“Basic bitches are all alike. Non-basic bitches are all non-basic in their own way.” —Leo Wokestoy
“Basic bitches are all alike. Non-basic bitches are all non-basic in their own way.” —Leo Wokestoy
Taylor on her delta blues album: “with what I went through this past year: the breakup with calvin, the haters from the met gala and just like the overall struggles of my life; I feel like I get what bessie smith, muddy waters and all the bluesmen were singing about. The blues is in me. I completely understand the…
With an actual Oscar winner playing the actual queen. Say one thing for George Lucas, he sure knows how to get the absolute least out of his actors.
Shove words in your throat? I directly quoted you. Twice. I extrapolated exactly nothing from those quotes save my opinion of them.
How many men do you know who make this a priority?
I want to know what sort of men this dipshit imagines he hangs around with, because they should either be incredibly insulted or avoided at all costs.
I think I’ve identified my problem with the quote. It puts down men’s fear of being humiliated. It invalidates it. Is there a need to compare fears?
Generalizing from this one incident isn’t fair.
Well okay, but I’ve talked enough about your comments. Why not tell me how you feel about mine? This is a reciprocal medium no?
I guess we should be fair, men are also afraid that other men will laugh at them and/or kill them.
It doesn’t invalidate it, it puts perspective on it.
When I go and ask out/speak my feelings to a woman, I’m worried about rejection. Getting laughed at is a possibility, but not likely. I have to think of “what will I do if she says no, and what if she says yes?”
In that moment, she has to think about her stance, and…
I believe this isn’t an “us vs them” debate, because violent men are a danger to women and children just as to other men. Their aggression and psychopathy endangers all of us. I have never felt physically threatened by a woman and I doubt I ever will, but other men have certainly triggered my fight or flight sense on…
It’s men’s job not to fucking murder.
Brazilian here. Although the article is factually correct, I think it would be useful to expand the information a bit, in order to get more context. Since I already sort of did that with my comment in the article about the Italian woman burnt alive by an ex-boyfriend, here it goes:
As an example once I was riding the train back from SF and at about 4 in the afternoon a guy I did not know sat down next to me and went from trying to touch me to asking if I disappeared would anyone care. Then he realized everyone on the train whipped out their camera phones and left at the next stop. I didn’t take…
I just went and lookes at the thread in the Italian article. And yup, they all seem to go that way.
I saw that. And it’s not even an uncommon response — every single time there’s a story like this, at least one and often multiple men show up to throw hissy fits that anyone could care about a little thing like women being brutally murdered when there are much more important problems, like poor, oppressed men’s hurt…
This quote has been relevant, here alone at least 6 or 7 times in about as many weeks. So anyone out there who still thinks it’s a misrepresentation is flying in the face of REALITY, not standing up to a bunch of riled up Atwood quoting misandrist alarmists
Jesus, dude. Seriously?
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