Do you thnk it's that, or is this just a way to try to highlight the harm the law would do while taking (for the moment) the issue of sexuality out of it?
Kaine is personally opposed to gay marriage. Barring any evidence to the contrary, I have to let that inform my view of his motivation.
the people who are all worked up about Teh Gays and Their Crusade Against Good Chiristian Folk don't really give a damn what happens to cohabitators either.
Probably, but cohabitators aren't going to cause the end of the world. Gays are the new apocalypse.
As if the fact that the spinach I was planning on having for dinner might try to kill me gruesomely weren't enough , must it now have a nonswedish sex life? !
I think I may be ordering pizza.
Honestly, I won't be sorry to see
the Chicken Girl go, which I assume will happen pretty soon. Because a, stupid stupid stupid and b, she reminds me of someone annoying from last season.
Despite the way it split
down male/female lines, I did appreciate hearing the women on the black team discussing getting rid of the blowhard because they id'ed him as a factor in how they can't seem to work together, not just a numbers thing. I also think investing a lot of time in pegging your alliances at this point is probably a waste.
Or at least I hope so, because boring.
I thought the Big Dog wasn't supposed to be eathing that kind of stuff anymore--and I thought that before I read the confirmation of Bill.
Dunno, lot of baked stuff there, salad, fruit. That sounds like Good-for-you Southern to me.
Plus, I think he
alienated them when he grabbed other guy and made the decision to send whosits to Exile Island without asking the women.
Molly Ivins' tribute to Ann Richards.
Bullock, "And this is Charles Miles, the head of my personnel department." Miles, who is black, stuck out his hand, and the judge got an expression on his face as though he had just stepped into a fresh cowpie. He reached out and touched Charlie's palm with one finger, while turning eagerly to the pretty, blonde, blue-eyed Ann Richards. "And who is this lovely lady?"
Ann beamed and replied, "I am Mrs. Miles."
Did they know before then that they were going to be divided by ethnic groups?
It looked like they did, yes -- it began with them jumping off the boat and onto their rafts, so Jeff must have already divided them up.
It looked like they did, yes -- it began with them jumping off the boat and onto their rafts, so Jeff must have already divided them up.
Yes, but I don't think they knew going in. It seemed like some of them just figured it out when they were divided up.
If it's not weird to either partner, but just part of the ordinary repertoire, it loses the "kink" designation. If it's a special "I can only do this on Tuesdays/I have to do this when the moon is full/I have to do it this way because I saw a red car today" type of practice, where the practice becomes an expression of an unresolved emotional issue, it becomes kink.
Damn, I have a feeling that Hec has probably taken off to go write and won't be around to clarify, and I feel
extremely
peculiar about trying to clarify any of this myself since it's really a completely foreign language and alien culture to me, but... I think it's more complex than that. The handful of people I know who self-identify as kinky/fetishistic, even when they're in happy, committed relationships with people who share their kinks and for whom the kinky stuff is an unremarkable happy norm,
still
self-identify as kinky and describe the sex they have as normal-for-them-but-still-firmly-outside-most-people's-norm. Within the context of a committed relationship there's not much in the way of unresolved issues going on, it's playful and joyful for them, but they don't have much interest in calling it normal.
At least, that's my very weak and flawed interpretation of what I've gotten from my confused understanding of my sample size of three couples.