I think— and this is in no way supposed to be a support of the the idea that "true" false accusations are anything but a miniscule percentage of the overall number of rape cases— the the difference lies in the visceral nature of a rape accusation.
I think— and this is in no way supposed to be a support of the the idea that "true" false accusations are anything but a miniscule percentage of the overall number of rape cases— the the difference lies in the visceral nature of a rape accusation.
"unthinking"? I've put a lot of thought into this. If the fries are tasty enough on their own, what do you need ketchup for?
What a fascinatingly aggressive comment.
Never underestimate the mind's ability to deceive itself.
"Good fries require no adornment"
Eh. Its more a parody of the Errol Flynn version with a modern reference than the other way around.
It's kind of two things.
And don't forget its theorized that more people are descended from Genghis Khan than any other person who's ever lived, due to… let's politely call it "conquerer's privilege".
Ah. I got the time frames mixed up there, the Costanza reference threw me off.
I wonder if they're really any different today or if it's a matter of getting older. I mean, all the magazines in the checkout aisle still have women in bikinis or tight/low cut outfits, but when you're being no longer a teenager (i.e. a walking chemical imbalance), the impact is a little different.
Fair enough. I'm not really a fan, but I thought they had more than one hit. I googled it to be sure, and they came up as seperate songs. Guess I should have researched more.
Hughes specifically mentions Twilight Zone in his blurb. My pedantic side is not taking it well.
Its baffling. Hughes actually MENTIONS Twilight Zone. How a band with multiple hits a One-Hit Wonder?
I know its a really complicated concept, but if a band has more than one hit song (ie Golden Earring with "Twilight Zone" and "Radar Love" or Soft Cell: "Taintied Love", "Where DId Our Love Go?") doesn't that make the band not a One-Hit Wonder?
Neither was Transformers (at least in live-action movie form).
That's pretty standard for a movie like this nowadays.
Perhaps this is the first step towards the world getting itself back to the correct timeline?
While I agree with the rest of your post, that was on Obama. Once
elected he immediately took anything resembling universal health care,
singlepayer, or Medicare-for-All off the table.
At this point, I would happily settle for a GOP bill which "only" kills thousands.
If you like horror movies, yes. The first one is a tight, nasty script. The second one is okay, then they get messy and muddled fast.