waldergrey
WalderGrey
waldergrey

I could explain to you that calling out people with invisible and defensive white privilege doesn't mean calling out all white people. But I suspect I'm actually communicating with one of the former. So here instead is some preliminary reading to help you sort out some basic racism 101 stuff: http://www.dailydot.com/op

Yeah, if you don't think racism is a thing...with respect to disease, population, land, and resource control...amongst many other issues...then I recommend...I dunno...google or something.

Sending a child to their room is punishment. LOCKING THEM IN is abuse. If you have children and are locking them in rooms, stop. Either way, there's way more shitty things listed in the affidavit so I'm not sure what point you're trying to get across. That he's not really a bad guy?

Really similar kind of thing for me and my wife. I had a bi-lateral lung transplant (almost 5 years ago!) and when I was getting listed we got a burner phone to give that number only to my transplant nurse coordinator so that we wouldn't jump every time our individual phones rang. (I ended up only being on the list

I was definitely a gay kid. As in gay from the start hey look that kid goan be GAY gay. It's definitely something that's noticeable in some kids really early on and I along with several guys I've met in my life knew we were "different" from our early memories on. You may not realize what that difference is until

You mean, BenGHEYzi.

"Cramblett goes on to say that she doesn't know much about black people and it's a lot to learn; in addition, her small Ohio home of Uniontown is "too racially intolerant."

It sucks that Payton will eventually realize that her racial identity was/is a source of distress to her parents. Hopefully they find a way to explain that to her before she finds out on her own. Imagine Googling your parents names when you're 10 (or whenever) and discovering that your mother considers your birth

I see comments from people online, and even hear it in real life more than a little bit, all going on about "why is being gay such a big deal?", "everyone accepts you, why don't you just shut the fuck up already?", "gays already have equality, now they just want special rights." Unsurprising, these comments come

"a mason jar filled with balled-up photos of other mason jars"

A good merkin reference never fails to make me laugh.

I mean, I know that society is patriarchal and women are expected to be sexy and sexually available no matter what we do in society, but I guess now I need to explain that to my sons?

Now that we have the primary and most serious question settled after several days and thousands of articles speculating about it, let's move on to some secondary issues:

It's kind of funny....people who have absolutist views of the Freeze Peach seem to think that they're some sort of saints performing a vital service to humanity, yet they spend an impressive amount of time arguing against universal human dignity.

So a school...turned down an opportunity to make a lot of money specifically for the football team...to protect gay students?

Some people have an opinion. Its OK to have one, it's a constitutional right.

The school is not preventing their students from buying from Chick-Fil-A. They're simply not accepting a donation from that company. Schools have a responsibility to make themselves a safe and welcoming place for all their students; as a gay person, I would certainly feel uncomfortable if a place I studied or worked

Funny how that last word always goes on to contradict the first part.

Team Cat Headquarters here,

Right because what this all comes down to is a difference of opinion and not just the outright refusal of others to view certain people as humans with autonomy and rights.