jcrabapple

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jcrabapple
jcrabapple_at_dmv.community@momostr.pink
npub1vmy5...ql57
Elder Millennial. Husband. Father of 4. Dog owner. IT Professional. Tech enthusiast. CSS tinkerer. Music lover. Huge Sleep Token and Bilmuri fan. Non-practicing white person. Grew up in MD. Lived in and around Baltimore for a long time. Currently living in VA with my wife, 3 youngest daughters, and our 2 dogs. https://jcrabapple.com Admin of: https://DMV.Community (Mastodon) About Me: https://cool-as-heck.blog/about/ Link Page: https://jcrabapple.com Personal Blog: https://cool-as-heck.blog Music Blog: https://blog.shrediverse.net
So Jimmy Kimmel is off the air, not for saying anything disparaging about Charlie Kirk, but for commenting on the right's reactions to his murder. Meanwhile, Brian Kilmeade blatantly called for mentally ill homeless people to be killed and he's still on the air every day being a fucking piece of shit.
Colin Kaepernick was kicked out of the NFL for taking a knee to peacefully protest racial injustice. The Yankees and the Packers held a moment of silence for Charlie Kirk, a racist, misogynistic, xenophobic, gun loving, Neo-Nazi podcaster. Make it make sense.
ICE raid: South Koreans feel betrayed over workers' detainment Some idiot MAGA lady (who is of course running for Congress) reported this Hyundai factory to ICE. On September 4, 2025, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) conducted a massive raid at Hyundai Motor Group’s electric vehicle battery plant in Ellabell, Georgia, detaining 475 workers, the majority of whom (over 300) were South Korean nationals. The operation—described as the largest workplace raid under the current administration’s mass deportation agenda—involved armed agents, military-style vehicles, drones, and helicopters, leaving workers feeling “hunted like animals,” according to witnesses. Many of the detained South Koreans were engineers and specialized technicians brought in temporarily to install and service high-tech equipment, work they were legally authorized to perform under B-1 business visas or the ESTA visa waiver program, which allows short-term business stays for citizens of 41 countries, including South Korea.