Prompted by a friend and sex educator in rural Illinois, I was curious about how easy it was to access affirming information on sex and gender in the public library system in #Saskatchewan. I thought I'd start off easy, and search simply for the classic "Our Bodies, Ourselves."
Searching through the Parkland Library system (Yorkton), the results shocked me. These were the first three results. The first title is a book on getting sober; the second is a holistic health book, and the third is a book on the big tech hijacking of the mind and body.
The 1984 version of Our Bodies, Ourselves, with one copy in the province, was 10th on the list, and the 2011 version (still 11 years old) was 16th, with 5 copies across the province, and none in the largest urban centres of Regina and Saskatoon. Curious, I decided to search
for my friend @ShannonDea1's book "Beyond the Binary," which is a very accessible introduction to moving beyond gender and sex binaries. Given that Shannon became Dean of Arts at @UofRegina in 2020, you might think you could find a copy in the province. You can - with a catch.
An .epub, you would think it would be readable by any e-reading device. But the fine print notes that it is "Restricted to use by people with documented print impairment." I'm all for accessibility, but how is restricting an .epub to ONLY those with 'print impairment' equitable?
Okay, back to the original search for Our Bodies, Ourselves. The fourth entry was for Trans Bodies, Trans Selves. Okay, now we're getting somewhere. Except there is ONE copy in all of Saskatchewan, in Prince Albert. BUT THERE'S MORE! If you look at the parklandlibrary.ca/sm/search/item…
suggestions at the bottom of that search page, you'll see the transphobic "God and the Transgender Debate," written by the @andrewtwalk from the now-disgraced Southern Baptist Convention's flagship Seminary. parklandlibrary.ca/sm/search/resu…
In #Saskatoon, the largest city in #Saskatchewan, you cannot take out Our Bodies, Ourselves, nor can you take out the trans-affirming Trans Bodies, Trans Selves. But you CAN take out a book on trans people written by a professor of ethics for the Southern Baptist Convention... 🤷♂️
Check it out for yourself. Go to saskatoonlibrary.ca or parklandlibrary.ca. It is unconscionable to me that bigots get shelving in the largest library in #Saskatchewan, but the health and wellness of women and trans people are mere afterthoughts.
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1/ "The next day the separations began—Oleh was called to join 13 other men on a large Ilyushin-76 transport plane; Dima was not.
2/ He had a brief chance to say goodbye—worried about Dima’s state of mind, he checked to make sure his son remembered his name, address, and phone number—and asked some of the other prisoners to look out for him. vanityfair.com/news/2022/05/b…
3/ Oleh was blindfolded and bound on his flight, kicked and beaten by Russian soldiers. It was only days later, when he happened upon a library book in his cell, that he realized they had been brought to a prison in the Russian city of Kursk.
Answers are more about the questions you ask than anything else. These days, asking difficult questions is paradoxically seen as weak, and a YouTube University™️ degree is often taken over the advice & wisdom of experts w/ years of training in asking those difficult questions.
Folks have spent years learning how to ask good questions using critical thinking skills that have taken thousands of readings and discussions and experiments to hone. Then, when we ask them what they've come up with, we balk at the answers we're given, cuz they don't conform to
our preconceived notions of the world. Many Canadians are angry that we're asking questions about the conduct of our nation towards our Indigenous siblings, both now and in the past. Likewise, many American states are introducing legislation that would prevent certain questions
2/ "People who had recovered from COVID-19, including those no longer reporting symptoms, exhibited significant cognitive deficits versus controls when controlling for age, gender, education level, income, racial-ethnic group, pre-existing medical disorders, tiredness,…
3/ …depression and anxiety. The deficits were of substantial effect size for people who had been hospitalised (N = 192), but also for non-hospitalised cases who had biological confirmation of COVID-19 infection (N = 326).
"But the most dangerous effect of the exhaustion steadily gaining on all engaged in the fight against the epidemic did not consist in their relative indifference to outside events and the feelings of others, but in the slackness and supine-ness that they allowed to invade their
personal lives. They developed a tendency to shirk every movement that didn't seem absolutely necessary or called for efforts that seemed too great to be worth while. Thus these men were led to break, oftener and oftener, the rules of hygiene they themselves had instituted,
to omit some of the numerous disinfections they should have practiced, and sometimes to visit the homes of people suffering from pneumonic plague without taking steps to safeguard themselves against infection, because they had been notified only at the last moment and could