There are like 4 or 5 superhero movies per year at the most. There are lots of good movies being made these days, just as there was lots of good TV in the early 2000's despite the proliferation of one genre you don't like.
There are like 4 or 5 superhero movies per year at the most. There are lots of good movies being made these days, just as there was lots of good TV in the early 2000's despite the proliferation of one genre you don't like.
I've never heard of millennials referring to kids born after 2000. It's pretty much '80s and '90s with no clear cutoff point on either end.
I love the deposition scene where Martin Starr can't remember anything about his kids.
As examples of censorship, you've put forward
-Trigger warnings
-Standups struggling at college campuses
-Job applicants being "discriminated against" based on their personal values
At this point it's obvious that you and I have different working definitions of censorship.
Edit: I guess I never technically used the word…
The factual description of the campus itself I'm sure is accurate. But the article's content amounts to the same old reflexive "censorship" panic I see in every comments section. It has nothing to do with the real life, day-to-day function of safe spaces, which are about addressing students' mental health, not…
What are some specific examples of speech being monitored and controlled in the name of political correctness?
Do you know how it feels to be offended by something?
I find that roughly 100% of people who complain about safe spaces have no real understanding of what they are.
I wasn't aware any words had gotten banned.
Interesting theory. Care to elaborate?
The implication being that "heavy bias towards the right wing" = "secretly a Trump fanatic." This is an argument I see way too often, the conflating of a set of systemic biases, conscious or otherwise, with some sort of conspiracy. This is how anti-feminists often respond to the idea of a patriarchy, they pretend it…
lol
It's like that famous catchphrase from one of the greatest movie heroes of all time: "Why so serious?"
It's not so much that "you have to take a side" as it is that in politics, neutrality has the end effect of supporting whatever side has power. Not taking a side is kind of impossible. That's the danger of the South Park ideology; refusing to participate always has consequences.
Pet Sounds is more consistent, but Sgt. Pepper hits way higher peaks. A Day in the Life alone is worth ten Pet Sounds.
Therefore shortchanging the writers for like 70% of the work they did.
This is the most obnoxious kind of comment there is.
I've always hated hearing this word. People just use it to mean "fan." What's the point.
It's not asinine to call people what they want to be called. And you don't even have to memorize the terms; just ask. Most people won't make a big deal of it as long as you're nice about it.
I wonder if they would have the balls to say "civil rights warriors" the same way.