The festive knit

Dec 23rd, 2022 9:59 am | By

On a more cheerful note – South Ken Natural History Museum T rex gets Xmas jumper:

The animatronic T.rex is sporting the festive knit, which has been made by a family-run firm in Leicester.

British Christmas Jumpers has previously produced sweaters for Ed Sheeran and the Houses of Parliament.

Director Snahal Patel said the latest design was the company’s biggest job yet and took staff 100 hours to complete.

The T Rex at the Natural History Museum now has his own jumper (compete  with tiny sleeves) : r/CasualUK


The invention of rights

Dec 23rd, 2022 9:33 am | By

When did we all decide that it’s ok to invent new rights out of thin air and then impose them on everyone else no matter how batshit zogborst they are?

I say we never did all decide that, it’s just that a few people did, but they’ve had amazing and horrifying success in imposing this sleight of hand on the rest of us.

Like so:

What rights? What rights?? What rights of trans people are we talking about? There is no human right to force everyone else to believe one’s fantasies about one’s own precious self. That. is. not. a. human. right.

How did so many people so swiftly let themselves be convinced that it is? Especially governments and political parties and rights organizations?



At the center of this imagined plot

Dec 23rd, 2022 8:59 am | By

The NY Times first reported Hannity’s admission that he lied.

On Nov. 30, 2020, Sean Hannity hosted Sidney Powell on his prime-time Fox News program. As she had in many other interviews around that time — on Fox and elsewhere in right-wing media — Ms. Powell, a former federal prosecutor, spun wild conspiracy theories about what she said was “corruption all across the country, in countless districts,” in a plot to steal re-election from the president, Donald J. Trump.

At the center of this imagined plot were machines from Dominion Voting Systems, which Ms. Powell claimed ran an algorithm that switched votes for Mr. Trump to votes for Joseph R. Biden Jr. Dominion machines, she insisted, were being used “to trash large batches of votes.”

Mr. Hannity interrupted her with a gentle question that had been circulating among election deniers, despite a lack of supporting proof: Why were Democrats silencing whistle-blowers who could prove this fraud?

Did Mr. Hannity believe any of this?

“I did not believe it for one second.”

But he pretended to believe it on the air.

Mr. Hannity’s disclosure — along with others that emerged from court on Wednesday about what Fox News executives and hosts really believed as their network became one of the loudest megaphones for lies about the 2020 election — is among the strongest evidence yet to emerge publicly that some Fox employees knew that what they were broadcasting was false.

Freedom of the press in action.



He never believed the lie

Dec 23rd, 2022 8:46 am | By

Oh, interesting.

Fox News star Sean Hannity – one of former President Donald Trump’s strongest allies on the air and one of his closest advisers off it – admitted under oath that he never believed the lie that Trump was cheated of victory in the 2020 presidential election by a voting tech company.

That stands in contrast to what played out on some of Fox’s biggest shows – including Hannity’s. On television, Fox News hosts, stars and guests amplified and embraced such wild and false claims, made by Trump, his campaign lawyers and surrogates, presenting them to millions of viewers.

“Stands in contrast to” is a euphemism for “this purported news reader lied repeatedly”…thus helping the liar Trump to incite an insurrection.

This country is so broken.

Hannity and a top Fox News executive who oversees prime-time programs told a different story about Trump’s false claims of fraud under oath and in front of attorneys, during separate depositions in a $1.6 billion defamation suit. While the depositions happened in August, their statements emerged yesterday in a Delaware Superior Court hearing relating to a series of motions by the two sides in the case.

“I did not believe it for one second,” Hannity testified, according to an attorney for Colorado-based Dominion Voting Systems, who was offering it as a precise quote.

There you have it. They sit there every night shouting into the camera, lying to our faces, shoring up the trumpist lies while not believing the lies for a second.

Dominion Voting Systems’ suit against Fox News and its parent company, Fox Corp, is roiling the network, the corporation and the Murdoch family that controls them both. 

Good. Roil away. Roil them until they can’t lie to us for one more second.



Retorts

Dec 23rd, 2022 3:37 am | By

Some replies to the ACLU’s smug triumph at trashing girls’ sports:

https://twitter.com/MujerGuerrera78/status/1604166935440146432

https://twitter.com/disseminatrix13/status/1604587786958512130


Equal and fair play

Dec 23rd, 2022 3:27 am | By

I kept meaning to get back to that ruling that it’s fine for huge hulking boys to compete against girls as long as the boys say they are trans girls. The ACLU is delighted to see girls deprived of opportunities and wins in this way.

They’re such liars these days. The issue isn’t “trans youth” or “transgender students”; the issue is boys invading girls’ sports. “Trans youth” are not an issue for the boys, but boys are an issue for the girls, whether they identify as trans or not. This ruling doesn’t harm boys, and it does harm girls, so that’s fine then.

“Trans youth have a right to equal and fair play,” says the ACLU smugly, no doubt via the keyboard of Chase Strangio. Sure, trans youth and all youth have a right to equal and fair play, but what does that mean? It certainly shouldn’t mean that boys who are either pretending to think they are girls or actually deluded into thinking they are girls get to destroy girls’ sport. Girls have a right to equal and fair play too, and letting boys take over isn’t that.

The fact that Strangio and the ACLU are so careful in their wording hints that they actually know perfectly well how grotesquely unfair this is.



So crazed by this ideology

Dec 23rd, 2022 2:57 am | By

Joan Smith on the disaster in Scotland yesterday:

So crazed are MSPs by this ideology that on Tuesday evening they voted down an amendment that would have placed barriers in the way of convicted sex offenders who seek to apply for a GRC, complete with a new female name. They even rejected an amendment — proposed by Michelle Thomson, an SNP MSP who has waived anonymity to reveal her own experience of being raped when she was fourteen years old — that would have paused the process of acquiring a certificate for men charged with sexual offences.

This is an extremely troubling development. Let’s not forget that the SNP-Green government has pressed ahead with the legislation even after Lady Haldane’s judgment established last week that a GRC changes someone’s legal sex for the purposes of the 2010 Equality Act. Scottish women are now expected to accept that any man standing in front of them, waving a piece of paper, is a woman — even if they’re in court and the man is accused of raping them. 

And they’re expected to live in a country where the law doesn’t acknowledge the most basic physical realities of who is a woman and who is a man.



Chiseling away

Dec 22nd, 2022 5:05 pm | By

This is scary.

Current predictions of ice melt in the Arctic are probably way off. According to an updated model, glaciers in the icy north could be slipping into the sea up to 100 times faster than previously forecasted.

Too bad they couldn’t have been way off in the other direction. Arctic ice melting way more slowly than we thought! But no, always it’s faster.

Scientists at the University of Texas at Austin (UT) think they’ve figured out at least part of the problem.

Gaps in data meant that climate scientists have been plugging in observations from accessible glaciers to build models of how all glaciers melt.

But what’s happening to the Antarctic ice sheet amid rapid global warming is significantly different from what’s occurring to Arctic glaciers.

In Greenland, for example, recent observational research has found that warm ocean water in the nation’s fjords is chiseling away at parts of the floating ice sheet from underneath.

Not good news.



Working with

Dec 22nd, 2022 12:02 pm | By

The “Institute” has been tweeting a lot of posters lately…including, of course, the give us money kind.

What does that mean? Works with them how? It’s very vague and general – could mean anything or nothing. Is that an accident? Or could it be because they don’t actually do anything? Except self-promotion?

Contribution for what purpose? What do they do?



The world’s premiere what now?

Dec 22nd, 2022 11:46 am | By

A person agrees with him.

Hoo-boy – where did he get that idea? It’s not the world’s premiere anything. It’s an obscure academic and her website.

H/t Mostly Cloudy.



Sorry, wimz, sucks to be you

Dec 22nd, 2022 11:37 am | By

So, they’ve done it.

The Scottish Parliament has passed legislation which aims to make it easier for transgender people to change their legally recognised gender.

At the expense of women.

Campaign groups have warned that the reforms – which seek to make the process for people to obtain a gender recognition certificate easier – could risk the safety of women and girls.

Will. Not could, but will.

However, supporters of the changes insist that it is about simplifying the process and removing hurdles within the current requirements.

That’s not a however, it’s just an and. Of course it’s about simplifying the process and removing hurdles, which is what makes it a risk to the safety of women and girls.

Scottish Greens MSP Maggie Chapman hailed the result as a “historic day for equality”.

It’s got nothing to do with equality. Allowing men to pretend to be women and thus invade women’s spaces and steal women’s opportunities has nothing to do with equality.

“The last three days of debate have shown the best and worst of our Parliament. But today isn’t about party politics. It is about the future and the progressive and inclusive society that we want to build.”

Burble burble burble. What even are words? Progressive how? Inclusive of what? Buzzwords butter no parsnips.



Woss in a name

Dec 22nd, 2022 10:32 am | By

There are at least two separate forms of manipulation in this here Lemkin Institute for Genocide Protection – the “Institute” that issued a “statement” three weeks ago that said gender critical feminists are genocidal Nazis. One of them is calling themselves an “institute” when they’re not what most of us think of an institute as being. I said in my first post on the subject that I couldn’t find out much about the “institute” but I didn’t think it was a couple of teenagers and their phones, but the joke’s on me, it turns out to be pretty much that, except the “teenagers” are academics old enough to know better.

The other is helping themselves to the name of Raphael Lemkin.

Borrowing a famous name isn’t necessarily bad or wrong. What a Maroon cited the Susan B. Anthony List. But what about guest’s example of Gandhi? Not quite the same, is it. Why? I think because literal genocide or massacres or other bloody horrors. I could be wrong, I’m bumbling around among intuitions here, but the appropriation of Lemkin feels more a step too far to me than the appropriation of Eleanor Roosevelt would.



Guest post: Especially zogborst

Dec 22nd, 2022 6:00 am | By

Originally a comment by latsot on Don’t call me a basket case.

I found the forbidding of ‘blind’ as in ‘blind study’ especially zogborst.

As a disabled person and wheelchair user I find that words don’t matter nearly so much as attitude. Blind people know they’re blind and if I ever forget I can’t walk it’s going to hurt when my face bounces off the deck. We’re generally not shy about our disabilities or embarrassed about them. We’ll joke about them and are happy for others to do the same providing, as tigger said, the intent is humour rather than abuse. My friend Henrietta, who some of you might know from Twitter, is paralysed from the chest down and has the biggest collection of unfortunate wheelchair accident gifs I’ve ever seen. She finds them hilarious. She’s right, they are. It’s a mixture of “yeah… done that” and “he totally deserved it”.

Those I’ve spoken to about this agree that we’d much rather people be straighforward than mangle language without ever actually consulting us. It feels performative and it makes me personally feel as though I’m expected to be grateful.

A couple of illustrations about attitude:

I’m asked very often why I’m in a wheelchair. I don’t mind this at all and I don’t think it’s rude… providing I’m asked by someone I’m already having a conversation with. It’s natural to be curious and frankly it gives me something to talk about. My conversational skills are not the best. But if someone marches up and asks me out of the blue, it no longer feels like a matter of curiosity. It feels threatening. It happens more than you might expect. I’m also asked this quite a lot by people I’m arguing with on Twitter. There, the intent is very clearly malign and it’s definitely rude.

But a lot of people are shocked when someone asks me the question in good faith. They think it’s a topic that should be avoided, for some reason. Who’s that helping, exactly? Me or them? I’d much rather they just ask than pretend I’m not very obviously in a wheelchair and they’re very obviously wondering why.

I’m also asked quite a lot if I need help going up slopes and curbs. It’s easy to see in most cases that the intent is a genuine desire to help someone who might struggle and I always decline politely and warmly. These people are not being patronising, they’re going out of their way to offer help because of simple, honest empathy. It’s not offensive at all.

It is offensive when people grab the back of my chair and push me up the slope without warning or permission. Again, this happens a lot more often than you’d think. It happened when I was doing the Great North Run, for goodness sake! Would anyone just pick up another runner and carry them for a bit, all the time grinning to their friends? It happened in London a couple of weeks ago and when I reacted with shock and some anger, the man was furious at me since he was “only trying to help”.

Was he, though? Was he really? Or was it a performance? His reaction suggests the latter. I don’t like being used as a prop. And if you hang your bag on the back of my chair in the tube or at a bus stop so you don’t have to carry it (yep, happens surprisingly often too) then you deserve the elbow that is about to make contact with your testicles.

So don’t walk on eggshells around us. Make a joke about us rolling our chairs over eggshells, if you like. Just don’t joke about our being unable to walk on eggshells, unless you know us quite well. And don’t alter language on our behalf, it just mildly embarrasses us.

I understand the need for somewhat performative language in many areas. It’s a sign that people are paying attention to issues without having to address them explicitly and personally. It’s a signal that everyone has understood the tone a conversation will take and the boundaries that have been set. And it’s an agreement that some words and phrases are unacceptable for cultural or historical reasons. It’s when people go out of their way to invent offence on behalf of other people that we get idiocy like the ‘blind’ example above.

Wait, I’m probably not allowed to say “idiocy”, am I?



Borrowed fame

Dec 22nd, 2022 5:42 am | By

Wikipedia on the Auschwitz Institute for the Prevention of Genocide and Mass Atrocities:

The Auschwitz Institute for the Prevention of Genocide and Mass Atrocities (AIPG), formerly the Auschwitz Institute for Peace and Reconciliation,[1] is a non-profit organization devoted to genocide and mass atrocity prevention.[2][3] The institute is best known for its Raphael Lemkin Seminar for Genocide Prevention held annually at the Auschwitz concentration camp,[4][5][6][7] and for serving as the technical secretariat of the Latin American Network for Genocide and Mass Atrocity Prevention.[8]

So. It looks to me as if the “Lemkin Institute for Genocide Prevention” has helped itself to the prestige of the above mentioned institute and seminar. It looks to me as if it’s hoping to sound more established and respected than it actually is. That needn’t mean it’s worthless or fraudulent; it has put out some informative and sensible statements. On the other hand it has also put out a statement accusing feminist women of inciting genocide, so I’m not feeling particularly charitable about it.



Looking for an intern

Dec 22nd, 2022 4:45 am | By
Looking for an intern

Aha – I wonder if they found that intern.

I wonder if it did find that intern, and then let that intern write a statement for them. I wonder I wonder.

It seems like awfully quick work, but who knows, maybe they’re just efficient that way.



They seem a little quiet

Dec 22nd, 2022 4:38 am | By

Here’s a funny thing – the Lemkin Institute is on Facebook, with all of 781 followers, and almost no activity. One like per post – maybe put there by the person who posted. Even funnier than that – its “statement” calling feminist women genocidal is not there. Why not?

As people at Ovarit are saying*, the statement reads as if it were written by a trans ideology zealot. It certainly does not read as if it were written by a reasonable adult campaigner for human rights and against genocide…but then again that so often applies to the ACLU and NOW and other rights organizations these days, so who knows if it means some rogue actor wrote it or not. But I’m suspicious.

*thanks to guest for the reference

Updating to correct: the statement is there, dated November 30. Two shares, no likes. H/t Eava



Actual attacks on human rights

Dec 22nd, 2022 4:17 am | By

Now here, from nine days ago, is the Lemkin Institute talking about something concrete and specific:

Gender critical feminists haven’t cut anyone’s electricity or access to gas, nor have we threatened to or tried to or planned to. I wonder if the Institute can make out the difference here.



Sources

Dec 22nd, 2022 4:01 am | By

This may be why lots of people started talking about the Lemkin Institute:

One birdbrain replied “Interested to see how they’ll deny away the *actual official genocidal prevention institute* voicing their concern over their rhetoric.” There is no such actual official institute, and if there were, this wouldn’t be it.

I’m sure “Katy” is having the best fun of his life getting people to call feminist women genocidal Nazis simply because we refuse to agree that men like “Katy” are women and our sisters and welcome in our spaces.



The G word

Dec 21st, 2022 3:57 pm | By

This is breathtaking. An institute for prevention of genocide equates non-belief in magic gender with actual genocide. Genocide.

I haven’t been able to find out how reputable or established or widely known the Lemkin Institute is, but I don’t think it’s just a couple of teenagers and their phones.

It issued a statement last month saying we (gender criticals) are on the way to committing genocide.

The Lemkin Institute for Genocide Prevention voices its concern over the growing number of laws introduced in the United States that target transgender individuals and the transgender community. Anti-trans hostility in the US has become a staple of the Republican Party’s election strategy and is clearly being used to stoke voters’ fears of a changing world by raising the specter of a malevolent polluting force tied to liberalism, cosmopolitanism, and democracy. The Lemkin Institute believes that the so-called “gender critical movement” that is behind these laws is a fascist movement furthering a specifically genocidal ideology that seeks the complete eradication of trans identity from the world.

That’s so crazy it makes my head swim…and scares me a little. I think it’s threatening toward people like me. Are we going to end up screaming at each other “No you’re the genocider no you are”?

If trans ideology disappeared while the people who formerly called themselves trans simply went on with their lives being lesbian or gay, or gender-nonconforming, or both, would that be genocide? Or would it be people dropping a particular way of describing themselves in favor of a different one?

The Lemkin Institute seems to be saying we’re like China versus the Uyghurs: trying to force a set of people to abjure their beliefs and way of life to make themselves acceptable to a totalitarian government. That is, they seem to be saying that unless they’re saying that we’re actually hoping and plotting to kill all the trans people until there isn’t a single one left.

It’s slightly staggering that they don’t pause to remember that gender critical people don’t have quite the same kind of power and reach that the Chinese government has or that Hitler had. We don’t control armies or prisons or the medical establishment or the universities (all too obviously) or the banks or the media. We don’t “seek the complete eradication of trans identity from the world”; we point out what’s wrong with trans ideology and its consequences for women. Also, by the way, we’re not the ones cheering on surgeries that sterilize people.

I’ll stop there for now. I’m having a hard time believing what I’m reading.



Guest post: “Confined to”

Dec 21st, 2022 10:48 am | By

Originally a comment by tigger_the_wing on Don’t you call me a basket case.

As a crippled old women who isn’t confined to a wheelchair, but uses one if I have to walk more than a few steps (because I prefer to avoid unbearable pain and nasty falls), and who spends most of the rest of my time in bed (because, until I get a better wheelchair, it’s the only place where I can recline and raise my legs), I find the ‘confined to’ phrase ludicrous. Since I can transfer from my bed to my wheelchair, and back; and from my wheelchair to and from the toilet, the shower, and my vehicle, I don’t regard myself as ‘confined to’ anything.

It’s just wheelchairs and beds which get that weird description.

I have never been described as being ‘confined to’ my reading glasses, or my sticks. Are people with hearing difficulties ever described as being ‘confined to’ their hearing aids?

was ‘confined to’ home for fourteen months by the CoViD pandemic, until I was vaccinated. I’ll accept that usage, because I was unable to leave. But all other tools are just that; tools. We use tools in order to be able to do things which able-bodied people can do unaided. That doesn’t mean that we’re ‘confined to’ them!

Yes, there are people who have to use their wheelchair whenever they are out if bed, and cannot get out to stand, even briefly. They likely (although not necessarily) need help with transferring to a toilet. But they get into bed when it’s time to go to sleep.

That said, I don’t have a problem with people who use that phrase. It’s been around for a very long time, and few people have had any reason to reflect on it. I also understand that many people have a problem with the word ‘cripple’, although I don’t.

I only have a problem with words which are said in a way which is intended to hurt. I’ll only nitpick phrases when it’s important for clarity. If I hear a shop assistant asking a colleague to help ‘the lady confined to a wheelchair’ I won’t be bothered. Far too many people grew up with that being the only way to describe a wheelchair user, and have never heard any other way to say it. It’s almost a single word, confinedtoawheelchair.