How dare you insult Lt. Kettech.
Nathan Goldwag
@goldwagnathan.bsky.social
9049 Followers
345 Following
In every time, in every place, the deeds of man remain the same. (He/Him).
WEBSITE: https://nathangoldwag.wordpress.com/
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Increasingly convinced that both the anti-trans and anti-immigrant hysterias are fundamentally psychological rebellions against the complexity of modernity.
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I think the fact that the store has a separate fitting staff speaks to whether or not this random floor employee offered to do a fitting, no?
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People used to argue with TERFs by trying to point out that what they were demanding would require a totally unprecedented level of militarized gender policing, and now that's the consensus position of British society.
Notably in here: "Sex Matters" now taking the position that even the "Men's" and "Women's" sections of a clothing retailer should be regarded as prescriptive "single sex spaces" where anyone they judge to be the "wrong" sex/gender should not be allowed.
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Oh hey, it's atomic bomb discourse day, so have fun with that kids.
Were the Atomic Bombings of Japan Justified?
The Bombing of Nagasaki Every few months, regular as clockwork, there’s another debate about the moral justification of the Atomic Bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki at the end of World War I…
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This is because Louis XVI foolishly failed to invest in a fleet of mesmeric hot air balloons, which would have effortlessly stopped Robby Pierre in his tracks.
Go to the Musée d’Orsay. Look at all the forgotten and forgettable art that was actually popular in the 19C. Then look at Impressionists.
What were the hot topics in the French “chattering classes” in the years right before 1789? Hot air ballooning and mesmerism. Neither proved to be “the future.”
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Just looked her up and Carrie has a substack now. I hope her planned book on trauma therapy is still coming out soon.
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I know they had personal reasons that made it necessary and I respect that but Oh No Ross and Carrie picked a bad time to shut down.
The skeptic movement of yore seems to have died down or become gender, but they really were doing a good thing going after pseudoscience and scams, and I would love for it to come back.
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- One of those books that I pulled off a shelf at my grandpa's and read on impulse many, many years ago. I remember it being really interesting, but it's been a while, so I can't speak to details.
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- LeGuin's early work is interesting, because you can see all the preoccupations and themes that are going to define her, but there are also a lot more commonalities with other mid-20th century science fiction.