The words "kitten farts" are making me laugh like a maniac. Our dog has puppy farts and usually looks suprised or slightly worried by them.
Lorne ,'Why We Fight'
Natter 63: Life after PuppyCam
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.
I went to a new tapas place for (early) dinner.
The one on Market St in Wilmington??? If so, we went there for my dad's b'day in February and dang it was good!
hey lisah! You should totally come to LA (for Thanksgiving!) so we can go to yoga together!
The words "kitten farts" are making me laugh like a maniac. Our dog has puppy farts and usually looks suprised or slightly worried by them.
I wish they would be even slightly embarrassed by them. Because the cuteness of the phrase is inversely proportional to the deadliness of the reality.
My kitten attacks my ass when I fart in proximity. Which made mac fake farts all weekend once I told him. I explained they needed to be real farts, but I think something was lost in explanation.
And my cat's gas? Is obnoxious. And yet Loki doesn't react to that.
I love that it's 11pm on a Monday night and we're discussing kittens and farts.
My husband thinks I'm nuts now.
I should go to sleep. I'm not tired.
Also, random question for an argument I'm trying to make: what examples are there of discrimination against atheists that's specifically against atheists, rather than against non-Christians or non-whatever the majority religion is? The only example I've been able to come up with is that Boy Scouts require a belief in a higher being, but don't care which one. Googling atheist discrimination got me a bunch of cases of atheists who were discriminated against or attacked for being not Christian, but I've having trouble finding cases where it's clear that the issue is atheism itself.
What about the atheists who fought against having to say "one nation under God" in the Pledge of Allegiance? I'm fairly sure there was a court case with that, though I think the atheists were suing.
What about the atheists who fought against having to say "one nation under God" in the Pledge of Allegiance? I'm fairly sure there was a court case with that, though I think the atheists were suing.
Hmm. Could work. Though there are a few religious groups who won't say that, either. IIRC, the court case from a few years ago was dismissed without a ruling, because they said that the father who was suing on behalf of his daughter didn't have custody of her and so he didn't have standing to sue on her behalf. (That case got ugly really fast. I remember reading that the girl's mother said that her daughter had no problem with saying the Pledge.)