Bugs in drag = aces.
With my spear and magic helmet!
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.
Bugs in drag = aces.
With my spear and magic helmet!
Spear and magic helmet?
Yes, magic helmet! And I'll give you a sample!
Edit: Man, pwned by YouTube.
t tantrum
Where is my HUSBAND we have to leave in TWENTY MINUTES for EDDIE IZZARD and I guess we're skipping DINNER GET HOME NOW
t /tantrum
From way back..."handicapped" is kind of insulting. Or at least an unpleasant callback to, like, feudal gimp history, when "we" were legally allowed to beg, cap in hand. For myself, I generally say "wheelchair user," or "mobility-impaired" cognitively disabled (except with my brother...if he does something stupid, I take retarded out of mothballs, cause we got it like that.) And he's not. I wanted to like differently abled, but in the end, it's like...silly. or humorously challenged.
an unpleasant callback to, like, feudal gimp history, when "we" were legally allowed to beg, cap in hand
o.O
I had no idea of that etymology. It stings, huh? I mean, it's real to you?
I don't even like "wheelchair user". Whenever I describe someone dependent on a chair to get around, I say "s/he uses a wheelchair." Small difference, but for some reason, it's really important to me to identify the person first and the tool second.
I don't know how much it stings, viscerally, for me. Because mostly I hear it now from older people who probably aren't ever going to buy into the whole independent-living thing in the first place. As a kid, I was probably tortured with it, but that is not a terminology thing. I just wanted to point out why disabled people in my generation don't really use it.
Fox News refers to Michelle Obama as "Obama's Baby Mama." [link]