day2night-old
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day2night-old

@amowls: I'm the same way! We should start a book club...err, pr0n club. I like how this article touches on that very concept: "the mysteries of desire".

@lollilove: nah, you knew she was well enough to Tweet afterwards.

@unmoldednicole: You're saying he wasn't at yours too?!? I thought Crispin Glover's nudie photography was a rite of passage. Last time I answer an ad on Craigslist.

@Pierce Nichols: Agreed! It can work (and the questions listed above are great for begining a relatioship), but the red flag is the conflicting attitudes towards sex.

@ILikePineapples: It would be like a pissed off journalist writing an article where every other word was the f-word and then submitting it to the editor. Sure, he was a jerk to write the article like that, but it is the editor's job to not let it go to presses. That being said, the woman deserves to go to jail, but

@BebeBambalam: sounds like corrupt policing to me. Innocent before proven guilty.

@PhillyLass: Oh I hear you. I would be terrified too. My argument was why were these specific men arrested? The woman didn't name-names. This is a police screw up, and they need to take credit for that. That being said, I didn't mean to detract from the original argument. But stupid people will always do stupid

@suzy-q: I'm not questioning his breakdown. Hell, if a cop drives by me, even if I am not doing anything wrong at all, I'll break a sweat. What I mean is this woman didn't name-names. What led to their arrests? And why is this being used to make her feel guilty? Just like the cutting her clothes and hair, and giving

@Gavagirl: I should have been more clear. This woman didn't target a group to accuse. She didn't say "Billy, my mechanic". Under what grounds were these men arrested?

I'm interested to know why the innocent man hurt himself and described the ordeal as "torture". This isn't the fault of Woman Who Cried Rape, that seems to indicate a corrupt police force. Which is why I'm surprised the articles linked brought it up at all.

@yeahisaidit: But from an education perspective, I think it highlights the issue well. No one would *expect* to learn how to be a spy from 007 Films, no one should expect to learn how to have sex from porn films. That's what Cosmo and their G-Spot Treasure Maps are for (I kid!)

@Mad_Mulatto: I agree. Charlie Sheen is one of the highest paid (if not highest) television actor. And it isn't just the men, female stars get away with a whole lot too (not violence or neglect). Hollywood is a little messed up.

@kavitabk: thanks for shedding some light!

@laureltreedaphne: While I agree that I don't think the sentiment is racist in nature, I do believe that the perpetuating the "white is beautiful and you cannot be successful unless you are white" is troubling. And although our culture isn't without self-hatred ("must be a size zero or no one will love me" kind of

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Unilever (the parent company of Vaseline) also has a product marketed in India called "Fair & Lovely". The ads are seriously disturbing. A young lady is turned down for a job (and is gossiped about) and disappoints her father. He finds her a cream that makes her lighter, gets the job, and is hit on by an attractive

@fatchickintheTARDIS: I think Katy made him change it. The one I have doesn't seem to work any more!

@weaselina: +1! Ha. Aren't all moms like this? "My magazines".. classic.