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Not long after, of course, AIDS entered the general public's consciousness. All us twelve-year-old girls talked about how we should all find virgin boys to fuck while something in the world was still safe, and one of the wealthy parents hired the preeminent AIDS researcher at the time to give a lecture for the frightened parents (and here we were, twelve and at a single-sex school) at their townhouse.
And there were, in addition to lessons on how to put a condom on a cucumber, ribbons I did not wear, lest my parents tell me again I was a child, both bad and ineffectual. I remember watching the Oscars and looking at those lapels with such suspicion. All those famous actors, they were bad children too.
I am wearing purple today. It is better to, than not. But no one else seems to be in my moving about the city so far today. I imagine they didn't hear about it. I imagine they don't care about it. I imagine they are like me and not, but certainly, better at defending themselves from shame.
Thank you all SO MUCH. We don't get contact info to send personal thanks until after pledging closes and the project is successful. While we recognize some names as pledges come in, we actually don't always know who people are, so the big personal thank yous will largely be happening elsewhere down the line.
Does that mean no more news links? I doubt it. I'm not that self-disciplined, and I'm grateful that if people aren't seeking out news in other ways, at least they're getting something about how some of the world works here. But, it's not a responsibility I want, nor, increasingly, an obligation I enjoy.
So can we make a deal? I'll spend 5 minutes more a day trying to bring more precision to my links, if you spend 5 minutes more a day exposing yourself to more news that you're not getting from here. Cool?
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Date: 2010-10-20 05:43 pm (UTC)I wonder if that says more about the nature of Internet-driven campaigns than it does about people not caring or feeling shamed. Spirit Day definitely does have a strong online presence, at least in the circles I frequent, but the circles I frequent are hardly the whole Internet, let alone the whole country, and I haven't seen a lot of offline promoting of the event. The Internet's a powerful tool for social organization, but it doesn't always have all the necessary infrastructure to support and promote a national event like this, and I wonder what else we could have done to get out the word, especially to people who aren't as Internet-savvy as some of us are.
(And I'm pleasantly surprised that none of the most dangerous neighborhoods are in Baltimore, since I think there was at least one Baltimore neighborhood on the list last year.)