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Southwest Virginia resident. Building Science Trainer. EV driver.

"you're a man"
ad hominem

"you were born a boy"
sunk cost fallacy

"you were assigned male at birth"
false dichotomy

"you have xy chromosomes"
false equivalence

"you're mentally ill"
non sequitur

"you're invading women's spaces"
category error

"you'll never be a real woman"
no true scotsman

"you're normalizing a fetish"
strawman

"you can't change your sex"
skill issue

@dnkboston Tesla’s stock price would like to disagree.
@meganL If there are no heroes, who do I look up to and aspire to become? And, more importantly to me, how do we avoid that new ideal from becoming co-opted by the next generation of grifters?

I finished R. F. Kuang’s Katabasis today - just in time to turn it back in to the library on the day it was due .

I found the writing quite good. I enjoyed the exploration of the, basically, voluntary torture grad school participants submit themselves to. I also very much appreciated the perspective of a woman struggling to excel in a male-dominated field. I found the imaginative exploration of Hell combined with philosophy very creative and fun.

My one quibble was that the protagonist managed to squeak out of crises enough times that I could clearly see the plot armor and the wrap-it-up-in-a-bow ending was a little too cute for my taste.

My only real criticism is to wonder what it is about books about wizards that people can’t stay dead? Ms. Rowling removes the impact of her protagonist’s sacrifice by bringing him back. Ms. Novik has to keep her protagonist’s love interest alive in her Scholomance trilogy to, I think, avoid making El sad. And Kuang follows in the same pattern of what, to me, seems like cowardice in the face of loss. I’d suspect it’s an American thing about wanting to avoid thinking about death, but Rowling isn’t American. Still, I think it robs all these stories of a depth they could all benefit from.

Overall, I would recommend Katabasis for its creativity, writing, and for presenting a solid, female voice; but now that I know the plot, I’m not sure I’d pick it up again - which is true for most of the books I’ve enjoyed.

#katabasis #bookreview

Marc Andreessen was right about web browsers.

But he has since been wrong about a great many things.

And he is entirely wrong about introspection.

https://www.joanwestenberg.com/marc-andreessen-is-wrong-about-introspection/

Marc Andreessen is wrong about introspection

This newsletter is free to read, and it’ll stay that way. But if you want more - extra posts each month, access to the community, and a direct line to ask me things - paid subscriptions are $2.50/month. A lot of people have told me it’s

Westenberg.

@blogdiva Impunity is real and well-documented. When powerful people face no consequences for serious crimes, it genuinely does signal to them and to institutions that accountability has limits that correlate with wealth and power.

⭐ That's not conspiracy; that's pattern recognition.

Yup.

https://qz.com/1872176/half-of-us-network-tv-dramas-are-about-cops

The biggest factors in the delta between what cops actually do, and white white folk incorrectly think they do:

1) Copaganda TV shows

2) Framing by newspapers and TV news

Without this sustained disinformation campaign against Black people, white folk would not accept this level of racism.šŸ¤·šŸæā€ā™‚ļø

Half of US broadcast network dramas are about cops

Perhaps one reason why America’s national reckoning on police brutality took so long to arrive is because TV is conditioning its citizens to view cops as reliable heroes.

Quartz