mrmeseekslookatme
mrmeseekslookatme
mrmeseekslookatme

Like many Americans, my first job was flipping burgers at the local McDonalds.  This was 1987, so the McDLT was the bad boy in town.  And it.  Was.  AWESOME.  Especially when you pulled a sneaky and added a second quarter-pounder patty and more cheese for your break-time meal (I only did it once, honest).  But the

The first 3 seconds of the video are him saying the exact opposite of what the idiot tweeting this said

The other thing is that any Trump-created or -endorsed platform is never going to get anyone other than his supporters on it, and his whole social media oeuvre is about getting a rise out of people who hate him so the aforementioned supporters can think they “owned the libz” and send him money or buy whatever shitty

That’s 78% of the entire population (including children). It’s well into the 90s for vulnerable populations.

stop trying to make Kookie dooks a thing. Aint gonna happen

Sad, predictable end for her and her family. The limits of benevolent sexism and any privilege society may give women is on display here. She looks the right part. She did every thing right and took a male “guardian” with her, she had the right family who cared about. Still she ended up murdered. Beyond getting people

I’m familiar with both adages and I would say that I’ve found the first to be truer than the second in our current era. Similar to you, and contrary to my parents, my views have become increasingly progressive as I’ve aged. I grew up in a moderate/right leaning family of hypocritical but largely anodyne political

I think the second one used to be a lot more common, as young middle-class people who start off wanting to Change the World get a bit older and a bit more invested in the system, until they eventually end up in management with a family and a house that they theoretically own, and find that they are too bought in to

As I get older, I get more liberal because I’m convinced everything around me is bullshit or fraudulent. I refuse to support the GOP or any GOP candidate. That entire party is FULL OF SHIT. I have much darker opinions of the kind of fate the 1/6ers and their enablers should face but I will not share those.

I don’t know Rose McGowan and am not qualified to comment on her experiences. But over my own journey in life I have encountered a few individuals who cite personal trauma as the reason they became Republicans. Not conservatives in the classic sense, but acolytes of the modern GOP. The reasons seem to be similar to

Here's hoping Nicholas washes away all the rapists.

I’m not a nurse, but I work with them regularly, and they are truly just regular people. There’s probably been a sliding doors moment in all of their lives, and many of them could have easily become make-up artists or fitness instructors or car dealers or kindergarten teachers, etc. Some of them are passionate about

Republicans oppose education in general, but especially for not-rich people. Because the ignorant masses are there to serve and obey, as has been their purpose in life since time immemorial.

A lot of people out there went to one awesome party senior year in high school and seem to spend the rest of their lives trying to recreate it.

I remember Bennifer 1.0 and it did seem like they were really into each other but the press circus around them was fucking bonkers and I totally buy that it put a lot of undue stress on them and drove them apart. I think most people have that person that they wish they could have had a do-over with, so seeing them get

The worst part of this is it will probably reaffirm her faith and make her even more of a looney.

See:  Critical Race Theory

“Nobody can blame GOP voters for wanting a phone that prioritizes privacy”

No offense to these history scholars, the most damaging conspiracy theory in history is religion. Full stop. The perpetuation that some omniscient and omnipresent invisible being/s setting up arbitrary rules and guidelines we must follow and have faith in have sparked more wars, murder spree’s, genocides, prejudices,

Sorry, Patrick Morrisey is absolutely wrong. Of course states should “vote with their wallet” in banning state funded travel to states that implement heinous policies.