Day 1: Amal lets Brad know he’s more than welcome and she and George are “here” for him.
Day 1: Amal lets Brad know he’s more than welcome and she and George are “here” for him.
I had a boyfriend in high school too. We even went to the prom together. He sent a lovely card when my wife and I got married, and I just sent a gift to welcome the new baby he and his husband are expecting this winter.
Such a weird question. Wamach is 36, the same age I am. I can’t imagine any situation where someone would be interested enough in who I dated in high school to research it and ask me about it.
terry really let me down with this :(
Actual comment I saw this weekend: “Hillary will be just as bad for reproductive rights as Trump!”
While I would have loved to see Holland Taylor’s reaction, it was so boss that she brought Marcia Clark for this.
Somebody put a bird on it.
She looks like she’s had all of her internal organs temporarily removed to accommodate the line of this dress.
OMG Jessie Graff, cancel everything.
I’m currently on Effexor. I was on Wellbutrin but it made me break out in full body hives. Disappointing because other than that inconvenience it worked quite well.
Probably a dumb question, but have you gone to the website from a laptop? I just cancelled mine yesterday, and I had to go to the full website to do it.
FRESH HOT TIP: if you have the feels about providing medically necessary treatment to our prisoners, consult the Constitution. And if you’re worried about people who are so desperate for medical coverage that they’re willing to GO TO PRISON to get it, then try improving our healthcare system, rather than making it…
omg how much money is the taxpayer giving to this criminal that could be spent on bombs to defend my feelings
I hope this ruling will set a precedent for federal/state prisoners. I work in federal court and we have several active cases where transgender inmates are not getting proper medical treatment for their transitions and/or they are being housed in a prisoner for the opposite gender that they identify with.
Yes. One of my friends, who is sixty now, was diagnosed in 1984, half his lifetime ago. He seems very healthy now, lots of yoga and working out and takes great care of himself, and is likely at this point to die from something else, hopefully a more traditional old person’s disease. Yet every several years there is a…
Med student here. Here’s the thing: It’s not the AIDS/HIV that kills you. It’s the tons of opportunistic infections. There are a ton of bacteria/virus/protozoa that people with fully functioning immune systems never have to worry about getting, but if you are severely immunocompromised (i.e. aids, kidney transplant,…
Yeah, thankfully the meds — and side effects — have improved dramatically over the years.
My understanding is that HIV is somewhat manageable (but extremely expensive to keep at bay), and AIDS is still quite the killer. We’re just better at holding off the serious ailments associated with AIDS, and people are not dying at the age of 25 as often anymore.
Largely, but not entirely. People do still die from it, particularly if they had it awhile before they were diagnosed. It’s become so accepted as something manageable that a lot of people no longer realize it’s still deadly.