I attended a workshop on how to plan my now-to-be-fully-online spring course. Here's a text someone recommended. It has dance imagery. I can't leave that without comment, can I? IOW, I disagree with the author--dance imagery can't be stretched too far. 1/ wordpress.kpu.ca/tlcommons/pivo…
To get ready for my spring course, I will need not just a pivot or pirouette or piqué. They won't fill the time. I can't turn just once or halfway and then hope for applause. I need a choreography.
Best to find some solid inspiration to hold onto. 2/
How about the choreography in this iconic Kate Bush production. In this scenario, I'm Kate Bush. Obviously. I might be frazzled about this project, but I still have aspirations to look as accomplished as Bush does in a contemporary dance performance. 3/
She's got the unruly, uncut quarantine hair. The simple-t-shirt-and-roomy-pants combo so many of us now live and work in. She makes unusual explanatory gestures, the way we find ourselves making them in front of cameras. She moves barefoot on the floor beneath her. 4/
I'm envisioning myself in her position, lifted up in my sometimes tragic-looking endeavour by educational technologists. They stand solidly behind me, move with me, do their best to appear collected, in control. They go along even with the more awkward lifts I may propose. 5/
In consultations and workshops, professionally trained educational technologists spin us instructors around and upside down as they show us all the possible options. They make our heads spin. Using their practiced muscle, they release us gently back onto the ground. 6/
Many times that will work. With good templates, it can look beautiful, even when executed by inexperienced dancers like us. But we're dizzy. And we have to keep running up that road, running up that hill. We will fall. Or, get stuck between crowded, indistinguishable options. 7/
If we only could make a deal with God, we would be running up that hill with no problems. That's not a deal we can make, however. There will be problems. We hope these problems are not tearing us and our students asunder. 8/
Oh come on, students.
Oh come on, darlings.
Let me steal this moment from you now.
Oh come on angels,
Come on come on darlings,
Let's exchange the experience oh. 9/
Bonus: old screenshots of my favourite lifts from the video. Choreography by Diane Grey. Bush's dance partner is Michael Hervieu.10/
Let's trace the self-alleged non-political cabal at play here. A cabal trying to change current principles of gender-affirmative care for trans youth. While conducting no original research of their own.
May I introduce, Society for Evidence-Based Gender Medicine (SEGM). 1/
Mostly they lobby for "evidence-informed healthcare" for "children, adolescents, and young adults with gender dysphoria."
If you believe a society with that narrow a focus doesn't have very particular political goals, you must be freshly born. 2/
They made a bibliography to show that evidence for gender dysphoria treatments is "of very low quality" and that they are very concerned for gender-dysphoric youth.
They filed an amicus brief to challenge WPATH on mastectomy for adolescents.
This part of #ColinWright's interview went on for quite a bit: he made his own example of not landing a TT job evidence for how rotten he thinks academia is. But he didn't mention once that his supervisor & co-author was a fraudster & that those co-retractions dragged him down.
“'Due to legal concerns (Pruitt obtaining lawyers) I have been advised not to issue any comments on this until the investigation surrounding Dr. Pruitt has finished,' #ColinWright, who co-authored several papers with Pruitt, tells ScienceInsider."
#JesseSingal, true to form, keeps hammering his list of requested corrections on all doors.
Do others remember when he copied his lawyer in an email and said it was certainly not a legal threat? Now he says someone saying corrections might appear “Soon…” is “ominous.” 🙃
So no, dear outraged Jesse, it is not “profound sloppiness” and it does not “exhibit complete unfamiliarity” when one repeats what is widely established in the accompanying research and discussion.
#ColinWright, #Quillette editor: "Being trans is just a state of mind. . .you can't empirically verify it in any way."
I know we didn't really need any more confirmation. But here it is.
When asked about his previous identification as a progressive, this is how he defines it: "I was pro the gay rights movement, and yeah, for sure."
Yep. Progressive. When you support legal and political changes that have just happened and without any of your participation.
#ColinWright about non-binary identity: "It's common but I still don't think people know what they're talking about when they say it. . .Just ask anyone of this ideology about what is a woman, and you just get insanity back."
Then he says "insanity" at least three more times.
"The same evolutionary & biological processes that. . .result in a shorter average lifespan for men than women also contribute to the sex differences in economic outcomes (e.g., annual income) & political participation." #Quillette authors
I'm reading this Shrier piece--follow Merkin's link if you're curious--and an obvious pattern is this.
#AbigailShrier reports with benevolence and understanding on these children's disabilities and mental health struggles UNLESS it's gender dysphoria.
She has detailed paragraphs to build good will from readers based on how supportive she is (and the parents she portrays are) in relation to a child's or teenager's autism, eating disorder, suicidal ideation, self-harm, insomnia, anxiety, depression, PTSD.