Scalfin
Scalfin
Scalfin

Because unlike so many of these others, it's pretty fact based but presented in a way that will appeal to juveniles (and adults!) This is a future I want to live in, but likely won't. With the right encouragement perhaps the next generations can.

That was my first choice. This was my second:

History class:

Because we have that wonderful piece of work, the Starr Report, which taxpayers paid millions of dollars to produce. In that document, there are no signs of any patterns of harassing or abusive behavior on the part of Clinton, despite the Special Counsel's offices best efforts to find ANYTHING that would make Clinton

No. As a gay man I've never groped a straight women but I've been groped (i.e. had my ass and cock grabbed because you know I'm not a "real" man) by five different women. I've been treated like a fairy godmother who is there to build self esteem, been called "my gay", heard straight women say fag because they're down.

Do gay men really objectify straight women more than straight women objectify gay men?

Gay men can be incredibly misogynistic, but straight women often treat them like little accessories. Talking about a gay privilege in this context seems disingenuous unless you're referring to the way gay cis voices dominate the LGBT discussion.

But.... she is plus-sized.

I have a fancy decanter full of slivovitz and tiny glasses (not shot glasses, specifically, but they match the decanter) that I foist on every visitor to my home in the traditional Balkan manner. At a bar, shots seem overpriced and, as Will notes, skipping the best part of being in a bar.

Girls not getting friendzoned as much? My entire dating life is me being friendzoned! Heck two weeks ago this guy I was dating gave me the friendzone talk!

Not true. It really depends on the suburb. The new "engineered communities" often don't even have sidewalks, so yes, in that case you're correct about the exercise difference. But I live in a suburb that is 150 years old, sidewalks everywhere, bike lanes, etc. Just like the city (where I lived for 16 years of my

She used the venue because, like it or not, this is how we communicate with one another now. This is what you have to do to make people listen. I can't imagine the amount of courage it took her to do this. I also can't imagine the stomach-dropping feeling her abuser must have had when she heard her on the other end of

my experience with gyms is that 90% of the time, people are just paranoid that others are looking and judging them. it's all in the head. if you go to a gym with a lot of pretty and fit people of course you'll feel self-conscious. And if people are being judgey, it's because you're a novice and you're committing

Although I would feel like a proper wanker describing myself as "ripped" (ahem), I too am a reasonable level of fitness. And if someone has made the effort to exercise, regardless of their weight or appearance, then they are a damn sight more impressive than anyone who just sits on the couch and whinges about it

No one gives a shit, seriously. People are at the gym to work out, not fucking judge you. Sounds like a bunch of excuses.

Blonde is a style if beer and it refers to the color of the beer.

I know I'm going to get shot down for this but - that roadside memorial is a fairly large issue right there. I agree the woman should not have taken things into her own hands, particularly in such a tragically sensitive issue too with the death of a 12 year old boy. However I do understand how people could find this

Hmmm, yeah, but taking over traffic signs and street "furniture" to create memorials is, in my view, not cool. Not safe, not visually pleasing, and even a little invasive. Yes, tragedies happen all the time around us, and, yes, people are entitled to mourn as they feels appropriate. But there are some unspoken limits

I can't wait to read how inoffensive this is because Europe doesn't have any history of blackface.

Alternate headlines time!