The isolated cute cat wearing a silly wint Cat Value T Shirt
This is part of why we have so many people in jail. Its so The isolated cute cat wearing a silly wint Cat Value T Shirt to rehabilitate people in America. Theres so much inequality and so many damn people here and religious and personal freedom leads to some insane situations. Its possible that kids fall through the cracks. They have no chance to become good citizens. If you can’t read you will never get a good job here. End of story. Without a job its impossible to make ends meet in America and have a decent lifestyle. So the cycle perpetuates itself. The juvy kid becomes an adult criminal who is always in and out of jail. In my home state, Ohio, more than 50% of the prison population is incarcerated for non-violent drug offenses or probation violations. They’re on probation because of their terrible upbringing and having no way to get a decent job so they buy and sell drugs, steal things, get involved in gangs, etc., And the circle continues. Their children are in the same position they were in, and get into the same drama.
The isolated cute cat wearing a silly wint Cat Value T Shirt
I missed the HP bandwagon out of The isolated cute cat wearing a silly wint Cat Value T Shirt, so I was older and still dumb and decided to hop on this bandwagon, “because what do I have to lose?” I really enjoyed 1-3 , even the hilariously cringey, yet honestly, kind of ballsy, empty pages with nothing but the months. I also remember telling someone that “I’ve never read a book that is constantly repeating the same thing, and isn’t boring!” which in hindsight, is not the ringing endorsement I thought it was at the time. And then, I got to book four. And it was a hot, hot, hot mess. I don’t think I have ever rooted for the death of a toddler before or since, but I really needed someone to see some common sense, and something, anything to happen in the plot that made the slightest bit of sense. Whatever religious nonsense was tastefully covered by sparkly ice-cold skin in the first 3 books went full monty by book 4. For me, it raised a lot of questions about responsible marketing of not awesome relationships to young adults. I also needed an editor to stop the slaughter of GRE level words, but that was about as realistic a wish as hoping Meyer’s would one day understand that the equivalent of a child beauty pageant queen strutting around on a battlefield is fucking bizarre. I usually don’t relish carnage, but again, I was ready for someone to die. I needed that death. I needed that toddler punted into the sea. I was losing my goddamn mind over hundreds of pages of nonsense at the end, and someone needed to pay for the sins of the author, and it might as well have been Frankenstein’s toddler monster. I would love to read a sequel of Bella and Edward 15 years later, full on post-pandemic. Does Edward have flashbacks to the Spanish Flu? Has Bella finally understood that parenting is less noble sacrifice and more daily mundane grind? What happens when their prancing wunderkind uses her peace-glam-dazzle to manipulate her fellow school kids? That’s the fanfiction someone needs to write. Twilight for the middle aged who were not bitten by a vampire in 2008 and are now no longer 20 and dumb, but 30 and boring (insert hyphens here.) Overall, there was a lot of hating on teenage girls for liking teenage girl things. But there is and was legitimate criticism of the underlying messaging in the books, especially of the ginormous red flags in all of the characters’ relationships, which Meyer’s herself uncritically, and very proudly, hoisted for the world to see. At the same time, read with general warning and enjoy it. It is entertaining. I had no idea that there were so many followers ups or that 50 Shades had even more books. So thank you for the highly entertaining drama and trip down memory lane.
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