A funny thing happened today. I was looking at the mirror to see how my graduation cap (or what ever it is called in english) looked on me and I thought: Hey I look rather androgynous with this thing on. I suddenly felt really happy :O
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A funny thing happened today. I was looking at the mirror to see how my graduation cap (or what ever it is called in english) looked on me and I thought: Hey I look rather androgynous with this thing on. I suddenly felt really happy :O
Mortor Board! It's what those silly hats are called. Also, congratulations on impending graduation! Also, also, *hugs* Probably the same way I felt when I got rid of my sideburns and started letting my hair grow out. ^_^
Maybe, but it still has to go through more votes, sessions, and red tape. It won't be any time soon... :smallsigh: The article I read said something about a 2011 Military Revision bill or something, so I'm assuming that's what it would be tacked on to and when it would take affect. :smallconfused:
Also, how did you get away with writing about a school shooting and only getting points off for waiting too long to reveal the writer's gender? In most schools, or at least mine, any references to something like that would have cost you more than a few points... :smalleek:
Well, getting rid of it has pretty broad appeal among the rank and file. Once you've been shot at by people trying to kill you, the sexual preference of the person at your side doesn't really matter very much. Also, US soldiers aren't allowed to have sex on active duty anyway, so any problems that might arise wouldn't really come up.
Well, that's reasonable. We can't have kids thinking it's okay to start zombie apocalypses.
:smallconfused: This is why I'm glad I go to a school were I can curse out a teacher, and I don't get in trouble as long as I'm clever about it.
I also wrote an essay about prostitution in History class, and got an A. :smallbiggrin:
But I can see things like this happening at other schools... it's sad.
Actually, it was taking refuge in the high school that got 'em expelled IIRC.
So. Gay people. More or less susceptible to the zombie plague?
Generally less contact with the elderly due to severed family ties and social prejudices, right? So that's a point in favor of avoiding patient 0...
Ah, that makes sense now. We can't have the youth of today thinking they can do sissy things like "taking refuge" and "not being possessed by a horrible supervirus that turns you into a zombie". Back in my day we got possessed by horrible viruses all the time, and we damn well enjoyed it.
Except that they might freak out from being near gay people. But society as a whole has to learn to deal with it and as said, it's probably getting much easier once you're under fire together.
Even if there's not much actually happening yet, I think it's at least nice to see that a considerable number of high ranking politicians seem to belive that abolishing the rule will be taken favorably by voters.
But having read about it yesterday, it got me wondering: What about open bisexuals? Are they forced to leave as well? What does the rules actually say what people have to be kicked out?
I'm fairly certain bisexuals are also covered by "Don't ask, don't tell." :smallconfused:
Well, as I said, surveys among active servicemen/women/others show that ~75% are in favor of repealing "don't ask, don't tell." They already know gay servicemen, who came out after they were discharged, and after having to deal with gorilla civil war in the graveyard of empires, hating on gays just seems rather pointless, especially gays who join the military.
Similarly, the military was integrated in 1948, before most other institutions in America. Throughout most of the fifties and sixties, racism was much less pronounced in military culture than anywere else-- your comrade in arms is your comrade in arms, black or white, gay or straight, he's still your brother.
It's the politicians and the old-fashioned higher-ups, who mostly went strait from collage to commission to the political ladder, who are crying foul
Erm...if I might add something... not to step on anyone's toes or anything.
Military members are not allowed to do certain things while deployed to certain parts of the globe. It is part of General Order number 1 and is spelled out.
Active Duty refers to anyone who's full time job is the military. I am on active duty. A guard member who is deployed is considered to be on active duty. So, just a clarification. :smallsmile:
No worries, just saw the post and had to add clarification so that you and others wouldn't be confused. :smallcool:
Cuz I don't live in a stoopid crazy paranoid country :smallwink:
Kidding! Honest! :smalltongue: Please don't bomb me! (o.o)How old do you think I am? :smallconfused: :smalleek: :smallmad:
I think I wrote it... in the 2000s... but before 2003. Maybe exactly 2000. If I recall correctly, the new kid befriended this loner guy who warned him to stay away from school but he ignored him and the guy turned up with a gun and I think tried to (did?) kill some people but the new kid stepped in and stopped him and the guy was caught alive and put in a mental institution where the kid visits him sometimes. Happy ending and all that jazz. More or less.
And instead live in a state that encourages molly-coddling. :smalltongue:
Definitely weird for it to not even get commented on. Definitely well into the age of school shootings then. Kind of scary that Serps is only about the same age as one of my brothers. :smallyuk:
...
Nah, I'll let it go at that :smallwink:
See, people here don't assume that if you bring up something that's happened in the world, you will replicate it :smalltongue:
:smallconfused:
He was mentally disturbed. I can't remember the reasons, but he was mad, not evil. Considering we don't have the death penalty here, a lifetime in a mental institution is plentily appropriate.
Ionno. Straight but flexible? Bi/homosexual but picky?
Someone with bad lovers?
I kid I kid.
Wouldn't that mean asexual gay man or something along those lines?
No. . .Serpentine has assumed that the teacher assumed a particular viewpoint for no good reason (and/or her name on the byline) and I have assumed that the particular, wrong for the narrator, viewpoint was embedded in the writing and the teacher picked up on it. It can't be settled either way without seeing the story.
Alternately, since I missed the whole shooting aspect of it earlier, docking the grade may have been an unspoken way to warn Serpentine not to write anything else on that topic, a "a guy would have gotten in trouble if he had written this" message, a "question who you identify with, the shooter or the savior" message.
:sigh:No. I already said, I'm not surprised she took that view. I was surprised that she considered the fact that it happened to be wrong to be such a big deal.Again: No. She would have said so if that was the case, and generally speaking (inner-city schools might be different), this is not an issue here.
If I can find it, I'll show it in all its crappy high schooly glory. In the meantime, moving right along.