teenmom
teenmom
teenmom

I’m not even talking about the content. I’m talking about the inevitable person who has to come here and smugly predict what kind of comments we’re going to get on a specific article. It’s annoying, smug and pointless. I’m allowed to have pet peeves.

You know what? Smug predictive comments like this are just as annoying as the comments you denigrate. What’s your point? To feel smart? To feel superior? You were in the greys once too.

I’m sad about the passing of xojane. The no-nonsense articles about makeup were pretty great, and I got lots of good tips from both the articles and the comments. It’s easy to hate on the confessional tone of the site, but those ridiculous IHTM articles were good entertainment.

“The site’s cartoonishly controversial content immediately became great fodder for not only feminist blogs”

Wait, this article is about Jezebel?

Y’all realize that 75% of Jezebel readers are completely oblivious to their own white privileges even as they set about requoting “the invisible knapsack”, right?

I’ll miss it, if only because I was allowed to participate in the comments section at XO. I’ve been here since well before Kinja debuted, and I was an approved commenter then. In April I’ll be celebrating 4 years in the grays. Maybe I’ll bake a cake! /kicks rocks

Brown’s offensive reference to the wrong ethnic origin goes nicely with Ansari’s joke about people telling him to “go back to...the country you’re from!”. His follow up is that the racists tend to not be geography buffs.

We truly are living through the golden age of the man child, aren’t we?

Aziz’s bit about G.W. Bush in his opening monologue cracked me up. “What the hell has happened? I’m sitting here wistfully watching old George W. Bush speeches? Just sitting there- ‘What a leader he was!’ 16 years ago I was certain this dude was a dildo, now I’m sitting there like ‘He guided us with his eloquence!’”

Yes. The catharsis and relief of being around like-minded individuals finally made me feel something other than the despair and hopelessness that I’d felt since November.

It’s already started to dampen my motivation, even though I’m really trying not to let it. I’m not generally a rally person because I and am mildly disabled (I don’t have good balance and can’t run or manuver easily from danger so crowds are hard) It was a big deal for me to travel for the march. I’ve always donated,

I saw a sign on the internet that said “so bad even introverts are here.” I have severe social anxiety and this is me, too. I was so worried there would be just a few of us, and it would be awkward and we’d feel useless. But it was a huge crowd and there was so much support.

Replying in a vain attempt to bump. Getting real tired of the Left’s “Hot to Not Make Friends or Influence People” sticht.

Thank you for this. I usually agree 100% with Kara but I can’t get on board with this. I am a black American woman, over 30 and this was my first protest. I usually only give money to the causes I support but felt the need to stand in solidarity and make my presence known this time. My friends and I went to a Women’s

Thank you for posting this! I’ve been looking for ways to get involved.

Kara doesn’t know if she can trust you, though. Sorry. Post every day for 2 months and she will know you are pure of heart and you can be in her important activist club.

My protest is better than your protest

While I understand there are valid critiques of the Women’s March, and they have been discussed elsewhere including other Jezebel articles, this here piece just kinda stinks of “gotta pick apart something!” I think part of the strength of the right is that they rarely eat each other the way we do on the left. No one

“Ain’t I A Woman, Too?