reportedly, this map is based on a real city! what a rip-off! i hope they paid those city planners royalties and apologized for plagarizing them!
reportedly, this map is based on a real city! what a rip-off! i hope they paid those city planners royalties and apologized for plagarizing them!
new byline pic, huh? it kind of makes you look like a politician, like mnuchin or something
what, no Smash Mouth?
platform?
oh sweet, i’m in seat 1. I like this idea
there’s no other way to read your comment. you popped up to try to score a point and now you’re salty you failed
To highlight the hypocrisy of cons who engage in a fictitious behaviour they themselves dreamed up
We have a perfectly good term for that. It’s performance and that’s the reason Gita used it.
Labeling things “toxic” is ironically one of the most toxic, virtue signaling greatest hits ever
it looks like it’s cut into 3 or 4 pieces. either that, or the wrapping is oddly layered. but you can easily get large spring roll wrappers, so that makes no sense.
anyone played Tricky Towers? I love that one
the term he’s referring to is “virtue signalling,” not “SJW”
I don’t agree, most people use it to simply mean that the person referred to is being performative with their views, not that they don’t actually believe what they are saying. Here’s wikipedia’s definition, FWIW:
do you remember that whole “lorax-approved” Mazda ad tie-in? that was the worst
terms can indeed become toxic by association. look at the swastika, for example. it long predates nazism, but try telling to someone that your tattoo is just because of your devotion to eastern mysticism and see how they react
yea, hence my caveat
This sounds a lot like what people mean when they say “virtue signalling,” as toxic as that phrase has become
Could some wrestling fan tell me why he has a plate of pancakes?
Why does everyone give him a pass for street racing, too? ok, in the particular accident that killed him, he wasn’t driving. but so what? he was a participant. what if they had killed someone in that accident?
There’s a pretty big production goof in one of the biggest movies of all time, Lawrence of Arabia. Throughout the whole movie, the editors left large empty black bars on the top and bottom of the screen. It’s actually very distracting to me, but nobody ever seems to mention it