bliberty17
Bliberty17
bliberty17

You’re right. I was raised in a small, white town where we did things like saying the Pledge of Allegiance, or honored God and America as though they were one entity. We either glossed over or ignored the plight of every group of people that were crushed by our glorious forefathers and refused to face up to the fact

Recently at the library where I work we had a younger black man get his phone stolen, and he was angry about it to the point of storming around threatening to get a gun and shoot people, decapitate the person who stole the phone with a knife, and other threats of death and grievous bodily harm. There were 4 security

So didn’t bother to bring any non-lethal gear, didn’t try backing off and leaving the house with the kid if needs be, or calling for assistance in dealing with someone with mental health issues?

If two cops can’t fend off a woman with a knife without killing her, you (a) probably shouldn’t be a cop, or (b) whoever trained you shouldn’t train cops (and also - you shouldn’t be a cop).

For me, the finale where Jim is Dwight’s best man and takes his duties so seriously completely erases the times he crossed the line. Dwight was also massively antagonistic to everyone in the office on a regular basis, but the finale episode showed they all had a lot of love for each other.

Kind of reminded me when Chanel West Coast started into music. I thought for the longest time that it was a joke, since I affiliated her with Rob Dyrdeck and he did parodies. Little did I know, she was dead serious.

Right the comment section is already filling up with burner trolls.