Wow. That one's really good. I had to google it to make sure it's real and not rage bait. From the article:
Researchers also suggest that state and federal surveys, like the U.S. Census, need to include “measures of sexual orientation and gender identity to increase the scope and granularity of information available on LGBTQ people, including assessments of climate risk.”
Heh.Montague and Cap yo'ass
Well, that's the point. Nothing quite says "rubbing your face in it" like this character. Doesn't work if she's even moderately attractive.Heh.
Does anyone else think that it would have been at least slightly better if they'd picked a black girl who's, you know, actually pretty to play Juliet? Maybe that's just me.
He could be an interesting character, he sounds like he's reached an introspective phase.Japanese Man Thinks That Eating 10,000 Hotdogs May Have Been a Bad Idea:
"I hear people say they’re hungry, and they look very happy after they’ve eaten," he said. "I’m jealous of those people because I no longer feel hunger."
His wife:
"[He] thinks he might be broken," she said. "He doesn't feel hungry or full. He doesn't feel those things at all."
Kobayashi said in the documentary that he believes he has eaten 10,000 hot dogs over his career and has often wondered "what damage I’ve done to my body."
I mean, what could POSSIBLY go wrong?
No idea what the first sentence means but given the crowd I'm sure there is good basis for it.I'm in a same-social construct couple with a person of tinge. Should I do something to prepare? Or is climate evolution (we don't necessarily say change) a social construct too?
It means I'm in a same-sex couple with a non white person.No idea what the first sentence means but given the crowd I'm sure there is good basis for it.
The bar for them is set so painfully low that even a child's scribbles are newsworthy.This just in from the BBC:
Negro Toddler From Ghana Smears Paint, Hailed As Artistic Genius
"The mother of the Ghanaian toddler officially recognised as the world's youngest male painter has told the BBC of her pride in her son's artistic ability, and hopes he can take the art world by storm.
Ace-Liam Nana Sam Ankrah achieved the incredible feat aged one year and 152 days.
"He already knows what colours complement each other," said his mother Chantelle Kuukua Eghan, who has been an artist herself for eight years.
Ms Eghan said she first realised his talent when he was only six months old."
The article further states that the young sprog's work reminds his mother of Jackson Pollock's .
Well, that certainly isn't saying much...