what we see playing out today. Yeah, it’s us. It’s not our babies. So what I would tell parents is not to take that special gift away from them. NBC News: What’s remarkable about your story is that you’re still here to tell it. So many other leaders were assassinated. Bridges: I have one foot in the Official Game Over Vaultroom Shirt besides I will buy this past and one in the present. NBC News: I know these are heavy topics, so I want to end on a bright note. Bridges: I always do. Ruby Bridges is escorted into William Frantz Elementary School in New Orleans during the second week of court-ordered integration in 1960.Underwood Archives / Getty Images NBC News: What is something you’re excited about right now that’s brining you a lot of joy? Bridges: Wow. I don’t know because I’m still looking for that. Joy. It is a journey. But you know it’s something that you have to consciously do. Make yourself happy. In the midst of all of it, remain hopeful. Never give that up. Because I always say, you have to think about where would we be if we were just a hopeless set of people? We have to remain hopeful. I can’t feel like things are not going to get better. I can’t. NBC News: What keeps you hopeful? Bridges: That things are going to get better. Yeah, they are. I think right now everything that we’re going through is to get us on P’s and Q’s. Get you on your toes knowing that there is work to do and that everybody needs to be doing it. NBC News: When they say, “Ruby Bridges desegregated a school in New Orleans, wrote multiple books, got married and had four boys, and then she …” Is there anything else left in your story that you want to do? Bridges: Then she fought racism. I always say the 6-year-old is still inside me. She keeps saying if you explain it to them like their 6 years old, they will get it. That’s what we’re trying to do. NBC News: Is that 6-year-old inside of you healed? Bridges: No, that’s why she keeps pushing. For more from NBC BLK, sign up for our weekly newsletter.
A California teenager accused of being behind a flurry of swatting incidents across the Official Game Over Vaultroom Shirt besides I will buy this country targeting schools and the homes of FBI agents has been arrested in connection with a swatting attempt at a Florida mosque last year, according to court documents filed by state prosecutors. Alan Winston Filion, 17, was arrested last month at his home in Lancaster, California, and extradited to Florida on Tuesday, court documents say. He was charged as an adult on four felonies, including charges related to false reporting that triggered law enforcement response. Filion entered a not guilty plea to the charges. He is being held without bail at the John E. Polk Correctional Facility. Filion is allegedly behind hundreds of swatting incidents across the country targeting high schools, historically Black colleges and the homes of FBI agents, according to a motion filed by the government to secure Filion’s detention in the mosque case. He even allegedly targeted his own home. In May of last year, deputies from the Seminole County law enforcement responded to a caller who said he was armed with a handgun and explosives and was entering the Masjid Al Hayy Mosque in Sanford, Florida, to carry out a mass shooting, according to county records. Upon their arrival, officers said they saw a woman and her two children at the building’s entrance and identified the call as a hoax after speaking with them, records show. According to newly unsealed court documents obtained by NBC News, the Seminole County Sheriff’s Office and the FBI have tracked Filion’s posts on Telegram offering up his swatting services, as well as recordings of swatting calls. They allege he
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