No. Quoting something you said three days ago is not a personal attack.
No. Quoting something you said three days ago is not a personal attack.
Again, I didn't call you any names.
Seeing a supposedly progressive community mock Kim Kardashian for this is so disheartening. We say we want people to stop being racist, sexist, homophobic, etc., and when someone makes an honest effort to reform—publicly admitting she was wrong—we say it's not good enough because it didn't happen sooner. What the…
Haha, what? You literally invited people to "call [you] a judgey, biased p.o.s." I didn't call you names; I didn't say anything rude. Assuming that everything a person does is "cringeworthy"—including admitting her ignorance on an issue and trying to publicly reform herself—is judgmental and biased, and you seem to…
I've never seen someone so hated for doing nothing bad to anyone.
I don't know if she's talking about Trayvon Martin, Jordan Davis, or someone else. It's not like only one young man has been shot for being black in Florida.
You are judgmental and biased. I hope that you learn soon that people are multifaceted and no one is wholly good or bad.
So are the Tsarnaev brothers who committed the Boston bombings. They aren't considered white.
Does it, though? In what way? I don't want to diminish the importance of one's self identity, but race does not exist in a vacuum. She is of Armenian descent, and I think it's debatable whether that is considered white. I've definitely seen racially charged discrimination against people from the Caucuses. Kim…
Ugh, come on. Not using names was clearly a stylistic choice. Anonymizing these victims makes it easier for the reader to relate.
Adding "folded like a taco" to my vernacular now. E.g., "I told myself I was done with SVU, but then Bradley Whitford guest-starred and I folded like a taco." I love you, Lindy.
Haha. So body snarking is going too far, but calling a woman a "street walker" is A-ok in your book. Got it. Feminism FTW!
I had so much trouble parsing the OP's sentence. Ridiculous.
It's like these people feel the need to brag about what is just baseline human decency—i.e., not being racist. And they don't realize that, with all their stories of the one time they fucked a non-white guy, and all their pictures of "OMG cute Asian boys!", they are not just missing the point, but also redirecting the…
"Bleach" may be the wrong word. From what I understand, the ingredients (most commonly arbutin, but there are others too) that lighten your blemishes also lighten your whole face. I don't think all BB creams have them these days.
Agreed! I feel so sad and frustrated when I see the women in this thread mocking each other's makeup choices or talking about how the men in their lives prefer they look. So much infighting, so much pitting ourselves against each other.
Ew at your dad. What a weird, gross thing to say to his daughter.
And yes, the constant exposure to flawless images has created a new baseline — the sense that bare minimum, concealer is critical to looking acceptable, whether at work, where you can be penalized for not wearing enough makeup
Ohhhh, okay. I misunderstood you. I thought you meant that he left the offending flip-flop there to save his spot in the crowd while he, like, went to get a beer or something. This version—while still disgusting—does not plumb the depths of depravity I'd imagined.
That's ... insane. And disgusting. And I have so many questions. Did the people around him know he was doing it? Did you guys see him shit? Who the fuck shits in the middle of a stagnant crowd? Is this man the author of my nightmares? Did he try to go back to his spot? Did you ever see him again?