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The bullying about the rape happened on school grounds.

Haha, that's amazing. You don't need to be a brony to find that hilarious. Scout's the best.

I recently ran my first 5k and actually enjoyed it, despite always hating running in the past. I think I'd like to train up to the point of being able to do 10k runs, but that's as far as I'm interested in going at once. At that point I'd probably just start working on time.

I'm not telling them it's their job to reclaim the term. I'm calling them on actively reinforcing the stereotypes. Many of them aren't just saying "I don't call myself a feminist", they're saying "I don't call myself a feminist because feminism is just about complaining/being angry/hating men/...". Which pretty much

Do you think that's the way we ought to live our lives, though, letting the most extreme members of a group define that group? Would you give up your faith/religion/philosophy and just find another word for it if extremists who also identified themselves by it started giving it a bad name in mainstream culture?

I normally wouldn't argue with someone over whether they call themselves a feminist or not, because I'm not going to change anyone's mind on that. And I also believe that how someone behaves is more important than the label they choose for themselves. If someone really is advocating for equality, call it a win and

I don't think it makes any sense to abandon a label because there are negative stereotypes attached. It would be like someone refusing to identify as Catholic because of the stereotype of priests molesting little boys and churches covering it up, or refusing to identify as atheist because of fedora-wearing,

Well, some of them are articulating pretty ignorant concepts of what feminism means. Like the implications that it's nothing but complaining and being angry and not actually doing anything. If strong, powerful women are out there in society propagating those stereotypes, don't you think it hurts women who DO choose to

Playing as the bad guy isn't ironic.

Expensive social programs are always loved by those who understand the long-term benefits of living in a society that can provide security and stability to as many as possible - even the poor and disadvantaged, and are hated by those who don't understand the value of anything that isn't going directly into their own

Yes, when you live in a society you are expected to contribute to it.

Well first off, yes, obviously women are way over-objectified, in media and public life in general. I'm not debating the truth of that.

You should have been sniffing the enemy more. Classic noob mistake.

I don't think they referenced any part of the real world when making this game.

Agree about the soundtrack. I'm not really a fan of dance music, but some of the dance remixes of the main theme make amazing jogging music.

That's effing incredible!

Yeah, it was kind of silly. You're trying to clear your sister's name, and you do so by becoming a mass-murderer in the process? If I remember correctly, the game tries to make you feel better about it by making a lot of the enemies private security types who, it's implied, are thugs anyway.

Both types of gameplay were good, in my opinion, but I thought the game often did a bad job of transitioning between the two. It felt like there were a lot of moments where the game is telling me to run, I JUST get up some good speed and momentum, and then it stops me with some vent crawling or ledge climbing.

I love that game, despite it's issues. I love the way it looks, love the atmosphere, love the concepts in the fiction, and the first-person parkour stuff was awesome. There are moments in that game that just feel amazing.

Haha, oh god, the interactive towel drying. This game looks (and sounds) ridiculous.