• 4 Posts
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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: August 27th, 2023

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  • Trusting that my guidance counselors would do their job. Not switching high schools because they didn’t look very different.

    My school refused to let me in more difficult classes I thought I needed for college even though I requested them, was recommended them by my grade school and even tested into them. I only found out recently that I test advance proficient, but they lied to me about when I was a student.

    All because when I was in kindergarten, someone decided I had a reading disability.




















  • From wiki

    Azealia Amanda Banks was born on May 31, 1991, in New York City’s Manhattan borough; she was the youngest of three.[5][6] Her single mother raised her and her two siblings in Harlem, after their father died of pancreatic cancer when she was two years old.[7] Following her father’s death, Banks says that her mother “became really abusive—physically and verbally. Like she would hit me and my sisters with baseball bats, bang our heads up against walls, and she would always tell me I was ugly. I remember once she threw out all the food in the fridge, just so we wouldn’t have anything to eat.” Due to escalating violence, Banks moved out of her mother’s home at age 14 to live with her older sister.[8]

    At a young age, Banks became interested in musical theater, dancing, acting, and singing. At 16, she starred in a production of the comedy-noir musical City of Angels, where she was found by an agent who sent her to auditions for TBS, Nickelodeon, and Law & Order, all without success.[9] At this point Banks decided to end her pursuit of an acting career, citing the stiff competition and overall sense of nonfulfillment.[10] Because of this lack of fulfillment, she began writing rap and R&B songs as a creative outlet. She never finished high school, instead choosing to embark on a career as a recording artist.[5]

    Ok, so she got her start fucking her way into roles and doesn’t want to admit that it was wrong. This is where a lot of those Epstein Island kids end up. That’s why you don’t hear as many testimonials as you think you should. They got gaslighted into thinking it was normal.