I did hear it here first, you’re right.
I did hear it here first, you’re right.
Seems pretty obvious the left two and the right two are different people.
I’m sure it’s highly context-dependent. I’ve just never viewed the “equal access to exploitation” school of gender equality as quite the social victory others seem to.
To frame it another way - we’ve historically sent men to war partly because their relative disposability is understood. The strength to swing a sword and the strength to bear a child are not necessarily fungible.
I remain conflicted on the issue.
It’s weird because there is an internalised class hierarchy in the UK that even the traditional working class seem to adhere to very strictly. And yet the concept of the Dalit seems simultaneously abhorrent.
Interesting, it sounds like a topic I could learn more about.
I really don’t know if equal access to the front line is the kind of social progress we should be aiming for. It smells faintly like it, I’ll admit.
The British did not create the caste system.
Which one is best, argue now.
I don’t know enough about flags.
He most likely is a millionaire. You presumably mean billionaire.
Annoying isn’t it.
I put them in the fridge because I don’t have anywhere else to put them, but I’m aware it’s unnecessary.
Cherry Lips
The spoiler tag hasn’t worked and that looks extremely painful.
Think about it this way - it’s okay this year.
Hmm, overly harsh.
That’s true, but doesn’t preclude the existence of premium or prestige services for those with money to burn - the cost in those cases becoming the point of difference, and a proxing heuristic for an (assumed) improved service. Think visiting a tailor for your clothes.