“I suspect that there might be a day I wear that T-shirt on the bus where a woman next to me, who I have never met before, says ‘I was, too,'” she wrote in a statement on her Web site.
That’s really a lot street smart. I hope she gets down here soon to enlighten the Los Angeles subway.
I am not a psychologist, but there just seems to be something wrong about a shirt like that.
A lunatic once tried to blow my head off with a shotgun, but I certainly don’t wear t-shirts with that on it.
Dan Collins’s complaints are completely disgusting — so much so, that if there are any children or sensitive people reading this letter, I suggest that they stop now and not read what I am about to describe. It is worth noting at the outset that no matter how bad you think Dan’s hastily mounted campaigns are, I assure you that they are far, far worse than you think. Dan’s beliefs (as I would certainly not call them logically reasoned arguments) are attributable to an ignorance born of fear and I’m not making that up! In summary, I can’t, for the life of me, see why Dan Collins wants to exclude all people and proposals that oppose his bestial intimations.
I think the safe is one of those metaphors, Enoch. You know, she’s had it all locked up inside her and now she’s opening up.
Still, going around to perfect strangers and saying “I was raped.” doesn’t seem to be normal behavior. I mean really, what are the strangers supposed to do, utter words of insincere sympathy? Think about how wrong rape is? Join movements to have rapists ostracized and criminally punished?
Personally I think this comes under the heading of TMI (Too Much Information, for the moonbats out there). It’s one thing to talk about it with a therapist, rape couselor, family member or the like. But advertise it to all and sundry like that on a tee shirt, that is way past being a bit over the top.
I’m sending a few to the Gleens.
That’s really a lot street smart. I hope she gets down here soon to enlighten the Los Angeles subway.
I am not a psychologist, but there just seems to be something wrong about a shirt like that.
A lunatic once tried to blow my head off with a shotgun, but I certainly don’t wear t-shirts with that on it.
why would someone rape a safe? I mean a picnic table, sure… I can see that… but a safe?
Dan Collins’s complaints are completely disgusting — so much so, that if there are any children or sensitive people reading this letter, I suggest that they stop now and not read what I am about to describe. It is worth noting at the outset that no matter how bad you think Dan’s hastily mounted campaigns are, I assure you that they are far, far worse than you think. Dan’s beliefs (as I would certainly not call them logically reasoned arguments) are attributable to an ignorance born of fear and I’m not making that up! In summary, I can’t, for the life of me, see why Dan Collins wants to exclude all people and proposals that oppose his bestial intimations.
I think the safe is one of those metaphors, Enoch. You know, she’s had it all locked up inside her and now she’s opening up.
Still, going around to perfect strangers and saying “I was raped.” doesn’t seem to be normal behavior. I mean really, what are the strangers supposed to do, utter words of insincere sympathy? Think about how wrong rape is? Join movements to have rapists ostracized and criminally punished?
Oh wait; we already do that last one.
Was #5 a joke, albeit a bad one?
Personally I think this comes under the heading of TMI (Too Much Information, for the moonbats out there). It’s one thing to talk about it with a therapist, rape couselor, family member or the like. But advertise it to all and sundry like that on a tee shirt, that is way past being a bit over the top.
Cave Bear–
That was a joke, and a pretty funny one, I thought. Otherwise, I quite agree with you.
Enoch: The Rape of the Lock Box
Here’s the t-shirt that’s prolly problematic…
serr8d:
The wearer of that shirt is just asking for a curb-stomping. Even from normally non-violent people like me.