It turns out being mad does not give you a right to destroy the property of the person you are mad at
It turns out being mad does not give you a right to destroy the property of the person you are mad at
LOL yup. This is what Feminism™ is all about. White Grrl privilege.
Black person: “I’ve experienced racism before and I know this is racist”
I believe the question you’re looking for is “would he have been suspended?”
DO....NOT....STARE....AT.....THE.....WHITE...GIRLS... don’t you know they are precious. Welcome to American, home of the free, and land of the brave. That is all.
Poor baby. He did nothing wrong and he is still apologizing for doing the wrong thing. This is such bullshit.
A good teacher could make an exceedingly effective lesson out of this. It might teach kids more about the subtleties of language manipulation and the ownership of history than any abstract example could.
“Germany systematically reorganized its population structure in the first half of the 20th century.”
women’s world cup team comes to mind. ok, now you’re turn to answer.
In women’s locker rooms, male reporters have to leave before the women get undressed and take their showers.
Yes, but the rules are different.
When was the last time a male sports journalist was allowed to go in a women’s locker room?
There are tons of pics and stories about female reporters having encounters with (half) naked male athletes. I’ve never heard stories about male reporters and naked female athletes or seen pictures in locker rooms. I wonder at what point do male reporters get entrance to those locker rooms? Is it after it was made…
I dunno. This seems like a bit of an overreaction to a small mistake.
No person of the opposite gender should be allowed in the locker room.
Slave families loved it! Ever since those big ol’ mean northerners abolished slavery the black family has fallen apart!
Until the publisher corrects the language teachers may look at this as an opportunity to question what is in print with his/her students. As a former teacher I quite frequently used slanted text as a teachable opportunity to encourage critical thinking in the classroom.
iHistory textbook, 2184: “Steve Jobs loved children so much that he allowed child volunteers in China to assemble some of his early devices.”