anarchyoftaste
AnarchyOfTaste
anarchyoftaste

I'm an actual, real mexican person and I totally put guac on my burritos when I feel like it. Sometimes I even put it on english muffins and have it for breakfast. It is the tits, you should live a little (forget your guacamole rules! Throw them away! Be free!) and try it.

I live in LA. Believe me, I'm not lacking for excellent Mexican food. I still think Chipotle is delicious. And I don't put guac (which, despite the fact I am a copy editor, I feel just fine about abbreviating in an Internet comment) on my tacos or burritos—I only get it to put on chips. The great thing about Chipotle

Neither do I — nor people just like her, like you.

Wow, that's some ignorant shit. Hope you're just trolling poorly, instead of for real.

No need to get foul. All I was asking was a simple question. And you failed to answer any of them.

Calling R. Kelly a rapist has the potential to micro-agress the urban communities continuing to act in silent acceptance of his kiddy-fucking.

No one truly awesome or cool would appear on such a vacuous, idiotic show.

Sorry if it sounds like I am saying that crime prevention is useless, it is not. I spent a few years prosecuting sex crimes crimes against children, so I am both aware that (1) there is a lot of value in pursuing perpetrators and (2) the criminal law is not any individual person's best defense against sexual assault.

The only suggestion I'd make is changing 'men' to 'rapists' or 'predators.' There are plenty of men whose masculine identity has more to do with stopping those around them from being victimized than with being aggressive.

Nothing I said was disingenuous; that implies that I am not being candid or sincere, which is not the case.. I am sorry if what I said upset you. I do not believe that the prevalence of rape is tied to cultural acceptance of rape, and I do not believe that changing the culture will eliminate rape. Further, I would

I'm not denying that male culture is by far the biggest part of the problem, nor am I denying that the culpability of male culture remains largely unaddressed. I just think that in addition to fostering that discussion we should also have a common sense talk about the fact that being blotto makes you statistically

I feel as though your position presumes that there are people who would otherwise commit rape but who can be educated or acculturated to do otherwise. This is certainly correct at the margins. The questions are "how far does this go" and "what do we do about the rapes that remain." Just as there are limits to how

I think it was framed as a parenthetical because the author acknowledges that it couldn't possibly happen overnight. Feminists and other progressives have already been working on it for several decades now, and a great deal of progress has been made, but it will take several more decades to see the kind of results we

While on the one hand, absolutely. Allen deals almost exclusively with white people and their #problems. On the other, it seems narrow to assail him or Blanchett for this. He also doesn't write, for example, roles for poor women. Or disabled women. Or undocumented worker women. The things not covered are

I know - times change - supply and demand are what change neighborhoods. People have short memories. We can talk about laws encouraging local businesses, but property owners should always be able to rent/sell to the highest bidder. Unless you want each neighborhood to be locked down like some kind of Funkytown

They're human. They have to sleep. So find out when they sleep, and then blast "All Things Considered" as loud as it will go.

While I whole heartedly agree that its a shame and incredibly racist that it takes white people to bring in services, I do have one problem with this...

YO I'M KANYEEZY UP IN THIS HEEZY AND I LIKE BABIES BUT NOT WHEN THEY HAVE RABIES AND IMMA GONNA SING A LULLABY NOW.

As a dead broke college education transplant New Yorker who has spent 10 years in the various outer borough neighborhoods I'm curious what you see as being the right way and what is the wrong way.

Who said people are moving in for "exoticism"? They're mostly moving in because it's cheap in an expensive city with tight construction limits, not because they particularly love living in a poor, ethnic neighborhood.