tammy612
tammy612
tammy612

since it's his nutso vomit about his perceived injuries, damages, and motivations, I absolutely think we have to pay attention to his meaning and accept it. It may not be rational by our measure, but it was an overwhelming drive by his.

But without the shooter's actual words, we can't use what he says to refute the excuses people come up with for him, like he can't have been misogynistic because he killed men, too. For once we have proof that women, and specific aspects about his dealings with women, were part of his story. The MRAs and misogynists

But these creeps don't want real women. They want the trophy women, the women the media and our culture have led them to expect are their due for the time in their life when they rack all the successful man points, or they think they have. They want an "arm charm," a Playboy bunny or Las Vegas showgirl with no

They're symptoms of a disease, the most extreme expression of which is mass murder.

I don't think you're high in the least. Plenty of us have been saying this for a long time, but we've simply been called jealous femiNazis. You can't tell straight white men that now they know how women, minorities, and LBGQT people feel when straight white men told them to suck it up, though, because they get all

He killed his roommates because he wanted to have some pre-girl killing. His main target was the sorority girls, and then all the pretty women out there, and then he meant to kill everyone else. Didn't you read what he actually wrote? Other people, i.e. men, were the side show; all women were his main target. He

my mother's father fought in WWI, but only late in the war. I got interested in it when I read poet and novelist Robert Graves' (I, Claudius)Farewell to All That, his biography of his service during the war. He talks about his friends who were writers and poets and also fought at the same time. I've been reading

Using "twat" as an insult doesn't help, either. I know it's common in the UK, and I wish it weren't.

Maybe Wikipedia says so, but it looks awful round for a semi-natural event to me. Still, I accept that *you* aren't storyin' us.

You're just storyin' us.

::scratches head, in my best hillbilly:: Yep. That's a big `un, all right.

"Honey, where's Cuddles?" "Oh, he was restless, so I let him go outside for a while." "You WHAT?!" "well, I told him to stay in the yard . . . "

do any of these people READ? (More than the Bible and magazines)

The remedy is simple. Had Columbia only kicked those they found confirmed of committing sexual assault out of the university and off campus, then any names that were posted would earn the posters libel charges. If you have a gripe, take it to the university, whose failures under Title IX and the Clery Act are

Where exactly does our experience of rape culture begin if not in witnessing the response of public institutions to the statements of those who protest rape culture? Art is a medium of perception, and this artist's perception was that her piece protested rape culture (our hypocrisy in showing as much female flesh as

::headdesk:: ::headdesk:: ::headdesk:: ::headdesk:: ::headdesk::

this student has more courage than I could have dreamed of at her age. And both her art and her experience amplify the statement she's making.

Just how does invalidating this woman's experience because you feel your experience hasn't been addressed serve as justice for you or her? Do you plan to go through life saying that every injustice you encounter doesn't matter compared to yours? There are all kinds of injustice in the world, and if you only focus

Not even funny once. The whole point to a bathroom is privacy. Shame on the photo taker, and shame on Jezebel (that means you, EGR) for re-posting it.

I have loved this man since he played Owney Madden in "The Cotton Club", and every other part I've seen him in since then. We've lost a wonderful actor with a great success story.