cockenblog:

The escalating cameos in this made me really happy.

(Source: freshprincesubs)

(Reblogged from monicagellerb)

What, let gays get married? We must be bonkers

feathers:

According to opponents of the new law, once gays can get married, that cheapens the marriages of everyone who isn’t gay. This shows how powerful a gay wedding is, because no other marriages have been able to ruin everyone else’s like this. No one suggested that marriage was cheapened because Fred and Rose West were married, because, while their marriage was unconventional in certain respects, at least it was a union between man and woman, and that’s the main thing.

Similarly, Hitler and Eva Braun’s marriage didn’t lessen the sanctity of heterosexual blessings, because whatever else, their ceremony in the bunker was healthy and natural and not all icky and weird.

But now gays can get married, the offices at Relate will be bursting. Couples will have to be seen six at a time to fit them all in. “Our marriage seems pointless now,” they’ll whimper. “Now gays can get married, we spend every evening shooting each other with air rifles and we’ve put our kids into care.”

This is the latest of a long line of things we can no longer enjoy because gays are allowed to do them as well. Since homosexuality was legalised in 1967, hardly anyone has bothered to have heterosexual sex, as it’s been cheapened. And these days why should a married couple bother buying toothpaste, or food, when lesbians can legally buy them as well?

For some, it’s even more serious. Tory councillor James Malliff said if we legalise gay marriage “we may as well legalise marriage with animals”. Because would any of us react differently to either of the following statements: a) “I’m Brian, and this is my husband, Kevin” or b) “I’m Brian, and this is my husband. I keep him in a matchbox because he’s a wasp.”

Several MPs opposed to gay marriage asked, “Where will this lead next?” They should have a competition to see who can go the furthest, with Edward Leigh yelling: “Then we’ll be allowed to marry a stick of rock, which will get jealous if it suspects the man has chewed a liquorice allsort, then the man will notice the rock has ‘I want a divorce’ written all through it, and it will move out to live in a tin on housing benefit which the taxpayer pays for, and if we refuse we’ll be taken to the European Court of Confectionary Rights.”

James Malliff can trump him by pointing out that next we’ll be allowed to marry attitudes, so a man will marry wistfulness, but if the owners of a bed and breakfast turn the couple away because their religion considers it a sin to be wistful, THEY’LL be the ones put in jail in these days of political correctness. Gerald Howarth opposed the bill, claiming it’s a result of the “aggressive homosexual community”. And you can see his point, because look at the aggression in society, and who’s always at the heart of it – homosexuals. Football crowds chant “the colour co-ordinations on your away strip are shit, and you know they are”, then it all kicks off.

And there’s no greater sign of a community behaving aggressively than when it asks to be allowed to get married. That’s what happened to the Vikings. They were peaceful at first, then they were allowed to get married, and it was just pillage, pillage, pillage. So you’ll want to keep clear of these aggressive homosexual weddings, which will go, “Do you take this man to be your lawful wedded spouse”? “Of COURSE, I do you arsehole. Shut it, vicar. Now listen you witnesses, if just one flake of confetti lands on my blond highlights I’ll cut yer.”

John Stanley, MP for Tonbridge, said gay marriage will be “unhelpful to young people being attracted to others of the same sex before arriving at being heterosexual”. Because it’s been such a help, over the years, to young people attracted to others of the same sex, to know they can’t marry the person they’re attracted to. Many people, in an even more dedicated effort to help, have called these young people perverts and spat at them and insisted they’ll go to hell, so that they can arrive at being heterosexual, enjoying a proper wedding with someone of the opposite sex who they’re not really attracted to, which always ensures a long, healthy and uncheapened marriage.

The idea that we need laws to discourage people from being gay suggests that opponents of gay marriage aren’t confident about heterosexuality being “natural” at all. Because they seem to assume that once the law’s changed, straight people will think “Now gay weddings are legal I might as well be gay”. Because our sexuality is shaped, above all, by what’s legal. Make it legal to marry furniture and we’ll all be rubbing ourselves up and down the sideboard, and downloading hardcore copies of The Antiques Roadshow.

The complaints also suggest that where the Labour Party did undergo a genuine transformation, during which the beliefs it was founded on were largely discarded, the Conservative Party remains, at heart, unchanged, wedded to values immeasurably more dated than anything offered by the trade unions.

And you can understand why, because whenever one of these couples who’ve been together for 60 years are asked for their secret to a long and happy marriage, they say: “The main thing that’s kept us together is knowing that gays aren’t allowed to do it, isn’t it, dear?”

“Yes, dear. We’ve had our ups and downs but, even in the rocky times, knowing that gays can’t marry each other has seen us through. I’ll put the kettle on.”

[Mark Steel, The Independent]

(Reblogged from feathers)

scottecs:

Nuova avventura sui Treccani: Zarzoz il ladro che lasciava tantissime tracce!

(Reblogged from scottecs)

scottecs:

Nuova FBCFM! Ancora 2 alla fine!

(Reblogged from scottecs)
(Reblogged from awesomephilia)

Oggi ho risposto a un sondaggio che mi ha fatto riflettere su me stesso e sui miei sentimenti.

Step 1: take John Lennon’s “Imagine” instrumental and speed it up a whole load.

Step 2: take Paul McCartney & Wings “Band on the Run” and slow it down a wee bit.

Step 3: throw one over the other and leave alone for two minutes.

(via Giavasan)

Compiti per oggi: riflettere su quello che state dicendo letteralmente quando dite “non stare lì impalato”.

È presto detto: col blog siamo in pari, ci costa sui duecentomila euro l’anno, li copriamo con la pubblicità, ci sono tre persone che ci lavorano a tempo pieno.

Quanto guadagna Beppe Grillo con il blog? - Giornalettismo

Niente, volevo solo dirvi che ci sono tre persone che “lavorano a tempo pieno” al blog di Beppe Grillo e prendono tipo cinquemila euro al mese.

What Does A Man Do At A Restaurant, Part 4028

thatbadadvice:

Miss Manners, 10 May 2013:

Dear Miss Manners:

Who should a husband seat first at the dinner table, his mother or his wife?

Gentle Reader,

The one he loves the most.

(Reblogged from thatbadadvice)

ilovecharts:

Hyperbole and a Half: Depression Part Two

Allie Brosh is absolutely the best writer about depression on the Internet. This, like her Part One, is perfect.

(Reblogged from ilovecharts)
fatalquiete:

…a che ora cara ?

fatalquiete:

…a che ora cara ?

(Reblogged from rollotommasi)
If owning a gun and knowing how to use it worked, the military would be the safest place for a woman. It’s not.

If women covering up their bodies worked, Afghanistan would have a lower rate of sexual assault than Polynesia. It doesn’t.

If not drinking alcohol worked, children would not be raped. They are.

If your advice to a woman to avoid rape is to be the most modestly dressed, soberest and first to go home, you may as well add “so the rapist will choose someone else”.

If your response to hearing a woman has been raped is “she didn’t have to go to that bar/nightclub/party” you are saying that you want bars, nightclubs and parties to have no women in them. Unless you want the women to show up, but wear kaftans and drink orange juice. Good luck selling either of those options to your friends.

Or you could just be honest and say that you don’t want less rape, you want (even) less prosecution of rapists.
(Reblogged from feathers)