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3 yr. ago

  • I mean, yeah, the moon’s right over there, so birbs should have little trouble popping over for a bit when it gets cold here. Sense, friends, use it sometime, eh?

  • Some of that has been happening, to varying degrees, since about the dawn of humanity.

  • It being a sin for the poor sods doesn’t mean it doesn’t turn ‘em the fuck right on.

  • That would require him to have a mind. And also not be a dementia patient.

  • SHUN THE NON-BELIEVER! SHUUUUUN! SHUUUUUUUUNNNNAH!

  • That’s what antivaxxers sound like.

  • Fairly solid season. I keep forgetting about the latest Love, Death, and Robots season.

  • Latest Black Mirror season has an episode about this.

  • And the word “cance” directly below “house”, and “wiht their butt”…

  • No.

  • Third and perhaps most striking is Márquez Duany’s attitude toward the president, whose policies pose a direct threat to his safety. Like the vast majority of Cubans living in the U.S., he fully supports Trump.

    “If I could vote, I would have voted for Trump,” he says. “He’s the strongest president when it comes to Cuba.”

    Márquez Duany’s journey from resistance icon to deportation case began in February 2021, when he and other artists released “Patria y Vida.” The song, featuring rappers and musicians both on and off the island, denounced repression in Cuba and called for change. Two of its creators, Maykel Osorbo and Luis Manuel Otero Alcántara, are currently in prison in Cuba for their participation in the project and other protests. Meanwhile, the song’s banned status on the island only amplified its power: It became the de facto anthem of the unprecedented protests during the summer of 2021.

    By then, Márquez Duany had already been under house arrest for months, kept from participating in the demonstrations by guards posted outside his home. When the Latin Grammy Awards sent him an invitation a few months later, Márquez Duany knew it was likely his only chance to escape. As is customary, a Cuban government official escorted him to the airport.

    “What we want is for you to leave,” he says the official told him. “Go, but don’t come back because you’re not welcome here.”

  • True

    Jump
  • People who feel differently about things than you: what a concept.

  • Ugh, that movie was so long ago, can we all please just let it go.

  • What the fuck, I told you not to message me again.

  • [poops on ur chest]

  • Like the vast majority of Cubans living in the U.S., he fully supports Trump. “If I could vote, I would have voted for Trump,” he says. “He’s the strongest president when it comes to Cuba.”

    And as always, enjoy thoroughly the life you voted for. Don’t let the door hit ya where your good lord split ya.

  • 🤡💃🪩🕺🤡

  • Kid in the frame raising his right arm, impostor on the ground raising his left. Hmmm.

  • RIP degenerate waterfreak shoulda drank Brawndo like a real person