frocklobster
Frock Lobster
frocklobster

I’m having a hard time with this all. My husband is a veteran and we argue about it because-and I know in my heart he’s right about this—but his stance is that we live in a country where we protect the freedoms of it’s citizens to speak out in this way and not get shot or put into prison for protesting.

This kinda feels like this crossing the line. What the woman did was wrong, ironic, kinda funny, but she didn’t harm anyone, and I thought her getting fired in the first place was too much.

It’s complicated- black men weren’t being lynched because white women were offended that they looked at them, it was white men thinking white women belonged to them, and punishing black men for looking at their trophies. I don’t really believe black men have it better than white women, I think they mostly face the

Black men were considered worthy of a right to vote long before white/any women were.

Zero surprise here. The shock and occasional angerI have sometimes seen from managers when their female employees ask for a raise or complain about their compensation is telling. Even when a dude asks for a raise and doesn’t get it, at least the manager is not surprised and/or offended by the question. Women are still

That makes a lot of sense, especially in America. The order of who gets the most respect seems to go white men, black men, white women, black women and apparently no one else exists here aside from black and white people.

You’re obviously one of the all-wrongs I used to hang with. It’s like a reunion.

I don’t feel bad for her. She needs to grow the fuck up. She reminds me of my now recovered drug addict little sister - so much drama all the time. Feeling sorry for these people doesn't get them better, it actually harms them.