Have you ever participated in a protest?
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CrystalRaindrops — 7 months ago(August 16, 2025 02:09 AM)
Wrong!
Protests, such as the Montgomery Bus Boycott and the sit-in movement, were crucial in advancing civil rights for African Americans in the United States. These demonstrations, often nonviolent, brought attention to the injustices of segregation and discrimination, ultimately leading to landmark legislation like the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
Protests played a significant role in securing the right to vote for women in many countries. The fight for women's suffrage involved various forms of protest, from peaceful demonstrations to more militant actions, ultimately contributing to legislative changes that granted women the right to vote. -

️ Christina 1986-05-20 


— 7 months ago(August 15, 2025 02:05 AM)No, never!
I was "in" on an official one. Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic Parish, Church. A couple took over the choir, an organist and his wife, and did the rectory or office.
They got fired, and so did the priest.
It was a big thing. Lots of talk, articles in the paper, not sure the number of articles or about for sure.
It was weird the wife seemed so friendly and all she did was claim the rectory as base and like a curse of what was Heaven, not to be mean or suggestively mean, and it was just how she was. She just wanted to "be."
She was so pale and had big blue eyes I'm sure. Her hair was not really bleached and not the typical blonde but not that "dark" but not medium brown, if you get me.
Her name was Francine.
At least, she was at choir every night, well 2 days a week.
There was a daughter..
She was little but not a toddler.
A lot of Latin or whatever in the families here with children who don't take after the appeal of the parents. They are too excited and burn out and lounge around when older, it seems as a trend. Hair has flyaway orange-ish brown..
Well, I loved going in that office! We had Father Reed, and Meryl Dakin, the ballet teacher's niece, went with her family. It was rather funny. I should take a hint. We were like rabbits. She came to say hi, and I was cursing how life was bulls****, from Florida. Her mom told her to come, and I thought it was more ghey than hurtful. All I can say is I'm not gonna look Oriental. They are
not
racist. I know they did piano and home school. That must be it, home school. They got involved in Slidell Little Theatre, "easily," and moved to my 3rd/4th high school. They were the braids like Madeline type, this group. The girls older, well 3 and 1 or 2 my age, were big, not really younger, in the day with the ballet teacher.. not their only thing or a main thing or on track. Well, it was great, but I wanted to move to the regular ballet school one day and never did. I was torn about a regular dance school, time after time.
Well, it was interesting. I just loved being in that office. I think of the escape of regular high school, though, my taking World Geography and planning to take World History, even when I was age 14 years old. I think of French and the France and Germany thing and how they put in German, planned it before I went my first year, for the second year. I never knew if it'd fit. I liked Spanish. I could have done French but did German on my own. I can do some of each.
I also think of things like the Northeast and college, the dreams from Down South. I went to a good college.
I found something I liked up here, some blonde girls, gold thick hair, maybe dried, kinda petite but strong, hard to describe, like Jewish but maybe straight limbs, 2005, maybe born 1987, 1986. Probably blue eyes. Pale but nice skin. Long strong sleek noses. I saw them from afar. I can't believe they were so mean. Only losers are nice but still won't talk in time.
½ S/N Asian (40%+ Chinese) ½ Norwegian/Danish-Irish Swiss (Amish/PA) German French Dutch? French+Dutch Celtic-Irish English-Irish?
..? -
JustinCase — 7 months ago(August 16, 2025 04:20 AM)
Christina should be hired to be a code creator to communicate things in secret.
Of course the downside is that only she will understand it and no one else will.
How you die does not redeem how you lived. - A black pastor on the life and death of Charlie Kirk -
JustinCase — 7 months ago(August 16, 2025 04:17 AM)
Yes.
It was a protest protesting the protests to end protests.
We won but then the other side had a protest protesting the right to protest.
We then protested them protesting as they protested us protesting them protesting.
How you die does not redeem how you lived. - A black pastor on the life and death of Charlie Kirk