I would say it started in 2004 and completed by 2009. In 2004, social networking websites came to prominence. By 2009, social networking had been implicitly integrated into smart phones that had been unleashed upon the…
It's all the same machine, right? The Pentagon, multinational corporations, the police. If you do one little job, you build a widget in Saskatoon, and the next thing you know, it's two miles under the desert, the…
You're not doing a hero's work either. Don't claim to be instructing me with shame. Why encourage silence in the scenarios where it's safe to conjecture. They're both dead, and history is written. Recognize the lack of…
But that's how smears work. The whole point is to cause deep consternation, because dangerous questions might reflect poorly upon the person that asks them. So, when confronted with a delicate social scenario that…
So, like maybe he gave her a black eye, and a fat lip? Did her clothes get ripped? Was there lasting evidence of a serious assault? Did he knock her down a flight of stairs, and the kick her the stomach until she shat…
That would be a form of "threatening" or maybe "menacing", and yeah, it's intimidation, but I wouldn't count it as an attack.
> during which time he attacked her Still sounds kind of vague. What, precisely, does the word "attacked" refer to?
I would say it started in 2004 and completed by 2009. In 2004, social networking websites came to prominence. By 2009, social networking had been implicitly integrated into smart phones that had been unleashed upon the…
It's all the same machine, right? The Pentagon, multinational corporations, the police. If you do one little job, you build a widget in Saskatoon, and the next thing you know, it's two miles under the desert, the…
You're not doing a hero's work either. Don't claim to be instructing me with shame. Why encourage silence in the scenarios where it's safe to conjecture. They're both dead, and history is written. Recognize the lack of…
But that's how smears work. The whole point is to cause deep consternation, because dangerous questions might reflect poorly upon the person that asks them. So, when confronted with a delicate social scenario that…
So, like maybe he gave her a black eye, and a fat lip? Did her clothes get ripped? Was there lasting evidence of a serious assault? Did he knock her down a flight of stairs, and the kick her the stomach until she shat…
That would be a form of "threatening" or maybe "menacing", and yeah, it's intimidation, but I wouldn't count it as an attack.
> during which time he attacked her Still sounds kind of vague. What, precisely, does the word "attacked" refer to?