MissSkittles
Zombie Ms. Skittles
MissSkittles

@Ninja Robot Pirate: Obviously, that's true. I mean, if black people wanted to be like everyone else then wouldn't they just be white?

Okay, I'd like to point something out here.

Yeah, that abstinence only stuff is really working well for us so far! Let's give it another 20 or 30 years to really kick in.

@Clare116: Nobody ever flipped anyone over, held them up by the ankles and called the dog over to lick their face?

@icyblonde: On the plus side, you started making me come up with colors associated with other people.

I guess some people love being in middle school so much they just never leave and become teachers. Bitchy, bitchy teachers.

@cate3710: Spaz actually is offensive in England (possibly all of the UK, I'm unsure). That was a bit of internet based culture shock I'm glad I learned about before I move to Australia.

@Scout: I don't think anyone here can say in all honesty they've NEVER used "retarded" as an insult. What really matters is that you try to get better about it.

@Artemis47: My entire family uses it that way which drives me absolutely insane and causes me to occasionally catch myself using it. I did the r-word pledge just now, so hopefully that will keep me in line. My mother stopped for awhile after she almost called someone "fucking retarded" at Wal-Mart for walking

@Dauphine: Oh I know. I have a sewing machine and I've made dresses and stuff before. My biggest problem(s) are that I have no time and no place to set up the machine.

I wish he'd make a public apology for it instead of apologizing to figureheads. He's only actually apologizing to TWO people with special needs, everyone else in the meeting will be people just like him and just like me. And news flash, people like him and me? Aren't really the ones who are hurt by slurs against

@alanna: And there weren't that many more men who graduated college and fewer who attended. That really tells me it's a class thing.

@I Believe In Peace, Bitch: Yes, but how many pairs of jeans and t-shirts do you own? In the 40's, you wore skirts instead of pants and this graphic doesn't take non-sweater shirts into account.

All this does is make me really want to start sewing my own clothes.

@alanna: It is a lot. I suspect that the reason for this is the women who went to colleges back then were not "average" ladies. They were, by and large, women whose parents could afford to send them to an expensive college for an "MRS" degree. The average respondent was most likely upper middle class at least.

I would totally bang (and get dumped by) Gawker Columnist John Mayer, Brad Pitt, AND Bradley Cooper (at the same time!) for that house.

@Hexapus: Thanks for the reminder! I always loved that part.

@robina: You know what else is expensive? The stuff they want hyped, that's what.

Dear Product Producer People,

@jetRink: I get a nice little high out of wandering the stacks of the library or book store waiting until something catches my eye. I also pick things based on recommendations from friends and the internet.