@pleasantriestheband: from my song/animation "YOU SHOULDN'T HAVE MADE FUN OF ME"

pleasantriestheband
pleasantriestheband
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Region: US
Thursday 01 September 2022 14:07:30 GMT
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xq8fv
xq8f.aep :
I love the part where he said "you shouldn't have made fun of me"
2022-09-01 14:16:22
8845
neospronouns
༉ ^_^ ASHIE !! ꒷꒦ :
why does it sound exactly like lemon demon
2022-09-01 20:29:47
578
pedrosalas52
Pedro Salas :
I dream to be this petty
2022-09-01 15:04:51
747
vampiricclown
🦴🪦Tricks🪦🦴• Enemy :
do you have a spotify
2022-09-01 19:36:23
1
jay_akuji
Jay :
he never learned to let go 😂
2022-09-01 15:10:13
196
_lessio11
Lessio :
Pleasentries underrated
2022-09-01 20:12:10
726
pleasantriestheband
pleasantriestheband :
copyright claimed when it's my own song. feels bad
2022-09-06 03:02:29
91
rustcow
Rust 🦈 :
Why does this sound like System of a Down
2022-09-03 12:47:29
21
thefigureisafteryou
The Figure. :
This hits fr
2022-09-02 02:52:44
4
cracked_tortle
Lyn :
Guys I think he doesn’t want to be made fun of
2022-09-01 14:22:24
274
eatentoaster
EatenToaster :
Guys i may have a slight feeling that i shouldn't have made fun of him, idk just a guess
2022-09-01 14:40:19
177
ticksc2
Kenny :
here me out
2022-09-01 21:23:22
1
.three_daysgr4c3
jazmine 🌺 :
That looks kinda like Eric from the pool party back in '06
2022-09-01 20:34:48
3
denviss
denvis :
is that the old guy and protag from "you need me", or am I just seeing things lol
2022-09-02 00:47:08
1
wynterrrrrrrrrrrrrrrruh
Gggg :
I love the part where he says “you should have made fun of me” and exaggerated the Me instead saying “Meiiiii
2022-09-01 20:44:46
2
muppetstea
Cory :
WHAT AM I WATCHING
2022-09-01 20:08:42
3
tempest_xx
gabby :
Did SOAD drop a new song 🤣🤣
2022-09-03 19:01:04
0
er1in._
n0odlEd._GirLyS :
ngl it's pretty good song
2022-09-01 23:46:17
1
azayadler
Azayadler :
this is so lemon demon
2022-09-01 22:51:15
1
pies323
PIES :
lemon demon real????
2022-09-02 02:56:19
2
tarantulastears
Fool For Him Only :
Early
2022-09-01 14:24:32
3
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The Platt Family Case :White Family labeled as Black by White sheriff  in 1955. This school segregation case, which received national media attention at the time, involved Allen Platt, who moved his family (including five children and a niece) from Holly Hill, South Carolina to Mount Dora (Lake County), Florida in October, 1954. Platt and his family considered themselves of Croatan Indian and Irish descent. The children began to attend White schools in Mount Dora (as they had in South Carolina), but some of their classmates commented to their parents about the Platt children’s dark skin. The sheriff of Lake County, Willis V. McCall, a White supremacist, visited the Platt home, rudely examined and photographed the children, and “deciding that they were Black” advised them to stay away from school until he could “investigate”. His action was supported by the principal, superintendent, and school board. Platt wrote the governor of Florida that “I then, now, and will continue to refuse to send my children to a Negro school” . The Platts’ landlord received a threat that their house might burn down if they were not evicted—so he asked the family to move. The local newspaper, The Topic— covered the story extensively and featured Platt’s side of the controversy, resulting in crosses burned on Reese’s lawn and subscriptions to her newspaper canceled. Some people, however, contributed to a legal fund for Platt, and three lawyers volunteered to handle the case. The lawyers filed suit in Circuit Court, requesting a declaratory judgment asserting that the Platt children could attend White schools. The attorneys for the school board were unable to get the case dismissed on technical grounds, and their appeal to the state Supreme Court was denied. When the family moved to nearby Orange County, the White schools would not admit the children until the Lake County School Board had resolved its dispute with the family. The Mount Dora Christian Home and Bible School researched the family’s background and decided to admit the children. Sheriff McCall then wrote the governor of Florida protesting that “if the Platt children are taken into classes of Christian Home and Bible School, everyone connected with it could be sued and prosecuted” . When the court case was tried, the school board’s attorneys’ and Sheriff McCall’s evidence that the Platts were Black was flimsy compared to the Platts’ lawyers’ evidence that they were not. The school board’s attorneys’ primary argument was that on some records the Platts were listed as Croatan Indians, and Webster’s Dictionary defined Croatans as people with mixed Indian, White, and Negro blood. The court found (on October 18, 1955) that the Platt children could attend Mount Dora’s White schools. The school board first voted to appeal the decision to the Florida Supreme Court; but before doing so, it voted again and accepted the circuit court’s ruling. In the meantime, someone had set fire to the Platts’ cottage. The children finished school at the Mount Dora Christian Home and bible School. #fypシ゚  #fypシ゚viral  #blackhistory  #blackhistorytiktok
The Platt Family Case :White Family labeled as Black by White sheriff in 1955. This school segregation case, which received national media attention at the time, involved Allen Platt, who moved his family (including five children and a niece) from Holly Hill, South Carolina to Mount Dora (Lake County), Florida in October, 1954. Platt and his family considered themselves of Croatan Indian and Irish descent. The children began to attend White schools in Mount Dora (as they had in South Carolina), but some of their classmates commented to their parents about the Platt children’s dark skin. The sheriff of Lake County, Willis V. McCall, a White supremacist, visited the Platt home, rudely examined and photographed the children, and “deciding that they were Black” advised them to stay away from school until he could “investigate”. His action was supported by the principal, superintendent, and school board. Platt wrote the governor of Florida that “I then, now, and will continue to refuse to send my children to a Negro school” . The Platts’ landlord received a threat that their house might burn down if they were not evicted—so he asked the family to move. The local newspaper, The Topic— covered the story extensively and featured Platt’s side of the controversy, resulting in crosses burned on Reese’s lawn and subscriptions to her newspaper canceled. Some people, however, contributed to a legal fund for Platt, and three lawyers volunteered to handle the case. The lawyers filed suit in Circuit Court, requesting a declaratory judgment asserting that the Platt children could attend White schools. The attorneys for the school board were unable to get the case dismissed on technical grounds, and their appeal to the state Supreme Court was denied. When the family moved to nearby Orange County, the White schools would not admit the children until the Lake County School Board had resolved its dispute with the family. The Mount Dora Christian Home and Bible School researched the family’s background and decided to admit the children. Sheriff McCall then wrote the governor of Florida protesting that “if the Platt children are taken into classes of Christian Home and Bible School, everyone connected with it could be sued and prosecuted” . When the court case was tried, the school board’s attorneys’ and Sheriff McCall’s evidence that the Platts were Black was flimsy compared to the Platts’ lawyers’ evidence that they were not. The school board’s attorneys’ primary argument was that on some records the Platts were listed as Croatan Indians, and Webster’s Dictionary defined Croatans as people with mixed Indian, White, and Negro blood. The court found (on October 18, 1955) that the Platt children could attend Mount Dora’s White schools. The school board first voted to appeal the decision to the Florida Supreme Court; but before doing so, it voted again and accepted the circuit court’s ruling. In the meantime, someone had set fire to the Platts’ cottage. The children finished school at the Mount Dora Christian Home and bible School. #fypシ゚ #fypシ゚viral #blackhistory #blackhistorytiktok

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