The World with landlocked regions removed.
good post
You can only reblog this blessed post if you have access to the sea.
Given that my location was removed and I am now IN THE SEA, I reserve my right to reblog this blessed post.
The definition of “regions” here feels, to me, like it sort of makes the whole thing a bit moot. Because I’m trying to think of something that more effectively demonstrates “land-locked” than the HUGE FUCKING DESERT in the middle of Australia, and failing. And yet because the way Australia’s divided up means that every state chunk appears to have sea-access, that GIANT FUCKING DESERT has been declared to be not land-locked. Also British Columbia has like five different regions and several of them are landlocked. So I feel like “regions” should be retitled.
Month: August 2017
Bigots who are always screaming ‘BUT MUH TROOPS’ suddenly have no problem attacking high ranking military officials on Facebook when they say that they’re OK with transgender people serving in the military. Which one is it going to be assholes?
They only like the bigot troops.
CALL FOR ART & POETRY –
The submission period is now open for our first issue. Cloudthroat is a magazine dedicated to publishing poetry and artwork by queer Indigenous and queer poets/artists of color. Please email submissions to cloudthroateditor@gmail.com
Texas Republican Blocks State’s Bathroom Bill: “I Don’t Want The Suicide Of A Single Texan On My Hands”
Today in “Texas lawmakers doing something right for fucking once”
Joe Straus is a moderate Jewish Republican who has been battling against the Tea Party for a long time, and has been repeatedly targeted for defeat – as well as anti-semitic abuse – because of this. This doesn’t surprise me. I wish there were a lot more like him.
Thank you, Joe Straus.
I wish we did not live in a time where what you did required bravery. But, unfortunately, we do.
Thank you for your courage.
Hey guys, especially in Texas?
You should send this guy thank you cards and positive thank you emails and that kind of shit.
I can guarantee that his office is getting flooded with nasty bullshit over this. It gets really, REALLY bleak and lonely when that’s ALL you get. Letting him know that he did good (yes, even if JUST on this one issue, if you disagree with everything else) is actually REALLY HELPFUL for encouraging politicians to do what you want.
Damn, he’s great. This kind of thing should be incentivized as much as possible.
…I mean, “focusing on the fiscal stuff” GOP style – telling disabled people that they are unworthy of assistance and should work or die, bleeding public services white, etc, etc – might well cause more suicides still. But at least he’s trying, I guess.
At this point any indication of policy decision making that isn’t literally motivated by sheer overt conscious malevolent evil is incredibly welcome, even if I do speak as a lesser-evil libbrul-type impurist adn should not be counted.
Please don’t think this fight is over. This article was from June, and as of this past weekend, the Senate Committee passed the bill! 10 hours of testimony that were mostly against this fucking bill and they still passed it! I’m so fucking angry.
But it’s not over yet. This shit bill is not yet law. So there is still hope
(As of July 24)
Advice:
Don’t substitute a conscience with group approval, even if that group is your friends, who you think of as morally upright people
If you tell a child that a trans woman with traditionally masculine features is a woman the kid is not going to be confused about what women are, they are just going to accept that some women have those features.
Or, alternatively if they are confused you can just explain that
some women have those features.
(BTW: Some women have those features.)
Thank you, this is exactly right.
everytime I hear about children of the corn I think about the guy I met at comic con who actually lived in the town they filmed that movie at, and on the farm where they filmed in the corn.
he was a teenager at the time and him and his friends would get drunk on moonshine and rustle the corn and let the air out of the tires of the production team’s trailers and shit.
and now there’s Wikipedia pages about how the children of the corn set was haunted and they thought they angered god but it was really just drunk hillbilliesI don’t like adding to posts but I also have a funny story like this, so I was watching the movie the Blair witch which takes place in burkettsville maryland, which to me is so funny because that is were my grandfather lives and the town is literally just old people and cows with their main street consisting of a post office. Well anyway he told me that after it came out people were coming in like bus loads to the town to find the witch and my grandfather lives up in the Mountain area and people were up in his property trying to find the witch and it made him angry so he went out and hung up stick people and stacked rocks and it freaked the people out so they started thinking something was out there when really it was my 80 year old Italian grandpa who wanted people out of his woods.
We had ghost hunters come to a historic house in my town to film and if you think every high school kid in town respectfully stayed at home that night instead of going to fuck up that filming you’re dead wrong.
this is comforting, actually, sometimes paranormal things are just a bunch of bored people dicking around in the woods.
New favorite cryptid: locals
Bad Representation vs Tokenism vs Diversity just existing without justification like in the real world
Many authors can relate to the frustrating accusations of their characters and settings simply being the way they are for “diversity points” and writers are often scared of adding diversity out of fear of it being received poorly as a gimmick. Why does this situation exist?
Bad representation and gratuitous diversity are not the same thing and have to be addressed separately. The first one is a legitimate fear; the second one is exaggerated and has the dangerous potential to shut down legitimate representation. There’s so much diversity that you don’t even notice it in real life.
You go shopping in a Korean and Black neighborhood, get directions from some Desi folks, hop on to a bus and sit behind the guy in the wheelchair lift. When you come home to crack open a book (after shopping in that same neighborhood and riding on that same bus), does seeing diverse characters make you or someone you know cry, “WAIT A MINUTE NOW. I AM THE GRAND WIZARD. I SAY THIS IS TOO DIVERSE?“
What is representation that ends up being harmful instead of supporting diversity?
“I need a tough drug dealer ex-boyfriend for my MC to be scared of. I know! I’ll make him Black and/or Latino.”
“My MC is oppressed by her parents who want her to get married, have babies, and not major in anything that would threaten a man’s ego, when she’d rather marry a girl and become a physicist. I know! I’ll make her Muslim, Hindu, or an Orthodox Jew.”
“My MC is very sexually open and adventurous. I know! I’ll make her Latina because that sounds sexy.”
“My MC has an older female boss who yells at him all the time, who he’s scared of. I know! I’ll make her East Asian.”
When choosing a character’s ethnicity, if your logic flows like this – you have to work harder to free yourself from the white supremacist myths that permeate our everyday life.
This is not the same as “gratuitous” diversity.
People have a way of accusing diversity that doesn’t seem plot-relevant of being “gratuitous”, but a character doesn’t need a plot reason to be Muslim, Jewish, Black, Latina, in a wheelchair, trans, or anything else.
If you have a witness in a trial, and she wheels herself into the witness box instead of walking, you don’t have to sit there justifying it. It doesn’t have to mean anything. If you walk into a coffee house and ask directions from a cute barista in a headscarf, you don’t have to work her ethnoreligion into the plot for that to be “allowed.”
Now, if you have actual significant characters who are diverse – and you should! – their identities should be incorporated into their characterization and not feel like they’re wearing a series of nametags. There are plenty of ways you can do this – giving them names common to a group, mentioning a Black character’s specific natural hairstyle, having them endure a microaggression, having a trans character experiment with presentation, having a gay or bi person mention a partner or a celebrity crush. You can also just say “He introduced me to a tall East Asian man wearing a polo shirt” or “the new doctor was a Black woman with her hair in twists and glasses that looked like they could stop a bullet” and just leave it there, since that’s referencing a visible trait; if that looks pasted on or artificial to you, you may have unexamined prejudices, which is normal, but something to work on.
Remember that if you’re not in a group, your meter for determining whether or not diversity is “forced” is going to be unreliable. Don’t assume that other writers whose works are diverse are trying to coast on diversity stats or that the diversity in their books is automatically unrealistic and forced just because it’s more diverse than the media you usually consume. The real world IS diverse and lots of people get erased by the way mainstream fiction is structured, most of all being people who are marginalized in multiple ways at once.
–WWC
Any time I see people complaining about representation and seriously using words like “Pandering” or “Tokenism” or anything remotely like that I just go ahead and safely assume that said person is a bigoted asshole whose opinions are utterly worthless
The real problem is, there’s a lot of people who either a) don’t want to ever have to acknowledge that anyone not like them exists, b) can’t handle a world not built for them exclusively, or c) some combination there of.
This is especially true in comics and sci fi fandom where there’s an unfortunate number of shrill cishet white dudebros who apparently think acknowledging that queer, trans and black people exist is somehow the Worst Thing Ever ._.
I especially support the part that says “a character doesn’t need a plot reason to be Muslim, Jewish, Black, Latina, in a wheelchair, trans, or anything else.” Because the ‘default’ is white, abled, straight cis male, creators often feel like introducing any diverse characters will require an explanation- after all, why would you include anything but the default if you don’t have to? Then you have to be responsible, and aware of consequences and context, and so on. Far easier to be lazy and cowardly and just go with the default white dude. This is a problem I see far more often in film, to be honest. People working on the Transformers movies, for example, stated they decided to leave out female Autobots because then they’d have to explain how their genders work. As opposed to the obviously male-gendered robots already present, which did not make people think about gender because they are the ‘default’. It’s a lot easier to go with the default, but it’s easier because it’s not challenging anything, because it’s not creating new forms of thought in the audience or the creator. We need to encourage the idea that diverse characters can just be in a film, rather than exceptions which must warrant a justification.
SO MUCH THIS
There doesn’t need a “REason” to have queer and trans and POC characters in the story
You can just…HAVE THERE BE QUEER AND TRANS AND POC CHARACTERS
You don’t have to justify it
“Why is that character a black lesbian?”
“I felt like it.”
I dream of a day when there’s a black trans woman who is this doctor or lawyer and they are important to the story. Not because they are black or trans but because they are a doctor or lawyer and they are good at what they do.
I think it’s very important for writers to realize that they HAVE a default, normally a straight white cis male, and challenge it.
Another really good way to challenge the default is to mention the skin tone of all of your characters. Because how many times have you read a book where the only time skin color comes up is when the character isn’t white…
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