…about just what would be the proper reaction to this particular group: Operation Take One For The Country. Amused? Appalled? Apprehensive? Approving? And that’s just the As.
Not that what consenting adults do is any of my business, mind you, but this is definitely one of the… shoot, the censor circuits just kicked it up a notch. I’m actually feeling mildly guilty now about having any opinion on the subject at all, positive or negative. How odd.
(Via Jeff Goldstein; he didn’t have any difficulty stating an opinion, dammit.)
I saw this there: “…the second part of our motto is BE DISCRETE!”
Wise advice. Being amorphous can be dangerous.
In a vague sort of way.
The article is a gem.
I saw this there: “…the second part of our motto is BE DISCRETE!”
I prefer my women to be continuous. Unless she meant discreet, in which case never mind.
Two reasons I love this blog: (1) Two people already made the point about discrete/discreet (2) Now I don’t have to do it…
(Sorry, Gary. Edward’s infectious.)
You’re citing Edward’s pet, which is named “infectious”?
What an odd name.
😉
“McDonough is un-phased by this type of objection.”
Sounds like Star Trek lingo to me…
Geez, nothing gets by you Grammar Gods, does it?
Yes.
I tried a “take one for the team” effort to support the hard-won efforts of local swimsuit models, but those pinkos apparently weren’t patriotic enough.
Somewhat surreal, this post.
What I love most about this concept is how it illustrates so clearly that puritanical “morals” are a wholly manufactured luxury by-product of a society with too much time on its hands. Making love to a soldier who’s being deployed erases so much of the stigma of what would otherwise be promiscuous sex. Why? Because he/she may never return and all the importance of (read: fussiness about) what’s “proper” pales in comparison.
(left Infectious at the vet’s today.)
“Geez, nothing gets by you Grammar Gods, does it?”
Could be, but this is sixth-grade spelling, not grammar.