Physicians Assistant yelling “HELP ME” while stealing a CitiBike ?

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Moral of the story: women are always disbelieved, even when there's video. And the Karen trope is weaponized to discredit women who advocate for themselves.


White woman will weaponize video to pretzel herself and be the victim of black youth.


By “video” you mean “recorded facts”?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Moral of the story: women are always disbelieved, even when there's video. And the Karen trope is weaponized to discredit women who advocate for themselves.


White woman will weaponize video to pretzel herself and be the victim of black youth.


By “video” you mean “recorded facts”?


PP, these people want her fired. They’re excited by this, it’s an interweb particicution, and when legitimately famous people like Roxane Gay pile on, they have permission to be ultra gleeful. The facts are completely irrelevant to them.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Moral of the story: women are always disbelieved, even when there's video. And the Karen trope is weaponized to discredit women who advocate for themselves.


White woman will weaponize video to pretzel herself and be the victim of black youth.


By “video” you mean “recorded facts”?


Karen is a trope for a reason.
You and this woman you are for some weird reason defending are number one exhibits in this gaslighting exercise, insisting on calling yourselves a victim.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If he rents the bike when it beeps, why would he need to continue covering the QR code?


He doesn’t, which is why after he unlocks the bike, his hand moves out to the handle bars— you can see that’s where it is when the hospital worker comes up to talk to them.


No, his hand was on the part with the QR code for a period of time after the chime.


A few seconds, maybe 10? And it down lower, on the base of the bars, not over the screen.


My question: why would be need to cover the QR code after he rented it?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Moral of the story: women are always disbelieved, even when there's video. And the Karen trope is weaponized to discredit women who advocate for themselves.


White woman will weaponize video to pretzel herself and be the victim of black youth.


By “video” you mean “recorded facts”?


PP, these people want her fired. They’re excited by this, it’s an interweb particicution, and when legitimately famous people like Roxane Gay pile on, they have permission to be ultra gleeful. The facts are completely irrelevant to them.


The facts are what they are and your pretzeling is not making them what you want they to look like.

She got caught on camera. Hope she is not a racist PA too. Let her be investigated and the “facts” will vindicate her.

It is 2023 not 1960.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If he rents the bike when it beeps, why would he need to continue covering the QR code?


He doesn’t, which is why after he unlocks the bike, his hand moves out to the handle bars— you can see that’s where it is when the hospital worker comes up to talk to them.


No, his hand was on the part with the QR code for a period of time after the chime.


A few seconds, maybe 10? And it down lower, on the base of the bars, not over the screen.


My question: why would be need to cover the QR code after he rented it?


My question : why does she sit on a bike someone else is renting?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Moral of the story: women are always disbelieved, even when there's video. And the Karen trope is weaponized to discredit women who advocate for themselves.


White woman will weaponize video to pretzel herself and be the victim of black youth.


By “video” you mean “recorded facts”?


PP, these people want her fired. They’re excited by this, it’s an interweb particicution, and when legitimately famous people like Roxane Gay pile on, they have permission to be ultra gleeful. The facts are completely irrelevant to them.


+100

Can’t wait to see what happens when additional facts come out.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Moral of the story: women are always disbelieved, even when there's video. And the Karen trope is weaponized to discredit women who advocate for themselves.


White woman will weaponize video to pretzel herself and be the victim of black youth.


By “video” you mean “recorded facts”?


Karen is a trope for a reason.
You and this woman you are for some weird reason defending are number one exhibits in this gaslighting exercise, insisting on calling yourselves a victim.


Do you truly want to embrace race and gender stereotypes? Come on.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If he rents the bike when it beeps, why would he need to continue covering the QR code?


He doesn’t, which is why after he unlocks the bike, his hand moves out to the handle bars— you can see that’s where it is when the hospital worker comes up to talk to them.


No, his hand was on the part with the QR code for a period of time after the chime.


A few seconds, maybe 10? And it down lower, on the base of the bars, not over the screen.


My question: why would be need to cover the QR code after he rented it?


My question : why does she sit on a bike someone else is renting?


Because it hasn’t been rented yet. The video doesn’t show the full story. One possible explanation is that she sat down to rent it at the same time he was standing next to it.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Unfortunately, we have seen from Emmett Till in the 60s (his white female accuser admitted to lying) to the recent Central Park birdwatcher (the video proved his white female accuser was lying) how a cry for help can often be used intentionally to minimize accountability, deflect blame, or worse, inflict harm in scenarios where they know their whiteness grants them benefits.

Even if she was right and had the bike first, her cry for help and tears followed by the quick recovery is what concerns people because of the history.


So white women are not allowed to be scared and cry for help. Got it!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Moral of the story: women are always disbelieved, even when there's video. And the Karen trope is weaponized to discredit women who advocate for themselves.


White woman will weaponize video to pretzel herself and be the victim of black youth.


By “video” you mean “recorded facts”?


Karen is a trope for a reason.
You and this woman you are for some weird reason defending are number one exhibits in this gaslighting exercise, insisting on calling yourselves a victim.


Do you truly want to embrace race and gender stereotypes? Come on.


Let’s invoke some stereotypes about the boys involved in the incident. After all, these stereotypes exist for a reason. I’m sure PP would love that.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If he rents the bike when it beeps, why would he need to continue covering the QR code?


He doesn’t, which is why after he unlocks the bike, his hand moves out to the handle bars— you can see that’s where it is when the hospital worker comes up to talk to them.


No, his hand was on the part with the QR code for a period of time after the chime.


A few seconds, maybe 10? And it down lower, on the base of the bars, not over the screen.


My question: why would be need to cover the QR code after he rented it?


My question : why does she sit on a bike someone else is renting?


Because it hasn’t been rented yet. The video doesn’t show the full story. One possible explanation is that she sat down to rent it at the same time he was standing next to it.


Given what we know often happens, if I were in that situation, I would just let the guy have the bike. Not worth a confrontation or getting hurt.
Anonymous
Black America has a lot to be angry for. If they want to take down this woman, so be it. I don’t really care if she did it or not.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Moral of the story: women are always disbelieved, even when there's video. And the Karen trope is weaponized to discredit women who advocate for themselves.


White woman will weaponize video to pretzel herself and be the victim of black youth.


By “video” you mean “recorded facts”?


Karen is a trope for a reason.
You and this woman you are for some weird reason defending are number one exhibits in this gaslighting exercise, insisting on calling yourselves a victim.


Are you confused? The only person who has claimed to be a victim is the teen who bullied her off the bike.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If he rents the bike when it beeps, why would he need to continue covering the QR code?


He doesn’t, which is why after he unlocks the bike, his hand moves out to the handle bars— you can see that’s where it is when the hospital worker comes up to talk to them.


No, his hand was on the part with the QR code for a period of time after the chime.


A few seconds, maybe 10? And it down lower, on the base of the bars, not over the screen.


My question: why would be need to cover the QR code after he rented it?


My question : why does she sit on a bike someone else is renting?


Because it hasn’t been rented yet. The video doesn’t show the full story. One possible explanation is that she sat down to rent it at the same time he was standing next to it.


This is what it looks like. 2 people trying to rent the bike at the same time, chaos ensues. I don’t see how, from the video, she was stealing it but it could be possible given where the video starts. Both parties appear to be antagonizing each other but she is clearly over the top in her response to the point that she comes off terribly. Particularly given the racial dynamics and because her response comes off as contrived and fake.
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