danielpalos
Diamond Member
- Banned
- #281
any women brave enough to let me practice shaving or waxing?
platonic or non-platonic ok.
platonic or non-platonic ok.
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Creepy incel is creepy.any women brave enough to let me practice shaving or waxing?
platonic or non-platonic ok.
who cares what a guy thinks. besides, this is politics not morality.Creepy incel is creepy.any women brave enough to let me practice shaving or waxing?
platonic or non-platonic ok.
No surprise, it's just more of the war on men in today's culture.
Gillette chastises men in a new commercial highlighting the #MeToo movement — and some are furious
- Gillette released a commercial on Monday called "We Believe," asking men to change their behavior in light of the #MeToo movement.
- The commercial encourages men to be the "best" by holding one another accountable and eliminating excuses for bad behavior.
- Some have heavily criticized the ad online.
Gillette is calling on men to step it up.
A new ad, called "We Believe" and lasting a minute and a half, encourages men to change their behavior. It directly invokes the #MeToo movement to confront America's culture.
"Gillette believes in the best in men — that by holding each other accountable, eliminating excuses for bad behavior, and supporting a new generation working toward their personal 'best,' we can deliver positive change that will matter for years to come," Gary Coombe, the president of the Gillette parent Procter & Gamble's global grooming business, said in a statement about the ad.
The ad opens with audio of news anchors covering a simulated reporting on a #MeToo-related movement. A narrator then asks: "Is this the best a man can get? Is it?"
Gillette chastises men in a new commercial highlighting the #MeToo movement — and some are furious
there is nothing toxic about REAL masculinity.
i told my daughter: the way you know a young man will respect you is by watching how he treats his parents!
No surprise, it's just more of the war on men in today's culture.
Gillette chastises men in a new commercial highlighting the #MeToo movement — and some are furious
- Gillette released a commercial on Monday called "We Believe," asking men to change their behavior in light of the #MeToo movement.
- The commercial encourages men to be the "best" by holding one another accountable and eliminating excuses for bad behavior.
- Some have heavily criticized the ad online.
Gillette is calling on men to step it up.
A new ad, called "We Believe" and lasting a minute and a half, encourages men to change their behavior. It directly invokes the #MeToo movement to confront America's culture.
"Gillette believes in the best in men — that by holding each other accountable, eliminating excuses for bad behavior, and supporting a new generation working toward their personal 'best,' we can deliver positive change that will matter for years to come," Gary Coombe, the president of the Gillette parent Procter & Gamble's global grooming business, said in a statement about the ad.
The ad opens with audio of news anchors covering a simulated reporting on a #MeToo-related movement. A narrator then asks: "Is this the best a man can get? Is it?"
Gillette chastises men in a new commercial highlighting the #MeToo movement — and some are furious
If your scared of a TV commerical, check your shorts for balls.
No surprise, it's just more of the war on men in today's culture.
Gillette chastises men in a new commercial highlighting the #MeToo movement — and some are furious
- Gillette released a commercial on Monday called "We Believe," asking men to change their behavior in light of the #MeToo movement.
- The commercial encourages men to be the "best" by holding one another accountable and eliminating excuses for bad behavior.
- Some have heavily criticized the ad online.
Gillette is calling on men to step it up.
A new ad, called "We Believe" and lasting a minute and a half, encourages men to change their behavior. It directly invokes the #MeToo movement to confront America's culture.
"Gillette believes in the best in men — that by holding each other accountable, eliminating excuses for bad behavior, and supporting a new generation working toward their personal 'best,' we can deliver positive change that will matter for years to come," Gary Coombe, the president of the Gillette parent Procter & Gamble's global grooming business, said in a statement about the ad.
The ad opens with audio of news anchors covering a simulated reporting on a #MeToo-related movement. A narrator then asks: "Is this the best a man can get? Is it?"
Gillette chastises men in a new commercial highlighting the #MeToo movement — and some are furious
If your scared of a TV commerical, check your shorts for balls.
If you assume objecting to something = "scared of it", check your skull for brains.
Teaching your son to be a better man shouldn't be an objection, but a goal.
Numbnuts.
No surprise, it's just more of the war on men in today's culture.
Gillette chastises men in a new commercial highlighting the #MeToo movement — and some are furious
- Gillette released a commercial on Monday called "We Believe," asking men to change their behavior in light of the #MeToo movement.
- The commercial encourages men to be the "best" by holding one another accountable and eliminating excuses for bad behavior.
- Some have heavily criticized the ad online.
Gillette is calling on men to step it up.
A new ad, called "We Believe" and lasting a minute and a half, encourages men to change their behavior. It directly invokes the #MeToo movement to confront America's culture.
"Gillette believes in the best in men — that by holding each other accountable, eliminating excuses for bad behavior, and supporting a new generation working toward their personal 'best,' we can deliver positive change that will matter for years to come," Gary Coombe, the president of the Gillette parent Procter & Gamble's global grooming business, said in a statement about the ad.
The ad opens with audio of news anchors covering a simulated reporting on a #MeToo-related movement. A narrator then asks: "Is this the best a man can get? Is it?"
Gillette chastises men in a new commercial highlighting the #MeToo movement — and some are furious
If your scared of a TV commerical, check your shorts for balls.
If you assume objecting to something = "scared of it", check your skull for brains.
Teaching your son to be a better man shouldn't be an objection, but a goal.
Numbnuts.
No surprise, it's just more of the war on men in today's culture.
Gillette chastises men in a new commercial highlighting the #MeToo movement — and some are furious
- Gillette released a commercial on Monday called "We Believe," asking men to change their behavior in light of the #MeToo movement.
- The commercial encourages men to be the "best" by holding one another accountable and eliminating excuses for bad behavior.
- Some have heavily criticized the ad online.
Gillette is calling on men to step it up.
A new ad, called "We Believe" and lasting a minute and a half, encourages men to change their behavior. It directly invokes the #MeToo movement to confront America's culture.
"Gillette believes in the best in men — that by holding each other accountable, eliminating excuses for bad behavior, and supporting a new generation working toward their personal 'best,' we can deliver positive change that will matter for years to come," Gary Coombe, the president of the Gillette parent Procter & Gamble's global grooming business, said in a statement about the ad.
The ad opens with audio of news anchors covering a simulated reporting on a #MeToo-related movement. A narrator then asks: "Is this the best a man can get? Is it?"
Gillette chastises men in a new commercial highlighting the #MeToo movement — and some are furious
If your scared of a TV commerical, check your shorts for balls.
If you assume objecting to something = "scared of it", check your skull for brains.
Teaching your son to be a better man shouldn't be an objection, but a goal.
Numbnuts.
Life must be a lot easier when you can just make blind assumptions about everything, rather than having to take the time to know and understand what's going on. I wouldn't know, but you clearly do.
Teaching your son to be a Gillettized effeminate pussy is not teaching him to be a better man; no matter how much LIbErals want us to think that it is.