At some point, we have to decide on when she'll be allowed to return. I think we should have a surprise party. We'll all get hats and kazoos and go on cam to welcome her home. Don't fuck me over; these are boyfriend points I'm trying to score.
Originally posted by Jeremus
I honestly couldn't tell you, I let my more experienced friends take care of that
I just went through Google reviews and picked out the ones that seemed most affordable and service-oriented. The places I really enjoyed were the ones that let you smell all the buds and talk about their distinct flavors. Some of them are pretty educational, others are clearly there to cash in.
Originally posted by RisiR †
What if it attacks you and I save you. Can we feast on the loser? The tiger.
I'll assume there was no choice except to kill the attacking tiger. Personally, I don't see anything inherently wrong with eating something that you couldn't avoid killing for practical reasons. But, then again, my theory of animal rights extends moral agency to nonhumans, so we arrive at a strange question: suppose a human attacks you, leaving you no choice but to kill them in the interest of your own safety - would you eat them afterward?
I agree with your critique for the most part, but for the sake of argument, you may want to consider it from the perspective of a nation of beneficiaries. The murdering of 17 high school students is not useful at all, and so we call it despicable; while millions of Chinese adolescents working their little fingers to the bone to provide the West with technological instruments is very useful, and because we're clearly getting the better end of this so that we don't ever have to see them, we feel minimal obligation to pay attention to their working conditions.
If all those Chinese kids were to jump from their buildings at once, however, it would be a global catastrophe that would force us to reassess our dependency on foreign labor. But, since it's more of a suicide trickle we consider the occasional leap to be the cost of doing business. Likewise, 17 kids shot at once is a tragedy, whereas individual teenagers dying hardly makes the news in most cities.
So whether we're sad about the deaths of teenagers is determined by how useful they were to us and/or whether we're able to avoid acknowledging their sacrifices, and how sad it makes us depends largely on the size of the death cluster.
Another celebrity, this time one even further removed from the political sphere, feels vindicated in running and then challenge him in 2020. The ensuing race will be repeatedly compared by the media to a circus, but only after greedy journalists have reserved their own tent.
Originally posted by Malice
Nearly forgot to ask. How many people hear have come close to getting killed by another person? Did it mess you up? I want to hear other's stories for the therapeutic experience and because I'm not afraid to enjoy your suffering.
Imagine being a sheltered hiki with severe anxiety and depression, autism, and severe psychological issues and suddenly being thrust into traumatic experiences from your safe den, with everything amplified by your conditions. It messed me up, especially when I got hit with the sedative and antipsychotic in the psych ward and thrown into a nightmare state.
I'm sure Casper has some crazy stories.
My older sister pushed me down the stairs. I was 2-3, she was 7-8. I remember my head hitting every step, and then just looking up at her from the bottom, wondering why. It's my first memory.
I hope you realize that if my goal is to keep Karen on the front page, you're doing like 70% of the work for me by bumping all my threads. Thanks for your help.
Nah, not really. I've purchased a lot of them, though. They don't work as hard as liberals would have you think, but I should try paying them before I come to such conclusions. It takes cuts to build a villa for my Karen, and I can't afford slackers planting the cherry trees on the estate.