Aim for the head. Try to knock out a tooth. Or the nose. Make them bleed if you can.
At least that worked for 8 year old me
It was reportedly an expensively capped tooth
Aim for the head. Try to knock out a tooth. Or the nose. Make them bleed if you can.
At least that worked for 8 year old me
It was reportedly an expensively capped tooth
I think it’s only arguably Christian. Loads of atheists follow that tradition and I would consider it culture not religion
That’s the one.
Wonder why I read it as if you were speaking like Staghorn Leghorn
The Australian census has a similar question. “None” is not an option, though I don’t think it’s a mandatory question (though it’s hard to get meaningful data out of blank versus a stated “none”)
They are likely to have increased protection that day
In my country we allow everyone to wear whatever religious symbols, clothes, knives in public service workplaces since those things don’t affect how they do their work, though telling them they may not have those things will push them out of the jobs, or make them upset and less productive if they don’t leave
I see bans on religious symbols in the workplace as an attempt to reduce the number of people who value those symbols in those workplaces
They are asking whether the prohibition affects Christians wearing cross and fish symbols, or only less popular religions’ symbols and styles
I went to good schools. In primary school (in the '80s) I knocked a tooth out of a bully. I got no punishment
In high school I flung a two student table at a verbal bully. He got in trouble “kids don’t throw tables for nothing”