I wear the cheese. It does not wear me.

Cheese Man ,'Chosen'


Spike's Bitches 28: For the Safety of Puppies...and Christmas!  

[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risque (and frisque), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.


Cass - Jan 14, 2006 7:41:19 pm PST #4562 of 10001
Bob's learned to live with tragedy, but he knows that this tragedy is one that won't ever leave him or get better.

Comment: Grammatically sucktastic.

Else, what's that so-called "Condo" person have to sell?


Spidra Webster - Jan 14, 2006 7:48:51 pm PST #4563 of 10001
I wish I could just go somewhere to get flensed but none of the whaling ships near me take Medicare.

He spelled "Condi" wrong.


§ ita § - Jan 14, 2006 8:00:05 pm PST #4564 of 10001
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Assuming my contextual guess at Fox and Penn was right, I was longwindedly trying to say what Windsparrow did briefly.


Typo Boy - Jan 14, 2006 8:05:44 pm PST #4565 of 10001
Calli: My people have a saying. A man who trusts can never be betrayed, only mistaken.Avon: Life expectancy among your people must be extremely short.

Skippy McSkimmerson doing a driveby here. Knowing many bitches are knitters, here is a link with instructions on making your own edible panties in case it is of any interest.

[link]


Pix - Jan 14, 2006 8:18:21 pm PST #4566 of 10001
The status is NOT quo.

Update post and then I will vanish once more...

I have now graded 23 essays and 23ish poetry quiz revisions. Go me!

I think I'm done. Eight hours of grading is enough today.


beth b - Jan 14, 2006 8:23:37 pm PST #4567 of 10001
oh joy! Oh Rapture ! I have a brain!

Go KT!

it sounds more like a cheer to use your initals


meara - Jan 14, 2006 8:29:29 pm PST #4568 of 10001

Go Kristin go! Work hard! Play hard! Be fun!

(OK, perhaps I'm a little loopy, cause it's late here and I should be asleep...)


Emily - Jan 14, 2006 9:25:28 pm PST #4569 of 10001
"In the equation E = mc⬧, c⬧ is a pretty big honking number." - Scola

Any comments?

Oy.


WindSparrow - Jan 14, 2006 9:53:41 pm PST #4570 of 10001
Love is stronger than death and harder than sorrow. Those who practice it are fierce like the light of stars traveling eons to pierce the night.

Assuming my contextual guess at Fox and Penn was right, I was longwindedly trying to say what Windsparrow did briefly.

Yeah, well, I thought ita was saying clearly what I was (apparently) obfuscating. Bunch o' Quakers, they were. Not that George Fox and William Penn themselves were necessarily eloquent on the particular topic of slavery, nor yet that the Quakers were by any means the only group to oppose it, but I figured they would reasonably represent one form of human rights activists that fit in the period in question.


Topic!Cindy - Jan 15, 2006 2:56:20 am PST #4571 of 10001
What is even happening?

MG, does the instructor grade these projects in a reasonable fashion? By which I mean, does one get penalized for writing a woman's request to join the Mayflower?
Well, as it pertains to slavery, 100+ years after the law Mg is supposed to write about, women were becoming a powerful, public force for abolition, so I'm not sure it would be a problem to write as a woman in protest of this 1701 slavery law. If Abigail Adams could have had John's role in the 1770s, she would have outlawed slavery. Sixty or so years after that, the abolitionists and suffragettes were making common cause.

You know what? Google Phillis Wheatley. She's the first African American to be published (some time in the 1770s). She is a former slave who was freed. If you were to write in protest as an African American woman, I think it would make more historical sense if she were a free woman. Wheatley wasn't yet born, but I think she could serve as a model for a fictional writer.