rm ([personal profile] rm) wrote2010-10-13 11:00 am
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  • The wonder of sleep, even not enough of it, is that it offers perspective. Last night, everything seemed very big and overwhelming. Today, it just seems big.

  • Although, I'd be lying if I said I wasn't freaked out about this trip. The part where I'm going to Cardiff to see Patty is grand. The part where I'm going to CH for work is expected. The part where Patty's going to visit me in CH is SuperExtraSpecial bonus. The part where all of this adds up to 5 weeks instead of 2 and change? IS FREAKING ME OUT.

    I am, at heart, a homebody in certain ways. I love to travel because it's glamorous and interesting and because travel is hard and it makes you know yourself. So a bazillion weekends going on little adventures with Patty? Awesome. A few two week trips here and there? Fabulous. Big epic journeys? Kinda set off my control-freak buttons, but totally have their place. Yet, this trip has no clearly defined category and there's very little of it I'm in control of, and so I'm a bit weirded out.

    This is, of course, compounded right now by being really artistically busy/productive (both in actuality and in the related to particular narrative matters of my existence playing in my head on the repeat loop of late) and the fact that fall, even as we're starting to edge into the cold crappy part of it (as opposed to the glorious October part of it), is my favorite season, not just in general, but in New York. I write about New York so much, but I don't always talk about the love. Not enough. This is my home and this is my lottery ticket. It leaves me more powerful than most people I know, and it too leaves me wanting and bereft. I talk a lot about my innate melancholia and romanticism; blame my city of decay.

    Mostly, I am just a big bucket of oh, shit! about leaving here for five weeks. Does anyone remember if I did this before I went to Australia? Does anyone think that's remotely comparable in anything but duration? I think, maybe the biggest part of the problem is that I'm lacking a framework. Patty goes. I stay home.

    I keep trying to tell myself it will be fine. It will, in fact, be good. A sort of hermitting stage -- I won't really have a social life in CH beyond the days Patty comes to visit, and I won't have a very excessive work schedule but for a handful of other days. That means I can be holed up with my laptop the rest of the time and sending files back and forth with the folks I'm doing collaborations with. I'll also be working on stuff for that screenplay competition, and I've not shortage of solo projects that need me. I'll also be flogging the hell out of the Kickstarter fundraising.

    When I get to Cardiff, I can unplug for the Thanksgiving week where no one gets anything done anyway. Plus, Patty's better than any ol' city.

    New York will survive without me; and Patty plus random Americans in Cardiff will survive my putting on an apron and attempting a feast. It'll all be great. Too bad I know there's really no talking me down about this. It's just going to be like this until it happens.

    While I'm being neurotic, things are happening in the world:

  • First, the recue of the Chilean miners is underway. As of this writing the 13th man has just been brought up.

  • Yesterday, a "permanent injunction" was issued against DADT. The justice department can still appeal, and there's significant debate as to whether this should be handled by the courts or the Congress. Don't get me started about the bullshit our current political climate has been heaping on the Judiciary Branch. Anyway. Good-ish news. Strange times. Long-term outlook: crystal. Short-term outlook: motherfucking hazy.

  • Anti-gay New York politician Paladino's gay nephew speaks out; after Paladino referenced the guy's existence while trying to argue that he's not homophobic.

  • Women, equality, and France.

  • Stress, inflammation, disease, oppression and health.

  • Holy crap: 20-year-old half-Egyptian US-born citizen finds FBI tracking device in his car (yeah, really, the FBI showed up to get it back) and it turns out he's being tracked because his now-deceased father was an Muslim community activist. Not, cool, FBI. Not cool.

  • Hey, my friend Mirabai has been interviewed about her steno technology and philosophy at the Geek Feminism Blog. Read it. This is how you do an interview: concise storytelling, cadence-aware, enthused, invitational.

  • [livejournal.com profile] reannon links us to a good post and a lot of funny comments about crap people did (some of it really frigging stupid, some of it really normal) in their 1960s and 70s childhoods that would get parents the fuck arrested today, but wasn't _that_ outrageous then.

  • Many of you have no doubt heard of the guy running for Congress in Ohio who used to dress up like a Nazi soldier in WWII reenactments. I have a lot to say about this, because the topic is both complicated in general, because I'm a reenactor (in other periods), because I'm Jewish, and because, in this case it's actually really clear cut (and it's not always -- there are places and contexts in which I'd argue it can be a relevant, necessary choice if handled correctly) that this was entirely not the fuck appropriate. I've not found myself motivated yet.

  • Look, I haven't seen The Social Network yet, which means my opinion is sort of crap, but having worked for dot.com start-ups aplenty, let me tell you, there's basically no amount of misogyny that could be present in this film that would surprise me or that would make me blame the writers/producers/directors for its presence. I may be proved wrong, once I've seen it. But that world was/is ugly.
  • [identity profile] heavenscalyx.livejournal.com 2010-10-13 03:06 pm (UTC)(link)
    20-year-old half-Egyptian US-born citizen finds FBI tracking device in his car (yeah, really, the FBI showed up to get it back) and it turns out he's being tracked because his now-deceased father was an Muslim community activist. Not, cool, FBI. Not cool.

    Comment in my house upon reading this article: "Those FBI agents sound like the stereotypical men in black from the 1950s and 1960s. 'Give us back our thing that you found. Grr.' It's terrifying when Mulder and Scully are more competent than the real FBI."
    azurelunatic: Vivid pink Alaskan wild rose. (Default)

    [personal profile] azurelunatic 2010-10-13 03:09 pm (UTC)(link)
    It's less the amount, and more the type, I think. The guy's actual girlfriend at about the time the film was set was not included, so he could accept a blowjob from a groupie, then obsess over the girl who dumped him for sufficient reason. "Facemash" (about as classy as Hot or Not) actually included male students, not just female students. And I heard from someone who does apparently have some familiarity with Harvard clubs that apparently their parties are less drunken frathouse on spring break with scantily clad women than the movie depicts.

    But as for the rest of it, heh, I've seen Bob Parsons in action.
    sethg: picture of me with a fedora and a "PRESS: Daily Planet" card in the hat band (Default)

    [personal profile] sethg 2010-10-13 04:50 pm (UTC)(link)
    The impression I get from all this discussion of TSN-the-movie vs. Facebook-the-real-history is that Hollywood is even more casually misogynistic than the dot-com world. As someone in the dot-com world who knows virtually nothing about Hollywood, I find that... impressive.

    [identity profile] rm.livejournal.com 2010-10-13 04:54 pm (UTC)(link)
    At one point in my dot.com career my boss ordered me to clean up sex trash in the office after a night with hookers to impress clients.

    So I'm not sure how that's possible.

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    azurelunatic: stick figure about to hit potato w/ flaming tennis racket, near jug of gasoline & sack of potatoes (bad idea)

    [personal profile] azurelunatic 2010-10-13 05:14 pm (UTC)(link)
    It seems like different flavors of misogyny to me. (Speaking as someone who knows nothing of Hollywood but that which comes out of it, and whose experience in the greater tech world has been the better part of a Computer Information Systems degree, interacting with IT as a woman employed in a non-technical job, interacting with the in-house developers of an in-house web-app as a theoretically non-technical end-user, interacting with in-house geeks as the creator of a database using *wince* Access [it was what I had to hand], serving as volunteer tech support on LJ, serving as cat-herder on [livejournal.com profile] suggestions, working front line tech support for a registrar with bells whistles email and hosting, and currently serving as volunteer tech support/spamwrangler/cheerleader for Dreamwidth...) Tech world, the good folks don't care if you're an alien blue poodle as long as you can do the job -- but part of doing the job is getting taken seriously, and part of getting taken seriously involves some hazing in very pointedly socially masculine fashions.

    I gather from the output that Hollywood doesn't seem to care whether you have a brain or not, or if your personal habits include *sleeping with* alien blue poodles, as long as you have the right look or can be made to have the right look, and can act.

    Neither of these strike me as particularly healthy things for humans, and even less so women and other classes vulnerable to exploitation.


    The misogyny in the tech world thing came up for me yet again this morning because of something mentioned in IRC, and I went Googling around after something or other, and I ran smack into some big wheel named Randal making an ass of himself in the comments, which I shouldn't have read. The phrase "yelled at for breaking the build" came up, in context of people who can't take the heat and run away, and people who stick around and become better coders through trial by fire. And it's over a year later, and I'm looking at a sudden plethora of wonderful devs, and it strikes me that Mr. S seemingly doesn't know the difference between a code review and verbal abuse, and apparently has linked the two, so that if your code's broken, you get berated for it like a kid who's just smashed the cookie jar in an attempt to snag a few. Why? Because it's always been that way. It builds character. And yet I'm staring at this channelful of strong spirited devs who've never had a harsh word from the leads in their lives, just "That didn't work; see here and here and here; how do you propose to fix it?" and half of them were just babydevs or not even that the same time last year. Open source is not boot camp.

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    [identity profile] missysedai.livejournal.com 2010-10-13 03:28 pm (UTC)(link)
    Many of you have no doubt heard of the guy running for Congress in Ohio who used to dress up like a Nazi soldier in WWII reenactments.

    Ugh, ugh, ugh. He lives HERE IN MY CITY! And he was already problematic BEFORE this came to light. GAH! I feel filthy, just living in the same town.

    My Opa marched into Ohrdruf-Buchenwald with the 89th Infantry in 1945. He was just 19 when he helped liberate that camp. He wouldn't talk to me about the war until after I had lived in Germany and visited a number of KZs. (He cried when I called him from Buchenwald and asked me if I understood why he never talked about it. Boy howdy, did I ever.) If my Opa were alive today, he'd have been the first in line to bang on Iott's front door and BEAT THE FUCK OUT HIM for this.
    Edited 2010-10-13 15:29 (UTC)

    [identity profile] azn-jack-fiend.livejournal.com 2010-10-13 03:30 pm (UTC)(link)
    About the reenactment... maybe I'm anticipating your argument by going out on a limb and say yes, it is OK to dress up like a Nazi for some reenactment situations.

    I thought about that in relation to a big reenactment issue here in Georgia: The Moore's Ford Lynching Reenactment. Video here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1GCQi2jhre4. It's been done for several years, organized by African-American activists, to try and raise awareness of a lynching that many people have a vested interest in forgetting. A lot of (white) people HATE this reenactment and throw all sorts of arguments against it, even though they don't seem to muster up the same vitriol against Civil War reenactments...

    But anyway, the first year of the lynching reenactment, the organizers couldn't get any white people to play the KKK lynchers. So the KKK roles had to be played by black people, which must have been pretty psychologically disturbing for the reenactors. The next year, the organizers sent out appeals into the social justice/peace activist community and found some white people (I think they're from the Quakers) to play the roles. One of them is shown in the video.

    So I had that reenactment issue sort of in mind as I read up on the Nazi "Wiking" dude. And then I read the details, and oh man, they actually ADMIRED those Nazis and that's why they were doing it in the first place. There was no reason, no understanding of context, that some people would have a problem with this... it just seemed all-around disgusting, offensive, entitled, racist and anti-Semitic. The defenses are just pathetic.

    So I wouldn't actually blanket condemn anyone for dressing up/reenacting if it seemed like they had a good reason for it. Like the KKK reenactors... that actually took a lot of courage and was done out of the best intentions and for a good goal. But those Wiking fuckers are just undefendable.

    [identity profile] rm.livejournal.com 2010-10-13 03:34 pm (UTC)(link)
    Oh, that's super-interesting, thanks for the link. I didn't know about that.

    And yeah. I've known a few people who have played Nazis in WWII reenactments that were about educating people about the horror of that war, and not about running around playing dress up. And it was serious, uncomfortable, solemn business for the folks, who were willing to take on filling the necessary Nazi roles.

    But man, every year when it's "oh, look, Nazis" time at Dragon*Con in the bar, I am pretty unhappy (largely, because there is a fairly responsible core group of WWII reenactors who go to D*C, but when people show up in the bar in Nazi uniforms, no one comes out of that happy. Or shouldn't anyway).

    This dude in Ohio, as you say, looks like it was even worse than "oh, pretty uniforms!" which is the usual level of assholery, you see. This was just... I still can't even quite get my head around this existence of that one.
    andrewducker: (Default)

    [personal profile] andrewducker 2010-10-13 03:39 pm (UTC)(link)
    Chatting to a friend of mine about this, and apparently there is a high level of uncomfortableness between the "Well, someone has to play the bad guys." Nazi reenactors and the "Woohoo! I'm an Ubergruppenfuhrer!" ones.

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    [identity profile] yarram.livejournal.com 2010-10-13 03:53 pm (UTC)(link)
    "...then I read the details, and oh man, they actually ADMIRED those Nazis and that's why they were doing it..."

    I was afraid of that.

    I mean, FFS, I'm German, and you'd have to do some pretty hard convincing about your motives to get me to participate in a reenactment that included Nazi officers (then again, my being German is probably part of the reason why). That's on top of all the skeevyness issues I already have with most historical "re-enactments", especially the ones that gloss over the not-pretty aspects of the period being re-enacted (RenFaires, I'm looking at you, never mind the historically wrong bits).

    Then again, my Oma lived through the period in question, so I know from second-hand some of the psychological trauma that comes with being complicit in that shit.

    [identity profile] missysedai.livejournal.com 2010-10-13 04:07 pm (UTC)(link)
    Then again, my Oma lived through the period in question, so I know from second-hand some of the psychological trauma that comes with being complicit in that shit.

    That trauma seems to get passed down. I didn't truly understand the concept of "Germany's National Shame" until I moved there in the late 80s. It was really hammered home by my schoolmates apologizing for WWII.

    They ranged from 15 to 18. Not complicit, but they still felt responsible.

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    [identity profile] redstapler.livejournal.com 2010-10-13 03:38 pm (UTC)(link)
    I'm actually seriously cranky about the cries of "MISOGYNY!" at The Social Network.

    It's not like it's inaccurate, it's not like it's being sincerely glorified.

    Spend any time in that kind of environment, and I guarantee you're likely to hear worse than anything Sorkin wrote.

    It's one thing to get mad at legitimately bigoted language played for laughs, but this is honest stage-setting. BIG FUCK DIFFERENCE.

    [identity profile] rm.livejournal.com 2010-10-13 03:39 pm (UTC)(link)
    Yeah, what's been described to me from the film seems no worse, and in some cases less worse, than the coke and hookers bullshit I saw go down in my dot.com days.

    [identity profile] 5251962.livejournal.com 2010-10-13 03:41 pm (UTC)(link)
    I have actually been looking forward to your take on the Nazi reenactment bit. I may not know as much about it as you, but I'm also Jewish and a reenactor (Renaissance, though.)and I've been sort of puzzling out my own opinion of the thing.

    Knee jerk response, though was, "Oh, FINALLY one of them is admitting what we knew of them, all along."

    [identity profile] rm.livejournal.com 2010-10-13 03:44 pm (UTC)(link)
    Hahahah, yeah. I've always felt like there were a lot of people who were "well someone has to play the bad guy" in public, but maybe had deeper, far more problematic feelings about in private. I remain floored to see this out in the open in this way. And yes, there are cases where someone has to play the bad guy and it is appropriate.

    All of this also, somehow tangents into fancy dress parties and the seemingly regular parade of British public figures who get busted at such (or with prostitutes) while dressed up in SS uniforms. Among so many things that makes all this stuff so complicated is the places where it intersects with private desire and real history that people still alive recall.

    [identity profile] 5251962.livejournal.com 2010-10-13 03:49 pm (UTC)(link)
    I was just sort of stunned at how poorly handled the PR aspect of all of this has been. The flip way he addresses this was what bothered me.

    [identity profile] rax.livejournal.com 2010-10-13 03:48 pm (UTC)(link)
    having worked for dot.com start-ups aplenty, let me tell you, there's basically no amount of misogyny that could be present in this film that would surprise me or that would make me blame the writers/producers/directors for its presence. I may be proved wrong, once I've seen it. But that world was ugly.

    Friendly amendment to "that world is ugly" ?

    [identity profile] rm.livejournal.com 2010-10-13 03:49 pm (UTC)(link)
    Sorry, I'm not grasping what you're asking.

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    [identity profile] tod-hollykim.livejournal.com 2010-10-13 04:19 pm (UTC)(link)
    Yeah, did a lot of bad stuff when I was a kid:

    Rode in the back of pick-up tracks (hey most of the male members of the family owned one at some time of their lives)

    Ran through the mosquito stray during the summer

    Came home from school to an empty house after school (grade school) because my mother worked as a waitress. She was asleep when we got up to go to school; already left for work when we got home; and didn't get home until about 2 or 3 AM, long after we had gone to bed.

    Gone to the beach alone when we were kids and even wander the town.

    Jumped from a pavilion to the sand on the beach, about a story or so.

    But we survived all that.

    [identity profile] random-girl.livejournal.com 2010-10-13 06:00 pm (UTC)(link)
    I once had the lead developer at my start up (where I was the QA Manager) ask why I wasn't home barefoot and pregnant. I responded because there were dicks like him the world and not nearly enough people like me to undo the damage they caused. It sounded more impressive in the break room when I said it (I even got a standing ovation from some of my colleagues).

    I do not miss those days at all.

    [identity profile] natf.livejournal.com 2010-10-18 12:56 am (UTC)(link)
    *stands and aplauds*

    [identity profile] teleens-journal.livejournal.com 2010-10-13 07:43 pm (UTC)(link)
    There were a lot of interesting things in that Paladino article, from his nephew not working on his campaign since he made the comments, to Carl collecting rent on gay bars. The most interesting one is that his son ran one of them though. Methinks that there are a lot of skeletons in that closet that aren't skeletal, but rather real human beings in his family that he hurts every day with this bigoted crap.

    I hope more of this continues to unravel and make him unelectable...

    [identity profile] hoyland54.livejournal.com 2010-10-13 10:44 pm (UTC)(link)
    I'm very much stuck on the question of motivation to do Second World War re-enactments outside of educational settings. In some sense, re-enactment is always about interfacing with history, but I think most people (or at least the adults) living in participating countries have known someone for whom the war is in living memory. It's accessible in ways that most other conflicts aren't, even if the people who remember don't talk about it much, we put it together as we get older and we realise how it impacted them and how that impacted us.* In that context, I'm having a hard time seeing re-enactments as something other than a denial of history one way or another (not necessarily glorifying Nazism, but a re-enactment is, by necessity, a sanitised version of the event).

    One thing I keep thinking about was an activity in my German 3 class. We were supposed to be learning about German history from, I don't know, maybe 1918 through reunification. Inevitably for a Berkeley German class, this involved small groups and skits. With a few minutes preparation, three of us were supposed to silently re-enact 1933 to 1945. This is probably the most taxing thing I ever had to do in a German class. I think everyone's natural impulse is not to deny Nazism exactly, but to deny anyone like you could have been involved and here we were getting asked to re-enact a genocide. That one activity (I think it's canonical German 3, but maybe not) was probably more effective than any previous efforts I'd seen to teach about Nazism.

    *I have a friend who can see the impact of the First World War on his family, but I suspect our access to that war has faded considerably outside of the places that saw combat.
    eredien: Dancing Dragon (Default)

    [personal profile] eredien 2010-10-14 05:12 pm (UTC)(link)
    I loved that NY Times "Room for Debate" you linked to. Kenji Yoshino rocks.

    [identity profile] nonsecateur.livejournal.com 2010-10-14 09:06 pm (UTC)(link)
    Aaron Sorkin (screenwriter) on The Social Network and misogyny:
    http://kenlevine.blogspot.com/2010/10/aaron-sorkin-responds-to-commenter-in.html