Look Torii, you're no longer in LA, where local officials rarely catch anyone after they've jumped the fence.
Look Torii, you're no longer in LA, where local officials rarely catch anyone after they've jumped the fence.
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Wow, that escalated.
Holy shit, that was the laziest rhetorical "I'm rubber and you're glue" I've ever read.
I'd love to know what planet you're from. Not a word of that sounds like any of my LIEBERAL LIBTARD friends. It does, however, sound a lot like the folks waving the Confederate flag outside the White House.
That's not the equivalent. The equivalent would be the n-word. Do you not understand what a racial slur is?
Sorry brother, but in my efforts to curb the use of hate language directed against minorities, gay and transgender people, the only people who have ever put up a fight are the people who are way too concerned with the possibility of not being able to call a gay person the f-word or black people n-words.
Were you trying to set a world record for most strawmen and false equivalences in a single sentence?
And I think here the message is twice as powerful because it's delivered by the controversial Notre Dame mascot.
I'm more of a libTARD.
You are probably one of them! DUMMYcrat!
Yes, because the first nation tribes towards whom that term is derogatory are all liberals.
As I've said before here, perhaps you should approach the next African-American you see and call him a "blackskin." Be sure to take notes on whether or not he finds it offensive.
Ohh, "lieberals." I see what you did there. Very clever.
Hear that? That's the thunder of scared white people stampeding over themselves to trash "political correctness" because they feel threatened by the fact that they're losing more and more avenues by which to marginalize minorities.
Police officers later apologized after they came to understand that "I ♥ Jerry's Kids" on the back of a jersey not only might have two different meanings, but that they could also be referring to two different sets of kids.
I thought it was the Penn State police department that looked the other way when confronted by troublesome people, not the other way around.