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  • beardown

    did... did you make this account just to insert racist bullshit into the bear meme?

  • Typical woman

    as always, the people most upset about the bear thing just so happen to also be sexists.

  • cop got on the news and used a bike lock chain that was used to barricade the building as "proof" that the protestors were infiltrated by professional agitators, because it was an "industrial chain" or something like that. its the bike lock that Columbia University itself recommends to students.

  • so, the only way to address the problem of sexual violence in hospitals is just to divide the population in two? this is just like the bathroom bullshit. if you're assuming that trans women are rapists, you are a transphobe. if you're assuming that sex-segregated wards are a useful deterrent to rape, you're an idiot. the thing stopping people from hurting patients in the hospital is the hospital. the staff, the doors, the nurses, the help buttons beside each bed, the check-ins by doctors and nurses.

  • so should we segregate our hospitals too? i'm sure you could find some examples of interracial violence if you cared to look. maybe the poor people should get their own ward, we all know the poors are more likely to be criminals! the argument you're using right now is one that has been used against minority groups since antiquity. all people are capable of violence. that you focus only on the violence of a single case, and use that to justify discrimination? that is not "common sense". it is prejudice.

  • its not nonsense, its a well documented part of trans discrimination. trans people are commonly treated as if they are cis, and many doctors just don't have the kind of awareness of HRT's effects that you seem to think is commonplace. like, more than half of trans people have experienced medical discrimination. trans people are routinely confronted with medical professionals that refuse to acknowledge their medical histories. trans people have quantifiably worse physical health outcomes even when they do get care. i have not met a single trans person who hasn't experienced at least some kind of barrier to care. doctors refusing to perform mammograms, doctors who haven't even heard of HRT, doctors turning trans people away at emergency rooms. there is tons of data out there about this problem that you're refusing to believe even exists.

  • i'd like to see how you'd be measuring "performance" in this context, or what you consider to be worthy of merit, because those things are not the objective measures you seem to think they are.

    people who are contributing to open source projects are not a perfect Gaussian distribution of best to worst "performance" you can just pluck the highest percentile contributors from. its a complex web of passionate humans who are more or less engaged with the project, having a range of overlapping skillsets, personalities, passions, and goals that all might affect their utility and opinions in a decision making context. projects aren't equations you plug the "best people" into to achieve the optimal results, they're collaborative efforts subject to complex limitations and the personal goals of each contributor, whose outcome relies heavily on the perspectives of the people running the project. the idea you can objectively sort, identify, and recruit the 50 "best people" to manage a project is a fantasy, and a naive one.

    the point of mandating the inclusion of minority groups in decision making is to make it more likely your project and community will be inclusive to that group of people. the skillsets, passions, and goals that a diverse committee contains are more likely to create a project that is useful and welcoming to more kinds of people, and a committee that is not diverse is less likely to do so. stuff like this is how you improve diversity. in fact, its quite hard to do it any other way.

  • no, it wasn't "more data", it was just data. blood letting and mercury are pre-scientific treatments that were in use during the 1600s. puberty blockers were developed with a modern understanding of hormones, and extensively tested before they saw use in a clinical setting. you might as well have brought up magic as a legitimate medical practice that we eventually proved wrong. like, no duh, but it also has basically no bearing on the safety of a chemically synthesized hormone inhibitor invented in the 20th century.

  • puberty blockers are used explicitly to delay having to go through puberty. they are used for kids who have precocious puberty (puberty that starts too early), as well as for trans kids. there are some marginal risks associated with them, you might grow a bit shorter, or just generally develop differently that you might have if you had allowed puberty to progress on time, but there aren't specific health challenges people who use them face. the reason you take them is to explicitly prevent somebody from going through irreversible changes they might not like before they can make an informed decision, or before it is healthy for those changes to occur.

    interestingly, most of the poor health outcomes of precocious puberty are psychological and social, not physical, which is, i think, an interesting parallel to the trans experience.

  • people do nothing unless motivated

    this is an assumption worth challenging. the evidence suggests, in fact, that people are almost always doing things!

  • there isn't a problem to solve. the fact legislators want to do this is the problem. quibbling about how exactly they're gonna implement the torment nexus is secondary to the goal of resisting the torment nexus.

    like, if your whole thing is "this is happening, its self-evidently about surveillance, and we can do nothing to stop it" and you start proposing ways for us to be surveilled "safely, securely, and privately", you are pro-surveillance. you are supporting the bills, right now, with the rhetoric you're using. like, imagine doing this about any other political issue.

    "i don't support the death penalty, but we can't stop the government from implementing it, so here's the way I'd murder prisoners."

    "we can't stop them from banning abortion, and I hate that, but I'll suggest we put the limit at 10 weeks. that seems reasonable, right?"

    your idea for "solving the problem" involves doing the thing that both restricts what information people can access, and tracks their legal identity, but in a way that is maybe marginally less stupid than tech illiterate legislators can manage. the fact that you would be fine with the bills if the intent was just to ensure kids can't access "pornography" in a private way kind of reveals your biases here. it would not be a good idea even then.

    what counts as pornography is socially defined. a tool which allows the selective restriction of pornography is also by definition a tool that encourages the redefinition of pornography to encompass whatever it is governments don't want people to learn about. especially in the US, it would become a tool for the censorship of minorities, the banning of books, and the removal of queer people from the internet. that's why these laws are being proposed. its not ambiguous at all. like, even if it is inevitable it will pass, the priority doesn't then become "how do we make this bad idea more efficient?", it becomes "how do we subvert this unethical restriction on our communications?". assuming that we can do nothing to stop this ensures that we won't. its a good thing nobody's buying your bullshit.

  • if you think bills like this aren't at their core designed to erode user privacy, you're fooling yourself. there is no "privacy based approach" to destroying user privacy, and the ultimatum you're proposing is not real. stupid laws fail all the time. the fact that people are trying to make ID verification a thing doesn't make it inevitable it will become a thing, and in fact, opposing it is the best chance we have at making it fail.

    your argument to the inevitability of shit-eating just makes you an advocate for the legislators who want us to eat shit.

  • because adopting open source software is a societal good? the idea that it won't grow is kind of bleak. the industry standard for android device OS is dogshit for user privacy and a private monopoly and that's something we should want fixed. unless you like living under constant corporate surveillance.

  • no, its to achieve your goals. this is fundamental to the idea of direct action. you're doing stuff. you aren't trying to build support for helping homeless people, you're going out there and feeding them. you aren't waiting for people to legalize desegregation, you're defying segregated public space. you aren't begging public officials not to build an oil pipeline in your home, you're chaining yourself to equipment.

    if you confine protesting only to convincing bystanders to be on your side, you're just saying the only way to win a just future is to be popular. what consolation is that to the marginalized? to those who have never enjoyed widespread public support, and can't expect it to solve their problems?

    if you think protests are only to alter public opinion? you don't know very much about protesting. direct action has been part of protests since the beginning.

  • i'm not really seeing any claim that "any protest anywhere is just as valid". they're talking about educating people on the strategic value of civil disobedience and direct action. that is important for any social movement that wants to succeed.

    Blocking random roads does nothing but turn people who just want to get to work against you.

    this isn't true. it can turn people against you, for sure. that isn't the only thing it does though. it can delay the construction of an oil pipeline. it can disrupt the logistics of an industry. like, the activist's dilemma is important, taking care to recognize the PR of what you do is important, but direct action is about doing the thing you want done, rather than waiting for public opinion to turn.

    if you are an indigenous activist trying to keep an oil pipeline from poisoning your water, or the government from leasing your land to corporate agriculture, it doesn't matter if people are "on your side" or not. you need to stop the fully legal process that is guaranteed to make your people suffer, knowing that nobody but you and your people are historically likely to defend your home. there are so many situations where just waiting for public opinion to turn isn't gonna stop the thing you want to stop.

  • i'm sorry, but you really aren't in a position to be saying anything about how effective these strategies are. direct action continues to be a huge part of basically every modern social movement up to and including the largest protests in history. if you aren't open to learning those reasons, you have no grounds to contest their efficacy.

  • they're kinda right though. the things this person is saying aren't new. the principles of direct action were instrumental in the success of the Civil rights movement, and many other activist movements throughout modern history. i'm really not sure where you think this person is coming from, though, with the whole "spoon-fed hate" thing. they're a leftist. a socialist or an anarchist, something of that flavor. the action they're demanding is action against climate change, against bigotry, against capitalism. or at least, i don't really see many people who aren't somewhere around that headspace talking about "praxis" and "direct action". they kinda come off like a smartass to me, but the point they're getting to is something pretty fundamental to organizing effective movements, and they're talking about it because tons of people aren't aware of the theory and politics that has grown up around making changes in society.

    like, just for history's sake, in the SCLC, the org MLK lead during the civil rights movement, Selma, among many other things, was organized by James Luther Bevel, the SCLC's Director of Direct Action and Nonviolent Education. he turned out to have sexually abused his daughters, so uhhh... not a great dude , but if you look at his wikipedia you can see how instrumental he was to the civil rights movement as it is known today, and how the idea of direct action was foundational to that movement and its success.

  • because not fighting means getting killed, being marginalized, getting the groundwater poisoned, losing rights, getting put into concentration camps, etc? its not complicated. lots of people don't have the luxury to just not "bother". they aren't blocking roads cuz they like it, people who do direct action can get put in fucking prison. they're doing it because they don't have the choice to sit on the sidelines and whine about how annoying protests are.

    like, for real, do you think the people who built the civil rights movement didn't hold meetings on this exact thing? that they didn't talk about blocking roads and airports? that they didn't do sit-ins and other kinds of direct action? like, if you think this is stupid as fuck, you must think a great deal of the people who built and participated in the civil rights movement were pretty fucking stupid, because they were doing this shit, and it was against the law, and it was the law that broke first.

  • Like JKR not being pro-trans is just her opinion. And as far as I know, she hasn’t gone on a crusade against anyone yet.

    using a large public platform to disseminate the same kinds of anti-trans arguments currently being used by bigots to draft legislation putting trans people at risk is not just an opinion. like, it isn't a crusade, but when there is a crusade going on and you're saying the same thing the crusaders are saying, its not a good look.