crackerjack
Well-known member
In my experience, American's aren't very good at swearing.
motherfucker, shitkicker, fuckstick and dicklicker say you're wrong.
In my experience, American's aren't very good at swearing.
motherfucker, shitkicker, fuckstick and dicklicker say you're wrong.
motherfucker, shitkicker, fuckstick and dicklicker say you're wrong.
Around 02:30.
I'm assuming you're at college, quite thick or living in a cotton wool world (or all three) but you really need to get over this lazy fall-back of accusing people who disagree with you of gleefully revelling in some overblown caricature of what you find offensive. Yeah, I'm sniggering and nudging Eric Idle every time I use bad language, even bloody makes me titter...
Still, "fighting for the right to use cunt" made me laugh, would make a great Manowar comeback LP title.
motherfucker, shitkicker, fuckstick and dicklicker say you're wrong.
Probably preferable to beating stakes in our arses. Well, each to their own of course.Wow, only 44% of Britons are atheist or agnostic? I'm disappointed, the Swedes and Japanese are beating our arses in these stakes.
Apologies Ripley, certainly didn't mean to offend or seem hostile, I guess that's just the way I argue, sorry about that."I tried to convey how it sounded hostile and was basically told I was making it up, that i was "not a real feminist" etc etc."
In the episdode of Curb Your Enthusiasm where Larry calls the guy a cunt (for dropping out at poker when he had the best hand) there seems to be some implication about the guy's sexuality - is that a connotation of the word in the US? As far as I'm aware it's not in this country."in America it is much more rarely used, and usually applied to women. Overall, I think it is more heavily gendered. So perhaps I was being american-centric."
From the Independent article:
Thatcher was about to lift the white working-class right-wing vote and I think she successfully did that by talking about "people being swamped by an alien culture".
This is interesting, and something I've noticed before. Do you think that maybe the real reason extremist right-wing groups lost their momentum in the early 80s was that their attitudes were absorbed into the mainstream and diluted by a more nationalistic Tory party, more so than being defeated by left wing activists? I'm sure it's not just one thing or the other, but it's worth considering.
Do you think that maybe the real reason extremist right-wing groups lost their momentum in the early 80s was that their attitudes were absorbed into the mainstream and diluted by a more nationalistic Tory party, more so than being defeated by left wing activists?
I think it was a twin pronged approach - Thatcher attracted the hardcore xenophobes who were likely to vote NF.