It’s well known that Meth Elves are the most intolerant of elves.
It’s well known that Meth Elves are the most intolerant of elves.
He should stick to being a Clippers fan
Yuuuuup
“there is an actual history of the black community legit loving kung fu movies.” Also known as, one of the first ways I bonded with my African American father in law.
My comment below goes into it a little, but Wu Tang, while some of their references are a little cringe-worthy, are generally making their references for a reason; the samples they chose were selected for a reason; the names they chosen are referential and selected for a reason. They clearly know as much about kung fu…
This is a 100% mess, which is usually a sign of appropriation in a bad way. I’m Chinese and there are elements I recognize as Chinese, some are Japanese, some are . . . I guess what Americans consider one or the other?
Hate speech is not, in and of itself, a crime.
Not sure if it is what you are referencing, but in the first season, Maeve is on the operating table and one of the techs (Felix or Sylvester I think) says that she has MRSA in her abdomen.
Tiny correction - the Kingdom Choir sang “Stand by Me,” not “Lean on Me.”
With liberty and justice and guns for all
Actually, people often have trouble controlling their emotions after traumatic events. It’s completely natural.
I’m with you.
what’s an ass throat?
Students at public schools have First Amendment protections, but cannot engage in speech that is disruptive or that violates viewpoint neutral school policies. So no, he’s not correct.
The dumbest thing here is that this kid has basically admitted to wearing the confederate sweatshirt to be disruptive and to troll his classmates and the administration, which invites the school to suspend him.
The case law on schools regulating statements and symbols, I think, is pretty clear that if the school can demonstrate an actual disruptive effect (30 student complaints about it probably qualifies), they can tell the student to stop wearing the offending clothing or risk suspension.
Kick Ass 2 was even more problematic. In fact, I’m not sure if it’s Matthew Vaughn or the fact that he adapts Mark Millar works, but a lot of the stuff he does is problematic.
I think this is correct, but I’m not sure the two men were actually ever expelled.
They could sue her for defamation of character for making false public statements that probably amount to defamation per se (i.e., in a category so egregious they don’t need to even prove damages, the statements are so inherently damaging), as well as probably a host of other stuff. Not sure they could sue the school…