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My question is this, not that I’m dismissing anything of this as being untrue. Anything can be true. I like to understand things a lil bit tho.

So my question is, it feel like, entities with this much access, tech, and planing could just do what they want. I.E, Trump is president. Which is a testament to, access to tech, wealth, and planning. Bro sits at podiums and rants nonsensically..straight President

Why would all of that be necessary if you’re essentially Trump times 10? Why not just kill and enslave humans make the globe what you want it to be?

Why play by a certain set of rules that no one is holding you to?
 
Damn I didn’t know lil dude was murdered…


I don't even know the circumstances but he deserved it.
Idk, seems kinda sad & could of been avoided

AURORA | Meme followers across the U.S. are mourning the death of a 22-year-old Aurora man — whose video went viral in 2014 — after he was found shot dead this week in front of a tire store.

Police identified the man found dead Sunday morning as Vincent Brown. The itinerant, young homeless man with gang ties became a national sensation several years ago for aggressively telling a man “Today I got time” for an altercation in a viral video.

Linnea Brown, his mother, told the Sentinel that Vincent was a big personality and beloved on Aurora’s streets. He’d been homeless for several years and split his time sleeping in a tent, in cars and in motels, she said. She said Vincent also had ties to local Crip gang members but was more “affiliated” with the gang than an active member when he was killed.

Brown’s mother said Vincent attended Parklane Elementary School and Aurora West College Preparatory School in Aurora before they briefly relocated to Missouri. He didn’t finish high school, she said. The family was homeless for several years beginning in 2015.

“He kind of, more or less, grew up on the streets in his teenage years,” she said.

Linnea said Vincent struggled and was homeless for the last six years. But he was well known in the community, she said. Despite his gang affiliations and posturing in the viral video, she said he had a big heart.
Vincent had a long rap sheet that included a slew of minor charges such as: probation violations, failures to appear in court, trespassing, obstructing police officers, traffic charges, making false reports to police and shoplifting, according to the Colorado Bureau of Investigations.

But he also had several convictions, including: registering a fictitious license plate in 2016; possessing “dangerous drugs” in 2017; reckless driving the same year; another drug possession conviction in 2018; smuggling contraband into prison in 2019; and yet another drug possession conviction that year.
 
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