elumere11
elumere11
elumere11

No, but everyone can if they want to. I'm happy that you are in a position to not care about black life being taken, but everyone isn't in that place of privilege.

I've seen so very many "this is the ONE ice bucket challenge you should watch" that I almost dismissed this one. Fortunately my love of O-Jones and D-Stew made me look. This really is the best and most meaningful one I've seen and I hope it gets the attention it deserves. Thanks, Dodai.

I think the point is to not allow frivolous things like internet fads (the ALS cause is good, the fact that it's a fad isn't) to distract us from what we should be paying attention to: innocent people being murdered by the very people who are supposed to be protecting them.

When my brother and I were little, my dad straight-up told his racist parents that he wanted them in their grandchildren's lives, but that if they ever said anything bigoted in front of us that we wouldn't be visiting anymore. They clearly listened, because I had no idea my grandparents were racist until my parents

If you don't draw the line at homophobia and racism, I would be interested in what you consider a bridge too far.

I come from a long line of people I'd like to refer to as "passively racist." There is no outright hatred, no race-based discrimination, but there are a lot of stereotypes that seem to permeate their views of minorities (especially poor minorities). I used to fight tooth-and-nail when I was a teenager but past a

If they are racist, delete the "educated" and "great people" parts...

My advice to my students (college) - when a member of the family makes a racist comment at a family gathering, loudly say, "I've got to take a shit" and leave the room. Makes it into a politeness as opposed to a political issue. They stop saying racist things and you'll stop announcing you have to take a shit when

I realized when I was 15 how incredibly racist and bigoted my extended family is. To the point that I feel as though I am violating my own sense of morality and my own responsibility to the world by associating with them. So when I turned 18 I cut them out of my life. I get questions from people being like oh but

Friend #1 and #2 are assholes. Friend #3 was merely an idiot.

Yup. Like how I won't date people on OKC who won't date people of another race, or who don't believe in gay marriage, despite being the same race as them, and not gay. I don't care that the beliefs don't directly preclude a relationship, they still speak to your values.

I don't think there's anything wrong with looking down on someone because of things that they can control. It's when you look down on someone because of factors beyond their control (race/gender/sexuality/religion/nationality/etc.) that we run into issues.

Everybody in this life has his or her personal line that cannot be crossed. I want you to ask yourself what your line is.

All 3 of these friends are assholes.

"The figure places Spacey into an elite club of network stars who make over $500,000 per episode. According to TV Guide, it includes Mark Harmon for "NCIS" ($525,000), "Two and a Half Men" actors Jon Cryer ($650,000) and Ashton Kutcher ($750,000), and "The Big Bang Theory" stars Jim Parsons, Kaley Cuoco, and Johnny

I still love this:

No, but when you put it back in your shorts it dribbles a tiny bit. Some cruel joke of nature is that putting it back in your pants does something weird to your dick and a little more comes out. And then bathing suits, because they're like nylon nightmares or whatever, make the tiny bit of moisture really obvious

No matter how you shake and how you dance, those last three drops land in your pants.

No, he's joking! Haha, just a joke! Man, there are a lot of other great posts on the internet today!

YOU ARE NOT SUPPOSED TO TALK ABOUT THE DRIBBLE!