The Other McCain

"One should either write ruthlessly what one believes to be the truth, or else shut up." — Arthur Koestler

Antifa Inferno: ‘Mostly Peaceful’ Rioter Torched by Molotov Cocktail in Portland

Posted on | September 7, 2020 | 1 Comment

 

Just another fun Saturday night in Antifatown:

A firebomb thrown by rioters at police in Portland, Oregon, on Saturday night set a “protester” on fire, according to the Portland Police Bureau.
Video taken at the scene and retweeted by the police showed fire erupting in the middle of a street, as a man caught in the flames attempted to run out of the way. He emerged with his legs ablaze, as rioters attempted to help him. . . .
Reporter Andy Ngô of the Post Millenial tweeted that Antifa and Black Lives Matter staged the riot to mark more than 100 days of violent protest in Portland since the death of George Floyd in police custody in Minneapolis, Minnesota. . . .
Earlier Saturday, the Oregonian remarked on the 100-day anniversary of violent demonstrations: “In Portland, the whitest major city in the U.S., demonstrations against systemic racism and police brutality have stretched for 100 straight days, sparking unprecedented cuts to the city police bureau, night after night of violence by law enforcement officers and protesters, presidential condemnation and national attention.”
Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler has refused support from President Donald Trump, blaming him for the violence.

Everybody on Twitter had fun by creating videos of the flaming Antifa set to music, e.g., “Cotton Eye Joe”:

Yes, even President Trump got in on the fun. More seriously, research shows how widespread the mob violence has been this year:

New data from Princeton University show that riots associated with the Black Lives Matter movement took place in 48 out of the 50 largest cities in the United States.
The study found:

In more than 93% of all demonstrations connected to the movement, demonstrators have not engaged in violence or destructive activity. Peaceful protests are reported in over 2,400 distinct locations around the country. Violent demonstrations, meanwhile, have been limited to fewer than 220 locations ?— under 10% of the areas that experienced peaceful protests. . . .

The Princeton data set shows that nearly every major city in the United States experienced riots from late May to the end of August — even under the narrow definition that the study used to classify riots (as separate from events described as police violence against protesters).
The only exceptions within the top 50 cities by population were Fresno, California, and Mesa, Arizona.

Four confidential sources tell me they blame Joe Biden.




 

Early Morning Rule 5 Monday: Kaia Gerber

Posted on | September 7, 2020 | 2 Comments

— compiled by Wombat-socho

This week our appetizer is 19-year-old model Kaia Gerber, Cindy Crawford’s daughter, who seems to have inherited at least some of her mom’s good genes. What caught my attention was a Page Six article noting a risque photoshoot for Vogue Japan, which had some NSFW topless shots. Here she is in something more suitable for work.

In her mother’s footsteps

Ninety Miles From Tyranny: Hot Pick of the Late Night, The 90 Miles Mystery Box Episode #1098, Morning Mistress, and Girls With Guns.

Animal Magnetism: Rule Five You Say You Want A Revolution Friday and the Saturday Gingermageddon.

EBL: Peter Grimes, Ginger Costa Jackson, Lulu, Carole King, Chianti Day, Porgy & Bess, Sad Kentucky Derby Day, The Tempest,  and No White After Labor Day.

A View From The Beach: Estella WarrenFish Pic Friday – Mermaid Mo and FriendsTattoo ThursdayA Wednesday WasteTuesday TanlinesAnother Muddy MondayPrimitive Deep Sea FishingPalm Sunday and Belushi Killer Dies at 73

Proof Positive’s Vintage Babe of the Week is Alexandra Bastedo, and Red Pilled Jew brings us Women Wearing Masks.

Thanks to everyone for all the luscious linkagery!

 

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The Other Podcast: Home Stretch

Posted on | September 6, 2020 | Comments Off on The Other Podcast: Home Stretch

In case you missed it, Saturday night my partner John Hoge and I returned to the airwaves (podwaves?) with the latest weekly edition of The Other Podcast. With the presidential campaign now in its final 60-day home stretch, we find ourselves unfortunately compelled to take politics somewhat more seriously. This is difficult to do, when some polls show Joe Biden leading by 10 points (Quinnipiac) or even 11 points (Economist/YouGov). Are Americans really willing to put that doddering old fool in charge of the country? Like, we are going to surrender our nation to rioting mobs of Antifa goons and Black Lives Matter thugs?




 

The Labor Day Weekend Book Post

Posted on | September 6, 2020 | 1 Comment

— by Wombat-socho

Having completed my life or death struggle with the new microwave (to say nothing of the FMJRA), I greet you with some books suitable for what’s left of the long weekend. First out of the gate is Tom Kratman’s latest (and perhaps last) book in the Carreraverse, Days of Burning, Days of Wrath, in which the man formerly known as Patrick Hennessey exacts his final revenge on the people ultimately responsible for the death of his wife and children. As with Jerry Pournelle’s Mamelukes, it would be fine if Kratman stopped here, with the boot of the UN Fleet finally removed from the necks of the Terra Novan people, and revolution sweeping the Tauran Union into the dustbin of history, but the possibility of his son Hamilcar leading a fleet to liberate Earth can’t be ruled out, and would be most welcome.

After having read SPOTREPS, I went back to read Escalation, which is the first of the Maelstrom Rising series by Peter Nealen. It’s a very different book. First of all, unlike the anthology, which is full of stories about the U.S. sliding into another civil war, with the active encouragement of Red China, Escalation is more of a “20 minutes into the future” technothriller, with not much techno but plenty of thriller. A Triarii special ops unit in the Balkans to retrieve a captured American soldier runs into unexpected (and very lethal) difficulties as the European Union sucker-punches the American regular forces in Slovenia on their way to deal with the recalcitrant Slovaks. The Triarii have to nursemaid a horribly undertrained American mech platoon and the survivors of the EU attack on one of the American forward operating bases as they attempt to evade the EU forces and retreat to Poland. Very good writing in the tradition of Tom Clancy, and there were several points in Escalation that reminded me of Clancy’s Clear & Present Danger. Recommended.

Larry Correia’s Destroyer of Worlds, the third novel in his Saga of the Forgotten Warrior series, is out; I have a copy but haven’t had a chance to crack it open yet. Ditto for Peter Nealen’s Holding Action, the sequel to Escalation, and Cracked, which bills itself as an anthology of Eggsellent Chicken Stories. Hope it doesn’t lay an egg.  I’ll be on the road next week, traveling to the Emergency Holographic Convention in Clarksville, and may pick up more reading material there.In the meantime, if you’re looking for something to read before then, there’s a 99 cent sale going on that may have something you like.

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FMJRA 2.0: Equinoxe

Posted on | September 5, 2020 | Comments Off on FMJRA 2.0: Equinoxe

— compiled by Wombat-socho

Early Morning Rule 5 Monday: Linda Ronstadt
Animal Magnetism
Ninety Miles From Tyranny
A View From The Beach
Proof Positive
EBL

4Chan Does Better Journalism Than CNN, Identifies Portland Shooting Suspect
357 Magnum
Bacon Time
Dark Brightness
A View From The Beach
EBL

Biden Voter Arrested in Colorado
357 Magnum
EBL

Another Biden Voter Arrested
357 Magnum
EBL

Podcasting the Long, Hot Summer
EBL

Kenosha: Anthony Huber Was a Felon, and Jacob Blake Was Dangerous
Bacon Time
EBL

FMJRA 2.0: Willin’
A View From The Beach
EBL

‘I Also Hope to Keep a Steady High’
Female Investors Daily
COVID-19 Business Relief
357 Magnum
EBL

The Shark Has Been Infinitely Jumped: Russians Controlling Black Lives Matter?
357 Magnum
A View From The Beach
EBL

‘Adult Entertainment’
357 Magnum
EBL

In The Mailbox: 08.31.20
357 Magnum
A View From The Beach
Proof Positive
EBL

In The Mailbox: 09.01.20
Proof Positive
EBL

‘For Months, Joe Biden Has Given Moral Aid and Comfort to the Vandals’
357 Magnum
Pushing Rubber Downhill
EBL

Police Chief: ‘When You Point a Gun at Officers, Expect to Get Shot’
EBL

Protests in D.C. After Police Shooting
Dark Brightness
EBL
357 Magnum

100% Antifa’ Is Now 100% Dead
357 Magnum
Dark Brightness
A View From The Beach
EBL

In The Mailbox: 09.03.20 (Afternoon Edition)
357 Magnum
Proof Positive
EBL

In The Mailbox: 09.03.20 (Evening Edition)
Proof Positive
EBL

Why the Panic in Bidenland?
Pushing Rubber Downhill
EBL

Crazy People Are Dangerous
357 Magnum
EBL

In The Mailbox: 09.04.20
A View From The Beach
Proof Positive
EBL

Top linkers for the week ending September 4:

  1.  EBL (22)
  2.  357 Magnum (12)
  3.  A View From The Beach (7)
  4.  Proof Positive (6)

Thanks to everyone for all the links!

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The Case of the Non-Compliant Motorist

Posted on | September 5, 2020 | 3 Comments

 

“Step out of the car.”

This is a simple sentence. You don’t need a Ph.D. in linguistics to understand the meaning of “step out of the car.” When this sentence is spoken by a man with a badge and a pistol, the driver of a motor vehicle has a legal obligation to comply with the officer’s command.

Notice the word “command.” The cop is not requesting that you exit your vehicle, he is commanding you to do so — it is an order, and the policeman has legal authority to compel your compliance. Your failure to comply with the officer’s lawful order thereby results in the officer gaining authority to use physical force against you.

Nowadays, police are trained in what are called “de-escalation tactics.” If you ever get pulled over for a traffic infraction, you can expect the police officer to be very polite, even cordial, as he asks for your license and informs you of your excessive speed or whatever. Cops are trained to talk nice like this, because it helps encourage cooperation. And if you watch a lot of videos on the Police Activity YouTube channel, like I do, you notice a pattern in the behavior of criminals — the kind of people who mistake courtesy for weakness. The law-abiding citizen feels embarrassed when he gets pulled over for a traffic infraction, and responds to the policeman in an apologetic manner: “I’m sorry, officer, I was in a bit of a hurry, I didn’t realize it was a 45 mph zone,” etc. Citizens respect the law, and therefore feel shame when they are caught breaking the law, even in the most ordinary and harmless ways. Criminals? Not so much.

One of the hallmarks of a criminal personality is the shamelessness with which they break the law. Criminals do not respect the law — they lack any proper sense of justice — and so, no matter what the law is, or how serious their breach of the law, criminals tend to be defiant in their behavior toward anyone attempting to enforce the law.

Consider the case of Deon Kay, who had a pistol in his hand when he was shot dead by police in Washington, D.C. Our nation’s capital has very strict gun-control laws; liberals support these laws, with which I strongly disagree. Yet liberals are now protesting the shooting of Deon Kay, despite his open defiance of the city’s gun-control laws.

Question: Exactly how are gun-control laws supposed to be enforced? What do liberals think should happen when gangsters flagranlty advertise their violation of gun-control laws, as did Deon Kay and his buddies, by posting online images of themselves with their weapons? This type of defiant behavior is, as I say, the hallmark of a criminal personality, and no one’s life is safe when such behavior is tolerated. Every simple traffic stop has the potential to become a life-or-death situation.

You see this demonstrated over and over in Police Activity videos. The criminal has been pulled over by the police, and the officer has some reason to suspect there might be drugs or weapons in the vehicle, or else there is an outstanding warrant for the driver’s arrest. The driver often seems to be compliant up until the moment the cop asks him to step out of the car, and that’s when the situation spins out of control. Either the suspect pulls a gun, initiating a shootout, or else he takes off in his car, seeking to escape arrest. Say hello to Braily Andres Batista-Concepcion.

 

Batista-Concepcion, 22, believes he is a victim of “excessive force” by police in Raleigh, N.C. Here is a description of his arrest:

On January 14, 2020 at approximately 9:30 a.m., Raleigh Police Department officers responded to a report of a hit and run in the 3500 block of Wake Forest Road. Before officers arrived on the scene the suspect vehicle fled the area and was involved in a second hit and run in a parking lot at St. Albans Drive and Wake Forest Road. While fleeing the scene of the second collision the vehicle struck a pole at 4320 Wingate Drive. A short time later, an officer spotted a vehicle matching the description from the three earlier hit and run incidents driving erratically on Navaho Drive. The officer initiated a traffic stop and observed that the driver appeared to be impaired while transporting three passengers. When Mr. Batista-Concepcion ignored repeated commands to place his hands on the wheel, the officer ordered him to get out of the vehicle. Mr. Batista-Concepcion failed to follow the officer’s commands and officers used force to remove him from the vehicle. Braily Andres Batista-Concepcion was subsequently charged with DWI, three counts of Hit and Run, two counts of Contributing to the Delinquency of a Minor, Simple Possession of Marijuana, and Resist, Delay and Obstruct.

OK, so this guy was completely wasted at 9:30 in the morning, smoking weed and driving around with three other people in the car — including at least one minor — and endangering public safety:

“We just got ran into,” one man tells a 911 dispatcher. “And the guy took off, twice. He ran into us twice and took off.”
In another call to 911, a woman tells dispatch, “They hit me. And then I stopped at the red light and they looked in the mirror and they were trying to back up and hit me again.”

Batista-Concepcion is a menace to society, a dangerous criminal, and why do you think the cops got irritated when he “ignored repeated commands to place his hands on the wheel”? Isn’t it just common sense that someone who deliberately rams his car into other vehicles might possess weapons? If the cop says “keep your hands where I can see them,” and you refuse to comply with that command — it is not a request, but a command — the cop has good reason to fear for his own safety. And keep in mind the cop didn’t just pull over Batista-Concepcion for a minor traffic offense, but three separate hit-and-run incidents.

OK, now it’s time to watch the video of Batista-Concepion’s arrest:

 

As I say, Batista-Concepcion claims to be a victim of “excessive force,” but the local District Attorney seems to think otherwise:

The Wake County District Attorney refused to ask the State Bureau of Investigation to investigate after a video of a violent arrest, which showed a Raleigh officer punching and kneeing a man, surfaced on social media.
After reviewing the video with the SBI, Raleigh Police Department officials said they met with Wake County District Attorney Lorrin Freeman to review the body and dash camera video of the incident. Freeman decided not to request SBI involvement but left the door open for SBI assistance should it be deemed appropriate as the investigation unfolds.
“Traditionally the State Bureau of Investigation is asked to review use of force cases involving the use of lethal force. This case does not involve the use of lethal force,” Freeman said. “Additionally after reviewing the video of the incident, I believe interviews conducted by the Raleigh Police Department, which I have requested to be recorded, will provide full information for a decision to be made as to whether the officers’ conduct was criminal. If follow up investigation is needed, the State Bureau of Investigation may be asked at that time to conduct it.”

Here is the Raleigh Police Chief’s press conference:

 

“One of the passengers speaks about he wishes he had his 40, which is often the language referencing a gun. It is the goal, and it will always be the goal, of the Raleigh Police Department and all of its members to protect and serve the public in a safe and courteous and professional manner. . . . Policing requires the help and cooperation of all of us. . . . No officer wants to use force or become involved in a deadly force encounter.”

In a situation such as was caused by Batista-Concepcion’s non-compliant behavior, what do we expect police officers to do? What is the alternative when a driminal refuses to comply with lawful orders?

Without regard to what, if anything, becomes of the “excessive force” complaint in this case, I predict that Batista-Concepcion will soon be in prison, or else in the graveyard, as a result of his criminal personality. He is a bad person — a defiant and shameless law-breaker — and such people have a tendency to meet a violent death.

ADDENDUM: Permit me to add this quote from Edmund Burke:

“Is it because liberty in the abstract may be classed amongst the blessings of mankind, that I am seriously to felicitate a madman, who has escaped from the protecting restraint and wholesome darkness of his cell, on his restoration to the enjoyment of light and liberty? Am I to congratulate a highwayman and murderer who has broke prison upon the recovery of his natural rights?”

This is the dilemma posed by such cases as Batista-Concepcion and Deon Kay. An obsessive devotion to “liberty in the abstract,” which characterizes the attitude of some of my libertarian friends, will always encounter problems in practical application, where madness and/or criminality renders a certain number of people incapable of responsible enjoyment of liberty. It is one thing, really, for a handful of decadent bohemian intellectuals to engage in drug abuse and sexual hedonism (e.g., the “Beat Generation” of the 1950s) and quite a different thing when such behavior becomes normative among the less privileged lower classes. The vicious habits of Allen Ginsberg as a Columbia University student could only cause so much trouble. However, when Ginsberg became celebrated as a prophetic voice, and emulation of his vices was hailed as “liberation,” the repercussions for society as a whole were much more serious. It is difficult to trace a direct line of causation from Ginsberg and the Beatniks to the death of Deon Kay, but this difficulty doesn’t mean that the causation is wholly imaginary.




 

In The Mailbox: 09.04.20

Posted on | September 5, 2020 | 1 Comment

— compiled by Wombat-socho

Usual Saturday deadlines for the FMJRA and Rule 5 Sunday are in place (noon and midnight respectively), plus a bunch of my author buddies have a 99 cent sale going on this weekend if you need something to read – and who doesn’t?

OVER THE TRANSOM
357 Magnum: Chicago Needs $2 Billion, Wants Federal Handout
EBL: Celebrate Chianti Day
Twitchy: MSNBC Contributor Compares First Lady To Nazi Sympathizer
Louder With Crowder: Trump Drops Brilliant Ad Appealing To #WalkAway Democrats
Vox Popoli: Hello, Fellow Black People, also, Salvaging Fukuyama
According To Hoyt: Smelling The Smoke, also, Be Good To Yourself
Monster Hunter Nation: Destroyer Of Worlds Is Out!
Stoic Observations: Inside The American Box

RIPPED FROM THE HEADLINES
American Conservative: The Media Have Lost Their Minds
American Greatness: Portland’s 100% Antifa Murder Suspect Shot Dead By U.S. Marshals
American Power: Belarus, The Kremlin, & The Attack On Alexei Navalny
American Thinker: Democrat Mail Fraud Will Take Us To The Brink
Animal Magnetism: Rule Five You Say You Want A Revolution Friday, also, Friday Evening Culture
Babalu Blog: Joe Biden’s Support Among Florida Hispanics Is Cratering
BattleSwarm: LinkSwarm For September 4
Cafe Hayek: An Ignorant & Dishonest Performance
Camp of the Saints:
Da Tech Guy: Do These Two Developments Prove The Corona-chan Lockdowns Were Unnecessary? also, Five One-Liners Under Other Peoples’ Fedoras
Don Surber: 8.4% Unemployment As America Rebounds, also, Highlights Of The News
The Geller Report: State Department Records Confirm Ukraine Embassy Was Spying On Journalists & Trump Supporters, also, NYC Restaurants Sue De Blasio & Cuomo For $2 Million Over Indoor Dining Ban
Hogewash: Team Kimberlin Post Of The Day, also, Add Another City To The List
Hollywood In Toto: Has Joe Rogan Already Waved The White Flag On Free Expression? also, Tenet Is A Riddle Wrapped In A Mystery Blurred By Hubris
The Lid: People Must Stop Defending John McCain – He Ended His Career As A Jerk & Started Russiagate
Legal Insurrection: Thousands Of Massachusetts Mail-In Ballots Found Days After The Election, also, The Atlantic’s Anonymously-Sourced Hit Piece Jump-Starts The Permanent Pre-Election Anti-Trump News Cycle
The PanAm Post: Venezuela “Opposition” Leaders Join The Enemy
Power Line: Have The Democrats Encouraged Urban Violence? also, Watching Joe Go Slow, History Edition
Shark Tank: Democrats Push Back At Opening FL Schools
Shot In The Dark: Blue Fragility – Be It Resolved
STUMP: Mortality With Meep
The Political Hat: The Manichean Right
This Ain’t Hell: Valor Friday, also, America’s Largest Police Union Endorses President Trump
Victory Girls: Trump Scoop By The Atlantic – Real News Or Hit Job?
Volokh Conspiracy: 8th Grader Suspended For Searching “Inappropriate Topics” Such As “Worst WW1 Gun”
Weasel Zippers: Woman Dead For Seven Months Receives Letter Informing Her She Has COVID-19, also, Washington State Highway Patrol Busts #BLM Anarchists For Blocking I-5 With Their Vehicles
The Federalist: Nearly 10 Miles Of Cars Line Up For Trump, also, Trump-Hater Bolton Debunks Anonymous Atlantic Hit Piece
Mark Steyn: Anything Happen? also, Mac The Knifed

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Crazy People Are Dangerous

Posted on | September 4, 2020 | 2 Comments

 

If you want the phrase “died in a hail of police gunfire” to be included in your obituary, just follow the example of Megan Rivera, 22. She and her boyfriend, De’Angelo Brown, 30, were already wanted for criminal charges in South Carolina when they carjacked a Toyota from a 72-year-old woman less than two weeks before Christmas in 2018. Now, I don’t know about you, but anytime a criminal carjacks an old lady, I always hope their life of crime ends in a hail of police gunfire. In this case, the happy ending happened in West Memphis, Arkansas, on the night of Jan. 16, 2019, about a month after the carjacking. A police officer spotted the stolen Toyota and turned on his blue lights, then the car took off, beginning a high-speed chase that lasted more than 10 minutes.

By the time the Toyota was brought to a halt, about a dozen police cars had become involved in the chase. The cops piled out of their vehicles with guns drawn: “Hands up! Let me see your hands!” Megan Rivera was at the wheel, and in the passenger seat, De’Angelo Brown said: “Go! Go!” She hit the accelerator and the car lurched forward, running over one of the cops, which is why the criminal duo died in a hail of gunfire:

 

That’s top-quality entertainment, even though I spoiled it by giving away the ending. In the aftermath of this incident, the local news did an interview with Megan Rivera’s family:

Two families are coming to terms with the deaths of their loved ones hundreds of miles from home.
WMC5 investigators are learning more about the man and woman killed in a police shooting last week.
A disturbing picture is emerging of the couple shot and killed by West Memphis police.
Their families described the troubles and the torture they have gone through since the shooting.
“It didn’t hit me but when it did hit me it hit me hard,” said sister Gloria Campos.
Campos said the family only recently found out her sister Megan Rivera was the woman killed in West Memphis when police shot at the car she was driving with her boyfriend in the passenger seat, 30-year-old DeAngelo Brown.
Campos says her 22-year-old sister didn’t have her ID, so it took a few days to notify the family.
She said her sister had problems for much of her life. “When she was six years old her dad died of a drug overdose,” Campos said. “He almost took out the whole family. He went into a rage and we were almost all gone that night.”
Campos said Megan had been dating Brown for about three years. They met in their hometown of Lancaster, South Carolina.
She also said her sister had big problems with drugs. . . .
The family believes the couple got lost and that’s why they were in West Memphis, but they didn’t know exactly where they had been.
“She was out to venture,” said brother Kevin Rivera. “She was out to see the world.”

Let me just advise young people that if you are “out to see the world,” don’t do it in a stolen Toyota or you’re liable to get no further than West Memphis, Arkansas. As you can imagine, the family of Megan’s boyfriend was likewise distraught by their loss:

The family of the South Carolina man killed in an officer-involved shooting in West Memphis, Arkansas, is demanding justice and say they want answers. . . .
In a FaceTime interview Sunday, Brown’s sister, Tierra Clyburn, described what went through her mind when she got the news.
“Just hurt, anger, disbelief,” she said. “I just — I would never imagine something like this would happen.”
Brown’s brother, Lemarutius Clyburn, believes officers should have done something to de-escalate the situation.
“They could have took different steps then just opening up fire taking people’s lives when their officers didn’t lose their lives,” he said. . . .
“I just don’t understand how a traffic stop end with two people losing their life,” Lemarutius said.
And they want to know why police shot their brother even though they say he wasn’t even behind the wheel.
“Another way could have been used. They could have flattened the tires or something,” Tierra said. “Why just go killing them like that? My brother was just a passenger in the vehicle – he wasn’t even the driver. We want justice.”
They say the couple loved to take trips together and were in the Mid-South visiting.
“They was traveling, taking trips, just enjoying life,” Lemarutius said.

Just “traveling, taking trips” in a Toyota they stole from an old lady, and “enjoying life” until they died in a hail of police gunfire.

As for the family “demanding justice,” after a review of the case, it was announced that no charges would be filed against the police. The officer who got run over is recovering from his injuries.

+ + + + + +

Speaking of injuries, my brother Kirby broke his right leg and ankle in a serious fall in June. He required surgery, and is still recuperating, so if readers could please hit Kirby’s tip jar, I’d be grateful.

Fun fact: My brother has never carjacked a Toyota.




 

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