The tragic death of a schoolmate leads to a revisionist Me Too story that ironically renders the supposed victim, and the supposed perpetrator, into cardboard characters. By failing to ask the hard questions and instead insisting on a simplistic good/bad narrative, the humanity and the shared responsibility of both protagonists gets squeezed out of the story.
As we delve deeper into the truth of what happened, questions of what is power, what is seduction, and what is "grooming" arise.
And we ask why girls are still encouraged, even by so-called feminists, to objectify and monetize their bodies. Why has one strand of feminism turned objectification into "empowerment" in the topsy-turvy bizarre world of identity politics?
On The Media Jumps The Shark
What is a war crime? Is the USA committing them?
That time my all white band used the N-Word in a song (and why that did and still does make sense).
The Whitest of Snowflakes - How the right are leveraging left-wing fragility by imitating it (+a free piece of music).
Thought Experiment 3: ”A Black Black Woman or a White White woman... ” When do aesthetics matter more than ideology?
J.K. Rowling, Daniel Radcliffe, Groupthink, Newspeak, and me...
Tune in, turn on, change your mind...
January 6th and the Perseverance of Belief
CD Quickie: Why is gender mutable but race cast in stone?
Trans Women in Sports: it’s not just about testosterone.
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