And they try the LAMEST lines on women who look like they just stepped off the fashion pages of Vogue
“I am a member of several e-groups and on a couple of them is a woman known only as mom2alex. Is everything you do related to your child? It seems terribly selfish and manipulative (not to mention sad) of these women who use their children to define their existence. It’s just as bad as women who define their lives by whatever piece of flesh they are fucking this week. How often do these girls have to change their e-mail addresses?” — Charlotte
“She’s in the same boat, but SHE think’s HER’S is a yacht. ” — Jadesyren (in reference to one of two co-workers who are deluding themselves)
“Heartless does not imply “frigid” or “cold”. Rather it means that a strong woman can use her gray matter instead of a pretty shape or blood-filled chamber.” — Carrie Dalton
I mean, if all we are talking about is sex here, and raw sexual attraction, let’s face it, the bulk of the male race is damned UGLY
K: “It was Albuquerque sugar daddy websites an accident.” N: “Did you apologize?” K: “No. I only apologize when I am genuinely sorry.” — Ken C.
“There is a tendency. today to explain human behavior, to remove purpose – motive – from serious consideration. We tend to accept the notion that mechanical, not purposive, causation accounts for the things people do. Joe Sinister is a criminal because his parents beat him or because of a chemical imbalance in his brain or because of a genetic disorder that removed the function we call conscience. These explanations of human behavior may be accurate. but the issue of accuracy is, in fact, quite irrelevant to human societies. A human community that uses mechanical causation to account for human behavior cannot survive, because it cannot hold its members accountable for their behavior. That is, no matter how you account for the origin of a human behavior, a community must continue to judge the perpetrator on the basis of his intent, as near as that intent can be understood (or guessed, or assumed). That is why parents inevitably ask their children the unanswerable question: Why did you do that? Terrible as that question is, it at least puts the responsibility back on the child’s head and forces the child to ask himself the question that society absolutely requires him to answer: Why do I do the things I do? And how, by changing my motives, can I change my behavior. We must believe in motives for human behavior, or we cannot maintain community life.” — Orson Scott Card, from the Introduction to “Cruel Miracles”.
“My guess is the point of the “male-basher” label is that I’m supposed to back down. ditto buzzwords like “aggressive” and “bitch,” among others. Someone throwing those words up does not do so by accident. They are trying to trigger a meta-message, to get our goody-goody, desperate-for-acceptance inner girly-girl to take over. Guess what? I’ve got that little twit gagged, I was sick of her mealy-mouthed whining holding me back!” — Erica Jackson
“Of COURSE women have more opportunities than men to get laid. I mean, have you LOOKED at the guys complaining that they can’t get any? They have bad haircuts, they don’t bathe, and they have no concept of how to dress. They tuck shirts into pants so that we can see their beer guts hanging out over their belts. Yech! You want to get laid? Try looking HALF as good as the woman you are drooling over.” — Tasha K.