Don’t shout at me or I’ll shout over you 🗣️

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Don’t shout at me or I’ll shout over you 🗣️
(( @tazmilyxfamily ))
“You wanna see my special Killer Wail in action? Aw, shell yeah!
“... But we can’t do it near city limits.”
Any opportunity to not only show off her personalized Killer Wail, but to let loose her voice was one that always got Pearl grinning ear to ear. Even better was when a friend, such as Callie, was the one to ask!
When she said “out of city limits,” she certainly meant it, as she loaded herself and Callie into a helicopter that was headed for Mount Nantai, near the edge of Octarian territory. Although the ride wasn’t going to be a terribly long one, Pearl was already kicking her legs over the edge of her seat and watching the world go by beneath the helicopter. Inkopolis sped past, and soon they were flying over countrysides and forests.
“Yo, thanks for askin’ to come out!” she hummed, “I’ve been dying for an excuse to do some major vocal practice lately!” she threw a grin at Callie, “And hey, maybe you can give it a shot, too! That baby can handle anything!”
How to De-Escalate a Shouting Match || Jefferson Fisher
Are you against us talking at a normal tone? Is it unreasonable to having a conversation at a normal volume? Are you opposed to having a conversation without raising our voices?
Got into a shouting match with a middle-aged white lady yesterday.
when worlds collide part 2- Pandoras box and science
This two page spread represents the feeling of my housemate intertwining with me. The creature shows to be tangled within the weeds and plants around it, as well as having a shaggy and messy coat. This is meant to represent the closing personalities of both me and my housemate.
Shouting match,
Woman put on FBI Most Wanted List after shooting dead a 9 months pregnant woman over an arguement
Woman put on FBI Most Wanted List after shooting dead a 9 months pregnant woman over an arguement
Shanika Minor, 24, was placed on FBI’s Most Wanted List last week after she senselessly shot dead a pregnant Milwaukee woman, just a week before she was due to give birth. She’s since been arrested.
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"Meanwhile, a very similar revolt is under way in the United States, with Donald Trump as the beneficiary. As I noted in an earlier post here, Trump’s meteoric rise from long-shot fringe candidate to Republican nominee was fueled entirely by his willingness to put himself in opposition to the consensus of the affluent described earlier. Where all the acceptable candidates were on board with the neoliberal economics and neoconservative politics of the last thirty years—lavish handouts for the rich, punitive austerity for the poor, malign neglect of our infrastructure at home and a monomaniacal pursuit of military confrontation overseas—he broke with that, and the more stridently the pundits and politicians denounced him, the more states he won and the faster his poll numbers rose. At this point he’s doing the sensible thing, biding his time, preparing for the general election, and floating the occasional trial balloon to see how various arguments against Hillary Clinton will be received. I expect the kind of all-out war that flattened his Republican rivals to begin around the first of September. Nor is Hillary Clinton particularly well positioned to face such an onslaught. It’s not merely that she’s dogged by embarrassingly detailed allegations of corruption on a scale that would be considered unusually florid in a Third World kleptocracy, nor is it simply that her career as Secretary of State was notable mostly for a cascade of foreign policy disasters from which she seems to have learned nothing. It’s not even that on most economic, political, and military issues, Hillary Clinton is well to the right of Donald Trump, advocating positions indistinguishable from those of George W. Bush—you know, the guy the Democrats claimed to hate not too many years back. No, what makes a Trump victory in November considerably more likely than not is that Clinton has cast herself as the candidate of the status quo. All the positions she’s taken amount to the continued pursuit of policies that, in the United States as in Britain, have benefited the affluent at the expense of everyone else. That was a safe choice back when her husband was President, and both parties were competing mostly over which one could do a better job of comforting the comfortable and afflicting the already afflicted. It’s not a safe choice now, when Trump has thrown away the covert rulebook of modern American politics, and is offering, to people who’ve gotten the short end of the stick for more than thirty years, a set of policy changes that could actually improve their lives. Now of course that’s not what the politicians, the pundits, and the officially respectable thinkers of today’s consensus of the affluent are willing to talk about. The same dreary rhetoric applied to the pro-Brexit majority in Britain is thus being applied to Trump voters here in the United States. “Racist,” “fascist,” “moron”—all the shopworn, sneering tropes that the privileged use to dismiss the concerns of the rest of the population of today’s America are present and accounted for. The passion with which these words are being flung about just now should not be underestimated. I had an old friend hang up on me in midsentence because I expressed a lack of enthusiasm for Clinton; we haven’t spoken since, and I have no idea if we ever will. Other people I know have had comparable experiences when they tried to discuss the upcoming election in terms more nuanced than today’s conventional wisdom is willing to permit. One of the most powerful and most unmentionable forces in American public life—class prejudice—pervades the shouting matches that result. To side with Clinton is to identify yourself with the privileged, the “good people,” the affluent circles gazing admiringly at themselves in the Hall of Mirrors. To speak of Trump in any terms other than cheap schoolboy insults, or even to hint that Trump’s supporters might be motivated by concerns other than racism and sheer stupidity, is to be flung unceremoniously outside the gates where the canaille are beginning to gather. It has apparently not occurred to those who parade up and down the Hall of Mirrors that there are many more people outside those gates than there are within. It has seemingly not entered their darkest dreams that shouting down an inconvenient point of view, and flinging insults at anyone who pauses to consider it, is not an effective way of convincing anyone not already on their side. Maybe the outcome of the Brexit vote will be enough to jar America’s chattering classes out of their stupor, and force them to notice that the people who’ve been hurt by the policies they prefer have finally lost patience with the endless droning insistence that no other policies are thinkable. Maybe—but I doubt it."