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I really wonder if people can sense power levels....

Cuz this dude just who I almost put hands on years ago just came in. I played it cool like I didn't remember him. But he was a little bit of a jerk... Then made some excuse as why he had to leave.... Like almost immediately after he came in. I think he could sense the danger 🤔
 
I really wonder if people can sense power levels....

Cuz this dude just who I almost put hands on years ago just came in. I played it cool like I didn't remember him. But he was a little bit of a jerk... Then made some excuse as why he had to leave.... Like almost immediately after he came in. I think he could sense the danger 🤔

Your blood pressure doesn't need you keeping a mental rolodex of everybody who slighted you or the establishment in the past.
 
Yeah you're actually right. My bad... I've been living comfy in the burbs for a couple of years. This is how Carlito got got.
I ended up choking a nigga tonight too..... It's crazy how you can feel all the individual shit in someone's neck when you grab it real hard
 
Argument over karaoke apparently leads to shooting outside Cutler Bay sports bar


“One of them was like, ‘No, it’s my turn,’ and the other one was like, ‘No, it’s my turn,’ and it just went into a big brawl from there,” Zachary Ramos said. “When we were running away from the shots, like bullets were flying past us. We could hear this zip coming past our heads and it was just madness.”

In all, the witness said he heard between 10 and 20 gunshots.

Cameras were rolling a short time later as one of the victims was taken to a hospital.

Miami-Dade police confirmed that officers arrived at the scene to find a woman and man suffering from gunshot wounds. They were transported to Jackson South Medical Center in critical condition.

Police said another man was found several blocks away moments later, also suffering from a gunshot wound. Miami-Dade Fire Rescue personnel transported him to Jackson South Medical Center in stable condition.
 
Argument over karaoke apparently leads to shooting outside Cutler Bay sports bar


“One of them was like, ‘No, it’s my turn,’ and the other one was like, ‘No, it’s my turn,’ and it just went into a big brawl from there,” Zachary Ramos said. “When we were running away from the shots, like bullets were flying past us. We could hear this zip coming past our heads and it was just madness.”

In all, the witness said he heard between 10 and 20 gunshots.

Cameras were rolling a short time later as one of the victims was taken to a hospital.

Miami-Dade police confirmed that officers arrived at the scene to find a woman and man suffering from gunshot wounds. They were transported to Jackson South Medical Center in critical condition.

Police said another man was found several blocks away moments later, also suffering from a gunshot wound. Miami-Dade Fire Rescue personnel transported him to Jackson South Medical Center in stable condition.
If you have the news break app this wouldn't crack a daily top 20 wrf is wrong with people story smh
 
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I blame all yall niggas who overhyped the hell out of Get Out which allowed Jordan Peele to make that absolute trash ass movie Nope
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I'm not posting all of it but just cliffs



The nation's poorest state used welfare money to pay Brett Favre for speeches he never made

Brett Favre earned nearly $140 million as a star NFL quarterback over two decades and millions more in product endorsements.

But that didn’t stop the state of Mississippi from paying Favre $1.1 million in 2017 and 2018 to make motivational speeches — out of federal welfare funds intended for needy families. The Mississippi state auditor said Favre never gave the speeches and demanded the money back, with interest.

Favre has repaid the fees, although not the $228,000 in interest the auditor also demanded. But the revelation by the auditor that $70 million in TANF welfare funds was doled out to a multimillionaire athlete, a professional wrestler, a horse farm and a volleyball complex are at the heart of a scandal that has rocked the nation’s poorest state, sparking parallel state and federal criminal investigations that have led to charges and guilty pleas involving some of the key players


The saga, which has been boiling at low grade for 2½ years, drew new attention in July, when the state welfare agency fired a lawyer who had been hired to claw back some of the money, just after he issued a subpoena seeking more information about the roles of Favre and the former governor, Phil Bryant, a Republican. The current governor, Republican Tate Reeves, acknowledged playing a role in the decision to sack Brad Pigott, accusing the Bill Clinton-appointed former U.S. attorney of having a political agenda. But the state official who first uncovered the misspending and fraud, auditor Shad White, is a Republican.

In his first television interview since he was fired, Pigott said his only agenda was to get at the truth and to recoup U.S. taxpayer funds sent to Mississippi that he says were “squandered.”

“The notion of tens of millions of dollars that was intended by the country to go to the alleviation of poverty — and to see it going toward very different purposes — was appalling to many of us,” he said. “Mr. Favre was a very great quarterback, but having been a great NFL quarterback, he is not well acquainted with poverty.”
Pigott, who before he was fired sued on behalf of Mississippi’s welfare agency, naming Favre and 37 other grant recipients, laid ultimate blame at the feet of top Mississippi politicians, including Bryant.

“Governor Bryant gave tens of millions of dollars of this TANF welfare money to a nonprofit led by a person who he knew well and who had more connections with his political party than with the good people in Mississippi who have the heart and the skills to actually cajole people out of poverty or prevent teenage pregnancies,” he said.
In an interview with the website Mississippi Today, Bryant said he never knew the grants came from welfare money. His lawyer didn’t respond to requests for comment.



Favre defended himself in a series of tweets last year against allegations from White, the state auditor, that he accepted state money for speeches he never intended to give.

“I would never knowingly take funds meant to help our neighbors in need, but for Shad White to continue to push out this lie that the money was for no-show events is something I cannot stay silent about,” Favre tweeted.

The speeches aren’t the only welfare grants tied to Favre. Text messages obtained by Mississippi Today and authenticated by Pigott show that Favre sought a $3.2 million grant for a drug company in which he was a shareholder and a $5 million award that built a volleyball arena at the University of Southern Mississippi, where his daughter played the sport and where he played football. Favre’s lawyer declined to comment.

The drug company, Prevacus, was touting treatments to mitigate the effects of concussions, although none were approved by the Food and Drug Administration. In some texts, Favre suggested awarding shares in the drug company to Bryant while he was governor.
“Don’t know if legal or not but we need cut him in,” Favre texted a company official in November 2018, referring to Bryant. Following up three days later, Favre wrote, “Also if legal I’ll give some of my shares to the Governor.”


The state auditor said he found other “no show” contracts benefiting former pro athletes and family members of Davis, the welfare agency director.

The auditor said Davis directed one contract to Austin Smith, his nephew, who was paid more than $400,000 to provide “coding skills” classes even though prosecutors allege he had no such skills “and did not know how to teach.”

At least $3 million went to Ted DiBiase, a retired professional wrestler. Marcus Dupree, a former college football star, also received $370,000 in welfare funds, which prosecutors say partly went to fund his horse ranch.

Paul LaCoste, who is the current governor’s athletic trainer, was paid $300,000 in welfare funds to run a fitness boot camp for legislators.


 
I'm not posting all of it but just cliffs



The nation's poorest state used welfare money to pay Brett Favre for speeches he never made
This Ted "million dollar man" Dibiase?

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Yeah, he guilty
 
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