You counting?
anyone else can’t see the reactions? reactions on posts are blank squares and to select a reaction I just see the words.. Thumbs Down, Haha Love etc
They working on my AC and it sound like one of them gon fall through the ceiling at any point now
Came around as soon as kandy started asking for donationsanyone else can’t see the reactions? reactions on posts are blank squares and to select a reaction I just see the words.. Thumbs Down, Haha Love etc
Came around as soon as kandy started asking for donations
I think the lights about to shut off yall
Yo I've been seeing a lot of praying mantises outside the crib lately. I've seen them before, but only like 1 or two per year. Ives seen like 4 in the past week.
The cat pussy hurt this nigga lmaoDu you can’t even afford to have pets since you have to work 3 jobs just to get by in baltimore of all places
Won’t be fights in my class.nice turn here
ay when the kids fight in your class are you the breaker upper teacher or you calling that code 2?
them, racoons, and hummingbirds all been out heavy this year
last year it was love bugs and moles
First-time voters, you’re not alone.
While Republicans would love nothing more than for you to stay your ass home on Election Day, there are plenty of you who will be casting a ballot for the very first time. And to the surprise of many—myself included—among that number is NBA legend-turned-serial pitchman, Shaquille O’Neal.
On the latest episode of The Big Podcast With Shaq, the 48-year-old admitted that he’s finally done something that he’s never done before: vote.
“Ladies and gentlemen, I have a confession,” he began. “You know I always like being honest on my podcast. I’ve never voted before, America. But now I’m doing all these voting campaigns, and you know one thing I never like to do is be a hypocrite. So the other day, I got my absentee ballot. [...] In other words America, I voted for the first time, and it feels good.
“I’m honest. I’ve never voted before in my life. This is my first time voting. I promise you.”
Taking his age into account, this news definitely comes as a shock. But as we learned recently during the NBA’s restart, only 20 percent of eligible NBA players voted in the last election—even though we’ve seen them wearing “VOTE” warmups on the sidelines during every game.
Having NBA players be so vocal about voting rights and political engagement while not following suit themselves hasn’t exactly sat well with fans. It was also something that formerLos AngelesTemecula Clippers coach Doc Rivers felt compelled to address in August.
“In the meeting, it came up,” Rivers told reporters. “‘Let’s walk the walk. We can’t just do the talk.’ And it’s all the players. I think it was like 20 percent of the players voted in the last election or something like that and [...] we’re going to get them registered here in the bubble. We are going to try to get every team registered, every player registered to vote.
“It’s so difficult for players because most of the time it’s in the middle of the season, and players are from so many different states, that it’s a lot of absentee voting. And we’re going to get them all done. We want to get it up in the 80s, 90s, 100, if possible, percentile as far as players and coaches voting.”
This election is more important than ever so it’s a relief to hear that both Shaq and NBA players are doing their part to ensure that their voice will be heard.