People often say that the biology-denying extremes of gender ideology are as crazy as flat-earthery. In my new novel, out on Kindle today, I explore how you might foist flat-earth beliefs on the world in the way that gender ideologues have performed their own spectacular capture.
In my imaginary world, a benign map-making charity called the Orange Peel Foundation, which has been campaigning to wean the world away from inaccurate Mercator projection maps, has completed all its work and is about to wind itself up.
But then it's offered a vast sum of money by a Californian tech billionaire called Joey Talavera to convince the world that the earth is flat. When founder Mel Winterbourne objects, she is sacked and replaced by her ambitious young deputy, Shane Foxley.
It's a tall order for Foxley. If he just announces the earth is flat, everyone will laugh and he'll have no chance of success. He has to go about the plan by stealth: piggy-backing on more popular conspiracy theories (eg around the moon landings) and also on a mood of anti-racism
For example: thanks to a C19th myth, Christopher Columbus is associated with 'globularist' beliefs that vanquished flat-earthery. But his statues are now being toppled. Why not harness that rage, framing the division of the world into two hemispheres as a racist social construct?
If Foxley has learned anything about the new era of social media, it's that people will believe anything as long as the rest of their tribe believe it – especially if they're led on by gullible blue-tick celebrities like the feather-brained Lateefa Latif.
He also knows baying mobs love having someone to bully and destroy. So when freelance journalist Ginny Pugh scents that something strange is going on at Orange Peel, Foxley and the useful idiot editor of website Earth News, Ricky 'Simpleton' Singleton, relish taking Ginny down.
Gradually, however, a resistance gathers to resist Orange Peel's deranged 'True Earth' ideology. They are reviled as 'True Earth Rejecting Globularists' or TERGs. Since they're mainly based in the UK, their country becomes known as TERG Island. They're quite flattered by that.
Do they defeat the bullying flat-earth zealots? You'll have to read THE END OF THE WORLD IS FLAT to find out. All I can tell you is that it has gone down well with some people well known in these parts, such as @bindelj and @blablafishcakes...
and with @HJoyceGender (did I read somewhere that she also has a book out? 🤣😉)...
and with @FrancisWheen, who wrote a book called How Mumbo-Jumbo Conquered the World, which gives him a certain expertise in this field...
And with @SimonFanshawe (look out for his own book The Power of Difference, coming soon)...
and with @Gillian_Philip, a hugely accomplished and prolific adventure writer for teenagers, whom the flat-earthers tried to cancel for heresy
I'm very conscious that it's much easier for a male author to tip his toe into these poisoned waters than for a woman. That's why THE END OF THE WORLD IS FLAT is dedicated to six indefatigable women who have also suffered greatly for believing the earth is round
While my novel is inspired by the real world, it's a work of the imagination, not a depiction of real people, organisations or events. I hope it will make you laugh. It's out on Kindle today, at the bargain price of £2.84 amazon.co.uk/End-World-Flat…
The paperback is out a month today, on August 16, although if you order it directly from Eye Books you may get it sooner than that. UK p&p is free. It will be out that same day in the US too. Ask your bookseller to order it. eye-books.com/books/the-end-…
I know there are loads of books out at the moment and everyone's on a budget. NB you can always ask your library to get them in. If you do, you'll be doing a favour to authors like @Docstockk, @HJoyceGender, @SimonFanshawe, @AbigailShrier, @RooneyRachel and me. Happy reading!
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I was delighted to see @andrewstickland's Mars Alone trilogy praised in the New Statesman. They're superb books that haven't found the audience they deserve. But also, Andrew was the target of attempted sabotage by trans activists. The reason may make you gasp 1/
The trilogy, written for young adult readers, is what's known as 'hard' sci-fi – not because it's difficult to read (quite the contrary) but because it obeys the laws of physics. There's no teleportation, travel beyond the speed of light or encounters with aliens 2/
Instead it's a completely believable adventure yarn which just happens to be set three hundred years in the future, when humans have colonised the Moon and Mars. The kind of future that @elonmusk envisages. It's fascinating 3/
In the 1940s and 50s, Hollywood operated a blacklist, refusing to employ people with 'wrong' political opinions, whether or not those opinions had any impact on their work. Scores of careers were destroyed. The blacklist is now widely acknowledged to have been a bad thing. 1/
In 2024, Scotland's largest literary network launched a blacklist, instructing bookshops not to sell books if they were written by authors with 'wrong' political opinions. Many lives and careers have already been damaged by this persecution. 2/ archive.ph/xe8Pw
An interesting difference: the Hollywood blacklist may have been inspired by the US government's House Un-American Activities Committee, but the blacklist itself was the initiative of Hollywood's studio bosses. The private sector, in other words, not the state. 3/
🧵Thank you to Andrew Anthony of the Observer for holding @jonronson to account over his disgracefully partial documentary about Camp Trans. Ronson refuses to update the programme (which would be easy to do), nor has he replied to any of the criticism, until now.
Ronson's justification for not mentioning the murder of two lesbian Michfest participants and their son by a Camp Trans protestor is twofold: that Dana Rivers hadn't gone to trial by the time the programme went out, and that Michfest and Camp Trans weren't mentioned in court
This really won't do. On the first point, Ronson could have mentioned that Rivers was facing charges, because he was sat in jail awaiting trial when the programme went out. There are no legal rules saying you can't mention forthcoming trials in foreign jurisdictions
🤏🧵After lesbian Brenda Rees took hormones and had surgery so she could present herself to the world as a man called Mark, she was distressed to find she couldn't marry a woman or train for the priesthood, because the law still considered her female
She resolved to challenge this law and in the 1980s took the UK government to the European Court of Human Rights for failing to recognise her male status. Her action was unsuccessful but it paved the way for the Gender Recognition Act 2004.
This allowed trans people to be legally recognised as their chosen sex, not their actual one. A woman like Brenda could marry another woman provided she 'transitioned' to live as a man. Other lesbians had to wait another ten years before they were given the same right to marry
🧵 The Cass Review is 388 pages long. Deciding it's TL;DR is not unreasonable. We all rely on trusted people to read long documents for us and then summarise the key conclusions.
This particularly applies to people in public life, and especially politicians. There are 650 MPs. Expecting them all to read a 388-page report, on just one of the very many subjects they're meant to know about, isn't realistic. It wouldn't be a sensible use of resources.
And for government and opposition parties creating policy on the basis of the Review, it stands to reason that you put your best people on it – grown-ups familiar with the background who will understand all the detail – to formulate a response for your party
In May 2019 Ruth Hunt, who had just resigned as CEO of Stonewall, did a Q&A at the Oxford Union. Asked for tips on how to argue with people who didn't agree with Stonewall on trans issues, she said: 'Those who think transwomen are men? I wouldn't even bother. Leave them to us.'
If that sounds faintly menacing, consider this: a few months later, the @AllianceLGB held its inaugural meeting, at a secret location. None of the lesbian, gay, bisexual and trans people attending believed Hunt's mantra that transwomen were women.
One of those present, the black lesbian barrister Allison Kelly, afterwards tweeted enthusiastically about the meeting. Stonewall then wrote to her chambers demanding that she be sacked. It wrecked Allison's career.