Mine is purple actually, but blue is actually two colours in a trenchcoat, other languages like Russian know them as two separate colors.
they/them
Mine is purple actually, but blue is actually two colours in a trenchcoat, other languages like Russian know them as two separate colors.
Option 12: I can’t choose, I like all of them!
Option 11: White
Option 10: Grey
Option 9: Black
Option 8: Purple
Option 7: All blues
Option 6: Indigo/Dark Blue
Option 5: Cyan/Light Blue
Option 4: Green
Option 3: Yellow
Option 2: Orange
Option 1: Red
Many laws in the UK align with basic human moral values, but some serious reform (no, not that one) is needed in terms of copyright shouldn’t exist, capitalism is too unrestricted, healthcare is being underfunded, particularly for GAC and mental health, and there are worrying trends in the direction of less freedom of speech and privacy, both in real life with the recent protest restriction laws, and how they’re trying to break encryption on our devices.
Not usually, I wouldn’t, but if I would I would pronounce the r like short oo with vocal fry
You’re free to not use them, if you want. But me and many others are going to appreciate that these alternatives that don’t rely on centralised cervices exist, that won’t track credit scores, personal information, or use tech companies with privacy and freedom concerns.
I’m a trans person, so I think I feel qualified to say that people can’t choose who they’re attracted to - race, gender, sex, age, etc - but I also don’t think we need words for every specific sexuality. Straight, gay, and bi seem good enough, and you can qualify that (I’m gay and only attracted to black people, I’m bi but only for people older than me, I’m straight but only for people that are either cis or trans and have had bottom surgery).
Not to be confused with absolute Unix
Do I become unhealthy if I do eat and drink anyway? Otherwise, I’ll just eat and drink at social occasions
Is that a The Good Place reference?