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Website:
https://g.co/kgs/hD59fW
Mr. Richie should have gracefully accepted my rejection of the 2016-2017 overtures which his daughter facilitated for him at her Instagram. I did nothing to encourage those overtures, nor was I rude about rejecting them.
Mr. Richie has enough to worry about with his daughter dating someone who is not age-appropriate for her. I don't know why he thinks that he should step back from offering his opinion about her life while he joins in all the bullying about my life.
Camila Cabello, the 22-year-old who sings this new song, called "Liar," should do some reading about how the police, social services, the criminal justice system, and much of the rest of the world treat poor people. I am repeatedly, criminally victimized because I do not have the social stature that being less poor than I am would give me. I don't know how many times I have to say that.
The song doesn't really match the video; maybe after the song was written, someone started to feel a little bad about how I'm treated.
Some of this music video is funny, but I do not vacuum in my underwear. Who vacuums your house? Is it you, or does someone do that for you, despite what the video implies?
https://youtu.be/KsDZix4ZSlU
My crawling around in the dark in two apartments in a row in Massachusetts did not stop the conglomerate's victim-blaming, nor did it stop my being targeted for voyeurism. The voyeurs thought it was funny; they liked to make jokes about turning the lights on.
I asked the police to search my last apartment for hidden cameras. They did absolutely nothing.
The entertainment industry is at least half a century behind advances in other professions. It doesn't think that it is because it has paid its female employees millions of dollars to personify stereotypes.
The next time that you're at home, or getting ready for work, why don't you turn off all the lights and see what it's like? How much of your time would you like to spend trying to prove to people who are already criminally victimizing you and who have already shown for years that nothing that you do or say matters to them, that you don't deserve it, that you're not asking for it, that you're certainly not "begging" for it?
Think about what it would be like to live somewhere that you can't have people visit you because they'll be exposed to the cameras. How would that affect your ability to start a social life?
Would you want the people who made you live like this, who had already seen you retaliated against for speaking up about it, and who still don't care, to be able to control you? What you wear, what you eat, your facial expressions, the music that you listen to, everything they can illegally observe and then turn into their own entertainment, for which they are paid millions of dollars?