highlyeccentric: Across the intercity platforms at Sydney Central Station. Sign reads 'Central' (Sydney Central)
[personal profile] highlyeccentric
Part two, because apparently I've been binge-reading The Entire Internet.

Short pieces, current affairs, hot takes:


Good News:


Longer pieces - essay, memoir, natural history, other
  • Christiana M. Coleman (Lightspeed Magazine), Interview with Nnedi Okorafor, subsequent to reading the Binti trilogy.
  • Violet Blue (Engadget), Sex, Lies and Surveillance: something's wrong with the war on sex trafficking. Mostly to do with FOSTA, but drops links to evidence that the big three religious anti-trafficking groups (already known to include far more than sex trafficking in their purview, including strip clubs, camgirls, non-trafficked sex work, and so on) have all falsified data and told straight up lies in their campaigns. I wish I'd known that back when I knew a whole bunch of people invested in the Not For Sale campaigns (instead I was just... creeped out by the lightly-sexualised-but-modestly-dressed selfies they were posting with 'Not for Sale' branded across their bodies).
  • Don Apattu (The Nation, 2004), Interview with Avi Shlaim on a bunch of things, including America, Israel, and Palestine.
  • Sally Davies (Aeon), Women's minds matter: on feminist theory and embodied cognition.
    But the mind-matter split, and its cognitive-computational descendants, are not logical necessities that follow from all attempts to understand the nature of thought. They’re really more like points of departure or grounding intuitions, and not everyone is going to share them. Elisabeth [of Bohemia], for one, told Descartes that she leant towards physical reductionism over a dualist approach: ‘I would find it easier to concede matter and extension to the soul than to concede that an immaterial thing could move and be moved by a body.’ Her vignette about housework also serves as a sly criticism. She knows first-hand that a body enervated by the duties and niceties that attend on being a woman affects one’s capacity to think. Likewise, writing two years later from a Belgian hot-spring town, Elisabeth’s experience of illness makes her doubt Descartes’s assertion that virtue is largely about having the mental fortitude to follow the cool dictates of reason. ‘I still can’t rid myself of the doubt that one can arrive at the beatitude you speak of without help from things that don’t absolutely depend on the will,’ she says. Surely doing the right thing depends on many things beyond our control, Elisabeth argues – freedom from too many burdens, the correct upbringing, good health.

  • A.C. Shilton (NYT), You accomplished something great: now what? What Shilton has to say about the arrival fallacy holds pretty true for PhDs, but his framing - one of career success not bringing happiness is kind of hilarious, when no one except possibly your family supposes 'completes PhD' translates to career success anymore.$
  • Dan Dixon (Meanjin Winter 2018), I haven't yet learned to speak as I should. A memoir account of his friendship with a woman he isn't dating but rather wishes he was, and also his relationship with his mother. And a little bit his father, but, despite the fact that his father's cancer is a plot hinge, his father isn't really a character here. Anyway. There's some good insight but the whole thing is just... ugh, ironic and then something at the end, where he reveals the woman he's written about was uncomfortable with the way he portrayed her. The *real* insight here is hers, that when men write about women the women are reduced to mere characters in the man's personal drama.
  • Jennifer O'Mahony (BBC World), The future of French is African. Really interesting - parallel to the discussion about the future of English being 'global English', the language of second-language-speakers. Most African Francophones speak three or four languages, and their usages are unique, but some are drifting back into mainstream French.
  • Dominque Matti (Scaling the Gate blog), Getting Mad at Good Men
    So I took my mom’s rhetorical question sincerely and found myself growing angry at the spectrum of it. Right and alone vs. suppressed and together? What kind of love expects you to swallow your feelings or it strays? No matter how many directions I veered from the original question, I wound up with the same translation:
    The love that women receive is conditional. It’s contingent on carefully curating the way we vocalize and advocate for our needs. The better the man, the more reckless the woman who asks for anything more.

  • Ruby Bilger (Bitch magazine) How conspicuous consumption became the theme of Sweet Sixteen parties. I had somehow existed unaware of 'Sweet Sixteen' as anything other than a trite alliteration, and I rather wish I'd stayed ignorant.
  • Kate Aronoff (Dissent magazine), The far right's environmental turn. In the wake of the EU elections, far right parties are shuffling toward re-branding as environmentally friendly. Borders are good for the environment, now.
  • Max Fisher and Amanda Taub (NYT), On YouTube's digital playground, an open gate for pedophiles. It's been known for a while that if YouTube's recommendations algorithm is fucked. Turns out if someone's watching sexualised content - say, adults in bathing suits, or adults engaging in childish play for titilation - YouTube just starts up and recommending people videos of actual kids.
  • Chongyi Feng (The Conversation), Thirty years on China is still trying to whitewash the Tiananmen crackdown from its history.
  • Joshua Badge (Junkee), My long and painfully awkward quest to buy legal poppers. In banning over-the-counter sales of amyl nitrate, the TGA (Therapeutic Goods Administration) insist the drug, often used as a muscle relaxant in preparation for anal sex, is not banned, because it can be obtained on prescription. So Joshua Badge set out to get some, causing much embarrassment to doctors and pharmacists all over Melbourne.
    I book an appointment at one of the city’s LGBTIQ sexual health clinics (which already puts the prospect of legal poppers out of reach for many rural queers). A week later, though, I’m talking to a gay doctor who is familiar with queer cultural norms around the safe use of poppers.“Can you prescribe them?”
    “I don’t see why not.”
    Success! One small hitch: he doesn’t know what strength or quantity to order. In all likelihood, no one has prescribed poppers in decades. I need to talk to a chemist, so I start calling compound pharmacies, which are a mixture between a pharmacy and a laboratory, where they tailor your drugs especially for you.




Comments policy: Everything I said in the caveats to this post applies. I teach critical thinking for a living, but I'm not *your* teacher, and this blog is not a classroom. That means I don't have to abide by the fallacy of 'there's no such thing as a bad contribution to discussion'.

Date: 2019-06-06 04:56 pm (UTC)
lilysea: Serious (Default)
From: [personal profile] lilysea
Austria's right-wing governing party collapses amid scandal, involving a senior politician and video footage from Ibiza. This sends the Vengaboys to the top of the Austrian charts. Yes good.

I, an Australian, misread this as "Australia's right-wing governing party collapses amid scandal", and had a brief moment of hope before I realised.

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