mrpostit
cbabgeae
mrpostit

This is crazy, like, I didn’t even say that and you put it in quotes. One more time to reiterate:

Part of the reason for the backlash against PC culture is that political correctness almost always involves a younger generation telling an older generation that they’ve been doing things wrong their entire life (“God, Dad, you can’t call them Orientals anymore...”), and any time you’re being told by someone decades

I’m not referring to people with opinions about news stories, I’m explicitly calling the art students at Emory college (who protested “Trump 2016" written in chalk) crybaby, oversensitive cowards. Life is really, really hard for almost all of us, much tougher to deal with than that nonsense. My hope is that we ALL

“But out in the real world, it usually pays to not be an insensitive, judgmental prick. You can’t control the obnoxiousness of other people, and you’ll go insane if you try. But you can do your best to make everyone else feel comfortable and welcome. Just because the world is cruel doesn’t mean you have to be. You,

Its braised, sliced Pokémon on rice or noodles.

As a woman who has been in LTR with at least 2 men with very disordered body image issues, I’m glad you are participating in this discussion. I don’t think you’re trying to compare or raise one gender over the other. As a feminist who believes that feminism helps all people, the body image stuff is huge for everyone

Yeah, I’m a little uncomfortable with the idea of “what 8-12-year-old has CURVES for goodness sake!!!?!?!”

1. Comparing and Contrasting: I am so not into comparing and contrasting. If you want to do that regarding body image, then I suppose white women should keep their privileged mouths shut in favor of women of color. I don’t agree with that at all. How about diseases? Cancer, diabetes, AIDS, Alzheimer’s, Acne. Can I

Such an article would never be written, and as YesYesThisAgain himself said, women and girls do have it worse. However, dismissing the physical insecurities of men and boys as mere “every human being has issues” is somewhat callous. Growing up, I was always much shorter and skinnier than my peers, which coupled with

“I don’t want your magazine telling my nine-year-old that she needs to feel ‘confident’ in her swimsuit. She has no current thoughts about NOT feeling confident in her swimsuit.”

Seventh graders get curves and start to get uncomfortable about them (or their lack of) so an article on dressing for your figure that has one pieces and two pieces for every shape, that’s pretty good. Swimwear is traumatic for every middle school girl. From the one that has developed and is freaked out about it to

Right, I’d have no problem with that article in a magazine that’s for middle school aged kids.

Tweens want to feel grown up, and this ipecac is regularly fed to older girls in teen magazines. I’m sure the idea was to ape an “older” angle to appeal to girls who are starting to feel their individuality without reasoning out what they were actually saying/doing with the article.

So it isn’t discriminatory to ban male-only clubs but it is discriminatory to ban female-only clubs?

The less lighthearted questions is how does copyright law apply toward a script? When the thing you’re copyrighting is essentially the story itself, does that extend to the plot points?

“claims to have inside sources that tell him story points before an episode hits TV screens”

Didn’t Blac Chyna ever watch the show before she was hired?

Oh the heartbreak, “her moment was taken from her.” Her precious moment of telling the twitterverse that she’s having her second baby. That’s such a milestone, a rite of passage that every girl dreams of from the time she is so small, this is an utter tragedy. How has this come to pass that in 2016, a supposedly

Congratulations! What a win to privileged white women in ivy league universities.