Anonymous wrote:You really seem to have an endless appetite for defending your use of the word "bitch."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:New poster.
Man was a bitch. We all know what that term communicates.
And dear god I hope this woman ditches his sorry bitch ass.
I have never been in a crisis situation but I have had my purse snatched, and as soon as I realized what happened, I started shouting (expletives) and ran after the guy as fast as I could (then the 'oh wait you idiot he ran into an alleyway' clicked on so I stopped pursuit).
Meaning, even in the heat of the moment, there can (and should) be rational thought. Regardless of whether his rational brain could overcome his gut response to flee, the fact is that it didn't - EVER. So either he reasoned that his life meant more than theirs, or he never did follow that train of thought. Which one do you believe?
Yes, it communicates that you think cowardice is a female trait.
Anonymous wrote:OP is correct that the guy is a coward. It reminds me of Seinfeld, when George pushed over women and children to escape when there was a small fire. I'm another person with a "good" response in these situations. When I was 14 an intruder attempted to rape me in my room. I escaped and was running away when my mom came out of her room behind the intruder and I turned around and attacked him because I couldn't leave my mother.
For me it was a conscious decision to return, but I didn't even consider continuing to run once I identified the danger.
The flip side of this is that I'm really very bad when non-life-threatening bad news comes. I'm calm and rational when people expect I should be feeling something. The feeling comes later.
Anonymous wrote:New poster.
Man was a bitch. We all know what that term communicates.
And dear god I hope this woman ditches his sorry bitch ass.
I have never been in a crisis situation but I have had my purse snatched, and as soon as I realized what happened, I started shouting (expletives) and ran after the guy as fast as I could (then the 'oh wait you idiot he ran into an alleyway' clicked on so I stopped pursuit).
Meaning, even in the heat of the moment, there can (and should) be rational thought. Regardless of whether his rational brain could overcome his gut response to flee, the fact is that it didn't - EVER. So either he reasoned that his life meant more than theirs, or he never did follow that train of thought. Which one do you believe?
Anonymous wrote:Uh there are lots of people calling you out on this.
You should have a more effective response than name calling. If you called me an assclown at ten years old I would have laughed at you. At 40 you just amuse me as you undermine your argument with each post.
Anonymous wrote:OP is correct that the guy is a coward. It reminds me of Seinfeld, when George pushed over women and children to escape when there was a small fire. I'm another person with a "good" response in these situations. When I was 14 an intruder attempted to rape me in my room. I escaped and was running away when my mom came out of her room behind the intruder and I turned around and attacked him because I couldn't leave my mother.
For me it was a conscious decision to return, but I didn't even consider continuing to run once I identified the danger.
The flip side of this is that I'm really very bad when non-life-threatening bad news comes. I'm calm and rational when people expect I should be feeling something. The feeling comes later.
Haven't heard that one before. I get it you don't care. Yet here you are.Anonymous wrote:*yawn*
Anonymous wrote:OP, you promised yesterday, around page 3, that you'd shut up and say no more.
im not addressing this issue anymore so if you are still upset by my use of the word bitch, my concern for it starts and ends with this reply.
So you're a liar too. Just sayin. Please keep your word this time and type no more.
im not addressing this issue anymore so if you are still upset by my use of the word bitch, my concern for it starts and ends with this reply.