Would men eventually find women attractive if they didn't shave their legs?

Some while back in this thread I unwisely used the expression "men are all about physical appearance". The idea I was trying to convey was despite the fact that we belong to the most intellectually advanced specie on Earth with remarkable abilities to deal with abstract concepts, we are none the less still animals with animal instincts and though we usually succeed in controlling these instincts the fact remains that they're always there. Grrrrr!

After eighty, I gave up trying to please the general public. Get back to those porn sites Josiah, and never mind the excuses.
 

Understood. Someone told me once you can never get in trouble by saying "whatever" and having been dumped on before I was just being cautious.

Being an easy going guy, I was known for my frequent use of "whatever", meaning whatever makes you happy is fine by me. Much to my surprise and puzzlement, I found that women in general, and my very own Sweetie, hate that response. They hear it as showing a lack of interest.
 
Being an easy going guy, I was known for my frequent use of "whatever", meaning whatever makes you happy is fine by me. Much to my surprise and puzzlement, I found that women in general, and my very own Sweetie, hate that response. They hear it as showing a lack of interest.

That's one of those expressions when one can't hear the inflection in the voice, it often at times will be taken as being dismissive and or condescending.
 

That's one of those expressions when one can't hear the inflection in the voice, it often at times will be taken as being dismissive and or condescending.

"Whatever" is a blank check. Doesn't get more agreeable than that. I don't think anyone has ever said it to me in my entire life.
Come to think of it, I don't think Ive ever heard any woman use it.
 
Not sure about elsewhere but in Australia WHATEVER is most often used by teens to imply that you've asked such a boring and irrelevant question that it doesn't merit a considered answer.
 
No, dingos are shy and hunt by themselves. You are in more danger from packs of half wild domestic dogs in country towns. They attack sheep and do a lot of damage but there aren't many cases of attack by dingo.

The exception is on Fraser Island, QLD. The dingos there are all pure bred and roam at will. Tourists are asked not to feed them but of course many don't comply. The dingoes lose the fear of humans and there have been several attacks on children or lone bush walkers. Those dogs are caught and destroyed, so it doesn't happen very often.
 
I'm wondering if they are related in any way to our coyotes?

coyote_3261np.jpg


They hunt in packs... and attack sheep and chickens and our pets... and sometimes kids.. because we have taken over their habitat. They can be pretty vicious.

coyote-growling-closeup.jpg
 
Not coyotes but there is an American cousin
Several experts have provided evidence that shows some native North American dogs should be classified as Canis lupus dingo. Prominent among these canines is the Carolina Dog, also known as "Yellow Dogs" or "Yaller Dogs". Formerly common and widespread in the United States, such dogs continue to survive living independently in isolated forests and swamps of the southeastern United States
 
My dad brought a dog back from Japan after WWII. He rescued it as a small puppy from a sinking Japanese boat; he stuffed it down his shirt, took it back to his ship and it became the ship's mascot; it wasn't easy, but he received official permission to bring it home. He was told by the Japanese that it was a "Koto" hound, whatever that was. The dog was two when I was born and they were afraid he was going to be jealous of me, but he became my protector and "baby-sitter" (my mother would put me on a blanket in the yard and tell the dog to "guard".......if I crawled off the blanket, he would lay down on me and bark until my mother came out....and believe me, NOBODY but NOBODY was allowed to come into the yard.) He was an excellent family dog, but was a terror to other dogs; he would look like hell after a fight, but the other dog would look even worse. His specialty was climbing ladders and trees....I guess it was his early life on a ship. We had 13 good years with him.
 

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