Evangelicalism isn't a culture, it's a cult. One that they belong to and you don't which makes them better than you and gives them the right to punish you.Also I was shown a funi.
Evangelicalism isn't a culture, it's a cult. One that they belong to and you don't which makes them better than you and gives them the right to punish you.Also I was shown a funi.
Nah, considering that most of the historical heresies that were violently suppressed were *still* closer to mainstream Christian doctrine than them, they've have been wiped out as soon as someone in power heard about them.This shit would've caused one of the Big Wars back in the day. Honestly, kinda get it
In the context of Russia actually nuking the UK (which is what all those are playing on), a fear which they have been pushing and implying for ages now in various ways? No, not really. Another one from today just to clarify the context...Are those NOT things to be concerned about?
I'm "willing to discuss" whatever is brought up. So far, the prudes have been focusing on that specific illustration, so I have too.The only scene you're willing to discuss is specifically labelled "this is the visual I'd been picturing". It is specifically representative of the imagery that had aroused the author. There is a drawing of the "latest ship" to imagine while masturbating (which is a dark haired boy and a blond hair boy, 99% chance it's alluding to Harry Potter and Draco Malfoy).
Yes, I'm well aware that you're happy to reduce, exaggerate or misrepresent the substance of a book if it makes you uncomfortable.Like, Imma be blunt a moment. I am about the same age as the author. I participated in the same era of internet as the author. This book, as best I can describe it, is an illustrated autobiography of a sex-obsessed 30-year-old woman who would prefer to be a teenage boy because she spent all her formative years reading gay Harry Potter fanfiction.
Yes, yes it does. This is literally a case where a teacher put up a protest poster, a mom scanned it, saw the top book on the list (which had a prominently mentioned upcoming reading event at the time), looked into it, got upset and complained to the school board.This event has nothing to do with a book or pulling a book,
To be clear, this is HB 1775 which I assume is the law you are dubbing "reprehensible":it's about a reprehensible law being used to threaten a teacher who isn't even pushing a book.
It literally isn't about the book because they're threatening the teacher, both physically and monetarily, when she didn't push a book.Yes, yes it does. This is literally a case where a teacher put up a protest poster, a mom scanned it, saw the top book on the list (which had a prominently mentioned upcoming reading event at the time), looked into it, got upset and complained to the school board.
Here's a Twitter thread with clips of the mom in question that started this incident:
To be clear, this is HB 1775 which I assume is the law you are dubbing "reprehensible":
https://legiscan.com/OK/text/HB1775/id/2387002/Oklahoma-2021-HB1775-Enrolled.pdf
https://sde.ok.gov/sites/default/files/documents/files/HB 1775 Emergency Rules.pdf
I was told earlier in this very thread that that law was irrelevant because I couldn't see how the conduct described in all the news articles violated it, so I questioned if that was the full extent of her controversial conduct.
Dude, it's exactly like thier approach to immigrationIt literally isn't about the book because they're threatening the teacher, both physically and monetarily, when she didn't push a book.
I mean, they're just normal people enjoying their niche billion dollar hobbies. It's everybody else who are opinion-having interlopers.One thing I find kinda funny with the anti woke world is the name they give themselves.
Geeks and Gamers, Nerdrotic, Justsomeguy. All names rather transparently chosen to make it seem as if they're just average joes giving you an insight about what the ''real fans'' are thinking.
You're going to leave out that the boys are entirely nude and layered on top of one another? Seriously?The "latest ship" pic is... two boys kissing. That's not even sex.
You've given 3 paragraphs of strawman. Congratulations.Yes, I'm well aware that you're happy to reduce, exaggerate or misrepresent the substance of a book if it makes you uncomfortable.
The content made you uncomfortable. That's all there is here. That doesn't mean it's obscene. The actual content is tame by coming-of-age story standards; it's just had an outsized impact on you personally because you're weirded out. That's no reason to misrepresent what's in there.
You know, 100%, that that sequence isn't intended to be arousing. If you pretend otherwise, you'll be lying; because it's blindingly obvious and you're not stupid.
How do you think gay men have sex?You're going to leave out that the boys are entirely nude and layered on top of one another? Seriously?
You've spent several pages labelling something as pornography that you know is not intended to be arousing, so this is a bit rich.You've given 3 paragraphs of strawman. Congratulations.
"They're only frotting, it's practically Sesame Street" - SilvanusHow do you think gay men have sex?
I'll give a hint: it would be difficult from that angle.
WATERBURY, Conn. — A federal bankruptcy judge in Houston ordered new personnel to oversee the bankruptcy of Alex Jones’s Infowars late on Tuesday, citing an ongoing lack of transparency, including over Mr. Jones’s lavish personal spending.
Judge Christopher Lopez dismissed Mr. Jones’s attorney and chief restructuring officer in the bankruptcy of Free Speech Systems, Infowars’ parent company, and expanded the duties of a Department of Justice-appointed trustee already monitoring the case. The judge authorized the trustee to hire additional legal and other help, specifying that any new hires must have “no connection to any of these cases,” he said, citing a need to investigate “insider relationships.”
“There has to be greater transparency in this case,” Judge Lopez said during the hearing on Tuesday, pointing to concerns with spending and other disclosures on the part of the company, which is run by Mr. Jones. “Without transparency, people lose faith in the process,” he added, referring to the federal bankruptcy system.
The lawyer and restructuring officer were together attempting to reorganize the company as part of the bankruptcy. In dismissing them, the judge did not fault their work, but rather cited a “lack of candor” on the part of the company, whose moves are dictated by Mr. Jones.
Mr. Jones put Free Speech Systems into bankruptcy in late July and has said he owes $54 million to PQPR, an entity owned and operated directly and indirectly by Mr. Jones and his parents. He filed the bankruptcy partly in response to ongoing litigation against him by the family members of 10 Sandy Hook victims, who say the bankruptcy is a gambit to prevent them from collecting what promise to be heavy financial damages in the cases.
The families filed four separate defamation lawsuits against Mr. Jones after he spent years spreading lies that the Dec. 14, 2012, shooting that killed 20 first graders and six educators at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., was a government pretext for gun control and that their relatives were actors in the plot. People who believed Mr. Jones’s false claims have tormented the families online, confronted them on the street and threatened their lives.
Mr. Jones lost all four cases last year. Judges in Texas and Connecticut ruled him liable by default after he refused to comply with discovery orders. The families’ victories in those lawsuits set the stage for three trials for damages, after two of the cases were combined. In the first, in August, a jury awarded Neil Heslin and Scarlett Lewis, parents of the Sandy Hook victim Jesse Lewis, 6, compensatory and punitive damages of nearly $50 million. The second is in progress in Superior Court in Waterbury, Conn., resulting from a lawsuit filed by the families of eight other victims.
Mr. Jones is in Connecticut and is expected to testify in the damages trial this week. On Tuesday, Judge Lopez cited Mr. Jones’s spending of $80,000 for “security” for his trip to Connecticut as one of the questionable expenses prompting his decision to impose additional oversight. Mr. Jones has also run up tens of thousands of dollars in credit card debt, according to his court filings.
“This was a monumental step in increasing the transparency around a bankruptcy that Jones and his proxies have until now been keeping in the dark,” said Avi Moshenberg, who is representing the Sandy Hook families in a separate lawsuit against Mr. Jones.
In a filing to the bankruptcy court in late August, the families accused Mr. Jones of funneling assets from his business to himself and his relatives. The Sandy Hook families said in the filing that Mr. Jones had siphoned nearly $62 million from his business into financial vehicles benefiting himself and his family beginning in 2018, when the Sandy Hook families first filed suit.
Mr. Jones’s $54 million debt to PQPR is fictional, the families’ lawyers said in the August filing, calling the claim “a centerpiece of Jones’s plan to avoid compensating the Sandy Hook families.”
You're literally imagining that in the image. There's no depiction of frotting."They're only frotting, it's practically Sesame Street" - Silvanus
And this is bad why?This book, as best I can describe it, is an illustrated autobiography of a sex-obsessed 30-year-old woman who would prefer to be a teenage boy because she spent all her formative years reading gay Harry Potter fanfiction.
Are you going to lecture us on the queer experience..It's in schools to normalize that sort of behavior, as some sort of relatable guide to the queer experience. But it isn't that. It's just the personal stories of a tumblr pervert.
Do you mean that it isn't pornographic and doesn't give a kind of scopophilic enjoyment you would expect of pornography?"Here's a picture of a blowjob I didn't enjoy" isn't fun.
How often do you see straight cis women dressed like they're in a pride parade?Unfortunately, that's never ever the conclusion. The author dresses like a teenage boy, then goes to a pride event and sees people in bright, sparkly clothing (like women wear regularly), and reaches the conclusion that asexuals have the best thing going, never thinking "oh, maybe straight, cis women do enjoyable things that I've been cutting myself off of for no reason."
Why is that an important or necessary thing to consider?The author tries different ways to have lesbian sex while imagining different kinds of gay sex, and never seriously considers "maybe I should take half of each of these and put them together"
Do you think the regret in that case is that they had careers or had sex and that these women all wish they'd gone and become housewives or nuns, or do you think the regret is that they sometimes made bad decisions because, as women engaging in a life pattern traditionally restricted to men, they didn't have a clear understanding or guidance on how to live the kind of life they wanted to live.In a similar vein, there is no shortage of women in the world writing opinion pieces about how they lived out female empowerment and ended up trapped in a stressful career they no longer wanted and had performed a bunch of sex acts they now regretted, but they still all find the conclusion that society just still hasn't gone far enough to empower these women, or else they'd be happy that way.
Are you the authority on empowerment?Never do they realize that they had made themselves into the perfect illustration of how fashioning your entire life after a stereotyped, sex-obsessed, hyper-ambitious man isn't actually empowering (for anyone, not just women).
Don't forget about "The Mysterious" Mr. Enter and NoBullshit. The latter especially is just a younger, and even lamer, version of:One thing I find kinda funny with the anti woke world is the name they give themselves.
Geeks and Gamers, Nerdrotic, Justsomeguy. All names rather transparently chosen to make it seem as if they're just average joes giving you an insight about what the ''real fans'' are thinking.
...The Banned Books list? It's long, and has only been growing since it was first created in 1982. Point of fact, it's a bit of a misnomer as - strictly speaking - no books are technically banned in the United States. It consists of books that various chuckleheads have tried to get pulled and/or banned over the years, ranging from Harry Potter and Lord of the Rings for "Witchcraft" and Bridge to Terebithia for "promoting secular humanism" to Fight Club for having sexual and violent content and anarchist themes, and Mein Kampf for - naturally - Nazism. For this year alone, the American Library Association counted 681 attempts to get 1,651 different titles pulled in the last 8 month period.Was the teacher actually pushing that particular book, or was it just on the list of banned books? And how big is the list?
To just give a small anecdote about how entirely uncontroversial this used to be, my childhood grade school, a fairly conservative Catholic parochial K-8 school, celebrated Banned Book Week literally every year throughout my attendance in the 90s/00s, with the school librarian even going as far as sharing printouts of the top-ten challenged list and ensuring every student was signed up for a card with their local municipal library....The Banned Books list? It's long, and has only been growing since it was first created in 1982. Point of fact, it's a bit of a misnomer as - strictly speaking - no books are technically banned in the United States. It consists of books that various chuckleheads have tried to get pulled and/or banned over the years, ranging from Harry Potter and Lord of the Rings for "Witchcraft" and Bridge to Terebithia for "promoting secular humanism" to Fight Club for having sexual and violent content and anarchist themes, and Mein Kampf for - naturally - Nazism. For this year alone, the American Library Association counted 681 attempts to get 1,651 different titles pulled in the last 8 month period.
What makes this especially stupid is that promoting the contents of the list has actually been not only endorsed but celebrated - at least in the States - for as long as I can remember, with libraries, schools, and businesses basically using it as a suggested reading list of sorts. No, seriously. The general sentiment basically being in line with a little ditty from Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade:
Which is to say that the general sentiment has long been that act of trying to ban books is the domain of idiots and antithetical to the very purpose of libraries (which are responsible for Banned Books Week, the annual campaign that the list was first crafted for, and that we just reentered the other day). And moreover, that it hearkens back to the intellectual repression under Nazi Germany and their infamous burnings of books they deemed subversive or included (or otherwise represented) peoples and ideologies that weren't in line with the regime's approved values. And frankly, that broadly tracks, with the reasons that people have tried to have the books banned often being more telling than the books themselves and rarely flattering to the people who made the attempt.
People tried to get Animal Farm banned for "encouraging revolt". People tried to get the His Dark Materials Series banned for having atheistic and anti-religious themes. The Autobiography of Malcolm X for having a political viewpoint and anti-white sentiment. The Awakening for having sexual content and suicide. A Handmaid's Tale for denigrating Christianity. Their Eyes Were Watching God because it contained sexual content, crude language, and murder.
Almost without exception, the efforts to ban a given book reeks of the same intellectual cowardice: that books are dangerous if they aren't obviously in lockstep with the speakers' ideologies, or even if they simply fail to evangelize them to the speakers' satisfaction. Hell, you know what the most challenged book of 2018, 2019, and 2020 was? George, because it "contained LGBT content" (being about a trans girl seeking her mother's acceptance and understanding), "conflicted with a specific religious viewpoint", "conflicting the traditional family structure", and because it did not "reflect the values of our community".
You know why Gender Queer was at the top of the list this year? Because since 2001, the American Library Association has drawn attention to the ten most challenged books of the year before, and Gender Queer was the most challenged book of 2021.
That's what makes this entire thing so frustrating. "Dear god, some teacher was pointing people to the banned books list that libraries, schools, and businesses around the country have promoted EVERY YEAR SINCE 1982! But this time it's totally bad behavior that traces to the liberal agenda to corrupt our children, and we need to make sure that subversive gets her just deserts!"