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Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.
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Entitled old lady tells me I’m not allowed to stand outside my own apartment
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Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.
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This one is an older woman who does not live anywhere near the building in question, but somehow decides she has the authority to order people away from a doorway they legally occupy. She walks up to a group of people in their twenties, probably in sweatshirts and dirty trainers, and acts like they are running a pop‑up crime syndicate under the overhang. She demands they move, offers no explanation, refuses all nuance, and threatens to call security like she owns the streetlights and the rain schedule.
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Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.
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The real joke is how she later repeats the exact same bit with a homeless woman who actually has permission to sit on the step, which throws the whole performance into sharp focus. It was never about the doorway, the business, or even the noise. It was about who she imagines deserves to be there and who she feels entitled to police. The idea that a functioning adult cannot stand in the alcove of their own front door without being interrogated by a stranger who lives nowhere nearby is wild, and the fact that her being this aggressively intrusive in the middle of the day is treated as normal background noise says more about our culture than it does about her.
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The only thing she proves is that some people will weaponize age, sobriety, and their own imagined moral authority to harrass anyone they think is beneath them and then walk away with zero shame, like they just finished a community‑service shift at the Ministry of Overrated Opinions
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