Millennial a-hole

57 Followers
92 Following
1.6K Posts
atheist /Tool ( the band)/ drummer in training
JoinedDec 2, 2022

Maybe this is true, maybe he'll fall back into his shit belief, who knows

https://www.insider.com/white-supremacist-took-mdma-renounces-beliefs-study-2023-6

White supremacist renounces beliefs after taking MDMA in study

30 minutes after taking the MDMA pill, Brendan questioned his actions and realized his life was missing connection.

Insider

Trump is now claiming classified documents were “”planted”” at Mar-a-Lago

Not that there are any images of Donald Trump loading classified documents onto his plane or anything

Wait.

7/
5/
Why do we have traitors to the United States of America still serving in government?
Former Jefferson County deputy charged with felony DWI, involuntary manslaughter

The Sheriff’s Office said that former Deputy Colby McCreary was charged following a crash that resulted in the death of his wife, Savannah McCreary.

KMOV4

@DoctorDeathray May I recommend Positive News? They have daily articles about good things happening around the world, and they send out weekly newsletters about "What Went Right This Week.” They're a terrific alternative to the drumbeat of clickbait negativity that most of the media focuses on. ❤️

https://www.positive.news/society/good-news-stories-from-week-22-of-2023/

What went right this week: the good news you should know about

Emissions appeared to be flattening, a vertical forest took shape in Utrecht, and an Arab woman made space history, plus more good news

Positive News

They'll prosecute a poor kid from Cahokia, but not even talk gun legislation, fuckin disgraceful

https://www.kmov.com/2023/06/05/metro-east-teenager-accused-trafficking-glock-switches-china/

Metro East teenager accused of trafficking Glock switches from China

A 19-year-old from Cahokia Heights is accused of trafficking Glock switches from China.

KMOV4
Oklahoma school board approves what would be the 1st taxpayer-funded religious school in US

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — A state school board in Oklahoma voted Monday to approve what would be the first publicly funded religious school in the nation, despite a warning from the state's attorney general that the decision was unconstitutional.

Associated Press