"Last week the Independent ran a feature with the exciting headline 'I was a hooker who became an agony aunt'. Sounded fascinating. Another tart with a heart story, perhaps?
No, reading the piece indicated the headline was wrong.
The feature described blogger and sex writer Zoe Margolis, better known as the Girl with a One Track Mind. It focused in part on Margolis work as an ambassador for sexual health charity Brook, raising issues about sex and relationships with young people.
Zoe Margolis is not, and has never been, a sex worker."
Apparently, this facts vs. opinions confusion is making other people really frustrated too. Via
no subject
Date: 2010-03-16 04:08 pm (UTC)That's only in cases where I feel there's no... gah, how do I put it, importance to being right?
"Lost is the best show ever in the history of ever." (Doesn't bother me.)
"Stephen Moffat is just a better writer than Russell T. Davies." (Kind of gets under my skin because it sounds close enough to a statement of objective fact that if I disagree or have different taste, I feel like I have to call you a liar.)
"That is an offensive thing to say." (Same level of absolutism, but as it is important and you really do want to challenge anyone's reality who disagrees, I stand by it and it doesn't bug me.)
I don't tend to use "in my opinion," but the couple of people I know who don't add qualifiers or some kind of room for the fact that people disagree tend to be prone to making me feel mansplained* or run over by the force of their opinion.
You don't make me feel mansplained. You have found some more elegant way of including that space for disagreement. I applaud this.
* I really don't like "mansplained" because it is a group stereotype pejorative and I'm really trying to avoid those. Does anyone have a less inflammatory short term for this kind of jerkiness?
no subject
Date: 2010-03-16 04:40 pm (UTC)I agree it does take a certain amount of linguistic elegance and care to be able to express yourself with certainty but without 'splaining. It's interesting how people sometimes respond to that, though; there seems to be an inherent suspicion in some circles of people who argue well, like there's something manipulative about it (which - hi politicians and the press! - not entirely unfounded). I have no sympathy with anti-intellectualism, but at the same time, I think this relates to