Memeito's Replies


We see her tits and she takes a selfie after getting a facial. Maybe one of the lesser known Marvel heroes: Arkon The Magnificent, Armadillo, Ka-Zar, Baron Karza, etc. Yeah, he's old, we get it, that's probably why he keeps repeating "I'm too old for this shit..." I checked her and she has similar disturbing inappropriate photos, something must be wrong with this family... Ummm...that's exactly what she's doing... <blockquote>What's wrong with. She's a little girl laughing.</blockquote> Seriously? You don't notice anything unusual in that photo? How many blacks do you know that chase tornadoes? <blockquote>The guy is in a vegetative state. He can't go out in public or receive reporters. For some reason his family is in denial.</blockquote> They could still make him available to the general public - open the doors to the house and let people enter and see him - $10 a pop. If they want to take a photo with him - $20. They could also take him on a tour, from town to town, his fans would love this! His treatment apparently costs millions each year, his family needs to think at alternate ways of making money to cover the huge expenses. They could have at least take him out in public, let the people see him, take photos with him, raise awareness about people with the same condition as him, etc. At the races...He stopped going in public after the accident. Something isn't right here. He's a public person, the people want to know, they have the right to find out what happened to him. Lol, he turned down Star Wars, because he didn't "understand" it, what's so hard to understand? Vice is just quoting what other Tibetans say, The Tibet Rights Collective has a tweet about this: https://twitter.com/TibetCollective/status/1646516453015953413?s=20 I don't know about other news sites, for them the problem is probably just not important anymore, I mean for how long are you gonna beat a dead horse, it was just a simple cultural misunderstanding. It's when a Tibetan grandpa gives candy to his grandkids, and he sucks them first to make them soft, and when he's out of candy but the kids still want some, he might say jokingly because his mouth is all sweet now: "you can now suck my tongue instead", it's all explained in this article: https://www.vice.com/en/article/jg5854/tibetans-explain-what-suck-my-tongue-means-dalai-lama-viral-video <blockquote>Uhm, no. Like I said, it's mindboggling how he even got this wrong, since "eat" is clearly the easier word for a foreigner. English isn't my first language either and I would never mix the two up. And in the context of the supposed expression "eating" means to take away the tongue so the owner doesn't have it anymore. "Suck" doesn't even come close to that. </blockquote> Well, I'm from Romania and we consume candy, we usually say that we suck it, not eat it, since it's hard and it has to be kept in the mouth to melt. So, such a confusion between eat and suck is easy to be made. "Eat my tongue" is not the same as "suck my tongue". It doesn't even come down to the same thing. Not sure how the Dalai Lama could even get this wrong, since "eat" is clearly the easier word for a foreigner." He just misspoke, since it's not his first language, he wanted to say "eat" not "suck", an honest mistake, it's explained there. "Is there any evidence from before the incident that this is an expression in Tibet? If it is, why didn't that info come out immediately and not just yesterday? If you spoke to Tibetans, why didn't YOU mention this? Instead everybody tried to explain it away by saying that sticking your tongue out is just a way of greeting." I posted the explanation four days ago. " Even the article mentions that the supposed expression is said in a completely different context between a child and an adult who share a familiair relationship. Like I said, even if it was just a joke, it was inappropriate, especially since the boy was obviously feeling uncomfortable." The Dalai Lama often acts like a friendly grandpa to the kids he meets, he means no harm. Vice article explaining it: https://www.vice.com/en/article/jg5854/tibetans-explain-what-suck-my-tongue-means-dalai-lama-viral-video Sometimes over-explaining things could make the matter much worse, attract even more attention, discussion and debates over what is a small unimportant problem, they apologized and that's more than enough, for them the subject is now closed... It was explained on various online forums, social media and in youtube comments, but they are getting deleted or downvoted very fast, people don't want to hear any explanations, they just want blood now. https://www.reddit.com/r/india/comments/12ggufj/removed_by_reddit/ Yes, I've talked with some Tibetans online, who explained it, and are very confused why this whole thing was blown out of proportion by the media, to them it's obvious just some silly banter and harmless jokes, that simply got lost in translation.