wease wrote:How is it our society thinks it’s deplorable for actors, studio people, etc... to sexually assault people, but it’s A-OK for our president to do it and laugh about it?
Who said it was OK for the president to do it?
I think the Ok is based on the fact that Trump was elected President.
wease wrote:How is it our society thinks it’s deplorable for actors, studio people, etc... to sexually assault people, but it’s A-OK for our president to do it and laugh about it?
Who said it was OK for the president to do it?
I think the Ok is based on the fact that Trump was elected President.
Bingo
Let me tell you, Homer Simpson is cock of nothing!
- C. Montgomery Burns
This is absurd. She called him out ON-SET, he faced it head-on (with no grace or tact, according to her story), and his behavior changed. THIS story in particular is a witch hunt.
yeah - and 17 doesn't really count ... and anything in the category of butt slap or vulgar joke pre-1990 just doesn't count either
sorry, toots
go walk it off
All posts by this account, even those referencing real things, are entirely fictional and are for entertainment purposes only; i.e. very low-quality entertainment. These may contain coarse language and due to their content should not be viewed by anyone
Rangi Guy wrote:I hate the mob outing of a lot of these complaints. On Twitter nothing needs verification and you can destroy someone's reputation.
Absolutely agree. Guilty and convicted just on a word. It’s frightening.
It's a difficult issue. If a woman cannot feel safe and supported enough to stand up and name the person she said assaulted her, how will the society-level situation change? Conversely, like you said, why should this charge be the exception to the "innocent until proven guilty" mantra the modern criminal justice system is based on?
"The fatal flaw of all revolutionaries is that they know how to tear things down but don't have a f**king clue about how to build anything."
I kinda love She & Him's version where they switch the male and female parts of that song. It was a fascinating way to turn it on its head and reexamine the narrative. I love how everyone thought it was so sweet and funny and charming when the woman sang those creepy lines. Super interesting cultural experiment.