sarah-yael
there's a visine for that
sarah-yael

But shouldn't we be skeptical of the tendency to moralize art? Like, where do you think we should draw the line? As a graduate student studying indigenous peoples in the Americas, I struggle with these questions.

My social life was -out of control- when I lived in my dorms (which were pretty much apartments: everyone had a single room, 1 bathroom for a 2 person unit, 2 bathrooms for a 4 person unit, shared full kitchen).

I loved it. Dark, sweet, sexy.

Sheldon Adelson, too.

Network television has become so lame. There's no innovation there anymore: they pilfer ideas from AMC, HBO, Showtime, and shit- even UK public television- to try to meet consumer preferences. Then they water the whole idea down, have it jump the shark six episodes in, and then it's canceled.

I have a couple of friends who are very close to her. According to them, this *is* Aimee. She was super positive before the accident and has brought that attitude to bear on the new situation.

I have a couple of friends who are very close to her. According to them, this *is* Aimee. She was super positive before the accident and has brought that attitude to bear on the new situation.

Oh please. Barnard is the most selective women's college in the country. Its students are awarded degrees signed by both Barnard's and Columbia's presidents. I agree that there's no reason for Barnard students to claim they went to Columbia; I'm more impressed by women who went to Barnard to be quite honest. Get the

http://jezebel.com/5797577/even-your-leggings-are-making-you-fat

As a woman, I'm tired of hearing that everything that I (and other women) can do to stop the script of rape is "victim blaming." There are patterns in the way sexual assaults occur, and I think it's useful to point those out (as this reddit thread does) in order to identify the stages at which we can change the course

or you know, because diversity makes for a better workplace and product?

but Square isn't supposed to be typical, right?

trolling or just stupid?

it's simply a sexual-act-as-putdown.

There's a cop at my university who always says this kind of thing to me. "Don't look so down." "Why don't you smile?" "Too pretty to not have a smile on your face."

True. Though this definitely didn't seem like the kind of situation in which one good person could make much of a difference. Unless someone went to sit next to her— which would have been an amazing gesture.

I think you're right about that. It'd be nice if this teachable moment was limited to the guilt induced by watching thousands of strangers trying to make someone feel better about *your* behavior. Unfortunately I think these kids are getting threats and stuff, which defeats the purpose because it makes them "victims"

which makes me think that this incident is not common. She's obviously dealt with brats, but the video was one of straight cruelty.

Did you even watch the video?

I think you've misread this situation.