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Shhhhh.....
Okay smartass... you know that wasn't my point. I will try to remember this conversation the next time someone in the media does something you perceive to be sexist. Love you anyway.
LOL! I couldn't resist, but it is kind of valid, don't you think?
I have trouble with the entire racist/sexist thing and one day I'll get it all clear in my mind.
*smooch*
Don't you wish you could actually silence intelligent debate, so that your ignorant liberal whine can better be seen without distraction? You have already been shown by another as being completely wrong on this thread. Sorry to disappoint ya.
I don't wish to silence intelligent debate, but I don't think that issue is even relevant with respect to you.
Yet you posted a link that clearly disputes the very argument you want to make, ya that is bright as hell.
No, it doesn't. It merely says that the tabloids sometimes use the term to referred to married persons. Oh wait... Fox really is just a tabloid, isn't it? Perhaps you are right.
It doesn't say that at all. or perhaps you can quote it where it says that?
Baby mama - Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaOriginally, the term was used by the fathers of children born out of wedlock to describe the mothers of their children, but the term is now in general use to describe any single mother. Since entering currency in U.S. tabloids, the terms baby mama and baby daddy have even begun to be applied to married and engaged celebrities.
And yet your quote does not say it only applies to tabloids anymore, now does it retard? Or is that one of those " we all know it where I live" moments? It states that the term now applies to celebrities.
To bad, so sad for you. Perhaps you should vet your sources better?
You're point about FOX is valid, though I never consider it a serious news source, and while not quite lighthearted comedy it is in business, IMO, for shock value.
I did think about this, and wondered if I'd consider it sexist to call Hillary Bill's baby momma. It kind of made me laugh, really.
If you call a woman a momma, I don't see how it devalues her anymore than calling a man a daddy devalues him. Baby momma, sugar daddy...they aren't the total sum of someone, just a part of them. I can't imagine a man getting upset about being called a sugar daddy.
I think the real problem here is thinking being a momma is somehow a lacking trait.
But somehow being a boy is?
Hey, at least I didn't call you a c*nt.