Just came back from the Wallace & Gromit movie, which made me smile until my face hurt. I was also entertained by a Small Child on the way out who was happily saying "Cheese, Gromit!" every once in a while.
Dawn ,'The Killer In Me'
Natter 39 and Holding
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
See, that picture of Maher inclines me to give him his sippy cup of juice and blanky and go take your nap already. I have too strong associations of thumbsucking with childhood for it to be remotely a ...hithery thing. My little quirk.
Glad the date night went well, Burrell.
The blue sudafed I took is either going to make me feel better, or much much worse.
Wallace & Gromit is next on the list for me. We want to take Franny, but figure we'll warm her up with "The Wrong Trousers" and "A Grand Day Out."
Thanks for the kind words, guys! I'm not familiar with any particular case, but in general freedom of religious expression is not freedom to harm others.
There were at least two little kids led out of the theatre due to being a little over-scared of the action, and a couple climbing into parental arms. Nothing really bad happens, there's just some apprehension.
(I don't think that needs to be white-fonted...?)
BON is female. BOB is male. If you have a cold, it could be easy to confuse them.
Wouldn't they both just be bod bod?
She'd be bod bod. He'd be Bod Bod. That's how you can tell them apart.
I was also entertained by a Small Child on the way out who was happily saying "Cheese, Gromit!" every once in a while.
Hell, Hubby and I say that to each other occasionally. No Small Child required.
IIRC, there have been multiple cases before the SCOTUS concerning whether the state can compel parents to give their children medical treatment that goes against their religious beliefs. Specifically, there was a case where Christian Science parents were charged with neglect because they refused to take their child to a doctor, and the child subsequently died.Found it. I was wrong. It was a bowel obstruction, not strep. The child, age two, was Robyn Twitchell. The parents were convincted of involuntary manslaughter. There's more information about the case, here: [link] (3rd entry), and here: [link] (more legal-ee).
So, I'm trying to decide if I should keep my platelet donation appointment tomorrow, due to having this cold. It's not a bad cold, and I'm honestly still not 100% convinced it's not just allergies, but I'd hate to give a cold to someone who's already in the hospital! Bleh.