THE ATHERSTONE BALL GAME AND OTHER THINGS
This is the end of the Atherstone Ball Game, held last Tuesday. This game is a tradition that dates back to 1199. Basically people are divided by neighborhoods and even by bars and pubs, and it is about maintaining possession of a great ball until the end of the game. When time runs out, whoever has the ball wins.
Meanwhile, away from there...
Women don't know how to punch.
Also women:
Back spine.
Whoever hits first has the advantage
1 against 20
Traffic argument.
Scramble at the Taco parlor
Sending people to sleep.
He didn't even land one, how hard can it be?
Don't bother the police.
Nigeria Fight.
Catfight.
(Don't look down. Don't look down. Keep looking up. Look up.)
THOSE WHO PREACH TOLERANCE ARE OFTEN THE MOST INTOLERANTThe ones who pride themselves on being open and respectful are often the most aggressive when faced with opposing views. They don’t seek debate but rather to impose their beliefs, and when someone disagrees, they resort to insults, censorship, and personal attacks.
For them, tolerance only applies if you agree with their stance. They live in echo chambers where they only hear like-minded opinions, and when someone challenges their ideas, they see it as a threat rather than a different perspective. Their response isn’t dialogue—it’s hostility—because deep down, they don’t want to argue, they want to control the narrative.
True tolerance means accepting diverse viewpoints without violence or censorship, yet many have turned their version of tolerance into a rigid dogma that leaves no room for dissent. Ironically, those who talk the most about tolerance are often the first to attack those who simply think differently.
A man tries to debate random people on the street about abortion. People share their opinions—until a mother, with her young daughter, decides to silence the dissenter.
# Watch Video
The slow-motion shot of the day.