DarwinPunk
DarwinPunk
DarwinPunk

And then buy dog food with the insurance money. Remorsefully.

I just like how the dog looks at the bill all "fuck off! I'm not paying for your espresso."

I know there is. that's why I'm ashamed.

I assure you that us Brits have been using this particular hand gesture for an awful lot longer than black Americans have.

Can I say how much I'm loving the fact that this discussion includes a man defending feminism and a woman attacking it? Progress!

I really love the articles that say women "forget" to have children...like you went into Target to get shampoo and kids and you came out $200 poorer because you bought a career and a skirt and a bunch of groceries but forgot to get kids, which is what you went there for in the first place.

Well, didn't you know, if you touch a guys dick once, you are then obligated to let him put it into one or more of your orifices. It's like how if you touch a cookie or a piece of cake you have to eat it.

This! I was never officially vegan, but I'm Christian Orthodox, and practiced it more "religiously" (teehee) when I was younger, which involved basically going vegan for 6 weeks before Christmas and 8 before Easter, as fasting. During this period, we had beans, mushrooms, potatoes, rice, pasta, even tofu and various

I'm not vegan, nor do I desire to be, but as an Asian immigrant, my two cents are: I totally agree that vegan food does not have to be expensive. Native Indian, Southeast Asian, and Mediterranean cuisine has so many ingredients that are vegan. If people just did a little exploring in ethnic grocery stores and went

This has been almost exactly my experience, except that I *have* done all sorts of ridiculous diets and the like. But currently, because the dietary aspect of being vegan is just a small portion of a much larger ethical decision, nonvegan items just don't register as food. I could see the argument that you want "real"

TrueConfessions(TM): when I'm cooking with it, I often eat raw pieces of tofu...and I like it.

I have been vegan for 15 years and no it doesn't have to be all hip and trendy foods. I eat whatever is vegan and love me some junk food. I am not in it for health reasons.

I'm not vegan but I just came down here to say this. There are plenty of vegan foods that aren't exotic, weird and expensive.

I myself am not vegan but most of my friends are. Luckily here in the Bay Area vegan restaurants are abound. Even if they didn't exist, being vegan is still pretty damn easy. If you are cooking it does not need to be a complicated endeavor. Most of my at home meals involve black beans, brown rice, quinoa and big

I love raw, cold tofu. On hot days, it's the only protein I can deal with (and I'm not vegetarian nor vegan). (although I am Chinese so there is the cultural proclivity). Try this, I beg of you: Take a block of cold tofu. Sprinkle salt on top. Drizzle sesame oil on top. Sprinkle chopped green onions and cilantro on

Yeah, I'm on year 4 myself and can say that my grocery bill is significantly less now than it used to be. Except when peaches are in season. I always spend my paycheck on peaches.

It is pretty mainstream in my non-vegan house.

I'm not vegan, and I'm not even dirt-ass poor any more, but PB sammiches are STILL the best thing ever.

"garlic-braised bok choy, dal with lots of cilantro and caramelized shallots, chopped guacamole the way a Mexican friend had taught me, and rice."

The sad thing is that the best "video game" movie was actually King of Kong.