...despite deleting my account 20 years ago
Uh...yeah...
...despite deleting my account 20 years ago
Uh...yeah...
Harvey Spencer Stephens (born 12 November 1970) is an English actor.
I don't think your second link is the one you wanted to post...
Ok, I was wrong...I haven't watched the whole video yet, but the bits this video showed really does make it seem worse than the Spez AMA. At least Spez was smart enough to keep the answers short and concise, even if they ignored all the questions.
Why not both?
I'd just like to point out "a jizz of mayonnaise" is actually a line in this video...
Damn, and I was betting on weed...
It was all about obedience.
So is the New Testament. And the Qur'an. And the Book Of Mormon. It's all about blind obedience...
What if it's the one where he's a creepy perv that wants Kira's likeness made into a holosuite sex program?
This isn't just dementia. This is frontotemporal dementia, AKA Pick's disease. Likely he's been suffering for years before it got bad enough to seek help. You don't even notice it at first. It starts with personality changes over years. They become a different person before they progress to having trouble speaking. By the time he became aphasic, the person he was had likely disappeared completely. Before anyone even realized he was sick. I feel worse for his youngest children, who likely never got to meet the real person before the disease.
Gay For Pay is nothing new...
Cooking class was mandatory in my school in the 90s. We learned how to make muffins from scratch, some basic (and I mean very basic) meals, and some basic home cleaning. It was better than nothing, but I was able to see who had never been shown any of it before. I had grew up cooking for myself, and I was expected to help with dishes. So none of it was that new to me. But some of the kids had never touched unprepared food before. Some had never washed a dish before. It was obvious which ones were going to grow up still not knowing how to cook for themselves beyond microwave meals and takeout.
A single course isn't going to do much to help guide a kid into being a healthy adult. Basic life skills should be a graduated course in every single year of grade school. It's the only way to engrain it into everyday life.
You don't mention how many times it's happened, as if that actually matters, but insist it must be happening enough to be a problem. You're still making blatantly ignorant and misleading statements.