We got the bubble headed
Bleached blonde
Comes on at five
She can tell you 'bout the plane crash
With a gleam in her eye
It's interesting when people die
Give us dirty laundry
People love it when you lose
They love dirty laundry
Dirty Laundry by Don Henley [News Parody
KEK…Vegas here I come..kekekek
kek..I'm on a roll ..isn't that want's called a Palindrome
Watch out, you might get what you're after
Cool babies, strange but not a stranger
I'm an ordinary guy
Burning down the house
Hold tight
Wait 'til the party's over
Hold tight
We're in for nasty weather
There has got to be a way
Burning down the house
Here's your ticket pack your bags
Time for jumpin' overboard
The transportation is here
Close enough but not too far,
Maybe you know where you are
Fightin' fire with fire
Talking Heads - Burning Down the House (Official Video)
Protest is more valid when it targets people and events at home
Canada's Missing Protests
In Vancouver, Toronto, Ottawa and Montreal, thousands have been taking to the streets to protest the death of George Floyd at the hands of a police officer in Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA. Canadians might wonder why recent events in Nova Scotia, Canada, did not likewise drive people into the streets.
Back in April, a denturist named Gabriel Wortman, disguised as a police officer, began shooting people at random. Instead of putting out an emergency alert in the style of measures against COVID-19, the RCMP opted for Twitter, not universally used in Nova Scotia or anywhere else.
The RCMP’s deadly delay prompted no mass protests across Canada
The delay allowed Wortman, heavily armed and driving a fake police car, to continue the shooting spree that would claim 22 lives. The RCMP’s deadly delay prompted no mass protests across Canada demanding police reforms and accountability. It was not the first time the vaunted RCMP would act in bizarre fashion.
Back in 2008, Timothy McClean, 22, departed the summer fair where had been working and boarded a Greyhound bus for Winnipeg. Sitting next to him was Vince Weiguang Li, a software engineer who came to Canada in 2001. Li suddenly brandished a knife and began stabbing McLean in the chest before beheading the victim and showing the severed head to terrified passengers.
When the RCMP showed up, they did not break into the bus and take down the killer. Instead they waited outside while Li effectively cannibalized McLean. According to news reports, the victim’s eyes and part of his heart were not recovered, but police found McLean’s nose and tongue in Li’s pocket.
In Winnipeg and across Canada, people did not take to the streets to protest this grotesque lapse by the RCMP. Neither did protests take place when Li was set free in 2017, less than 10 years after he murdered, dismembered and cannibalized Timothy McLean.
Last year in Windsor, Ontario, police claimed to have found the man who killed six-year-old Ljubica Topic in 1971, a cold case nearly 50 years old. Police claimed DNA had finally identified the killer, who was deceased, but declined to release the killer’s name, claiming that would violate the dead man’s privacy rights.
https://canadafreepress.com/article/canadas-missing-protests
kek i'm good at doxing myself…please remove baker..kekekek
I did a search first retard kekeke