Are Not
Another uncomfortable truth.
African women can experiment endlessly with hair. Wigs. Braids. Colors. Lengths.
It’s called beauty.
When men do even a fraction of that, it becomes rebellion.
Why?
Because men are expected to be tools, not expressions. Workers. Providers. Structures.
Once a man starts expressing identity visually, people subconsciously feel he is stepping outside his assigned role.
And societies that struggle economically hate men who look like they are not suffering “correctly”.
5. The Criminalization Effect
This is where it gets dangerous.
In many African countries:
men with dreadlocks are policed harder
profiled more
associated with crime regardless of behavior
This creates a self-fulfilling loop.
Society excludes. Opportunities shrink. Resentment grows. Then society points and says, “See, we were right.”
But the origin was never crime. It was appearance.
6. What This Is Really About
It’s not about hair.
It’s about:
obedience vs autonomy
inherited colonial discipline vs self-definition
fear of difference in fragile societies
African societies did not have a problem with male hairstyles until authority decided uniformity was easier to manage than individuality.
And we never unlearned that.
7. The Quiet Question Nobody Asks
If an African man:
works hard
is disciplined
is ethical
contributes to society
Why should his hair matter at all?
And if hair matters more than character, what does that say about our priorities?
This topic always gets people angry because it exposes something uncomfortable:
Many African societies claim pride in heritage, but are deeply uncomfortable with the expression of it✅

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@just_the_guyy @DrTruthDissecto Honestly, I would love to tell you about my experience, in a modern world, it would seem stupid.
All I tell you is that the signs are there. Just look for it. Ask the elders.
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@BoidPanda @DrTruthDissecto What something does it attract
Enlighten me pls
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