Title: Black Matriarch Demonstrates The Moral Myopia of Black Females Source:
Living On Stolen Time & Playing With Borrowed Money URL Source:https://lostapwbm.wordpress.com/tag/michael-grace-jr/ Published:Nov 8, 2016 Author:staff Post Date:2017-08-19 20:08:36 by Tooconservative Keywords:None Views:19380 Comments:66
Background: 28-year-old Michael Renard Grace Jr. and two accomplices entered a Pizza Hut in Charlotte, NC, with the purpose of robbing the establishment. Grace was armed. An employee in the restaurant saw Grace and his accomplices robbing the store and fired on Grace, killing him. The accomplices fled the scene.
Just another day in the life, right? Oh no. The black matriarch who raised Michael Renard Grace Jr. to rob fast food restaurants has to get her two cents in. This is a special treat for me, getting to intersect the Black Matriarchy with the corrective nature of the 2nd Amendment. Im positively giddy.
What is the policy of employees having guns on the premises?
Was he a security guard?
Was he back there cooking dough?
Was he back there throwing pizzas in the oven?
What was his position?
Why did he have a gun on the premises?
Have you noticed that black females are very good at trying to sound smarter than they actually are? But these questions shes asking just show where her little brain is headed: A wrongful death lawsuit. She couldnt profit from her sons life, because his life wasnt worth anything, so shell be happy to profit from his death, or try to anyway.
Black matriarchs are very good at raising sons to not be shit, and then when the son meets his natural and rightful conclusion, shes right there with her hand out, demanding to be compensated.
A couple of other examples of black women cashing in on raising aint shit black men: Cleta A. Jennings
It was an act of desperation, but I do not believe he [Michael] would have hurt anyone.
I want to respond to this and to the why did he have a gun on the premises? statement in one part. The man probably had a gun because he knows where he works, a Pizza Hut, is one of those places that tends to get robbed by men raised by idiots like Temia Hairston.
But this idiot whore is so morally short-sighted, that she expects this employee to put his life in the hands of her son, to leave his continued existence at his mercy, and whether or not he decides to let his victim live.
How about no?
Thats why he had a gun on the premises of the Pizza Hut, and why everyone should carry, concealed or open: Just in case you run across another Michael Renard Grace Jr. and hes down on his luck, but rather than get a job, he decides hes going to stick a gun in the face of somebody whos barely better off than he is.
But this is the mentality that these black females have and its the mentality they transmit to their criminal sons; when things are going wrong in their own lives, they suddenly gain the inherent right to make things go wrong on everybody elses life. When mamas not happy because she had a bad day at work and comes home, and you try to show mama the picture you drew, and she slaps you across the face, thats okay, because mama just upset because she had a bad day, therefore, her act of violence is justifiable. When mamas son is short some money and runs into your place of business armed looking for cash, putting your life at risk, thats okay because it was just an act of desperation which magically gives him the right to threaten your safety, your money, and your life.
Makes perfect sense, doesnt it?
This wasnt a body shot. This was a head shot. A head shot is personal.
My son would have been facing jail time, instead of laying on a slab with a bullet hole in his head.
Ms. Hairston, a slab is the proper place for your son, as it is for all robbers. If the law were truly just, the Pizza Hut employee, who not only protected himself, but protected all of your sons future victims, would be able to file a lawsuit against you to collect the cost of the ammunition used to impose the moral discipline on your son that you were unwilling and unable to teach him while he was alive.
P.S. Did you notice that the man sitting next to her is quieter than a church mouse?
Poster Comment:
This is from last November but it is a pretty scrappy gun piece.
Stone should invite this writer to post here at LF.
Hmmm. I do have a Roku device (which acts like a Google Chromecast stick) plugged into my TV. In the other room. Too much trouble.
The advantage to the Chrome/Chromecast solution is that Google pretty much is guaranteeing the two will continue to work into the future. I don't see that changing.
The Roku and other Android solutions are far from perfect. I had trouble flinging Android stuff to Roku but maybe I didn't have quite the right app "channel" or something. Anyway, I was disappointed. I've only had success flinging video via Apple's AirPlay where it just works with phones or tablets or Mac computers. The only comparable universal solution that Just Works is Google's Chrome/Chromecast solution.
I have the 2016 version of the quad-core Roku stick. Surprisingly powerful at decoding 1080p H.264 or 720p H.265. It will do some but not all 1080p H.265 videos. That is one amazing Roku stick for only around $40. That H.265 is a very demanding video codec for both CPU and GPU.
Roku is well-positioned to take advantage of the increasingly unplugged internet cable era. So is Apple. So is Amazon. I could only recommend those three to anyone. They play Directv subscriptions via internet, all the major pay-cable channels like HBO via internet, stream YouTube and other vids, have access to the various online media stores and clouds like Sony or Apple's iTunes.
I think neither Microsoft nor Sony is well-positioned to increase their dominance. I think people will start to rely more on compact streaming sticks and even the same capabilities like Roku or Kodi built in to their TVs to support cable TV services. I see Apple, Roku, Amazon positioned to increase their market dominance in this burgeoning market.
I'm changing now to a 20Mbps internet connection. Same price now with crappy CenturyLink for all speeds up to 20Mbps.
I think people will start to rely more on compact streaming sticks and even the same capabilities like Roku or Kodi built in to their TVs
I have a roku 3 I never use anymore.
I use the chromecast regularly.
Wife got a free Roku Tv when she bought a new car last year. I like that TV a lot. Way better than the neighbors smart TV which is a pain in the ass to watch anything but regular TV and youtube. Can't figure out how to add any streaming channels except the couple they gave you.
I don't usually sign in a Google/YouTube or link my other devices to a Google account.
I have a google account. I haven't used it except to get some downloads onto my samsung tablet from the play store. To complicated to side load it. Maybe it isn't complicated I just didn't feel like figuring it out.
Wife got a free Roku Tv when she bought a new car last year. I like that TV a lot. Way better than the neighbors smart TV which is a pain in the ass to watch anything but regular TV and youtube. Can't figure out how to add any streaming channels except the couple they gave you.
Supposedly, the Roku TVs from various small Asian manufacturers give a very comparable Roku experience to their streaming sticks and streaming boxes.
I do have, for instance, a Vizio smart TV. It can do Plex and other streaming stuff. It also spies on a small group of around 8x8 pixels at the lower-righthand corner of the screen and silently uploads that back to Vizio's marketing partners. They can identify with only a small number of uploaded 8x8 frames exactly what program you are watching. That is marketable information.
Needless to say, I've disabled wireless and internet access on my Vizio smart TV. Since all the spying by Vizio became public, they've done nothing to correct this. They are relying on the stupidity or indifference of their customer base to overcome any negative perception of their brand.
I have a google account. I haven't used it except to get some downloads onto my samsung tablet from the play store. To complicated to side load it. Maybe it isn't complicated I just didn't feel like figuring it out.
Google's not all bad. I rank Facebook as the absolute garbage pit of manipulation and commercialization of your data. Then Twitter is mostly innocuous except for their recent purges. And Apple is generally more conservative and less inclined to ban people but that is mostly because they are running iTunes and the Mac Store (for Mac apps) as neutral venues, immune to anything political.
Another really bad provider is Verizon as cellular network provider.
Google is somewhat invasive on multiple fronts but it does offer valuable services. I think that their data storage for various Android options are much more invasive. Apple is far less so. For instance, Google will operate as a free backup for your Android smartphone. And it can be tied to your desktop Chrome browser to synchronize bookmarks, even tabs, from your smartphone to your desktop. So Google can track you from device to device and entices you with those "cloud" features.
However, Google also stores a lot of stuff online like your actual GPS coordinates. They keep a lot of data. On the upside, they keep that data to themselves and don't sell it to other companies (at least not yet). In contrast, Apple does not retain that device so, for instance, when you upgrade from one iPhone to another newer iPhone, you have to let the GPS data accumulate day by day until the new iPhone learns your travel habits. This is because Apple does not store online in any way your location data. Unlike Google which does.
Well, you can kind of see how I rank these various corporate entities and how they operate. So far, Apple has been by far the most trustworthy. But then, for all I know maybe Apple's iCloud is thoroughly infested by NSA access and nothing stored on Apple's cloud is any real secret. We know that the feds bought a solution from an Israeli security company to break an older model of iPhone's encryption and security so they could access the iPhones of the two San Bernardino terrorists. What has happened since and whether the FBI is paying more to that company to crack the newer iPhones is something that no one really knows.
To continue with Verizon, they actually embed TCP/IP headers that contain an ID number for every HTTP request your phone or tablet makes. That means that every app or web browser request is accompanied with a unique customer ID, to facilitate other internet companies to track you all over the internet, as well as Verizon itself.
Facebook is worse than Verizon but not by much.
The whole goddamn internet is turning into a heavily censored version of spyware. When we read the internet, it's looking back and tracking what we do and say and where we go.
In the case of Verizon, they can track your cellphone signal and know everywhere you go, whether you have GPS turned on or not. They have pretty good location data just from triangulating your cell signal, even if you have your more accurate GPS phone sensor turned off. The only way to stop this is to power down your device and/or remove its battery.
And you can imagine pretty easily that Verizon gets away with it by allowing the feds unfettered access to their data.
Use TOR and forget the rant you described. I have used TOR for over a decade and have no BS tracking crap that you complain about.
I'm already VPNed and I am considering adding Tor as well, especially since I am upgrading to a 20Mbit broadband.
I am hesitant mostly because I don't trust the reliability of the prepackaged Tor clients for Firefox. I admit, I need to learn more about who creates these and maintains them.
BTW, I just learned the other day that DuckDuckGo maintains a Tor node for searches. I thought that was mighty white of them. Apparently they've done it for 4-5 years now and I had never heard that despite being a DDG guy and trying to never use Google or Bing or Yahoo.
Unfortunately, Stone does allow every search engine and spybot to ransack every thread and every single byte of the entire LF site. So it starts to defeat any attempts at privacy when everything you post here is indexed within minutes to Google and the other search engines and social spybots.
Unfortunately, Stone does allow every search engine and spybot to ransack every thread and every single byte of the entire LF site. So it starts to defeat any attempts at privacy when everything you post here is indexed within minutes to Google and the other search engines and social spybots.
ROTFL! So, you do know: how technically lame Stone is. Keep in mind that we anonymously post so your point is really cast, "way out in the weeds" for the discussion.
ROTFL! So, you do know: how technically lame Stone is. Keep in mind that we anonymously post so your point is really cast, "way out in the weeds" for the discussion.
Our web browsers still have characteristic "fingerprints", even across multiple platforms. VPN and Tor may no longer be enough and their use may attract more attention to determining your identity than if you didn't use them at all.
My browser fingerprint score never reaches 1500. Pretty piss poor. Any determined government agency could likely penetrate my identity and have a fair chance of tracking most of my traffic. However, I am using a crufty but latest version of Firefox on the Mac so that will affect my scores as it is not a terribly popular platform. If I spoofed my browser user agent, for instance, my score would soar.
The same results would apply to using Tor. Something worth considering.
So where do you get your Tor VM or do you just use an extension? Or a special install package just for Tor?
I'm not worried about it. They know who I am by me registering the website. If the government wants to talk to me they are free to come and talk to me. If they want to put me on trial they can do that too. IF they want to come and kill me. They can easily do that too.
I'm not worried about it. They know who I am by me registering the website. If the government wants to talk to me they are free to come and talk to me. If they want to put me on trial they can do that too. IF they want to come and kill me. They can easily do that too.
I'm not worried about it.
What about the rest of us? Are you reporting us to the government? Where is your commitment for anonymity for the whopping crowd of irregular 20 posters here?
I'm not worried about it. They know who I am by me registering the website. If the government wants to talk to me they are free to come and talk to me. If they want to put me on trial they can do that too. IF they want to come and kill me. They can easily do that too.
Not if you paid a few bucks extra for the private DNS registration that shields your identity.
You should worry more that they'll declare LF a hate site, you a hate leader, toss you off the internet by cancelling your libertysflame.com DNS registration, etc. We should see that happen to the 4um site before the same ax falls here at LF.
You should also worry about the general chilling effect of such online monitoring will have on all web sites, including yours. How long until Google refuses to publicly index pages at LF or delivers links to LF but conditions them with a warning that "the SPLC has determined that LF is a hate site...click if you wish to continue to LF, you Nazi fuck".
Yeah, that's a pretty chilling effect they can exercise via these whitelist/blacklist functions they've put in all the web browsers.
Again, how is this not a utility that should be subject to public regulation for equal and unbiased access.
You don't get to cut off someone's power or sewer/water service just because you think they're a Nazi or Confederate. Or an Antifa supporter. Why is the internet that much different?
What about the rest of us? Are you reporting us to the government? Where is your commitment for anonymity for the whopping crowd of irregular 20 posters here?
What i'm saying buckeroo is that there is nothing I can really do about the advance of the surveillance state. So there is no sense in being a paranoid schitzo like you.
They can find out who we all are anytime they want to and we can't do anything about it.
We're not doing anything illegal, immoral or un ethical. So why worry about it.
We're not doing anything illegal, immoral or un ethical. So why worry about it.
I really believe you understand the world as majiikal charms, faerie-tale princess(es) and "everything works out for the best."
But you deliberately avoid the fascist state watching every god-damned move you make, even if it is a keyboard stroke. If the state waterboards you, you will be the first to give every tid-bit of information to the state to save your own ass.
I really believe you understand the world as majiikal charms, faerie-tale princess(es)
These things I have spoken unto you, that in me ye might have peace. In the world ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have overcome the world.
Supposedly, the Roku TVs from various small Asian manufacturers give a very comparable Roku experience to their streaming sticks and streaming boxes.
I do have, for instance, a Vizio smart TV. It can do Plex and other streaming stuff. It also spies on a small group of around 8x8 pixels at the lower-righthand corner of the screen and silently uploads that back to Vizio's marketing partners. They can identify with only a small number of uploaded 8x8 frames exactly what program you are watching. That is marketable information.
Needless to say, I've disabled wireless and internet access on my Vizio smart TV. Since all the spying by Vizio became public, they've done nothing to correct this. They are relying on the stupidity or indifference of their customer base to overcome any negative perception of their brand.
I have a Samsung plasma tv,and have no problems of any sort when using my ROKU 3 with it.
Have a Vizio 24 inch smart tv out in my shop,but rarely watch it other than from the RCA HD antenna I put in out there. I get 43 channels from that.
I am hoping to get someone to dig a trench so I can run an ethernet cable out there so I can get streaming video this fall. Nice to have a enclosed area in your workshop where you can relax that has a refrigerator, tv,microwave,ac,heat,and full bath to take breaks in and relax when things aren't going your way.
In the entire history of the world,the only nations that had to build walls to keep their own citizens from leaving were those with leftist governments.
I reported myself to that fag human rights watch group a while back. I wanted them to go after me and call me a hate site. I'm not big enough pickings for them.
But the government can easily subpoena that info if they want to.
Not from a Panama holding company.
You might rightly suspect that NSA could penetrate that info but not much of anyone else, provided you're using a computer free of spyware and trojans.
I am hoping to get someone to dig a trench so I can run an ethernet cable out there so I can get streaming video this fall.
Wow, I thought you finally had some Millenial kid digging that trench last spring.
Outdoor CAT6 cable isn't that much. If it were me, I'd just string it along the ground or go rooftop to rooftop with a tree or pole in the middle. Even that would last many years before sun/wind made the cable fail.
Starting at $52 for a coil of 500 feet. And it can be buried too. You also need to put ends on the cable, that costs about $25 for the crimper and a 100 ethernet plugs (enough to crimp ends on up to 50 cables).
They also have a pre-made ready-to-go 150' CAT6 cable that can be buried when/if you get someone to dig that trench for $80. This one has professional plugs already crimped on to it.
I had in mind you said your outbuilding was only 75' or so from the house so I'm going from that.
Nice to have a enclosed area in your workshop where you can relax that has a refrigerator, tv,microwave,ac,heat,and full bath to take breaks in and relax when things aren't going your way.
Damn, I could have a good time in a setup like that. Just need a lolita or two for back rubs, all real platonic. : )
For some reason, I was reminded of the movie Pulp Fiction today, probably because I watched Bruce Willis's The Jackal last night. So I wanted to fire it up, one of the best known movies of the Nineties. The Jackal was made in 1997, Pulp Fiction in 1994. Anyway, Bruce Willis still had hair. : )
And I couldn't find it, though I thought I had a copy. So I had to go grab this one instead from RARBG.
BTW, I run the free Plex Media Server and use it as my own private Netflix. Supports all the streaming sticks and devices (AppleTV, iPhones, tablets, Android, Roku, Chromecast, game consoles), detects and transcodes automatically for each device as needed. Capable of streaming multiple streams; I've had it stream up to a half-dozen streams to various computers and devices at once with no problems. Plex also downloads movie descriptions, cast, and other metadata. It does the same for TV series, including episode descriptions. It's very comparable to Netflix or Hulu or Amazon Prime Video.
Plex just added some DVR features, probably not as good as Pete's ChannelMaster setup but it has a DVR cloud as well. I may buy a little tuner and an antenna just to pull in the most local stations and DVR them. Surely they have a few programs I could stand.
Wow, I thought you finally had some Millenial kid digging that trench last spring.
I did. Or I thought I did. He seems to have disappeared.
So did the older guy that has been going to do it for at least 3 years,who who tells me every time I see him,"I'll come by next week to do it."
Outdoor CAT6 cable isn't that much. If it were me, I'd just string it along the ground or go rooftop to rooftop with a tree or pole in the middle. Even that would last many years before sun/wind made the cable fail.
Amazon: Outdoor CAT6 cable
Starting at $52 for a coil of 500 feet. And it can be buried too. You also need to put ends on the cable, that costs about $25 for the crimper and a 100 ethernet plugs (enough to crimp ends on up to 50 cables).
I already have the cable,the ends,and the crimpers. I even have PCV pipe to run the cable though,and a snake to pull it through with. I just can't hire anybody to dig a damn trench 50 feet long and a foot deep. Hate like hell to hire somebody with a backhoe to come here and dig it for me,but it seems like that's the only way I will ever get it done.
Bad back,bad knees,and COPD means I can't do it myself with a shovel anymore. I did have a cable laying in the yard that ran from the house to the shop,but the kid I hired to cut grass the last time I was really sick ran across it with the riding mower despite me telling him to not run over it.
I like grass. I like the way it looks,I like the way it smells,I like the fact it feeds various critters as well as helps create oxygen,but am seriously considering just covering my whole yard with gravel because I am just getting too damn crippled and old to keep up with it. Since I can't hire anybody to cut the grass,it might either do that or sell out and move to a city somewhere.
In the entire history of the world,the only nations that had to build walls to keep their own citizens from leaving were those with leftist governments.
BTW, I run the free Plex Media Server and use it as my own private Netflix. Supports all the streaming sticks and devices (AppleTV, iPhones, tablets, Android, Roku, Chromecast, game consoles), detects and transcodes automatically for each device as needed. Capable of streaming multiple streams; I've had it stream up to a half-dozen streams to various computers and devices at once with no problems. Plex also downloads movie descriptions, cast, and other metadata. It does the same for TV series, including episode descriptions. It's very comparable to Netflix or Hulu or Amazon Prime Video.
Plex just added some DVR features, probably not as good as Pete's ChannelMaster setup but it has a DVR cloud as well. I may buy a little tuner and an antenna just to pull in the most local stations and DVR them. Surely they have a few programs I could stand.
Thanks for the tip.
I don't see Plex as being comparable with my Channel Master,though. The Channel Master is a channel tuner/DVR with TIVO that is organized like the dish controller DVR's you get from the sat dish companies.
Plex is a software program that organizes your media as it downloads it,and I suspect you could use in addition to a channel master tuner. Let the CM organize and control your broadcast tv,and then let the Plex software organize and control all your streaming media.
You know a lot more about this technical stuff than I do,so you would be a better judge of if what I just suggested is doable,and the best way to do it.
In the entire history of the world,the only nations that had to build walls to keep their own citizens from leaving were those with leftist governments.
I already have the cable,the ends,and the crimpers. I even have PCV pipe to run the cable though,and a snake to pull it through with. I just can't hire anybody to dig a damn trench 50 feet long and a foot deep. Hate like hell to hire somebody with a backhoe to come here and dig it for me,but it seems like that's the only way I will ever get it done.
Maybe you could get someone with one of those small non-riding Ditch Witch units to come out. Just a thought. Would take less time to ditch it than to load/unload the unit from a trailer.
I'm seeing prices for these at $2,000-$4,000 for good used machines. Sometimes, you see plumbers with one or even electricians. For that matter, you might check your local rent-it center to see if you could rent one and hire someone to run it for you for an hour.
I like grass. I like the way it looks,I like the way it smells,I like the fact it feeds various critters as well as helps create oxygen,but am seriously considering just covering my whole yard with gravel because I am just getting too damn crippled and old to keep up with it. Since I can't hire anybody to cut the grass,it might either do that or sell out and move to a city somewhere.
Don't go too far. You could gravel the parts of lawn that are irregular and harder to mow and just use one of those new electric robot mowers to keep the open areas in grass nice and neat.
Amazon is really peddling the very pricey Husqvarnas. There are some other good choices out there. A $3500 Husqvarna is guaranteed to cope with even the most complex lawns once it is "trained" where to mow. That sounds like overkill. You could get rid of the most gnarly bits of the lawn and do fine with a robot mower under $1000, I bet.
Thanks,I know all about ditch witches,but I had no idea the prices had dropped so low. I might buy one to do it myself,and then sell it.
Thanks for the tip!
In the entire history of the world,the only nations that had to build walls to keep their own citizens from leaving were those with leftist governments.
Thanks,I know all about ditch witches,but I had no idea the prices had dropped so low. I might buy one to do it myself,and then sell it.
Have you looked into renting a Ditch Witch?
Also, I see upstream that this is talking about 75' to stream video. That can be done wirelessly with a powerful router and box (Amazon Fire or Roku Ultimate) using AC wireless 5 GHZ band.
Also, I see upstream that this is talking about 75' to stream video. That can be done wirelessly with a powerful router and box (Amazon Fire or Roku Ultimate) using AC wireless 5 GHZ band.
He's got a metal outbuilding that is apparently impervious to a decent wireless signal in either WiFi band. We explored all that quite a while back with lots of options (putting the router in the window facing the shop, putting a WAP in the window of the shop to receive the signal, etc. And pete is quite the Roku junkie already.
Before you go further, keep in mind that we're not there, we don't know his router setup, etc. We can't fix it for him from such a distance. There could be some interference problems we don't know about.
A wired connection is more of a pain but it will definitely solve his problem. He has a ChannelMaster DVR setup he likes and he'll be able to stream off that to his shop as well as use Roku smoothly once he gets his shop wired. Wireless is okay but it really is not fast enough to make you happy. What works really well, IMO, is a gigabit ethernet connection. Then it all runs very smoothly, FF/rewind, whatever. It all Just Works with gigabit connections.
Pete's been trying to get this project done for a couple of years but people won't dig his ditch for him.
I think you are right though that someone could be hired for a $200-$300 to bring a little Ditch Witch to the property and dig the trench for him. My first thought would be a plumber or an electrician who is set up to do outdoor electrical cable.
Pete has the PVC pipe to run the cable, has the cable, the RJ ends, the crimper. So an electrician (or plumber) with a Ditch Witch would be a good bet to dig the trench and to lay the pipe with the cable in it.
It might cost up to $500 to do the job with the trench and the PVC but it would be done and he could just enjoy internet, Roku, ChannelMaster and streaming services in his shop. It would be worth it.
Pete could at least get an estimate from a few local electricians to see what they would charge him.