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29 May

You’ve received messages from homelaegaryF

FiverrTo:nearlincoln@hotmail.comFri 5/28/2021 9:51 AM

You’ve received messages from homelaegary Hi tomdoody,
homelaegary left you messages in regards to the Gig, I will nj usa my blog ur link my txt customized4u:Dear Tomdoody: How are you doing, this is Gary Wang from Homelae cycling Co. Ltd. We know that you are professional writer about cycling by here. So I get in touch with you to write a article for our bike torque wrench. It is link: https://www.amazon.com/Torque-Bicycle-Mountain-Sockets-Extension/dp/B07P2NVJVM we would like to get a professional unique cycling article for this bike torque wrench. Includes: 1, 300-500 words 2, 1 SEO key word “bike torque wrench” and well researched 3, HD photos for our bike torque wrench 4, post your blogs and share with us 5, budget: 20$ By the way, Could you please show me some similar article sample on your blogs? Please feel free to contact us if you have any comment about it. Looking forward to working with you together. Best Gary Wang

Rand Paul Newsweek

21 Jan


But Paul took exception to Biden’s speech, telling Fox News: “Much of it is thinly veiled innuendo calling us white supremacists, calling us racists, calling us every name in the book, calling us people who don’t tell the truth.”Mimicking the new president’s words, the Kentucky lawmaker continued: “(Biden said) ‘going forward we are not going to have manufactured or manipulated truth’—that’s another way of saying, ‘all of my opponents manufacture and manipulate the truth and are liars.”He just said it in a nicer way but that really was the gist of what he was telling us,” said Paul, who also reiterated in the interview his call for Biden to reject Trump’s impeachment which he believed is “just going to divide the country further.”

words fr Remitly via chat

4 Dec

Perfect, thank you so much for that information. Please let me take a look into your account to see what happened. During a review of your account our customer protection team has identified behavior on your account that violates our User Agreement, so we have decided to suspend your access to your Remitly account and not allow the use of our service anymore. We appreciate your past use of our money transfer service. In order for Remitly to continue offering its customers a reliable and affordable way to send money, we have to make sure our customers are using our service legally and responsibly. This occasionally forces us to make difficult decisions regarding customer accounts. For more information, you can view our User Agreement on our website.

millennials llc dead

24 Nov

Payment Confirmation Number: 78de95bb-0e31-4e38-86f7-87aecb6eeefa Important Note: A confirmation email will be sent to the email address provided in the payment screen.
Your document will be processed within the posted processing times – check processing times Entity NameDocument TypeCreated Date And TimeAmountStatusTHE MILLENNIALS LLCArticles of Termination11/23/2020 6:34:00 PM$35.00Submitted For ProcessingTotal Paid: $35.00A PDF copy of your filing / order can be accessed from the My Correspondence section of your dashboard. azcc.gov

Hana Diego

12 Nov

Hana: You friend have chosen a mysterious and dark path whose sole motivation is deep criticism and unnecessary destabilization of the government not for the betterment and benefit of the country. 

You are sowing the seed of distrust on the very principle American democracy was founded on. To serve the agenda of an autocratic leader who is using demagoguery as his weapon to use and electrify the masses he is completely disconnected from and attempt to change and adapt the system to advance his goals. 

Through the elections a prevailing number of Americans who have seen thru this in the past 4 years have said NO, NO MORE.

He fires anybody who is critical of him and his questionable handling of the country as an actual dictator would and that’s dangerous. And more dangerous is that people like you have fallen for a light that you have seen in him and make light of the danger in this whole picture. And as a reaction, you turn your imbalanced view against us blaming us to be unreasonably focused on a small part of the picture. 

There is not a hint of rational thinking and deeper insight unlike you promote yourself. On the contrary you are just part of his mob of ardent supporters who are intent on twisting logic to be molded on a biased narrative. 

You assert you are seeing corruption and foul play but instead of acting against it focusing on legitimacy and evidence, you are fanning the flames. You are destructive not constructive. 

Reform of the system is necessary but not by attacking the good solid foundations for change it has. And i know you would not call out the electoral system rigged if Trump had won. You did not have a problem with this same process 4 years ago. 

I have known you for a funny and endearing  personality who made me laugh in a positive way many times but the more recent direction you have taken in these past few years is anything but endearing and enlightening. It has revealed light on a different and dark side of you that until a few years ago i would have said it was not in line with the Diego i got to know, enjoy and share laughs with. 

Things can change and i accept that. It just makes it harder for me to deal with this side of you but i will live with it.

Diego:

let’s make sure that foundations remain solid. 

I am sure a redo would not alter the course of the elections if no wrong doing was done… are you afraid?

The seed of discord is already there. Your position is not going to help. We have to remove discord and find common ground.

Now… for the institutions… you refused institutions for 4 years. So not in proper position to teach.

Imagine now… that lawsuits are successful, and Trump is president another 4 years…

Would you accept it? No because you did not accept it 4 years ago and this was the problem. However this time you would think that the system is rigged if results are flipped in some states and it goes all the way to the Supreme Court.

And it would be understandable.

Just like 50% of the people think the election was rigged. 

The other 50% of the people will think it is rigged if results are flipped.

You have a stand-off.

The only way out would be set up a system that beyond doubt would give a clear indication of the elections as simple as that. Any other route will not solve anything.

And just to clear up. 

You said for 4 years a president elect is not my president.

If you think it made you look smart… think again, that attitude is exactly what broke the system.

Now on the other side it is happening  the same… not by Trump but by your example.

We do have a problem.., 100% of the nation and the institutions are going to have a bigger problem if not fixed wherever way it goes…

So please do not give more examples!!!

Or think of the consequences before giving an example and expect others to do exactly what you did… or still do.

It is not only “your” attitude of course. It was shared by millions others. However that is what planted the seed of discord and broke trust in the system.

So, now, it is not likely a common ground will be found in the next president. 

The common ground has to be found in accepting the institutions and the rules that contribute to that formation. 

That is the common ground that has to be restored. Presidents come and go. Institutions stay.

And you cannot preach about institutions if you are the first to refuse them. Because that is what you already did.

And in your defense you did it because you thought it was right and good to do so… unfortunately the other side think exactly the same. There is no moral higher ground even if you think there is.

Hana:

Continuing to talk to you on the subject amounts to more antagonism, you calling out “you are trying to be smart, etc.”, am not trying to be smart, see what’s been unraveling. We had a president that focused on name calling, stoking racism and division not unity, “my way is the only way”, politicizing even a virus, he had 4 yrs to prove it wrong but he did not, so yes, you r right, for 4 long yrs he did not feel like my and millions of other people’s president. 

Biden said he will be everyone’s president including who did not vote for him in an attempt to heal the broken nation. And you said that believing him is like believing a fairy tale…talking of division and broken system… Trump has never spoken like that. Not once, but instituted more bans on people like no other president before did… talking of deep polarization and broken system….

I just won’t waste my time with you. It’s not worth it.

Diego:

Yes, you are trying to be smart and on moral high ground. And it will not accomplish much. The other side can say that even if there was a president name calling… at least did not caused (yet) millions of refugees or victims. So be careful at the high ground… there is really none. 

It is just an illusion.

Hana:

Four Seasons Landscaping 😂😂

Diego:

video shared “Old News Footage Resurfaces Showing Biden Lied About His Degrees and Education

😀 this is when he did not have memory problems yet!!!!

Hana:

don’t play these games. You know a redo would not alter the course cause no wrong doing has been verified… if there has been wrong doing, yes – let the truth prevail i am all for it, but first evidence.. not speculations. By the way, if you smell foul, let’s go both ways…why not recount all the votes with Republicans winning seats… guess you not interested in that…

Also, when Trump won in 2016 nobody contested his presidential win and is margin was much slimmer. Of course there is foul play and denial when he loses… it’s called a game of convenience 

Stop recirculating online garbage which is outdated, not even a news event. Be smarter than that. Amplifier of garbage irrelevant material. 

Diego:

Yes, but you cannot just recount… I think I told you in private why. Has to be clean above all doubts. Right now for you is clean. Not for many other people. Again whether the lawsuits flunk or succedd is irrelevant because they will not solve the doubts.

Hana:

 i have no idea who u were talking to, maybe you dreamt you were talking to me… or having a nightmare 

Diego:

 because now he is older… so everything he says or does could be… age related and not really his fault. So will leave him the benefit of doubt… that it was not done intentionally…

 I did… or Tom? I am getting old just like Biden!!! I never know whether I am talking to you or Tom 🙂

Hana:

Sure… clean above all doubts… undermining in the process the voting procedure, our votes, the poll workers integrity… maybe you can blame it also on the moon and the stars that did not align properly that day 

😂

Diego:

actually I told you or Tom, that the poor bastards that engaged in mail fraud are at least thinking of doing something good, and they are amateurs and the guys that will get in trouble and exposed. Other professional tampering will get away with it. 

masterbation

21 Oct

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OPINION
Jeffrey Toobin and the m-word: Let’s be honest about what makes this scandal so scandalous
By JONATHAN ZIMMERMAN
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
OCT 21, 2020 AT 10:00 AM

Jeffrey Toobin
Jeffrey Toobin (Slaven Vlasic/Getty Images)
So let’s suppose Jeffrey Toobin had been caught on camera having sex with a partner instead of touching himself. Would he be the most mocked man in the United States right now?

Of course not. And, putting aside Toobin’s history of bad sexual judgment, that’s what this pseudo-scandal is really about: our collective unease with masturbation. We Americans love to talk — and talk, and talk — about sex. But there’s one topic that remains taboo, and Toobin is paying the price for it.

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Unless you live on another planet, you already know the outline of this grim tale. On Monday, the New Yorker suspended Toobin — one of its best-known authors — after he was seen masturbating during a Zoom work call. In an interview with Vice magazine, Toobin said he didn’t realize his video was on.

“I made an embarrassingly stupid mistake,” Toobin admitted. “I thought no one on the Zoom call could see me. I thought I had muted the Zoom video.”

By late Monday, Toobin was the second-most searched subject on the internet in America. Over 2 million people — yes, you read that right — had Googled him. That was four times as many as searched Jeff Bridges (who announced he had lymphoma) or “presidential debate” (insert joke here).

What’s up with that? Part of it is simple schadenfreude: in a country that both worships and envies fame, we love nothing more than bringing celebrities down a peg or two.

But why the resolute focus on this celebrity? The answer has to do with his particular transgression, of course. Toobin previously fathered a child with a mistress, which generated a few gossip columns but was quickly forgotten after that. Yet nobody is likely to forget that he had sex with himself, which has been a big no-no since the advent of the Enlightenment.

That’s when the West invented the autonomous individual, endowed with natural rights. But liberty was dangerous, too: Freed from constraints, the individual could easily descend into corruption and vice.

Masturbation embodied all of those fears. It was solitary, fueled by fantasies that each person invented. And when that started, there was no telling when it would stop.

So it was decried as “self-abuse,” the evil downside of individual freedom. Doctors linked it to epilepsy, impotence and insanity. And they began to advocate for routine male circumcision, which supposedly deterred masturbation. And while the Bible didn’t condemn the practice directly, Christians interpreted the passage about Onan — who “spilled his seed” to avoid impregnating his brother’s wife — to constitute a prohibition on masturbation.

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But all of that went out the window with the sexual revolution, right? Wrong. That’s why Bill Clinton was forced to fire his surgeon general, Joycelyn Elders, after she suggested that schools teach about masturbation. After all, she said, it’s “a part of human sexuality.”

It just wasn’t a part that we could acknowledge in polite company. After press accounts incorrectly reported that Elders wanted to teach kids how to masturbate — which is one activity they can certainly learn on their own — she was toast. Dismissing Elders, Clinton declared that her views on masturbation countered his “own convictions.”

Not exactly. Remember that cigar? Of course you do. Among all the sordid details about Clinton’s affair with Monica Lewinsky, the masturbation episode is the one that lingers.

As Trump rages over ‘60 Minutes’ debacle, White House seeks to limit the damage
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And that’s also what everyone is going to remember about Jeffrey Toobin, I’m afraid. But that says more about us than it does about him.

According to a 2016 survey, 95% of men and 81% of women in America have masturbated. Yet in the same poll, over half of respondents said they felt uncomfortable talking about it.

So we joke about it, instead, which relieves our anxieties but reinforces the taboo. Witness the outpouring of juvenile humor over the past two days about “Toobin his own horn,” his “sticky situation,” and so on.

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Remember, nobody — literally, nobody — has suggested that Toobin willfully exposed himself to others. You might say that he shouldn’t have been pleasuring himself during a work call, but that’s his business rather than yours. Inadvertently, he let the rest of us know about it. And now we can’t forgive him for it.

News flash: Toobin masturbates. But I’m guessing that you do the same, dear reader. Maybe you should stop feeling weird and guilty about that. Then we can all stop making fun of Jeffrey Toobin.

Zimmerman teaches education and history at the University of Pennsylvania. He is the author of “The Amateur Hour: A History of College Teaching in America.”

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Jeffrey Toobin and the m-word: Let’s be honest about what makes this scandal so scandalous
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9 Sep

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Washington Post

19 Feb

Nest and Ring fresh fr the Washington Post: Ring and Nest helped normalize American surveillance and turned us into a nation of voyeurs
For all the worries about hacking, owners of Internet-connected cameras say they love watching people silently from afar — often their own family members
Hayden Maynard for The Washington Post
Hayden Maynard for The Washington Post
By Drew Harwell
February 18, 2020 at 8:00 AM EST
Margaret Cudia thought her Ring doorbell camera was “the best thing since sliced bread.” She loved watching the world pass by through her suburban New Jersey neighborhood, guarding vigilantly for suspicious strangers and porch pirates from the comfort of her phone.

She hadn’t expected the camera also might capture awkward moments closer to home, like the time it caught her daughter grabbing a beer and talking about how controlling her mother was. “I never told her about that one,” she said with a laugh.

Amazon’s Ring, Google’s Nest and other Internet-connected cameras — some selling for as little as $59 — have given Americans the tools they need to become a personal security force, and millions of people now seeing what’s happening around their home every second — what Ring calls the “new neighborhood watch.” (Amazon founder Jeff Bezos owns The Washington Post.)

But the allure of monitoring people silently from afar has also proved more tempting than many expected. Customers who bought the cameras in hopes of not becoming victims joke that instead they’ve become voyeurs.

The Washington Post surveyed more than 50 owners of in-home and outdoor camera systems across the United States about how the recording devices had reshaped their daily lives. Most of those who responded to online solicitations about their camera use said they had bought the cameras to check on package deliveries and their pets, and many talked glowingly about what they got in return: security, entertainment, peace of mind. Some said they worried about hackers, snoops or spies.

But in the unscientific survey, most people also replied that they were fine with intimate new levels of surveillance — as long as they were the ones who got to watch.

They analyzed their neighbors. They monitored their kids and house guests. And they judged the performance of housekeepers, babysitters and other domestic workers, often without letting them know they were being recorded. “I know maybe I should” tell them, one woman explained, “but they won’t be as candid.”

She installed a Ring camera in her children’s room for ‘peace of mind.’ A hacker accessed it and harassed her 8-year-old daughter.

Ring and Nest representatives said they had recently implemented new privacy and security measures to help protect customers’ accounts and that they encourage new users to make it clear that the cameras can record at any time. Ring’s installation guide suggests customers use stickers or signs to “let visitors know that your home is under audio/video surveillance by a Ring device.”

But the cameras’ offering of secretive observation, some customers told The Post, often felt too enticing to ignore. Mari Gianati, whose Nest cameras watch over her waterfront home in Puerto Rico, said she uses the cameras to examine the housekeepers, the pool guy, the fumigator, the people who feed her birds and any strangers who pass by her private road, most of whom she said don’t know the cameras are there.

“I have to admit: Sometimes I just watch,” she said. Once she looked on for hours as her sister argued with workers over a delivery of damaged furniture. “Thank goodness I had WiFi!” she said.

All that added vigilance has come at a cost. Hackers have peered into children’s bedrooms. Police officers have asked homeowners for video of their neighbors. And families have had to reckon with the delicate new bounds of home privacy — including one woman who didn’t realize that her lovemaking with her husband had been caught on camera until it was too late.

(Ashley LeMay)
But most people said those concerns weren’t enough to persuade them to turn off their cameras. Device sales have surged in recent years amid falling prices and rising public acceptance: The companies won’t give full sales figures, but they say millions of cameras now are online nationwide. Ring said in November that its doorbell cameras were dinged more than 15 million times on Halloween, nearly double the previous year’s total.

How Nest, designed to keep intruders out of people’s homes, effectively allowed hackers to get in

Matthew Guariglia, an analyst for the online-rights group Electronic Frontier Foundation, said the rush of new home cameras threatened to make the problems of widespread surveillance — the chilling of free speech, the erosion of privacy — that much more intimate and inescapable.

“Who hasn’t looked out and watched other people through their peephole? There’s a kind of morbid fascination to it,” he said. “The problem is when it’s not just you behind a peephole but a camera that’s on at all times, saving to a cloud you don’t control.”

No gadget since the smartphone has so quickly normalized personal surveillance. The motion-detecting cameras are cheap and come in a range of styles, from outdoor units with sirens and floodlights to battery-powered “stick-up cams” that can be placed virtually anywhere. Owners can watch the cameras live or save the videos for a few dollars a month.

Some cities offer rebate and voucher programs for the cameras in hopes that more surveillance footage will make crimes easier to solve. The cameras have also become popular Christmas gifts, and Google and Amazon have advertised them around the holidays with hashtags like #CaughtOnNestCam and #AlwaysHome. (In December, Ring also sold festive holiday camera faceplates.)

The extra eyes have been a huge gift to American law enforcement. Ring lets police officers use a special tool to ask customers for videos captured in and around their houses, and the number of police agencies with access has more than doubled since September, to nearly 900 agencies across 44 states, a Post analysis found. “Ring believes when communities and local police work together, safer neighborhoods can become a reality,” Ring spokeswoman Yassi Shahmiri said in a statement.

Privacy advocates have called the Ring-police partnerships an unnerving escalation of criminal surveillance powers. But nearly every Ring owner contacted by The Post said they would have no problem providing video to law enforcement if it could help solve a crime. Police and prosecutors last month pushed to use Ring doorbell footage in a Texas murder investigation and a New Hampshire assault trial.

Ring has terminated employees for abusing access to people’s video data, Amazon tells lawmakers

Some homeowners said they had already tried to be police informants, logging in several times a day to Ring’s companion app, Neighbors, in which people can share video of break-ins, lost dogs and seemingly unsavory characters.

By tallying up neighborhood reports of suspicion and uncertainty, the social network can also turn harmless moments — the kind most people would have been blissfully ignorant of — into signs of danger or sources of dread.

That heightened level of suburban surveillance has also triggered some false alarms. One man labeled a “Suspicious Male” on Neighbors because he stepped onto a Boston porch later defended himself by saying he had been reminiscing about his old house. “I used to play with my dog in the backyard,” he said, according to a Boston Magazine story. (Perhaps to lighten the mood, Ring this month unveiled a new category for Neighbors app users wanting to share recorded acts of kindness: “Neighborly Moments.”)

Some customers said the cameras had sparked conversations within their families about trust and privacy in a new surveillance age, often with answers they would rather have gone unsaid. After Rik Eberhardt set up a Nest camera inside his home in the Boston suburbs, he found it increasingly awkward being reminded of every late-night trip he or his wife took to the kitchen. “I started feeling like: What am I even using this for?” he said. (He has since aimed the camera at his cats’ food bowls.)

Others said they were growing exhausted from the hyper-vigilance the cameras seemed to demand. The motion-activated devices can send alerts whenever someone walks by and also can be triggered by the movement of cars, dogs, squirrels and windblown trees, leading some customers to feel startled or under siege.

(Jhaan Elker and Geoffrey Fowler/The Washington Post)
Several customers offered tales of strange noises, bizarre whispers and ghostly apparitions: One mother said she worried her toddler’s nightmares might have been caused by the unblinking camera in his room. The mortal realm has not always appreciated being recorded, either. One apartment dweller who said he used his Ring camera to record people littering at the community mailbox was told by his landlords to knock it off.

The doorbells have eyes: The privacy battle brewing over home security cameras

Molly Snyder, an education blogger and mother of three in the suburbs outside Columbus, Ohio, said videos from Ring doorbells and other home cameras had become the biggest source of conversation and outrage in her neighborhood Facebook group.

“There’s never video of porch pirates or criminals. It’s all what we’re doing to each other, or what the mailman is doing to frustrate our day,” she said. The postal worker’s biggest transgression, she said, is not pulling all the way to the side of the road when delivering packages: “People capture that on video, and there’s always a lot of rage commenting, with everybody dumping on the mailman.”

Her neighbors, she said, regularly post videos of children walking down the street alongside comments like, “Whose kids are these?” They don’t look like they’re doing anything wrong — a typical breach involves taking a shortcut through someone’s lawn — but her children told her they knew of kids who had gotten in trouble after video was posted of them hitting a tree with a stick.

“We’re not a neighborhood that’s unsafe. We’re also not a neighborhood where people spend a lot of time outside, interacting with each other,” she said. “So we turn our Rings on and start dissecting all the children. Shouldn’t we be encouraging each other to go outside, say hello and not just get alerts that you’re walking past?”

This ability to see into homes has already been weaponized: Hackers have used the camera systems to shout racist slurs at an 8-year-old girl in Mississippi and a 15-year-old boy in Florida; spew sexual expletives and kidnapping threats at a 4-month-old baby in Texas; and broadcast pornography into the bedroom of a 2-year-old girl in California.

Tania Amador, a teacher’s aide in Texas who used her Ring camera to coo at her cancer-stricken bulldog, shared video with The Post showing a hacker laughing as he blasted a deafening siren through her living room while she and her boyfriend hid just out of view. She is suing the company, arguing its lax security controls left her open to abuse.

Shahmiri, the Ring spokeswoman, declined to comment on the ongoing case but said Ring’s network had not been compromised. In some cases, Ring has argued that hackers used log-in details stolen from other sites; Amador said she had used a unique, 14-character password and had no idea how her cameras had been breached.

“It felt like a nightmare,” she said. “Even now, it’s tough to deal with the fact that we may have been watched for a while without knowing. What if the hacker (was) smart enough just to be quiet and watch?”

Ring partners with hundreds of police forces, extending surveillance concerns

Beyond outright hacks, the systems’ technical errors have reminded users of how creepy the glitches can be. The owner of a Google Nest video screen saw footage recorded inside other people’s homes, including a close-up of a baby sleeping in a crib. Google said the issue was the fault of the camera maker, the Chinese tech firm Xiaomi, and temporarily disabled some links to the devices.

The potential for mayhem has led some camera lovers to rethink their everyday use. Keith Keber said he liked using the cameras around his home in suburban Washington state to watch the hummingbirds and talk to his cats. But after his cameras’ maker, Wyze Labs, announced in December that it had suffered a data breach, he has been unplugging his cameras and leaving them in a drawer. “All these Internet-of-things devices, they’re portals,” he said, “not just to look out but to look in.”

Some customers also voiced anxiety over who might have access to their in-home feeds. An Amazon executive told senators last month that Ring had fired employees following four complaints that they had abused access to customers’ video data; the company has declined to provide further detail. Criticism of the systems has also come from inside the companies: Amazon software engineer Max Eliaser wrote last month that the mass deployment of Internet-connected cameras was “simply not compatible with a free society.”

“Ring should be shut down immediately and not brought back,” he wrote. “The privacy issues are not fixable with regulation, and there is no balance that can be struck.”

Despite privacy concerns, some customers said the cameras are a unique way to keep track of their families. One woman said she had installed cameras from Nest and the Chinese company Yi Technology to monitor her three children, ages 3 and younger, when they are alone in their rooms.

But other camera owners said they would never dream of installing the systems inside. Catherine, a 58-year-old Florida snowbird who uses Blink cameras to watch her home in Minnesota and who requested to use only her first name, said the cameras have become so easy to turn on that many people don’t really think about what’s at stake. Parents who installed cameras in kids’ rooms, she said, might end up depriving them of the privacy they need to grow into independent adults.

“We’re all getting too paranoid. Everybody thinks they’re going to be the next victim. And it’s set into us this mentality that we have to watch everything and everybody,” she said. “They think, ‘If I put all these cameras up, I’ll be safe.’ Safe from what? … It’s only making them more afraid.”

Michelle

4 Feb

Michelle

Michelle

4 Feb

[1/30, 10:00 PM] Michelle: Hey,Michelle here
[1/30, 10:01 PM] Michelle: My view from the 38th floor
[1/31, 10:31 AM] Michelle: Good blessed morning people
[1/31, 10:31 AM] Michelle: Yes I live upstairs 38th floor
[1/31, 10:31 AM] Michelle: Facing east
[1/31, 10:32 AM] Michelle: Yup
[1/31, 10:33 AM] Michelle: What city in NJ
[1/31, 10:33 AM] Tom Doody: 07087
[1/31, 10:33 AM] Tom Doody: Union City
[1/31, 10:33 AM] Tom Doody: source of my barrio Spanish
[1/31, 10:34 AM] Michelle: I know it
[1/31, 10:35 AM] Michelle: I used to live in NJ Somerset Country Manville, Plainfield and surrounding areas
[1/31, 10:37 AM] Michelle: Gotta go now, life is calling me. Catch up later
[1/31, 11:59 AM] Michelle: Have a blessed day
[1/31, 12:00 PM] Michelle: I’d love to chat with you about working for grub hub.
[1/31, 12:00 PM] Michelle: not now I’m heading out for the day
[1/31, 2:55 PM] Michelle: What’s with all these weird photos?🤔
[1/31, 2:56 PM] Tom Doody: my sometimes mine w Hana daily digital painting
[1/31, 2:57 PM] Tom Doody: 2day final day of UK in EU
[1/31, 2:57 PM] Tom Doody: yesterday a quarantined cruze ship in a Chinese port coronavirus
[1/31, 6:58 PM] Michelle: I literally just there about 30 minutes ago. Home safe , riot on 42nd street. Day of disobedience .
[1/31, 6:58 PM] Michelle: Watching the news, I drove from 1st ave home
[1/31, 7:03 PM] Tom Doody: in NJ
[1/31, 7:04 PM] Tom Doody: HBLR soon my barrio
[1/31, 7:04 PM] Michelle: Hblr??
[1/31, 7:04 PM] Michelle: Please speak English
[1/31, 7:05 PM] Tom Doody: Jersey light rail
[1/31, 7:06 PM] Tom Doody: mobile can’t play ur WhatsApp vid yet
[1/31, 7:06 PM] Michelle: It has to download first
[1/31, 7:07 PM] Tom Doody: right
[1/31, 7:07 PM] Michelle: Check ny timeline on Facebook
[2/1, 1:55 PM] Michelle: Yoga blocks????
[2/1, 1:55 PM] Michelle: wassat?
[2/1, 1:56 PM] Michelle: I know there are barriers, but yoga blocks ???? lol
[2/1, 1:56 PM] Michelle: Are you referring to the big brick barricade
[2/1, 1:56 PM] Michelle: I see
[2/1, 1:57 PM] Michelle: That would hurt my ass lol
[2/1, 1:57 PM] Michelle: NO thanks
[2/1, 1:57 PM] Michelle: Why
[2/1, 1:57 PM] Michelle: Target is on 34th street
[2/1, 1:57 PM] Michelle: Trader Joes is on 14th street I think I don’t like them
[2/2, 3:05 PM] Tom Doody: but u like Target
[2/2, 3:05 PM] Michelle: Love Target
[2/2, 3:06 PM] Tom Doody: Target 500 E 14th St, New York, NY 10009
[2/2, 3:06 PM] Michelle: No
[2/2, 3:06 PM] Michelle: Across from Macy’s
[2/2, 3:06 PM] Michelle: 34th street
[2/2, 3:06 PM] Tom Doody: where eye bought my yoga block
[2/2, 3:07 PM] Michelle: Ok
[2/2, 3:07 PM] Tom Doody: yes eye know herald square best 4 me
[2/2, 3:07 PM] Tom Doody: but but but
[2/2, 3:07 PM] Tom Doody: no yoga blocks and no store pickup
[2/2, 3:10 PM] Tom Doody: not a homeless encampment
[2/2, 3:11 PM] Tom Doody: Hana y me testing orw2 grocery
[2/2, 3:11 PM] Tom Doody: Pershing road Weehawken
[2/2, 3:11 PM] Michelle: ok
[2/2, 3:15 PM] Michelle: r u working 2at
[2/2, 3:28 PM] Michelle: I’d like to discuss grubhub with you when you have the time
[2/2, 3:48 PM] Tom Doody: time
[2/2, 3:49 PM] Tom Doody: now
[2/2, 3:49 PM] Tom Doody: w Hana at grocery
[2/2, 3:49 PM] Michelle: Later
[2/2, 3:49 PM] Michelle: I’m gonna go to the movies
[2/2, 3:49 PM] Tom Doody: eye only
[2/2, 3:49 PM] Michelle: I’m gonna finish cooking, then I’m heading out
[2/2, 3:50 PM] Michelle: Eye only??
[2/2, 3:50 PM] Michelle: Can you make sense please 😊
[2/2, 3:50 PM] Tom Doody: enjoy ur show
[2/2, 3:50 PM] Michelle: Catch up later
[2/2, 4:11 PM] Tom Doody: eye took this 4u
[2/2, 4:12 PM] Tom Doody: but but but misdirected 2 my Amiga eso esperanza
[2/2, 4:30 PM] Michelle: Please speak English!
[2/2, 7:13 PM] Tom Doody: KC 7 SF 3
[2/2, 8:30 PM] Michelle: ???
[2/2, 8:30 PM] Michelle: Kc 7 sf 3???
[2/2, 8:30 PM] Michelle: Decode please
[2/2, 8:47 PM] Tom Doody: SF 13 KC 10
[2/3, 6:20 PM] Michelle: Stop sending this stuff please +
[2/3, 6:21 PM] Michelle: I don’t care about super bowl!
[2/3, 6:21 PM] Michelle: I asked for your help with grubhub
[2/3, 6:21 PM] Michelle: Not all this bravado!
[2/3, 6:25 PM] Tom Doody: done
[2/3, 6:29 PM] Tom Doody: Michelle my apology eye mis judged best if u block and unfriend me
[2/3, 6:33 PM] Michelle: Eye mis?
[2/3, 6:33 PM] Michelle: Not even
[2/3, 6:33 PM] Michelle: Its annoying