No1451
No1451
No1451

Yes, what is this world coming to when employees can refuse service to customers simply based on their own religious beliefs? I’m assuming, of course, that next he’s going to go after the pharmacists and pharmacy techs who refuse to supply customers with birth control and Plan B. Right? Riiiiight?

Just awful news. I can’t imagine what those girls and women are going through, and have gone through.

Regarding access to abortions, from what I’ve read UNFPA can only work within the legal frameworks of the nations they service. They promote voluntary family planning though, and often deal with the outcomes of unsafe

If you want to know more about late term abortions. I watched the documentary After Tiller on Netflix. I thought it was very good.

The heat generated from their hopeful boners melted, on average, 72% of the snow.

Endowments don't typically work like that. Ideally, when a donor makes a bequest, their agreement includes a gift-over clause, which specifies what should happen to their donation in the event of dissolution. If there is no such clause, then the board of directors would find another charitable organization to which to

That dealers exist to protect consumers.

Oh, I know how to make the bed. I just can't figure out why I would actually do it unless there's company coming over.

I also think its important, especially when the information about you is no longer relevant - Like, say you were pardoned for a crime, it wouldn't be unreasonable to ask that search results about you being convicted of that crime be un-indexed (because, basically, that's all Google could possibly do). Or maybe you

most learn it but you know how it goes, in one ear and out the vagina.

I find it galling and disappointing that the fictional man's emotion in this episode was derided and mocked as silly and pointless by a feminist blog.

Take your whore-pill heresy elsewhere, foreign witch!

Folks, do we really need the comments about how your "vagina hurts just thinking about it" and to "keep that thing away from me" and such? I mean, you can see how that's simultaneously objectifying and body shaming this person, can't you?

I thought Fox News would appreciate seeing a strapping young, blonde, white man trying to run a small independent business in a hostile climate created by women, who successfully suckers them into getting him reparations for the property damage they've caused.

If I were in front of a camera while that happened I would have totally made it a point to immediately check on the person to see if they're okay (even though it looked very minor) so then I could watch the video later and jerk off to all of the "what a class act" posts I would accumulate.

So I've already said something deep in a comment thread but I know many people don't read into the threads.

You know, I saw this comment earlier in the day and I wasn't going to comment but your comment here: "...I guess I don't usually think of media beyond entertainment." Really stuck out to me. Media and entertainment has a much deeper effect on people then people generally realize. There are huge assumptions in the

Somewhere a '70s van is missing it's painting...

If I live to be 1000, I'll never understand how people who choose to be part of society and benefit from the country in which they live - you know, with national defense and roads and firetrucks and whatnot - feel like they should not contribute to the betterment of the entire society. Or fail to recognize that when

See, you are missing the fact that representation in media matters beyond simply how race affects the story (though race in Aida definitely informs the story, and that is also important)! But minority representation, characters portrayed by minorities who are important (ie not background, silent slaves) are important

Why are you arguing against having some sort of grave reaction to mutilation? What does anything have to do with this aside from the fact that this man was mutilated?