Yes. And listening patiently and without judgment to others' experiences is how we learn and grow.
Yes. And listening patiently and without judgment to others' experiences is how we learn and grow.
That's the point. That, due to culture, we start at an early age to rob our children of physical autonomy.
Look how well that's going.
I think it's justifiable to feel afraid when someone posts your address alongside chilling graphic descriptions of the violent acts they plan to and invite others to commit against you.
But did he do that to ensure that all strippers everywhere would realize the danger of talking about the salad-tossing preferences of all of their famous tween-star-turned-rapper clients?
It's difficult, and I would suggest unwise, to try to coexist peacefully with someone who is working for your destruction.
This is exactly why the designation as a hate group matters.
It is, however, his fault if he chooses to act in a film that is a discernible piece of crap.
Seriously! I lived on coffee, cigarettes, pints of Haagen Dazs, and fucking my first year in law school.
Ummm, all you folks who think its hysterical to: jizz in a rubber and tie it to the railing; wipe your boogers on the stairway bannister; piss in the corner of every subway elevator; or take a stinky, corn-filled dump on the subway stairs - here's the problem, ASSFACE. Some poorly-paid transit worker has to take a…
I can't even with the way this show portrays both law school and the defense bar.
I love that Robert Downey Jr.'s "press tour" is (according to the pic) coming through the Port Authority Bus Station.
Well, bless your heart, you're welcome!
And yet millions of people find it a convenient comfortable way to travel each year.
Ohhhhh, that's what feminism is! Thanks for telling me.
1. Please, please, please let @donglover be nearly naked and dancing in this film (I refuse to call it anything as plebeian as a movie.)
I envisioned a whooooollllleeeee other post when I clicked through. #doubledongdisappointed
It's not necessary to extrapolate to postulate that a woman who dresses her child like an accessory, rarely looks at her when being photographed, and (worst of all) appears in public in a lace jumpsuit/corselette combo is both a bad parent and a bad human being.
I love these people who are so opinionated that they declare that because a (tacky) thing can be done, it's acceptable to do it.
And I'm sure Ray Rice might say the same thing about Janay.