I swear to god if gay men started harassing straight men aggressively in large numbers across the country, street harassment would end in a week.
I swear to god if gay men started harassing straight men aggressively in large numbers across the country, street harassment would end in a week.
Um, yes, as a black woman, I should totally sympathize with white slave owners: "Oh, but they were just acting out their white supremacy because because uh that was the common opinion of the day, and so that makes it okay and me wrong for getting incredibly upset about it. I shouldn't call that shit out because then…
I haven't watch the show but none of the previews were funny so I didn't. But if what everyone is saying is true, that it depicts a female judge as being unworthy of the judgeship, people are more likely to attribute that to her femaleness than her being a shitty person. That's fucked up, but that's the world we live…
You could tell Maya Angelou was a black person because white authors rarely write black characters as well as she did. But I agree with ThunderingLogic, your characters should come to life, all of them. If only the white male characters in a story have any depth, chances are it's a white male that's written them.
THIS. And she thinks she's the voice of my generation. [insert the hardest eyeroll here].
My problem with Minaj is that she treats herself like a sex object. That may not be a popular opinion here but it's much different than rape. If Minaj was walking down the street in nothing but her favorite thong, that still wouldn't constitute someone raping her. But if practically all your music, all your artwork is…
Just going to leave this wonderful comment from facebook here: "Jordan Williams I mean what else is there to ask her about... What's her last single about? Ass? Oh ok..."
Definitely the best part of the entire video. Nicely done, nicely done.
"The music of Black-ish is basically an acknowledgement that it sees us." This.
No, I was just commenting my thoughts. I saw your comment as purely descriptive.
Yeah, this doesn't seem like power to me. This seems like strict gender roles which rob both genders of some power. What if there's a man that wants to care for his children? Or a woman that doesn't want any. What if a woman wants to hunt or have a job? This just seems like another part on the inequality spectrum.
This just doesn't sound fun or healthy. The strict gender roles, the power inequality. I'll pass :/ I think everyone, regardless of culture, should aspire to more.
NFL players.
I think this is an AIDS theory.
Yes. It makes absolutely no sense to me when any group besides straight white men are like "ewwwwww homosexuals", because at one point in their lives whether they want/ed to admit to themselves or not, someone said that about them because of either their gender or race. When straight white men, or even straight white…
Imagine if there were multiple incidences of white NFL players saying racial slurs to black and other nonwhite NFL players. Imagine if some of these cases even turned violent. Now imagine if Rihanna's performance had been canceled because she was black and they didn't want to "cause any problems" So, they just changed…
It depends on what those normal opinions are because there are a lot of normal opinions that happen to also be misogynistic. That's why misogyny still persists, those normal opinions never get questioned and called out.
" Put your penis where your mouth is." I feel like this is an MRA problem to begin with lmao.
It's not about confidence in any beliefs. From what I"m seeing, and what I've felt when people have mansplained, it's their confidence that they are doing it 100% correctly. And that is a problem because then you have a man, declaring himself an expert on women and our lives and that's the very definition of…
Just a theory, but I partly think this disconnect of empathy stems from male friendships being emotionally empty. If you can't even respect or trust your friends, people who you are seemingly more alike than other people, how would you ever respect or trust someone who's different than you.