As horrible as a lot of the comments are, I have to say that stumbling across the word "overvies" gave me a good 15 minutes of solid laughter.
As horrible as a lot of the comments are, I have to say that stumbling across the word "overvies" gave me a good 15 minutes of solid laughter.
Considering one of the attackers has said that she regrets that her actions could have ended a life, but the 'good' part of her wanted the victim to live and the 'bad' part of her wanted the victim to die, I'm pretty sure she's aware of the significance. Psychiatric treatment is definitely needed, though.
Like I said, I'm still trying to figure out where I stand. In a weird way, while I think 13 years is long enough for the attackers, I'm not sure it's long enough for the victim. If they get the full 13 years, she'll be 25 or 26 when they're released. At that age, with none of the tragedy, I was still getting the…
I honestly don't know where I stand. I hate the idea of trying a 12-year-old as an adult, but I'm also incredibly disturbed at just how premeditated the crime was. Frankly, I wish there was some middle ground, a way to try juveniles for incredibly heinous crimes that involved a longer sentencing.
I was wondering that myself. Looking at it, though, I think I was just thrown by the cropping and perspective. It looks like a 5S when you take that into account.
Not a website (sorry!) but look into Carol Gelles's '1000 Vegetarian Recipes.' A huge variety of tastes, everything from breakfast to dessert, and she also adds ways to change recipes to fit your diet (vegan, etc) as well as how to prepare unfamiliar ingredients. It was a lifesaver for me once upon a time.
Thank you. Especially when someone is just starting out (in retail or food service, particularly), employers may have different policies for employees that are under 18 and need to know your age as a result of that.
Congratulations! That's awesome news. You're getting a lot of great responses here. Something to keep in mind that I haven't seen anyone else touch on: Knowing a truth and feeling that truth are two very different things. As a kid, I knew what my test scores were and that I kept being invited to other testing…
I have to agree. It's kind of like saying that you shouldn't keep a fire extinguisher in the house because, in perfect circumstances, you'll never have a fire.
Hey, you know what's probably a good way to ensure a student gets picked on? Shaving her armpits in front of other students.
If something like Sandy Hook was a conspiracy meant to enact stronger gun control, wouldn't the government have actually enacted stronger gun control by now? Or is this a weird disconnect where an entire town can be populated by actors, but the government is still full of legitimate non-actor politicians?
My family's always had open-casket wakes, and I used to find it really creepy. Although I've grown somewhat accustomed to it, it's a pretty stark reminder of how much of a person isn't their body. No matter how 'good' the body looks, it doesn't look alive and that can be unsettling.
Looks like sugar and gelatin
I bought one of the "Girl of Today" outfits mid-90s, and it legit came with jellies. I need to dig those out now.
I really expect that to start showing up in different places, like Richard Lewis's mole in "Robin Hood: Men in Tights".
I dealt with cystic acne for about 12 years on and off. I haven't gone into full oil cleansing, but did start buying oil-based products. One of Garnier's newer lines has both an oil-based cleanser and a skin oil, and neither has aggravated my skin so far. It seems like a decent intermediate step, as I'll likely try…
I'm wondering if "greedy" covers "entirely changing your image to become more marketable and make more money." I feel like it should.
I'm guessing none of the parents actually read the text on the pages. Just having read the first few sentences, it pretty clearly "convey[s] the reality of what they are going through."
Do you know the saying "When the only tool you have is a hammer, everything tends to look like a nail?" I think it works kind of similarly with repressed sexuality. When you fight so hard against something, everything seems to be tempting you to give in to it. The sad thing is so many have been conditioned to fight it.
It's the "may have offended" part that I have trouble with. Instead of acknowledging that he did something offensive, intentionally or otherwise, he's putting the onus on the people that were (rightfully) offended. That's bullshit, at least as far as I'm concerned.