Do not go to UCLA

<p>I have heard that can happen, yes.</p>

<p>Guns kill people. People kill people. I say we outlaw people from campus as well. Can I get a hell yeah?</p>

<p>UCLA- Rapists
UCSD- Racists
UCI- Anti-Semitists
UCB- Anti-Slackers
UCSB- Anti-Nerds
UCD- Anti-Bike-Haters
UCR- Anti-Nice-Weather
UCM- Anti-Accreditation.</p>

<p>ohh the UC system just gets worse and worse</p>

<p>You neglected UCSC…Anti-Drug Laws</p>

<p>good eye</p>

<p>UCB- Anti-Slackers
UCD- Anti-Bike-Haters
UCI- Anti-Semitics
UCLA- Rapists
UCM- Anti-Accreditation
UCR- Anti-Nice-Weather
UCSB- Anti-Nerds
UCSC- Anti-Drug Laws
UCSD- Racists</p>

<p>I alphabetized them as well and fixed the misspelling of “semitics” which I carried over from copying and pasting</p>

<p>Is UCSB really Anti-Nerds?</p>

<p>well, they’re anti-not-partying.</p>

<p>Haha two in the eyes and finish off at the jugular</p>

<p>@Pscholler: Hell yeah! Although I think we should just ban concealed people. Unconcealed people, with a permit, should still be okay.</p>

<p>Fuuuun!! This is the reason I wanna go!</p>

<p>bro rape!!!</p>

<p>Even though I’m excited to go to UCSD this fall, I can safely say that racial tension has always been an issue there.</p>

<p>I’m an older student, 26 now, and in 2002 I was dating a Vietnamese girl from UCSD.</p>

<p>She was a member of the Vietnamese club and she had to let go of my hand when she saw her friends because they don’t like their members to date “non Asian” guys or girls. </p>

<p>One time I went to my Chinese girlfriend’s apartment (after me and Viet girl broke up) and I was outside about to knock when I heard arguing. It was her roommate (who coincidentally had a crush on her) and he shouted at her, “How could you date that filthy <em>expletive</em> Mexican?!”</p>

<p>I figured that was a better time as any to make my dramatic entrance. I ended up beating the crap out of him. Sure, I was only acknowledging the stereotype, but you know what? It felt good, and some times people need a good ass beating. </p>

<p>I’m always in this unique position because I’m not ugly by any means, I have a very approachable personality (I don’t sound ‘Mexican’ because I’m 4th generation raised in the states) so I usually have no trouble meeting girls from other nationalities and backgrounds. </p>

<p>This was in 2002, mind you. It’s been 8 years since then, but how much have things changed? </p>

<p>This isn’t to say that all the Asians at UCSD are racist, because that’s not the case at all. There’s definitely a divide in their own community, because a lot of my best friends in 2002 were actually Asian. I had one Taiwanese friend, and his friends, who not only accepted me as a friend, but had my back whenever I got into a conflict with other students. My other friend was Korean, we went to a few parties together, him and his friends accepted me and didn’t label me an “Asian girl stealer” lol. I had plenty of Asian friends who were completely cool with me, but there’s ‘SOME’ that have some deep rooted issues.</p>

<p>Hmm how about people just not be so god damn insecure.</p>

<p>“I figured that was a better time as any to make my dramatic entrance. I ended up beating the crap out of him. Sure, I was only acknowledging the stereotype, but you know what? It felt good, and some times people need a good ass beating.”</p>

<p>That part made me laugh though. I’ve gotten into a few fights in high school because for some reason I thought I was the bees knees. Did it feel semi-good to punch somebody you don’t like? Yeah, a bit. If I could kick somebody’s ass right now it would probably be myself from high school just for being such an ignorant idiot. Adults who still think like this make me laugh. Granted, it was 8 years ago so there’s a good chance you’ve gotten over that phase.</p>

<p>Oh okay, you want to have <em>that</em> talk. </p>

<p>Has a lot changed in 8 years? Yes. But most of what I think about getting into fights has only been reinforced.</p>

<p>You know what I think is REALLY stupid? How for some reason, people think that over thousands of years, we’ve evolved past violence. How is that? Because we can use language to communicate, we’ve lost the reason to settle conflicts without using words?</p>

<p>Let me explain something to you, one of my closest friends is someone I got into a fight with. Because the issues are done, they’re gone. We didn’t like each other for some reason, something that was definitely worth fighting for, and we both held our ground and decided to settle it the old fashioned way. Now he’s one of my closest friends. </p>

<p>My best friend on the other hand, from high school, someone I knew for 8 years. We’re not best friends any more. We had an issue we couldn’t get past, we parted ways and haven’t spoken since. Attempting to resolve that issue with words, didn’t get me anywhere.</p>

<p>Now I don’t condone useless violence, but to say that somehow when you get older that you shouldn’t knock people around when they act stupid without remorse, well that’s equally stupid. Of course I believe you should exhaust other efforts first. If someone does something you don’t like, ask them to stop. If they continue, separate yourself from them. If they still don’t stop, warn them you’re going to seek professional help. If you seek professional help and it does not work (cops don’t press charges, you can’t get enough evidence, can’t get a restraining order) and they don’t stop, what do you do? Just take it? And yes, in the real world, professional help doesn’t always work.</p>

<p>Yeah, I’d probably agree with that. I didn’t make it all that clear in my post but I was talking more about the fight-first mindset that a lot of people used to have. (I’m assuming that you didn’t talk it out with the girl’s roommate before kicking his ass haha)</p>

<p>Well, lol… The thing about him is. He said all that was needed to be said. Now if I heard him say, “How can you date that guy?” I’d probably have talked to him, to see if he was criticizing her for dating a non-student, which I’d be empathetic to or if she was dating a guy who has a bad lifestyle (I was a party head at the time) then I’d be empathetic too. But what he called me, pretty much let me know, exactly what he thinks and feels. </p>

<p>There’s a line. Once you cross that line, the gloves are off. He pretty much zoomed past the line, spit on it as he crossed it, managed to find another line I didn’t even know existed and crossed that one too, then went back across both lines just to make a U-turn and cross them both again. </p>

<p>So yeah, wasn’t much time for talking.</p>

<p>yeah… To make a blanket judgment over you based on a few words of text, you seem like somebody that wouldn’t do that on a regular basis so izzzz kewlzioz</p>

<p>eew asians. jk</p>

<p>Just because you’re still violent, doesn’t mean all of us are violent. I think you’re correct to assume humans resort to violence in the absence of minds capable of communication. To make a fundamental claim about human nature to seemingly validate your propensity for violence, is absurd. It’s absurd as me assuming you were physically punished as a child and are, now, reliving your parents’ behavior to normalize their abuse. </p>

<p>Lucky for me and other rational people, your violence is only ensuring that we actually do evolve beyond violence; as we have been, for thousands of years (yes, there is actual data to back this up).</p>

<p>I feel for you in your experiences with racism. While I don’t see how your violence solved anything (aside from making someone less likely to be vocal about their racism), I could see how that could make you angry.</p>

<p>yes, because if you come here I will rape you all. </p>

<p>finals week is just that stressful.</p>