Message from @Trez Silverwolf

Discord ID: 405698529227440128


2017-11-14 03:30:30 UTC  

Kinda nice Troll ;D

2017-11-14 04:43:10 UTC  

The source of the books is amazing!

2017-11-27 17:33:09 UTC  

Here is a link to my preliminary version of the website that I am building: http://www.fundfaire.com

2017-11-30 04:24:55 UTC  
2017-11-30 04:29:55 UTC  

ffffffffffff

2017-11-30 05:36:11 UTC  
2018-01-29 23:07:12 UTC  

Mozart wrote this shit at the age of 8 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=241C58kqZXM

2018-02-03 22:56:33 UTC  

He's the one that deserves to be interrupted.

2018-02-05 21:45:10 UTC  

following up on something Matt + Blonde talked about two weeks ago regarding men afraid to approach women http://www.sacbee.com/news/politics-government/capitol-alert/article186983518.html

2018-02-05 21:45:22 UTC  

skimmed the article but this stuck out:

2018-02-05 21:45:46 UTC  

>Debra Gravert, chief administrative officer of the Assembly Rules Committee, said the committee tracks only investigations she and human resources officials decide to conduct. Not all complaints about behavior – such as someone asking someone else for a date – violate sexual harassment policy, she said. In the last six years, it has conducted eight investigations, she said.

2018-02-05 21:45:58 UTC  

but then, followed by

2018-02-05 21:46:22 UTC  

>Lobbyist Samantha Corbin encouraged subcommittee members to rethink what might be considered sexual harassment under the current policy.

>“A suggestion was made earlier that it is not sexual harassment if someone asks someone out on a date,” she said. “I beg to differ, because if the chair of appropriations was to ask me out on a date, I would certainly feel pressured. If a fellow was asked out by their boss, they certainly would feel pressured.”

2018-02-05 21:47:52 UTC  

granted, this is YouGov and I have no idea how representative the samples are

2018-02-05 21:48:42 UTC  

but nearly a quarter of millennial + Gen-Z men view "asking to go for a drink" as a form of sexual harassment

2018-02-05 21:50:16 UTC  

I do wonder though if their responses reflect their personal views on sexual harassment or it's based on their observation of what would earn them a harassment charge

2018-02-06 01:00:44 UTC  

Thanks. I wish the graph was more specific about age, maybe coordinated with year, I could from experience and observation what ‘seemed’ about right. Putting a hand on lower back was once a sign of politeness, support, care, respect, something in that range, anyway it was a good thing, maybe on stairs, think about it, women in heels... akin to opening doors for women.

2018-02-06 01:18:42 UTC  

Even asking for a sexual favor, it would depend on context. I had close male workmates, geez, even I have sexually harassed them. I think communication is key. Paying close attention to reactions and asking if you’ve offended someone, seriously asking, and paying attention to the answer... they may say no but facial expressions might obviously say yes. Then, respect that. I think most people can recognize a real creep. Maybe lack of face to face communication may have reduced our ability to read social cues and the intentions of others. I get creeped out by some of the listed behaviors but it depended on the situation, location, groups you are legitimately safe with, etc. So, I still generally recommend men pay attention to the way the women act, if someone is bad at that, ask a female friend for an opinion, and I recommend that women grow up and get a damn grip. I generally ALWAYS suggest that men have a true female friend, because men are very often victims of manipulative bitches. I’m not kidding. It’s my area of expertise 😂