libbyjean
libby
libbyjean

Yes, my heart breaks for the PTSD suffered by the rapist who got caught, convicted, and was punished with a slap on the wrist.

I almost feel guilty about how little I disapprove of this. The curse of being a bleeding-heart liberal and not a college athlete rapist, I guess.

Yeah. Wish they’d leave the guns at home, but... *shrug*.

Well, I can’t approve of this sort of thing.

It’s precisely because of his short sentence that he’ll be looking over his shoulder for the rest of his life.

Yeah...... I feel like this is really not ok. Maybe planting a yard sign or something, but *armed* protestors? Adding guns to any emotionally charged gathering is a recipe for disaster. I just hope that he slinks off with his tail between his legs and no one gets shot.

I took it as the former, but you have a point.

On one hand this quasi-mob justice makes me pretty uncomfortable (what if next time it is directed at someone far less worthy of public hatred). Then again, the legal system failed to deliver anything close to justice in this case, and I hope his crime haunts this piece of shit for the rest of his life. Thinking of

Commas are your friends.

Heinrich had previously pleaded guilty to 25 federal child pornography charges, but denied any involvement in Wetterling’s disappearance.

My parents felt the same way! Fortunately I found “The Joy of Sex” hidden under their bed and learned about all the weird things very hairy humans (it was a ‘70s edition) like to do to each other.

No only Jesus is allowed to talk to my children about sex. He should be arriving any day now. Any daaaaay.

“But I believe that the film is an opportunity to inform and educate so that these situations cease to occur on college campuses, in dorm rooms, in fraternities, in apartments or anywhere else young people get together to socialize.”

What a thoughtful op-ed. I wish we could take some of the onus off parents and institute mandatory sex education classes in school that address affirmative consent along with other sex and health-related issues. If every young person understood the difference between “yes” and “no,” at least we’d begin to establish a