julieannie
julieannie
julieannie

It's terrifying. I mean, that's really serious. And most law enforcement folks know that often the last action an abused woman takes before she's killed by her abuser is taking out a restraining order. It's advised because it's typically grounds for harsher punishment to violate the order than committing the abuse.

The Sarah Hyland item is so scary. When an employee at a rehab center calls and tells you to get a restraining order, there must have been some seriously fucked shit happening. I hope she stays safe.

The first rule of Pie Club is you do not talk about Pie Club. The second rule of Pie Club is we tend to be good on fruit, so maybe consider bringing a nice coconut cream or Pecan next time.

Close by? Shut the hell up. They didn't have access to a car or public transportation, plus she couldn't AFFORD to take two days off work plus 300-600 for the abortion. Get your head out of your ass.

Yeah, and if they'd sentenced her to a class on why you should only get pharmaceuticals from a licensed pharmacy and some amount - even a large amount - of community service I'd say you had a point. But 12-18 months behind bars? That's excessive. She's not a risk to the community, she's not going to reoffend, and she

There was no public transportation and they couldn't afford for BOTH PARENTS to take off two days of work to take their ONE CAR to get this done. They also didn't have the money for the abortion. She didn't really have another solution. Not really.

I've had intelligent, educated family members tell me with complete seriousness that they thought international online pharmacies were legal. "If they weren't legal, why would I be able to buy stuff?"

I have to be real that I boned my husband ridiculous after watching this. Okay, not IMMEDIATELY after, but the seeds had been planted for sexy married boning.

"DAT ASS"

My husband has PTSD, and because he developed it because of physical and psychological abuse in his home of origin plus a violent home invasion — not through military service — he already feels like his PTSD is somehow illegitimate. So I find your attitude to be unhelpful at best, and reinforcing the prejudice that

omg my dog is SO INTO being in the bathroom with me. if i kinda close the door over she BARGES in (she's really into BARGING in to wherever i am) but she gets there and is like :DDDDDDD WE'RE TOGETHER IN THE SAME ROOM!!!! and i am like, we were just together in the same room a second ago.

If she got pregnant before she was married, it means one of her younger siblings was in the room when it happened...

Mmm but what word would you prefer? Throw, lob, chuck? All about the same. "Place" would be nice, but inaccurate.

If you actually click through the links to the original SF Gate article, you will see that there is NO evidence that Yelp has ever altered reviews.

It's on a list with "slapped or hit; kicked, bit, or hit with a fist; beat up; choked; burned or scalded." I think it would be pretty obvious what the context is, and I doubt anyone would self-report throwing a pillow at or to someone as an act of violence. They're referring to incidents like the time when I was a kid

You need to provide identifying information NOT an ID. It isn't a crime to walk on the street without an ID.

Depends on the state. There are five "papers please" states and nine more where they can ask without cause, but you can say no. California is neither. They can't even ask without cause. Unfortunately, being black is always probable cause.

Everything else about this aside:

Using the phrase "bringing up the race card" as this cop did isn't even a red flag warning of racism. It's a huge, flashing neon sign that says "THIS IS ABOUT RACE."

For the people who don't know: any person has the right to refuse to show an ID to the police. Refusing to show an ID is not cause for arrest.