Message from @dumpster
Discord ID: 460823363544154123
@dumpster truffles I did not know that very Interesting 🙂👍
@SighOperator What?!
The voting system in Cali. is corrupted to the hilt
@SighOperator 👀 Do we have a troll?
AFK
@R_Dubya well, there are really long periods of silence here, followed by your short responses, so i know that the conversation is OVERLY ONE-SIDED with that sonuvabitch dominating
@SighOperator - enemy here???
@SighOperator Negative, I'm quite & reflective this am
@dumpster i can't hear the enemy--got him blocked, muted, and his volume turned down 🤣
@SighOperator STOP being soft sir I didn't realize I hurt your pussy this bad with words you should toughen up
afk, call of nature, be back
Busted in yet another lie!! However, The Red Cross is a Scam and certainly should be kept away from children period!!

Mornin' chow call! AFK !!
@dumpster i'm pretty sure he wasn't born in the backseat of a greyhound bus, rollin' down highway 41
Nothing for it but pistols at dawn
@dumpster it's me @Deleted User he blocked I was speaking a couple of nights ago and his pussy started getting sore he still hasn't manned up and told me why he just blocked me and muted me. Soft as baby shit if you ask me
JOPPATOWNE, Md. - A judge ruled that Harford County discriminated against a group of Muslims who want to buy houses.
The group wants to buy 14-townhouses on Trails Way in Joppatowne to make a retirement village.
RELATED: Houses for Muslims anger critics in Joppatowne
The judge says the county scrutinized the project more than others because of the buyers' religion, so the ruling means the county now has to issue permits allowing the sale.
READ ALSO: Muslims try to break impasse over housing project
The pushback for the housing project started after neighbors heard it would be a Muslim only community, but the people buying the property say they would follow fair housing laws.
@Deleted User Is that language really required in here? I certainly don't appreciate it
@Deleted User we all have our personal spaces - harmony is a good thing and should be cultivated
BALTIMORE - On Monday, a new program begins to help high school graduates in Baltimore go to college.
The Mayor's Scholars Program will cover their tuition costs at two local colleges. The program was announced last December giving 200-300 city students the ability to go to college without bearing the financial burden.
The students will get a head start on the transition from high school to college with the Summer Bridge Program. which begins on Monday. Mayor Pugh's office is partnering with Baltimore City Community College and Coppin State.
Students can get an associate's degree or certificate in a job training program at BCCC, and if they want to get a bachelor's degree they can continue on at Coppin State, which will help foot the tuition bill.
The city budgeted about $1.5 million for the program this year. The mayor expects about 10 percent of the city's 4,000 graduates to take advantage of the scholar's program each year.