How often have you seen a fight at your school??? every day??? a week??? what???
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Every month I see a very terrifying fight, but usually it's like a little push or something.
The girl fights are weird, they all pull each other's hair. I remember to girls were pulling out each other's braids. Very intense...
How often have you seen a fight at your school??? every day??? a week??? what???
AnalogOdyssey
Every week. The worst case was when some kid broke another kids jaw...
i live in east st louis man, fights happen daily, at school, & walking home from school.
heres where i live - http://www.american-pictures.com/gallery/usa/book230t.htm
heres what they say in the papers about my city.
East of anywhere," writes a reporter for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, "often evokes the other side of the tracks. But, for a first-time visitor suddenly deposited on its eerily empty streets, East St. Louis might suggest another world." The city, which is 98 percent black, has no obstetric services, no regular trash collection, and few jobs. Nearly a third of its families live on less than $7,500 a year; 75 percent of its population lives on welfare of some form. The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development describes it as "the most distressed small city in America."
Only three of the 13 buildings on Missouri Avenue, one of the city's major thoroughfares, are occupied. A 13-story office building, tallest in the city, has been boarded up. Out side, on the sidewalk, a pile of garbage fills a ten-foot crater.
i cant wait til i get out of school, im gonna save up some $$$ and get my mom outta there. currently im away at college, and i worry about her every night.you arnt the "gamespot gangster" guy are you?i live in east st louis man, fights happen daily, at school, & walking home from school.
heres where i live - http://www.american-pictures.com/gallery/usa/book230t.htm
heres what they say in the papers about my city.
East of anywhere," writes a reporter for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, "often evokes the other side of the tracks. But, for a first-time visitor suddenly deposited on its eerily empty streets, East St. Louis might suggest another world." The city, which is 98 percent black, has no obstetric services, no regular trash collection, and few jobs. Nearly a third of its families live on less than $7,500 a year; 75 percent of its population lives on welfare of some form. The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development describes it as "the most distressed small city in America."
Only three of the 13 buildings on Missouri Avenue, one of the city's major thoroughfares, are occupied. A 13-story office building, tallest in the city, has been boarded up. Out side, on the sidewalk, a pile of garbage fills a ten-foot crater.
i cant wait til i get out of school, im gonna save up some $$$ and get my mom outta there. currently im away at college, and i worry about her every night.bizzy420
[QUOTE="bizzy420"]you arnt the "gamespot gangster" guy are you?i live in east st louis man, fights happen daily, at school, & walking home from school.
heres where i live - http://www.american-pictures.com/gallery/usa/book230t.htm
heres what they say in the papers about my city.
East of anywhere," writes a reporter for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, "often evokes the other side of the tracks. But, for a first-time visitor suddenly deposited on its eerily empty streets, East St. Louis might suggest another world." The city, which is 98 percent black, has no obstetric services, no regular trash collection, and few jobs. Nearly a third of its families live on less than $7,500 a year; 75 percent of its population lives on welfare of some form. The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development describes it as "the most distressed small city in America."
Only three of the 13 buildings on Missouri Avenue, one of the city's major thoroughfares, are occupied. A 13-story office building, tallest in the city, has been boarded up. Out side, on the sidewalk, a pile of garbage fills a ten-foot crater.
i cant wait til i get out of school, im gonna save up some $$$ and get my mom outta there. currently im away at college, and i worry about her every night.jubjub13
no sir. i have goals, and things i want to accomplish in life. 1 of those things is to get my mom outta the ghetto. when i was younger i made a few bad decisions, but now my head is on straight, and my priorities are straightened out.
nice wu pic. if you like WU tang then check out this dude named last emperor, he got a track called "secret wars" its sicc man. talks about mc's and comic book characters going to war. very clever song, with nice lyrics.
Does it count as a fight if 12 guys are kicking me on the floor while I yell and scream?PanPizza15
depends...do you thrash around a lot?
i havent personally seen a lot of fights for about a year and a half, but thats because i was like...you know what i really dont feel like explaining the fact that i failed out of 6th 7th and 8th grade despite getting strait A's in elementary and aceing all my tests, then to avoid my court date (for skipping and for other things...mostly skipping) and the inevitable 3 weeks at juvie i went to jubilee for 6 months...i saw a lot of fights there, but now i just hear about fights...well then again last time i was anywhere that one was going on was at school and i wasnt there...(skipping :P)...but uh yeah...oh damn it i did explain it...that sucked...
VOLCANOES!!!!!! ARE HOT!!!! -bill nye the science guy...sry
i live in east st louis man, fights happen daily, at school, & walking home from school.
heres where i live - http://www.american-pictures.com/gallery/usa/book230t.htm
heres what they say in the papers about my city.
East of anywhere," writes a reporter for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, "often evokes the other side of the tracks. But, for a first-time visitor suddenly deposited on its eerily empty streets, East St. Louis might suggest another world." The city, which is 98 percent black, has no obstetric services, no regular trash collection, and few jobs. Nearly a third of its families live on less than $7,500 a year; 75 percent of its population lives on welfare of some form. The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development describes it as "the most distressed small city in America."
Only three of the 13 buildings on Missouri Avenue, one of the city's major thoroughfares, are occupied. A 13-story office building, tallest in the city, has been boarded up. Out side, on the sidewalk, a pile of garbage fills a ten-foot crater.
i cant wait til i get out of school, im gonna save up some $$$ and get my mom outta there. currently im away at college, and i worry about her every night.bizzy420
LOL!
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