uspol, +
The Justice Department has decided NOT to pursue prosecution against Desiree Fairooz, the protester who laughed during Jeff Sessions's confirmation hearing. (She was convicted of a misdemeanor, but in July a judge voided the conviction and ordered a new trial.)
http://www.cnn.com/2017/11/07/politics/sessions-protester-fairooz-case-dropped/index.html
dream, Hannibal Lecter, sex
3. my actual reaction upon seeing fictive Hannibal Lecter would be "nope nope nope" /leave /do not engage /possibly move to another state, because there is no interaction with that character that is not fatally dangerous, and not in a fun way
4. I know for a fact that I'm not fancy enough for that Hannibal; I'm having a frozen pizza for dinner, I wear jeans from Costco, and I don't go to *those* kinds of parties
dream, Hannibal Lecter, sex
I woke up while trying to persuade Spouse it was ok, and as soon as I was awake I thought "HELL NO THAT'S NOT OKAY, WHAT THE ACTUAL FUCK."
1. I don't find the TV version of Hannibal Lecter attractive, not in a sexy way; he's a pretty monster, but Not Like That
2. dream-Hannibal was married, HIS WIFE WAS THERE, and they *weren't* poly, and that's a *solid* rule of mine, I do *not* get involved with couples who aren't poly, NO CHEATING
dream, Hannibal Lecter, sex
well that CW pretty much sums it up: I dreamed I boinked Hannibal Lecter, in his TV show incarnation, completely willingly, and it was (as dreamsex goes) pretty fun. Spouse was less thrilled about it, and we had a Long Talk--we're poly, but Spouse was upset about it for some reason that wasn't entirely clear. I tried to reassure him that Hannibal was "a fictive," a fictional person, and there were several fictive villains I'd boink given the opportunity.
also one of the crows that hangs around has an injured left foot; it won't flatten out when the crow stands on something flat, and zie has to hobble/hop around. zie also can't grip a tree branch for a perch with it. but otherwise zie is completely healthy, on the large side, and seems to be in perfectly good shape. I'll be watching for zir from now on, heh.
re: lrt--awwww, preening crows! I forgot to mention that a pair of crows that hang around my porch have been courting. the larger one brought the smaller one a bit of moss from a tree, which was ignored and then dropped, before the larger one tried to offer another bit of moss. there was also some preening and beak-rubbing. CUTENESS!
https://twitter.com/scottjohnson/status/927899437447315456
<<It’s that time of year again. Best of luck to those participating in Nano Rhino in November.>>
today's to-do list
ah I remembered a thing:
? bleach hair in preparation for re-dyeing
* clean catboxen
* work on story
* prepare lunchfood for tomorrow
today's to-do list
* clean catboxen
* work on story
* prepare lunchfood for tomorrow
+ call maintenance re: bathroom fan AGAIN
+ put vet appt. on calendar
Post-Halloween Frankenstein discussion
So a brief summary of my reading: Adam isn't a monster, but a quasi-revolutionary figure, born of the Enlightenment dialectic, but possibly capable of destroying it.
The bloodshed that takes place in the novel can be read simply as class warfare, and the only people who should be terrified of Adam are the same people that withhold positive liberties from everyone else, who have every reason to take those things through force if necessary.
Post-Halloween Frankenstein discussion
The specific freedom in question (the romance and love of two people born of similar circumstance) is one that the doctor attempts to enjoy, and is mirrored almost exactly. Adam wants a lover who is also in some respects, a sibling, just as the doctor is attempting to marry his adopted sister.
No one has lingering worries that Victor and Elizabeth's children could've been evil monsters that could destroy the world, even if they share that capacity with Adam
Post-Halloween Frankenstein discussion
Adam here serves as a useful stand-in for contemporary fears of AI or robots or whatever, but I think Adam was intended as a metaphor for the average person that science empowers, and as a result, threatens the very power structures that created them.
Adam's conflict with Dr. Frankenstein is of the scientific subject, empowered by science, but not yet emancipated. Adam enacts violence on the world (particularly its upper class) for his own freedom.
Post-Halloween Frankenstein discussion
It's after Halloween and so naturally I bump into critically misreadings of Frankenstein by incredible sums of people who frankly should know better.
Frankenstein's monster isn't ugly, he's -uncanny-. He was built to be beautiful, powerful, and man's equal if not his superior. As an allegory, the book describes that the central scientific fear is the creation of subjects more capable than their superiors. Those subjects aren't -necessarily- artificial.
---
pronouns: they/them
location: Seattle
phenotype: dracosaur
alignment: chaotic well-intentioned
...
aka Sprackraptor, Rasha, elynne, Yahvahzensil, & etc.
40-something ace/aro
an identity under construction in a badly-fitting human suit.
~follows welcome; followbacks not guaranteed~