missqueenbitch
missqueenbitch
missqueenbitch

My profession is on the list of professions psychopaths are most likely to join. Still, I don’t know of any who have murdered children. I’m not saying it isn’t interesting to think about why certain people are attracted to certain professions though.

I don’t know what it isn’t empathetic to state that I genuinely have no idea what her academic work has to do with her decisions in this situation. If one were to try to understand the why of it, I would think plenty of other influences rank above this. That’s all I’m saying.

Since I can’t seem to use the edit tool anymore, I have already been corrected on her versus him. So I don’t need more corrections.

Ah my mistake. I used the wrong pronoun but I still feel the same way about her as I do him.

I don’t understand how they’re opposed. His being a great engineering student has nothing to do with his sense of morality and empathy for other human beings.

Yes that’s a huge problem that needs to be addressed but it doesn’t mean these guys are off the hook. And I disagree with you that period films are all they’re good at. They’ve done plenty of movies set in current times (or current for when they were filming) and I also don’t think period Americana means eliminating

Then you kind of also have to ask why they so often focus on stories where it may be less feasible to include a person of color into that storyline.

Yeeesss. It’s always the same people who say “Why are you so quick to judge?” who tell me I was naive to trust that guy.... It’s like, hey, you’re the assholes who persuaded me to ignore my instincts in the first place! Now I listen to myself.

It seems like a lot of men have trouble processing and trying to understand why women are pulling back from them or seem less emotionally open. It’s like why not ask about what she’s dealing with and ask more questions if you actually care about peeling back the “layers” of this “strong woman”? It seems like, in his

Michael Shannon

I thought those were just her lips? And that she always loved bold lipstick.

I totally understand, Diane Keaton. Those dresses would make any room feel drafty. I also love how she’s the only one smiling. Probably because she’s warm.

Your husband sounds lovely

I think some fault lies on the author’s shoulders as well. He’s a very good writer but he also never seems to think about focusing on any of the influential people (as few as there may be due to institutional racism and sexism) who aren’t white guys. What I noticed while reading one of his books is that he writes in

She does not look obese to me but I don’t see what the problem is with her figure. The girl has relatively thin arms a narrow waist and then a lot of fat around the hips and thighs, kind of where I expect it to be. The fact that you think this woman is obese shows how warped our ideas are about how a woman’s body

She’s a 19 year-old with an hourglass figure. I guess this is as “normal” of a body as we’re going to get in advertisements.

“We should stay alert and united and support each other to change this unfair reality and don’t let anyone sabotage our common efforts by distorting the truth.” So this isn’t really an apology. She thinks people distorted the truth, or that people didn’t get what she was saying and concentrated on the wrong thing. She

I have nothing to say except I have a date with a hot lady next week after a couple years of not dating women (for a variety of reasons that would take a while to explain but they weren’t entirely voluntary) and I am nervous/excited. I had my big queer girl awakening a couple years ago, loved it, and then moved to a

I don’t see any positive elements in there, so nope. I have friends who say things I really disagree with, things that unbeknownst to them are hurtful to me (It’s weird to come to a childhood friend as queer even though I should), but she has good qualities. She asks how I am, she seems to care about other people,

This lovely. It’s moderately cheap, seems to go with anything, and doesn’t get me easily intoxicated.