kestrell: (Default)
Alexx just read me
this great tweet by Lara B. Sharp,
https://www.facebook.com/lara.bee.sharp/posts/10101087016372330
describing how she responded to a man's sexist comment in a parking lot by flashing him her tit, the one with the big biopsy scar on it, which resulted in a whole battle of wills thing, which is literally hysterically funny.

And I thought, hey! I have this trickster character in Sentinels of Freedom named Fizzy Girl who fights crime through non-violent means, and being able to reduce a criminal to sputtering impotent rage by flashing her tit would definitely be in her bailiwick, so I asked Alexx if it would be possible to add that action, and he said no. So then I asked if we could ask the programmers to add it, and he said "Probably not," which I think is totally sexist.

Then I had this thought of adding that whenever Fizzy Girl flashed her tits, Mardi Gras beads would fall from the sky, and evil doers would be compelled to chase after them, but maybe that's a little over the top?
kestrell: (Default)
Why does January feel as if it lasts for three months?

But this song always wakes me up
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5mfhITk-eRo
kestrell: (Default)
Kes: Though this is also true of *so* many virtual panels, technology and/or science fiction related, that I listened to this year.
Sadly, even if the majority of the panelists are female and there is only one male, imo, he will still jump in first and seize more of the discussion time than any of the other panelists.

As with many preferences, homophily, or a tendency to associate with similar individuals, tends to operate outside awareness.
We have learned that our intentions, and genuine egalitarian principles, are not enough to guide our behavior.
By: Abigail J. Stewart and Virginia Valian
https://thereader.mitpress.mit.edu/why-its-so-difficult-to-accomplish-inclusion/

This article is adapted from Abigail Stewart and Virginia Valian’s book “An Inclusive Academy.”

In 2002, the then dean of engineering at MIT, Thomas Magnanti, wrote in the foreword to the school’s report on the status of women that part of his attraction to engineering as a child had been its promise that anyone with merit could succeed. He was disappointed to discover that, at MIT, that was not so:

We learn, for example, about some of our women faculty colleagues, who despite their superb professional standing and despite the fact that they are highly valued by their faculty colleagues, have never been asked to serve on the Ph.D. committee of even one of their colleagues’ students in their own research area. Stunning.
....
biaswatchneuro
https://biaswatchneuro.com/
includes a formula for how to determine whether the number of women and men on a panel is what you would expect by chance, given the representation of women in the field.
A good starting point might be Jacqueline O’Neill’s timeless article at Foreign Policy,
https://foreignpolicy.com/2016/03/08/7-rules-for-avoiding-all-male-panels/
which swiftly outlines seven rules for avoiding all-male panels, or
‘manels
https://undark.org/2017/06/06/manels-all-male-panel/
kestrell: (Default)
A friend got me hooked on the female real-crime podcast "My Favorite Murder," even though I need to cover my ears for some parts, because I'm a wuss when it comes to real crime stories.
However, what really fuels the show are the two female hosts and storytellers, who are the best kind of crazy.

Another favorite media thing of mine is the daily audiobook recommendation from AudioFile Magazine skill I receive through Alexa
Audiobook Recommendations from AudioFile Magazine [AudioFile is spelled capital a u d i o capital f i l e]
https://alexa.amazon.com/spa/index.html#skills/dp/B07TWPRCQZ/?ref=skill_dsk_skb_sr_3&qid=1563892656
especially this week's theme is strong women.

This morning's recommendation was for "Stay Sexy and Don't Get Murdered," by the "My Favorite Murder" hosts. The title comes from their traditional show sign off. Parts of the audiobook are recorded with the hosts reading in front of their live audience, so it does manage to capture some of the Captain marvel-like "Because, fuck you" tone of the podcasts.

I was a little conflicted about the excerpt AudioFile chose to use, because it mocks the use of the word "self-care" which, in the world of PWD, is of huge importance, despite its more, um, self-indulgent use as framed by the show hosts.

Also, if you are a regular reader of audiobooks, I highly recommend the AudioFile Magazine Alexa skill, especially this week's focus on strong women.
Note: AudioFile is spelled capital a u d i o capital f i l e.
kestrell: (Default)
Thinking about all the women who have been pressured into counting calories for their entire lives, the entire diet industry seems obscene.

https://www.1843magazine.com/features/death-of-the-calorie
kestrell: (Default)
The color pink and I have a complicated relationship.

On second thought, our relationship was, until recently, actually pretty simple: I really loathed and despised pink.

When I was a kid, I was asked what color I wanted my bedroom to be painted in.

"Purple," I said promptly.
"No, purple is too dark."
"Lavender, then."
"Too dark."
"Green."
"Too dark."
"How about...yellow?"
"No, the dining room is yello."
"Okay," I sighed, "anything but pink."

And that is how I got a pink bedroom.

And by pink I don't mean shell pink, or peachy-pink, or even pastel pink.

I mean Pepto-Bismol *PINK*.

There was even more compulsory pink in my teen years (I'm pretty certain people were concerned that, since I didn't have a boyfriend, I was a baby lesbian, and somehow pink would be an antidote for that).

You can see why I felt that pink was a tool of the patriarchy.

What could possibly change my lifelong loathing of pink?

It's the hats.

I love the hats! All the hats, be they knitted, crocheted, sewn, woven from straw or made as origami, glittered, Bedazzled, beribboned, or with little metal claws.

Donald Trump has managed to accomplish something that decades of social pressure failed to do: get me to wear pink as a subversive color.

I declare The Pussyhat Project to be the twenty-first century suffragettes.
https://www.pussyhatproject.com/knit/

So, last night I was googling for some pussyhat DIY and was taken aback to discover the following article.

begin excerpt
"The Women's March Needs Passion and purpose, Not Pink Pussycat Hats"
https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/the-womens-march-needs-passion-and-purpose-not-pink-pussycat-hats/2017/01/11/6d7e75be-d842-11e6-9a36-1d296534b31e_story.html?utm_term=.af13e407eb31

Please, sisters, back away from the pink.
Pink pussycat hats, sparkly signs, color-coordinated street theater - all of it is gleefully in the works for the upcoming Women’s March on Washington on Jan. 21.
And that scares me a little. Because all of this well-intentioned, she-power frippery can make this thing more Lilith Fair than Lilly Ledbetter. And the Women’s March of 2017 will be remembered as an unruly river of Pepto-Bismol roiling through the streets of the capital rather than a long overdue civil rights march....

The Women’s March needs grit, not gimmicks.
end of excerpt

I felt as if someone had just stuck a pin in my pink pussyhat balloon.

And then I got angry.

I grew up as an orphan living in an unsafe environment, but I made myself the bibliophile with attitude who stands before you today.

Is that enough grit for you?

I spent most of my adult life wearing mostly black to show how cynical and tough I was, so, for me, wearing pink represents getting rid of a lot of baggage.

Is that enough grit for you?

I am a blind woman with a degree from MIT.

Is that serious enough for you?

But, mostly, I am a woman who is pretty darn peeved to find another woman spouting one of the oldest male lies that still gets touted as a legitimate excuse for men to behave badly, namely: that the way men disregard, disrespect, and dismiss women has anything to do with how women dress.

*Puh-leeze!*

Men have said and tried to do all sorts of unbelievable things to me while I was wearing anything from a Catholic school uniform (and yes, I was a Catholic schoolgirl at the time) to baggy jeans, an old Johnny Winter t-shirt and my hair in a braid. I wasn't wearing makeup, or nail polish, or high heels. It wasn't nighttime and I wasn't on my way to a club; it was broad daylight and I was on my way either home or to the library.

Does anyone remember a few years back during an especially cold winter when there was some man wandering around Somerville exposing himself to women, and police were walking around warning women not to wear sexy clothing? Someone on LJ posted that yes, obviously it was something she wore while coming home from work that drove a man to expose his junk in sub-zero temperatures.

Let me state it clearly for the benefit of other women: it does not matter what a woman wears, a sexist man with poor self-control and anger management issues is still going to behave however he wants to behave, because he thinks his right to do or say whatever he wants trumps a woman's right to just go about her way and do her own thing.

If you want to wear a pink pussyhat, you go girl! If you want to wear a red hat and a purple dress, go for it, woman! If you want to wear a pink leopard minidress and one of those absurd miniature hats, I'll support that too.

Wear what you want to wear, live how you want to live.

Btw, I now have two pink pussyhats: one is the classic baseball cap with a black cat on it, and the other is a furry hat with a Cheshire Cat embroidered on it.

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