Lately, I've been thinking about the ways people use the idea of others lacking empathy, and I'd be interested to hear takes on this. On one hand, there are societal factors that cause one group to have less empathy for another, but on the other hand, people definitely also use the idea to say "those who disagree with me on this must have a mental disorder". The language used for these is basically the same, and I don't want to silence voices when they are not academically correct enough, but also don't want to good-faith interpret my way into spreading ableism.
The trough-type urinals do create a sort of solidarity between drunken pissers, but I don't think it's worth the psychic damage from seeing one of those clogged (with shit, I assume, though I did not take a closer look) and filled to the brim
I read some internet liberals' responses to the events (which I do not recommend doing), and it's an interesting contrast between "wow there wasn't even a WMD lie this time", and "well Maduro was an evil dictator though"
Might start doing the weird New York chauvinism, but about my apartment instead. Where else in the whole world could you drink a nice cup of tea, put on some boot socks for warmth, and jack off?
Saw a trailer for some YA fantasy movie, and the central (only?) line of dialogue was "you must quest to the sea of monsters". Surely the film must have a less generic line in there somewhere
Lately, I've been thinking about the ways people use the idea of others lacking empathy, and I'd be interested to hear takes on this. On one hand, there are societal factors that cause one group to have less empathy for another, but on the other hand, people definitely also use the idea to say "those who disagree with me on this must have a mental disorder". The language used for these is basically the same, and I don't want to silence voices when they are not academically correct enough, but also don't want to good-faith interpret my way into spreading ableism.