well, yes you can.dont believe everything El Rusho talks about.now, if Greta van susteren or Shep Smith report, then there's a chance of something being truthful.
Interesting how it's always the fundies on this board who are so up to date on any story involving gay peopleI wonder why that is?
So, the Daily Caller made this up too?
Interesting how it's always the libs, ramming gay mess throughout the media and academia, trying to normalize this stuff, only to whine when "fundies" call them on it.I wonder why that is.
I don't dislike you in the slightest but the, way that you consistently, create ungrammatical sentence fragments, via the use of commas, makes me want to punch you, in the, t,h,r,o,a,t.
Did I say you or anyone else made it up?I just said it's interesting how fundies are always on top of every gay storyThe first time I hear about most of them is when a fundie posts them hereDo you have a google alert for "gay news" or something?
Moi?I thought a sentence fragment was a stand-alone group of words, which lacked either a verb or a noun.
I don't have as firm a grasp on the relevant technical terms as I ought to, but the point is that you unnecessarily (and illogically) break up thoughts into various grammatical chunks rather than expressing them in full.The above quoted sentence is an example: the content following 'I thought' should be in the form of a single embedded clause ("a sentence fragment was a stand-alone group of words which lacked either a verb or a noun"). The comma divvies up this single thought in a confusing way and is inappropriate.http://www.kent.edu/writingcommons/resources/upload/commoncommaerrors.pdf
the good chirstian,i thought you were not suppose to judge people, typ. christian hypocrite
That depends on how it's used. I know that such is the case when using the word,(unnecessary comma) "that". It's the reason I used the word,(unnecessary comma) "which", since it's specifically for describing things vs. describing people. ("that" can be used in either case).
As usual, you flap your beak without the slightest clue,(improper comma) regarding what you speak.
Heard this earlier this week on Rush. But, it's on again, during the "Week in Review" broadcast.I thought the whole gay argument was you can't control who you love. Now, even from the lefties, we get this? And, aren't these some of the very same people who blast anyone, trying to get folk to resist homosexuality, altogether (i.e. all the flap from that clinic the Bachmanns ran in Minnesota)?Students at Brown University will host a workshop called “Protect me from what I desire,” which purports to help gay minority students resist their same-sex attractions to white people.The event is sponsored by the Comprehensive Allyship Network, and will take place on April 8th. Though it will feature conversations about many aspects of gay sexuality, the dominant theme will be racial, according to the event’s Facebook page.“Some of us… find ourselves falling always for the white queers or other bodies that possess dominant power, wishing we could have more agency in the process, be more intentional about who we desire and how,” the page reads.http://dailycaller.com/2013/03/19/brown-universitys-workshop-on-gay-sex-will-segregate-participants-by-race/You can't make up such foolishness, if you tried.
what i find so funny is that the regular libtards on the board have the need to attack others and defend their agenda so much that even they cant come out and admit that even for ppl advocating same sex relationships this is stupid
Forgive me, but why are minorities so attracted to whites? Why does this generally seem to be a one way street?
Perhaps, it's due to a few centuries of white people, being held as the standard of all things beautiful?Black people have undergone that for centuries. That's why black women get perms for their hair. Even dudes, back in day, got their hair "fired, dyed, and laid to the side". Heck, Al Sharpton sports that hairdo to this day.If you've seen the movie "School Daze", you've seen the conflict between dark-skinned and light-skinned black women. I witnessed some of that first hand in college, having attended a historically-black college/university (HBCU) myself.