bbeenss
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It's such a fishy story. Apparently he 'found out' after their separation - well, then her drug use can't have been really that bad, if he didn't notice for 10 years.

Obligatory:

I don't smoke, because I work in the legal field, but I do plan to bring my flask and wear the sluttiest clothes I own.

Hordes of girls and women where and are too "looked down on".

The thing that really rankles is that video gaming, computers, "nerd industries," etc., were followed pretty equally by men and women when they started... later, they closed ranks and rewrote history to make it seem like it had always been that way.

Every dungeon I run in WoW is just sweet male life force absorbed into my vampoon.

But it's like— they might have been nerdy loser men, but at least they were still men, you know? Now that women are in the mix it's like, what power do they have left?! *dissolves into hysterics*

A cubic yard of pie and ice cream is a happy story, not a horror story.

The "girl gamer" is a legendary creature much like the storied mermaid, a deadly and beautiful nymph that lures men to their deaths by pretending to enjoy video games while really having a Lynchian case of vagina dentata and an insatiable neckbeard bloodlust.

B-but I like to knit AND slay zombies. I do not, however, like to watch my significant other play video games mainly because I prefer to play them with him or play then myself.
Cue the angry rant I had when one of my students told me, "But video games are for boys" when I showed him my 3DS. :(

I know, I know. You'd ratherknitthan watch meslay zombies, but hear me out on this.

As a longtime Thanksgiving volunteer, I would happily give up my place on the buffet line to a celebrity mugging for the cameras in return for a $20,000 check to Planned Parenthood.

As a group, Americans are much bigger fans of gluttonous eating than social justice or self-reflection...

"Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances."

Free speech is not applicable on a private website. A website has no obligation to let you say whatever you'd like, or say anything at all.

Make up your mind.

I laughed although I didn't want to.

It's a free country, but Facebook has to right to ban whoever they want from their site. They have chosen keep let it be a pretty open place to express whatever opinions and beliefs you have, but they are not required to do so.

I agree in principle, but Facebook IS a private corporate entity - no legal guarantee of free speech.

Believe it's a British term of endearment. Clearly doesn't transition well, but I don't think he meant anything by it.