Jason is actively trying to hook up Alfred with any nice lady he comes across with, and you would think with how many old ladies he can cross paths with and the answer would shook you. It could be the ones he chats with at the library, the supermarket, or that lady that he helped to cross the street, or the ones that he helps to carry their groceries back home or back to their cars.
The thing is that he is playing match maker (and he loves it) and always puts a nice word for Alfie (you know he's just gushing about how amazing he is, he always mentions that he is a british gentleman and such a wonderful cook). He comes to the manor every two weeks with a bunch of phone numbers but Alfred always brushes it off or if Jason is being more persistent about how he has been single for as long as he remembers Alfred would comment back and say "whenever you take your own advice and start dating someone I might consider it myself" and Jason just goes silent and drops the subject.
Reblog if you agree
Reblog to have Kiryu find a cat for you
Oklahoma Supreme Court dismisses lawsuit of last Tulsa Race Massacre survivors seeking reparations
The suit was an attempt to force the city of Tulsa and others to make recompense for the destruction of the once-thriving Black district by a white mob. In 1921 — on May 31 and June 1 — the white mob, including some people hastily deputized by authorities, looted and burned the district, which was referred to as Black Wall Street.
As many as 300 Black Tulsans were killed, and thousands of survivors were forced for a time into internment camps overseen by the National Guard. Burned bricks and a fragment of a church basement are about all that survive today of the more than 30-block historically Black district.
The two survivors of the attack, Lessie Benningfield Randle and Viola Fletcher, who are both now over 100 years old, sued in 2020 with the hope of seeing what their attorney called “justice in their lifetime.” A third plaintiff, Hughes Van Ellis, died last year at age 102.
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The city and insurance companies never compensated victims for their losses, and the massacre ultimately resulted in racial and economic disparities that still exist today, the lawsuit argued. It sought a detailed accounting of the property and wealth lost or stolen in the massacre, the construction of a hospital in north Tulsa and the creation of a victims compensation fund, among other things.
here is the money potato , rb for good luck