parangaricutirimicuaro
parangaricutirimicuaro
parangaricutirimicuaro

Looks like a tiny teardrop tattoo. Thought he had killed a really small insect or something.

The problem is not that she was compared to Audrey. It’s the fact that she was sporting a hairdo that black women have been using forever, but somehow Vogue’s editors are so ignorant about black culture that the only connection they could make was with a white actress whose hairdo is not even close to Lupita’s. It’s

Nothing of this matters. The point is that by passing this kind of legislation, they give the wrong and already prevalent idea that embryones are full formed baby humans who can feel pain and thus abortion is the same as infanticide. Grrr!

I think it’s the way she phrased it, since giving examples of how non discriminatory you are is always a bad idea.

Yeah, seems like he’s an entitled asshole who could have used the phrase “I support your work, I’m your fan” without much trouble, but managed to sound not just entitled but insulting with the “I paid for you” and like many, can’t see what’s so wrong about expecting famous women to do tricks and smile for him on their

No.
It was obvious by the context, and still he came back and explained. But somehow you’ve decided that he’s a liar or his thoughts and those of president Obama, who smiled and reciprocated, aren’t valid and your definition is the only one? No no.

No, because people put talcum powder on babies’ skin, not in their genitals. And babies usually stop being babies and become toddlers really fast, so they only use talk for a year or two, maybe.
The problem seems to be that apparently women used to be advised to put talc on their underwear in order to reduce odors and

And she’s had the control over those photoshoots. She’s decided how to do them, when to do them, how to look on them, etc.
The fact that you’ve taken pictures of yourself before doesn’t mean a stranger should be allowed to put a camera on your face/body when you’re walking down the street or that it wouldn’t bother

Because obviously he recycles. ;)

I know they’re separate sites and the writers have different points of view, but this is what Gawker published this morning:

Pst pst! Check the tags. :)

But how do you know that? There are plenty of movies that don’t seem that interesting to me and unless I start a really deep analysis on them, I’d probably wouldn’t notice some of the reasons. People don’t need to be actively avoiding something for it to be ignored. :/
BTW, I think whitewashing is terrible and

I don’t think they expected to erase that from the internet. I assume they were just paying that company to create popular news about UC Davis, so when people googled the university, the pepper spray situation would be relegated to the third page or something.
The problem is that in order to create popular interesting

I don’t know much about Nick Young, but I know there’s this pressure to be super manly and have multiple women that makes some dudes make up flings they didn’t have, just to brag with their group of friends. So the fact that he wanted to impress a teammate with stories about what a stud he was doesn’t necessarily mean

My nephew watched a lot of tv when he was that age and though he was a really nice and sweet boy, he’d say the most outrageous things that if thought about made a lot of sense in a cartoon world. But out of context, talking about shopping heads and pushing people to fall from cliffs sounds really scary.

I agree with you, but think it’s more complicated that that.
The confusion comes from the fact that WOC don’t want to look like blonde European women, but they DO want to look like the palest hair-dyed local women who are emulating European beauty standards.
For example, Latin American women don’t dye their hair to

I don’t think the problem is with her, but with her legal team. What kind of lawyer or person with common sense wouldn’t ask victims what happened before and after the attacks and help them be prepared for the typical awful questions from defendants? :(
I feel terrible for the victims and am mad at their team because

Its seems like they had a terrible team. Obviously they were going to be asked some of those questions, so why weren’t they coached on the best way to tell the truth and explain their complicated reactions instead of leaving them all confused and uncertain on the stand? :(

Thanks!

My question was, why is the passive “a student died” used. I haven’t seen this discussion in English and I know sometimes there are legal reasons to act with caution before using strong words like homicide. But in Spanish (at least in Spain, Argentina and Mexico) it’s pretty common for newspapers and even supporters