💰 Grifter "Mad at the Internet" - a/k/a My Psychotherapy Sessions

  • 🇵🇦 Nuestro primer dominio localizado está en español en kiwifarms.pa. Our first localized domain is on Spanish on kiwifarms.pa.
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Here's something you might enjoy. Kat Tenbarge, Partner in Crime of Ben Collins back during #Dropkiwifarms and when Ben and her was still working at NBC and wrote the infamous Keffals article, got sued by Former Nickelodeon Actress Alexa Nicholas over some false claims that she revealed some Drake Bell-related documents to harm some victim and as such Kat was forced to make an apology on twitter over it.
 
How uwe boll gets financing for his movies
YouCut_20260627_013927602.mp4
Honestly you and ppp should make the next next kiwi casino a review on uwe boll's postal movie. Its his magnum opus (for 2009 standards) it's got the ginger kid from a christmas story as the postal dude, the midget who played mini me from austin powers is in it (rip) and it's free on most streaming services. But cool thing about the unrated dvd copy is that it comes with a free copy of postal 2.
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It's a fucking shame that modern-day running with scissors won't make something this offensive, because Vince Desi and Mike J repost gay postal dude fan art and other shit on their discord and xitter pages. The modern postal fanbase are a bunch of larping faggots.
Postal was a genuinely decent movie, and that scene is funny as fuck.

There used to a type of film produced in the EU that some critics called 'Euro Puddings' in that they were financed sometimes by 40 or 50 different EU national organisations. Sometimes they'd be national film boards other times they might be a local authority or some tourist board. The end credits would sometimes go of for ages listing.

I suspect Boll is actually a fairly decent business man, and isgood at the money side of things.
 
Postal was a genuinely decent movie, and that scene is funny as fuck.

There used to a type of film produced in the EU that some critics called 'Euro Puddings' in that they were financed sometimes by 40 or 50 different EU national organisations. Sometimes they'd be national film boards other times they might be a local authority or some tourist board. The end credits would sometimes go of for ages listing.

I suspect Boll is actually a fairly decent business man, and isgood at the money side of things.
You can get the postal movie on steam and it has trading cards 🤭. I also vote for a postal movie review it's a classic in my household
 
You can get the postal movie on steam and it has trading cards 🤭. I also vote for a postal movie review it's a classic in my household
I thought that you couldn't anymore since steam dropped the movie buying feature
Postal was a genuinely decent movie, and that scene is funny as fuck.

There used to a type of film produced in the EU that some critics called 'Euro Puddings' in that they were financed sometimes by 40 or 50 different EU national organisations. Sometimes they'd be national film boards other times they might be a local authority or some tourist board. The end credits would sometimes go of for ages listing.

I suspect Boll is actually a fairly decent business man, and isgood at the money side of things.
Anyone who hates the postal movie is a fucking retard
 
I'm hopeful I'll make the evening news when someone discovers the symbols of hate around town.
The Swindon Constibulary takes 'ate symbols very seriously. They make look like innocent birds and fruits, but nothing could be further from the truth.
 
Kids act passed the house
Senate is next
Better than I predicted, but the KIDS Act still passed the House.

Here are the 32 Republicans and 89 Democrats that voted against massive data collection and surveillance of American children and citizens.

My prediction that KIDS Act stalls in the Senate stands. They will hold out for KOSA and duty of care.
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WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, Congressman Brett Guthrie (KY-02), Chairman of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce, Congressman Frank Pallone, Jr. (NJ-06), Ranking Member of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce, Congressman Gus Bilirakis (FL-12), and Congresswoman Kathy Castor (FL-14) issued the following statements after the House passed H.R. 7757, the Kids Internet and Digital Safety (KIDS) Act by a vote of 267 to 117.

“Congress has spent years searching for how to best protect children and teens online, and today’s overwhelming bipartisan vote indicates that we have found our solution. The KIDS Act creates strong protections with new rules for design features, default settings, and kids’ privacy,” said Chairman Guthrie and Ranking Member Pallone. “We want to thank our colleagues for their strong vote today to protect kids, empower parents, and hold internet platforms accountable.”

“Empowering parents to better protect their children—especially in the face of the near-constant barrage of digital threats—remains one of our most important responsibilities,” said Rep. Bilirakis. “Today, we advanced that mission by moving forward this package, including the Kids Online Safety Act, which establishes a comprehensive set of safeguards, such as addressing compulsive usage, and parental controls to protect kids. One troubling post should not turn into a constant stream of depression, suicide, or eating disorder content. I remain committed to ensuring children can safely navigate the digital world while holding technology companies accountable. Protecting our kids must always come before protecting corporate profits.”

“Today’s adoption of the bipartisan KIDS Act is a long-overdue and meaningful step toward protecting America’s children in the digital age,” said Rep. Castor. “For years, parents, young people, pediatricians, psychologists, teachers and advocates have made clear that Big Tech must act to reduce the harms experienced by too many kids online. This bill strengthens privacy protections for children and teens, bans targeted advertising to young people, gives families more control and preserves parents’ ability to seek justice in court. This is an important step, but it is not the end of our work. I will continue to press to create a safer digital environment for children and teens.”
 
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