Message from @retiredDep

Discord ID: 462951366118211584


2018-07-01 11:55:08 UTC  

👆

2018-07-01 11:55:26 UTC  
2018-07-01 11:57:17 UTC  

Our Father, who art in heaven, hallowed be thy Name. Thy kingdom come. THY WILL BE DONE, on earth as it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread. And forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive those who trespass against us. And lead us not into temptation, but DELIVER US FROM EVIL.

For Thine is the kingdom and the power and the glory, forever and ever. Amen †

2018-07-01 11:57:32 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/435869520998170624/462949875458506762/35721718_10155636071437371_6389759722571956224_n.png

2018-07-01 11:57:32 UTC  

patience

2018-07-01 11:57:50 UTC  

@**Åli̊čeȰn✨Q̣̇✨** - that short little vid brought up to speed on the meaning of 1776 and the ignorance of americans (joking)

2018-07-01 11:58:00 UTC  

Plymouth

2018-07-01 11:59:44 UTC  

1000AM here

2018-07-01 12:00:17 UTC  

My old dog got me up

2018-07-01 12:01:35 UTC  

time is elastic

2018-07-01 12:01:39 UTC  

COMPTON, CA (FOX 11) - Residents in neighborhoods on one of Compton’s busiest streets were fed up with a human trafficking problem they said was growing due to city officials’ lackluster response.

On Long Beach Boulevard from Rosecrans to Alondra streets, scantily dressed, young women can be seen looking down at their cell phones while walking on both sides on the street.

Neighbors said at first glance, the women could easily blend in as residents dressed with minimal clothing because it was hot outside.

But then cars would pull up and the women would walk up to the drivers and passengers and begin talking with them sometimes right in the middle of the street.

One neighbor, who didn’t want to be identified on camera due to fear of retaliation, said the women could be seen loitering sex at all hours of the days and nights.

“It makes me feel very uncomfortable. I mean this is something that’s against the law, as we all know, and nothing is being done about it,” he told reporter Leah Uko. “They’re not afraid of walking up to your car. If you do try to record them or try to report them, they’re not even running away.”

Other neighbors said the women would often use their apartment complex’s parking lot as a location for sexual activity.

“If this was somewhere like Culver City or Beverly Hills, I think this problem would be eliminated within a day or a week’s time.”

When FOX 11 visited a complex, used condoms were on the ground in the lot.

As evening hours approached, more women would come out to attract customers.

Mike Dardashti owns property on the street. He said after getting complaints from neighbors about the prostitution traveling to their area, he was going to look into having a fence installed that would close off the property.

But he said the city was giving him the runaround with getting approved.

2018-07-01 12:02:05 UTC  

Darshati was unavailable to speak at the time FOX 11 covered this story, but said he would speak at a later time.

The issue was also affecting nearby businesses.

Charles Jones, who worked at R.O.A.D.S Community Care Clinic, said many times the women’s’ pimps would force them to approach patients waiting to go into the clinic.

“Guys pull up in their cars and the ladies be in the car doing whatever,” Jones said.

Jones said the site of seeing the young girls selling sex didn’t make him angry, but rather sad.

“I have all girls. This here, it doesn’t make no sense really.”

Residents reached out to Compton mayor, Aja Brown on Twitter back in September 2017.

Brown responded, tweeting the city had worked on the issue for years by launching diversion services and other programs dedicated to treatment instead of criminalization.

She added in another tweet that, “it takes community members to get involved. Problems are easy to identify, working toward solutions takes commitment, hard work.”

2018-07-01 12:02:25 UTC  

I still like 8 hours of sleep, just getting it because of taqking care of my dog

2018-07-01 12:02:30 UTC  

He told Uko when the women are arrested, they can only be held for 24 to 48 hours then released. And whenever deputies patrolled one area, the women and their exploiters would relocate to other areas.

Hall said the bureau was working to tackle the issue by going after the sexual exploiters and customers, rather the women because they were considered as victims, not criminals.

This was an approach one resident said gave the women too much of a break.

“If the situation is that someone is a victim, if they get arrested and they get into a program where they can be rehabilitated that’s great. But if they get that opportunity once and they come back out on the streets to do it again, then I don’t understand what the problem is. They should be arrested just like any other criminal. They’re breaking the law.”

2018-07-01 12:03:01 UTC  

@retiredDep - They rub our noses in it - sheer arrogance

2018-07-01 12:04:07 UTC  

There is no such thing as a normal life, if you know natural is normal.

2018-07-01 12:04:16 UTC  

A small group demonstrated outside Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti’s Windsor Square residence Saturday morning, targeting the mayor over homelessness and calling on him to support the disbandment of the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency.

Protesters chanted, shouted and hurled expletives via a bullhorn as they stood outside the Getty House, the Tudor revival-style home that serves as the official mayor’s residence. The peaceful demonstration, which drew about 20 people, was organized by the Democratic Socialists of America’s L.A. chapter.

“ICE out of LA!” protesters chanted. “Shame on you!” “Housing not handcuffs!” “Black Lives Matter!”

It’s unclear if the mayor was home during the 7 a.m. protest. His wife, Amy Wakeland, briefly emerged from the residence shortly after demonstrators left. A Garcetti spokesman didn’t immediately provide a comment.

2018-07-01 12:04:31 UTC  

normal is a relative state

2018-07-01 12:04:32 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/435869520998170624/462951635627409421/36474010_132397774326328_2184567662649016320_n.png

2018-07-01 12:04:48 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/435869520998170624/462951705194135552/20180701_002335.jpg

2018-07-01 12:05:13 UTC  
2018-07-01 12:05:26 UTC  

heya rambler

2018-07-01 12:05:31 UTC  
2018-07-01 12:07:30 UTC  

A Los Angeles County Superior Court judge on Friday refused to overturn Gov. Jerry Brown’s decision denying parole to former Charles Manson follower and convicted killer Leslie Van Houten.

In his ruling, Judge William C. Ryan said there was “some evidence” to support Brown’s decision in refusing to release Leslie Van Houten, 68, who in 1971 was found guilty of taking part in the brutal killings of Leno and Rosemary LaBianca in Los Angeles.

If released, Ryan found that Van Houten “would pose an unreasonable risk of danger to society.”

Ryan said the brutal and terrorizing manner in which Van Houten and her accomplices killed the LaBiancas demonstrates how the crime was more heinous than most and stands apart from others.

2018-07-01 12:07:48 UTC  

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2018-07-01 12:08:17 UTC  

US Rep. Maxine Waters kept up the heat on President Trump at an immigration rally Saturday in Los Angeles.

"How dare you?" said Waters, a California Democrat and frequent Trump critic. "How dare you take the babies from mothers' arms? How dare you take the children and send them all across the country into so-called detention centers?"

Waters has been warring with Trump lately amid a broader discussion of "civility" in politics, which gained some traction after White House press secretary Sarah Sanders was asked to leave a Virginia restaurant.

Waters then encouraged people to heckle and harass Cabinet members in public.

In response, Trump tweeted that Waters had called for "harm" to his supporters and spoke against her in rallies.

2018-07-01 12:08:37 UTC  

Waters denied calling for violence.

Her speech Saturday was part of the "Families Belong Together" rallies held across the country. Protesters gathered to show opposition to Trump's "zero tolerance" toward undocumented immigrants, which has separated thousands of children from their parents.

She continued, "You are putting them in cages. You are putting them in jails. And you think we're going to stand by and allow you to do that? I don't think so. Donald Trump, you think you can get away with everything, but you have gone too far when you are trying to break up families in the way that you do."

Waters likened the situation to slavery.

"As an African-American woman, I was raised on the stories about what happened on the auction block when they auctioned off Africans" and broke up families, she told listeners.

She also had caustic advice for those who have made threats against her, increasingly, she said, since she and Trump have sparred.

"If you shoot me, you better shoot straight," Waters said. "There's nothing like a wounded animal."

2018-07-01 12:08:40 UTC  

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2018-07-01 12:08:59 UTC  

NAPPER