I’ve been reading about the coverage of this story lately. It’s pretty amazing how self-important people are. The dude who made the site talks extensively on his blog about how people should learn from his experience and trust love. The story isn’t a testament to anything but showing that the internet is a great means for social networking. There is no story that is a testament to love, because love isn’t a universally established ‘thing’. Although, the guy is an illustrator and pretty damn good at it. It’s a shame that he is so wrapped up in the righteousness of his own experiences. It’s also amusing because I feel that there is no way that site would have worked if he wasn’t a handsome white guy. If it was me who made that site, I would have been ignored and/or called a creepy weirdo and told to get a life and stop stalking women. I’m not implying that doesn’t already happen, but still. It would happen more.
I wish people would get over the idea of right and wrong. Or at least, thinking they know which is which. They don’t. No one does. Telling someone to learn from your experience with love makes no sense to me. It assumes that you have any idea of what love means to them - if anything at all. The only thing that I personally feel is definitely wrong, is when human(s) inflict unjustified mental/physical pain on other human(s). Everything else, in my opinion, is complete theocratic bullshit.