https://i.imgur.com/4SSy0Km.jpg
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Now there's a butt hole gone to waste :shakehead:
https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/i...YSQkw&usqp=CAU
Of course it's anti American, that's why the dems are backing it.
The Fight Over the 1619 Project Is Not About the Facts
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/ar...roject/604093/
Nell Irvin Painter, a professor emeritus of history at Princeton who was asked to sign the letter, had objected to the 1619 Project’s portrayal of the arrival of African laborers in 1619 as slaves. The 1619 Project was not history “as I would write it,” Painter told me. But she still declined to sign the Wilentz letter.
“I felt that if I signed on to that, I would be signing on to the white guy's attack of something that has given a lot of black journalists and writers a chance to speak up in a really big way. So I support the 1619 Project as kind of a cultural event,” Painter said. “For Sean and his colleagues, true history is how they would write it. And I feel like he was asking me to choose sides, and my side is 1619's side, not his side, in a world in which there are only those two sides.”
Men cause more climate emissions than women, study finds
https://amp.theguardian.com/environm...en-study-finds
Dear Prudence,
I’m very concerned about my daughter-in-law and how she is affecting my son. They have been together for a long time, nearly 15 years. She was his first serious girlfriend and he was a late-bloomer, so we were relieved he found someone. We normally get on quite well; she is polite and does seem to care about my son, although she can be rather loud and bossy whereas he is quieter. In the beginning she was much more feminine and slimmer. Over the years she has gone up at least one or two dress sizes. I’ve tried talking about the health issues of other large family members as a hint that weight gain is a dangerous path, but she seems unconcerned and says “she just loves food.”
However, now there’s a new problem: She increasingly dresses in a manly way. Which would be fine if she was gay, but she is my son’s wife! She has cut her hair short and always wears full shirts (not blouses) and chinos; she’s also got tattoos down her arms. I fear she is going to make life difficult for herself at work. I also worry she is emasculating my son. He is a sweet person who probably doesn’t want to say anything to hurt her feelings, but he can’t be happy about having a wife who looks so butch. I need a way to tell her that she has a responsibility to keep her appearance in a way that flatters herself and her husband. My husband thinks we should just leave it alone, but she has no parents of her own, so I feel I’m the only one who can give her advice.
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— Worried About My Son
Dear Worried,
I don’t know if this question is made up or if it was written in 1970 and somehow got delayed on its way to my inbox. But it is such a non-problem that it made me laugh, and provided a nice break from thinking about serious issues, so I’ll answer it to show my gratitude.
I’ll keep this simple with five short points:
- Gaining weight is not a bad thing.
- Dressing in a more masculine way is not a bad thing.
- Even if the aforementioned issues were bad things, they wouldn’t be your business. She’s your son’s wife, not yours.
- Please, if you want to keep a relationship with your son, who I’m sure you love, never share these thoughts again.
- Find someone who actually needs help with something like paying rent or feeding their children and redirect your abundant extra mental energy to them.
_________________________________________
Fat and loud syndrome. It's real.
Bold bit. She's filling a void that he created.
I don't disagree other than you assuming he created the void. Women becoming more aggressive and masculine is cultural and increasing common as they note no resistance to assuming authority. Assuming that the female is a victim reacting to a void is stereotypical and potentially victim shaming. Power is corrupting. This notion that females in power are any less brutal than males in power is laughable.