The author says: I hesitate to state my own opinion on the BridePrice app, mostly because my point of view is so very western.
The author says: I hesitate to state my own opinion on the BridePrice app, mostly because my point of view is so very western.
He was mad simply because a men's only gym would be seen as discriminatory. Life is so unfair for men!
UGH, why does he even care?! It's not like "women only" gyms are nicer than co-ed ones, for fuck's sake.
I am furious right there with you girl. And here is why. I don't want to be afraid of men. I don't want to think that anytime I walk past a man and I am alone I need to be on the defensive. I don't want to cringe when I am out for a jog and a car pulls up on the side of the road to park and all I can think about…
"I'm furious that my parents ingrained in me from a very young age that I should never wear heels because I should always be ready to run at a moment's notice"
I had a similar conversation with my college roommate's boyfriend. He was angry about 'women only' gyms. I couldn't make him understand that for too many reasons to count, lots of women feel vulnerable being in front of men when wearing gym attire.
I don't know if it's that I'm still feeling so deeply saddened by the Isla Vista shootings of a few days ago, or Maya Angelou's passing, but by the end of this article I was in angry/exhausted tears. It feels hopeless sometimes, because no matter what you say, there are still people who don't believe any of this…
I'm also angry for the many girls and women for whom the risk isn't out on a late night walk, but right in their very homes. Something about the place that should be the safest actually holding the most danger is just so cruel, and so very damaging.
Are we speaking of the same case? He had an arsenal of weapons and a bunch of screeds about his planned massacre when the police were called. That has nothing to do with the discussion that we're having about his motivations, which are clearly set out in excruciating detail. We're trying to talk about violent…
I also think it has to do with classism, had a homeless black guy made a similar manifesto, he would have been in prison but a rich white and they are like meh.
That the police don't deal well with the mentally ill is a truism and a discussion for any other article on the matter. This is about the misogynistic entitlement that contributed.
You seem to mistake critical success for the thing that the studios actually care about: commercial success.
Off topic, but why the fuck didn't the police decide to go forward with her case? And I hope this entitled little rapist shit loses his case SO MUCH.
makin' babies in the kitchen is the best kind of makin' babies
He's definitely not relevant.
I know, the headline is something that the Onion would've come up with, and it would've fit more neatly into the world if it actually WERE satire. It would've been blackly funny. But knowing it's real, this guy ranks up there with Richard Ramirez in the Soullessness category.
I really don't want to have sex in my kitchen. The tile is hard, it's in the middle of the house, unsexy lighting.
First off: Joe the Plumber is still a thing? Like, has no one told him that 15 minutes is not supposed to last seven years?
In a stunning turn of events, Baby Boomer White Man makes it all about him.