cry4hemp-old
Cry4Hemp
cry4hemp-old

Karl: I believe it.

@little stripes: No it makes sense. I think that modifying a design for various sizes would be costly, but it has to be said: A size 2 can't wear what a size 6 can and a size 16 can't wear what a size 6 can and so on. Different assets in different places, so to speak.

@pinkyBella: After twins my aunt went straight from a c-section to a tummy tuck all in one procedure. I was repulsed. But also in awe. It was the perfect crime. No one the wiser and all the greener.

Well, that was a gimme.

@summerwheatley: When doubt always throw on your sparkley cowboy suit. It's fool proof. Plus the prop potential is endless. The judges love chick with a lasso.

I can't wait for the InTouch cover: "How I lost all my baby wait in 7 minutes".

@SelfWrighteousMetsFan: There are social implications and possibly social mechanisms involved, but to isolate it as solely such withdraws individual accountability from the behavior.

@clevernamehere: I don't know what behavior 'eve teasing' really refers to, but I would definitely consider a violent response to a person based on his or her gender or race identification a hate crime. If violently berating, raping and abducting women because of some resentment of a perceived societal displacement

"But America is plus sized"

@PilgrimSoul: I wasn't discounting the stats on the increase of violence against women. I am displeased with the normal routine of reporting on crime against women: 50% psychological impact on the victim, 50% why the criminal did what he did and what possible justifications he might hold. You would never see that

"psychological frenzy"