isadog--disqus
a dog
isadog--disqus

To be fair, sometimes they're exploded.

According to the link, we also want to know "How to join ISIS?" :/

Yes, thank you! There is some serious estrangement happening there!

Les Miserables was published in 1862, the Paris Commune was 1871. It wasn't a 'radical socialist group,' it was a city-wide uprising/general strike which became the de facto government of Paris. If you're interested, there's a solid history of the commune by Stewart Edwards that's pretty widely available. If you

You edited, you monster.

It must be a Flowers for Algernon kind of situation.

Congratulations!

This place is full of GENIUSES!

Yes, thank you. When kids are at school we temporarily relinquish custody to the state. And the state knows better than to feed kids unhealthy shit. It has the resources available to set standards for healthy eating that individual households might not, usually for economic reasons. And the state has a

This is late, but I thought the fact that she replied, "Not really," rather than simply, "No," was significant. So if she's being "real," the answer is no. They're supposed to like LCD Soundsystem, but in that moment they're being "real" and admitting to not actually liking them. Which is why he subsequently

Ions. And he kind of did, because they were in solution. So, so sorry for this.

No, see, you've got it all wrong. It's the difference between saying someone's guilty and saying a crime occurred.

You can abide by "innocent until proven guilty" without presuming the accusation to be a lie. That amounts to presuming a crime didn't occur. Law enforcement proceeds in most instances (excepting rape, this is the problem) under the presumption that a crime did occur. It's the courts that are burdened with

I sincerely thought you were trying to start a pun thread with "can."

I read this in the voice of George Plimpton as George Templeton Strong.

I finally got around to watching this, and I know this will probably
never be read by anyone (Poop! Fart!), but I'm surprised I haven't heard
anyone compare this to La Dolce Vita. It has the same episodic
structure, same unlikeable, numb protagonist, and a lot of the same
themes. Post-9/11 Brooklyn as opposed to

I finally got around to watching this, and I know this will probably
never be read by anyone (Poop! Fart!), but I'm surprised I haven't heard
anyone compare this to La Dolce Vita. It has the same episodic
structure, same unlikeable, numb protagonist, and a lot of the same
themes. Post-9/11 Brooklyn as opposed to

Stupid, sexy Hitler…

You're making me uncomfortable because disagreeing with objectivists is something I usually take for granted.

Wasn't Lizzy Caplan's character in a Seth Rogen movie on Party Down and her part was cut? She can't catch a break, this girl. I don't know how to separate fiction from real life.