This evening's realization: Sometimes, it's easier to fight when you're the ally. 1/?
I recently had to take a step back from thinking about Justice Kennedy's resignation and its implications. One reason is that I feel powerless to actually do anything about it. But another reason is that it will affect me directly. 2/
I am Queer, and a Trump appointee is likely to be anti-LGBTQ. I am a woman who believes in bodily autonomy, and this appointee is likely to be anti-choice. I am a member of a union, and I have medical needs, and I want Democrats to win elections - which means access to polls. 3/
And I thought that was because I might actually make some small difference for immigrants. I can show up at rallies that might sway public opinion - and the opinions of legislators. I can donate money to groups helping immigrants. 5/
But it's also because, while these fights for immigrants often make me feel sad, disappointed and angry, they don't stress me out. This is because I am not an immigrant. I am in no danger of deportation, or even of losing my citizenship any time soon. 6/
No one in my family is in danger of deportation. I don't have close friends who are Dreamers. I don't personally know any Muslims who were banned from entering this country. I care about these issues, but they don't affect me. Not directly, anyway. 7/
And because I am not directly affected by the end of DACA, the Muslim Ban, or the family separations at the border, fighting to change these policies isn't nearly as stressful for me. My life and well-being aren't on the line. Instead, I'm fighting for other people. 8/
It's easier to for me to fight the immigration fights because my own life and well-being doesn't hang in the balance. It's easier for me to fight this fight because, in this fight, I am one of the allies. 9/
It's easier to fight this fight because less stress means more stamina. I might come home physically exhausted from rallying in the summer heat, but I won't be emotionally drained. In fact, I might feel emotionally recharged from doing something to help. 10/
If I were in one of the groups affected, every rally would be high-stakes. If this fails, what happens next? What if I didn't fight hard enough? What if I fought too hard and called attention to myself? What if? What if? What if? And every what if sucks away more energy. 11/
From an emotional energy angle, it's easier to fight if you're outside of the group being oppressed. Which is to say, get out there and use your ally power. Because it may be more important than you realize. 12/12
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For those of us who aren’t celebrating Christmas, I would like to share a story:
In a small Jewish community on an outlying planet sits a museum. At its center, a narrow plinth. Upon the plinth, a boxy container, folded from heavy white paper, its edges charred. A wire handle across its top.
The label reads: In Commemoration of the Great Christmas Alliance
There is no further explanation posted, but ask any museum staff member, and they will tell you the tale of the time when Chinese food saved the Jews from boredom and despair, on the occasion of yet another Christmas.
This Rosh Hashanah, my thoughts kept returning to a single story. It’s the story of a soul, newly arrived at the gates of Heaven And while I’m not sure I believe in a literal heaven, with an actual gate where angels stand guard, a story doesn’t have to be factual to be true.
So a woman arrives at the gates of Heaven. She is small of stature, but she stands tall before the imposing gates. A simple black robe hangs from her shoulders, and a lacy white collar adorns her neck. In her eyes, there is a gleam of steely determination.
In most stories, this is when the angels would stop her. They would ask her to prove she deserves a place in Heaven. But in this story, the angels step aside.
The eighth panel I attended at #ConZealand this year wasn’t technically a panel. It was a dialogue between @doctorow and @Ada_Palmer entitled “Corey Doctorow and Ada Palmer Discuss Censorship and Information Control”
I learned a lot from their conversation.
This thread will include some of the things the two of them said. I’m copying this over from my handwritten notes, so assume I’ve paraphrased unless I put something in quotes.
From @Ada_Palmer: Every time there’s new media technology, people worry about the new one and forget to censor older ones. Censorship focuses on the newest saturate media - and on where people get political information from.
This thread will include some of the things the panelists said. I’m copying this over from my handwritten notes, so assume I’ve paraphrased unless I put something in quotes.
The panelists began by listing pet peeves about how justice is handled in science fiction and fantasy:
@AdriJjy: I want more about societal institutions and systemic things rather than an individual. And I hate the bad guy getting redeemed by dying.
This thread will include some of the things the panelists said. I’m copying this over from my handwritten notes, so assume I’ve paraphrased unless I put something in quotes.
First, the panelists introduced themselves. Among other things, each shared which indigenous tribe they are a part of. Because most of these tribal names were unfamiliar to me, I didn’t know how to spell them, so I looked them up afterward on author websites and twitter.