kangeiko: (Default)
AAARGH.

I know it's a mistake to stray from my safe little corner of the reasonable, sensible internets, but there I go again, into the territory of people who get their news entirely from Faux News.

Don't clicky if you don't want the rage )

*

More rage, part the second )

*

Ah, I feel better.

ETA: Even more so for deleting their latest comment without reading. Srly, when the pinnacle of your argument is 'but you're mean!', that's when I stop caring.
kangeiko: (Default)
I AM HAVING AN AWFUL DAY MAKE THIS FRIDAY 13TH STOP NOW PLS KTHNKBYE

*is dead*
kangeiko: (Default)
On memes and people getting pissed off and, damnit, just plain rudeness )

So, on that happy note, I am going to go and read about Audit & Assurance. I have just realised that my dissertation interviews can be conducted as a gender audit, which obviously makes me happy as 1) this means that the research methodology bit is practically already written, 2) the work will be more robust, and 3) the final thing will have a point for the organisations I'm looking at.
kangeiko: (Default)
I'm off to bed, yes, because tomorrow = work, but first -

Having come across this via the rage from my entire flist, I have to say the following:

[livejournal.com profile] cousinjean, you can fuck the fuck off. I don't want to read your excuses, or any of your apologists' excuses about how people shouldn't rant and yell over what was "a mistake". You know what?

I have a right to rant and yell and take this personally. Go here and you'll see my name up there; the UK rep. I helped do that. I worked my arse off to do that.

I organised and I marched and I lobbied, all so that you and everyone else could continue writing Buffy fanfic and not be shut down, and what do you do? You decide to ruin it for everyone else.

Yes, people were pissed off, and yes, many took it very personally. That's because your actions affected them personally. Maybe you are relatively new to fandom, and weren't around when websites were being shut down left right and centre. "But Joss loves fanfic!" so many of your apologists say. Yes he does, you simple-minded cretins, and FOX hates it. FOX did their utmost to shut down their entire fanbase (X-Files, Millennium, Buffy et al), and damn near succeeded between 2000 and 2001. (Anyone remember the Slayme.com and Tripod closures? The Geocities disappearing websites? The change in TOS?) I and many, many others, worked our arses off, and you're going around not only trying to profit monetarily from this, but to do so at the cost of other fans.

Fuck you.

Not Dead

22 Jul 2005 02:30 pm
kangeiko: (Default)
It occurs to me that perhaps I should post this one-liner at the end of each day, to tally up the bombing days during which I was not blown up. It further occurs to me that perhaps this could be taken as disrespectful etc etc. Nothing could be further from the truth. However, I, and many other Londoners, are just a bit tired at the moment. The main effect of these bombings has been to make us walk home after work, which leaves us tired and tetchy. Certainly it is making me question the wisdom of moving to Clapham in a couple of months, which is almost exclusively dependent on the Northern and Victoria lines. . . both of which were closed off for a while after each bombing.

I am fed up.

I am fed up of being shepherded around by police officers and of having my lunch hour distrupted by evacuations. I am fed up of trains being delayed endlessly, and of announcements every three minutes reminding us to take our luggage with us. I am fed up, most of all, of listening to my colleagues mutter about how this wouldn’t be a problem if all Muslims were deported. Yes, you read that right – all Muslims. In fact, I got fed up to the point where a group of them had to come to me afterwards and apologise for their comments, as I had very obviously taken great offence to the extent of getting ready to walk out. In their favour, they realized that they were out of line and amended their behaviour accordingly. But it was frustrating to have to deal with it to begin with.

I know that we’re supposed to be working away happily, with a Blitz spirit or whatever, but right this moment people are just pissed off. I am not the least bit surprised that the would-be bombers yesterday and today were tackled by the public; if the mood in my office is anything to go by, any other would-be bombers stand a real chance of being ripped apart before the police get to them. You can feel the anger in the city. It’s seeping in through the pores. We’re getting on with it – there’s not much else you can do – but suffice to say, we’re not happy.

I’m not quite sure where this post is going, actually. I’m supposed to be watching Nat’s play tonight with [livejournal.com profile] athena25 and [livejournal.com profile] queenspanky+1, but whether any of us can actually reach Golder’s Green in time without a Northern Line working is anyone’s guess.

If terrorists make me miss open-air theatre, I’m going to be even more annoyed.
kangeiko: (Default)
So I’m not quite sure what the make of this now. The terrorists were suicide bombers that were born and lived in Leeds, and were perfectly normal (except that in the last few months their behaviour had changed radically, but apparently that was perfectly normal too. Er. What?). No one is running around like a headless chicken, but people are understandably freaked at the thought Terror in Our Midst! (tm). The problem is this:

1) you need to stay vigilant, the police are saying, and watch out for any suspicious people (as well as suspicious packages, which used to be fine).
2) BUT we also need to make sure that we don’t descend into Islamophobia and racism as a consequence of the attacks.

How is this supposed to work? I’m actually quite confused. How is your average person supposed to watch out for would-be terrorists on a crowded station platform? How do you find the people acting ‘suspiciously’? Oh, it’s easy enough – find the middle-aged Arab man wearing traditional clothing, or the young Arab man looking around. But, wait – that simply involves finding the nearest Arab person and going off on one. He’s not white, and he looks ill at ease, therefore he’s a terrorist. No actual thought required.

I’m incredibly confused as to how Joe Public is supposed to locate these terrorists without descending into racism, stereotypes and Islamophobia. Because you know that it’ll happen. You know that anyone of Asian or Arab descent looking ill at ease in a major public location would immediately be viewed with suspicion. Never mind that they are probably looking ill at ease because they are aware of an increase in racial violence and a bunch of BNP card-carrying thugs are eyeing them; in the eyes of Joe Public, they are Acting Suspiciously. Instant incident.

I don’t think that the public should be more vigilant, actually. I think that such vigilance will simply result in an increase in racial tension. Perhaps not that many attacks, but certainly tension, and that can’t be a good thing in trying times. We have plenty of police around for just this sort of role, and doubtless the new ‘emergency powers’ the Security Services are asking for will be pushed through (which is another outrage, but I will rant about that later). Today you couldn’t move for London Transport Police, which was actually strangely disconcerting. I’m used to neon-clad officers moving through the crowds, but these were uniformed LTP and Met stationed at entrances. Surbiton, Waterloo and Oxford Circus had at least one officer per ten people present. The police presence was somewhat bewildering, but I’m sure I’d get used to it eventually. People staring suspiciously at each other over their morning coffee and paper? Not so much. And we shouldn’t have to.

I say again – it is not the job of Joe Public to watch his fellow citizens. If we don’t have enough police to do the job and we don’t have CCTV and it’s required to ensure our safety – well, that’s a debate, isn’t it? We should sit down and talk about it. Maybe it would be a good idea to install body scanners; maybe not. But it is not a good thing to ask the public to start looking at each other suspiciously, especially when they’re supposed to be looking for potential terrorists. That’s how lynch mobs are formed and wasn’t that the underpinning principle of McCarthyism and the Stalinist terror? The enemy are among us. Make sure to report your son / daughter / significant other today; they could be filthy Red terrorists.

While I applaud the appeals made by prominent British Muslim clerics and scholars today, saying that the British Muslim community should do more to find out why its youngsters are being led to these beliefs in conjunction with the govt tackling extant racial tensions, I don’t think that this can be achieved by denouncements left right and centre. A witch-hunt helps no-one. Instead, I would argue that what is needed is greater communication and stronger links between the different communities in the UK. We don’t need a melting pot to churn out one vision of Britannia, but we do need to foster a sense of belonging. People do not bomb their own homes or communities. They attack that which is foreign and hostile to them. This is no different from the G8 summit, where the tiny minority of anarchists that initiated violence against local people and local buildings were decidedly not local. The vast majority of protestors, especially those local to the area, were respectful and non-violent. The same principle goes for any violent groups in the UK: you don’t attack your own home. You attack that which is different, and hostile, and a threat.

If Britain is truly a place where young people are turning to extremist teachings and becoming suicide bombers, then we must examine why this is happening, or we are all lost. If we react with suspicion and hostility, then we are doing precisely what the bombers and the planners behind the bombings wanted. I’ve lived in a society where you could be denounced at any moment as a dissident or a subversive simply by virtue of my ethnic composition. I don’t want to do it again.

*

Originally linked via [livejournal.com profile] mousewrites’s journal, I saw the following comic strip and was amazed. Mark Millar does the G8 summit, July 6th: see it here.

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