My baby was a dumpster baby (dumped in a box with her siblings IN A DUMPSTER). She will forever be on the small side, according to the vet, because they think they were pretty much starved for the first month of their lives. So. Much. Rage.
My baby was a dumpster baby (dumped in a box with her siblings IN A DUMPSTER). She will forever be on the small side, according to the vet, because they think they were pretty much starved for the first month of their lives. So. Much. Rage.
My little chihuahua was dumped. The first time my husband saw her she was sticking out of a bag of KFC, trying to rustle up some grub. I don't wish any harm to whoever dumped her. I assume they were in bad circumstances and couldn't bear to drop her at the shelter, where she would most likely have been euthanized. …
Yeah, everyone of my my pets either turned up in my yard or literally got dumped on my front step in a box.
As a person with dumped/stray babes I can not tell you how often I think about hurting the people who hurt them. Like, I want to hunt them down and break them.
Where is the dog now? Usually lovely people reach out and snap up the animals victimized in these horror stories.
My dog was dumped in a public park. A woman who walking her dog saw a pick-up truck pull into the park, dump him, and when he tried to get back into the truck she saw the driver kick him, shut the door, and leave him whimpering. This was an early January day in Maryland. She couldn't leave him, because she's a good…
I hope that guy dies in a fire. That's not Internet rage; I really hope that is what happens to that guy. Death by fire.
He was half-Asian, but let's all ignore that because Asian. (Sorry, that just irritates me about this story.)
The lede was that police inaction was due to sexism.
It's years of getting called names online basically making me numb and dead on the inside.
I'm astounded by your coolness and patience. Is critical thinking a meditative practice for you or something?
I dislike the argument that someone is "missing the point" if they disagree with a premise. I don't agree with the premise that the police didn't do more because we accept sexism. I think the police didn't do more because there was literally nothing within their powers as police to do. It's not me missing the point:…
So we have to make untrue statements while we're at it to discuss the broader issues?
I'll go a step further: federal case law would have limited the police in every state that I know of. California is one of a handful of states where police may have had enough authority to do something. Otherwise, all the liberties we enjoy from police also meant that he enjoyed those same liberties.
You're right that he would have had extra scrutiny if he had been black, but that still doesn't mean that the cops didn't find probable cause because they were expressing misogyny.
As a woman, I think what Laci said was sophmoric and glossed over. This is about a mad man that wanted to control people. He directed his anger towards women. End. Of. Story. This guy explains it more in depth.
It's astonishing how few people here understand or care about the concept/principle of due process. You're perfectly fine with bona fied kangaroo courts run by legal novices and armchair lawyers ruining people's lives on scant evidence in order to further political aims. And why? Because "rape culture." Fuck you.
We don't even know if police were shown his social media postings. All they said was that he seemed polite and a bit timid when they talked to him in person.
Weird, i didn't get that manual.
High fives for the fine arts degrees!