sabotabby: raccoon anarchy symbol (Default)
This may come as a surprise to you, but I am a highly anxious person. Which is to say that I am a diagnosed, mentally unwell, clinical depression-and-GAD with a cherry of PTSD on top person. Not just "I feel a little anxious sometimes" but "I'm under supervision by a medical professional about it" kind of thing.

I suffer from it. It's not great. I hate it, in fact. I wake up at 4 am on a regular basis, often from nightmares, heart racing, consumed by intense and specific worries. My heart races. In the past, though thankfully not for awhile, I've had panic attacks that are so bad I thought I was having a heart attack. 0/10, strongly do not recommend.

And hence this post is going to sound a little weird. 

If I had to define what anxiety is for me on a personal level, it's the ability to picture future or potential scenarios that feel as if they are currently happening or are inevitably going to happen. For example, thinking about the potential death of a loved one results in a physical and emotional reaction similar to if that death had actually happened. Extremely vivid nightmares that feel real. The sense—as I've written before—that you are leaning back in a chair and have leaned so far back that righting yourself is impossible, but the full tip over to the hard floor hasn't happened yet.

I can neither, at this point in my life, disentangle this from either my personality or my ability to write fiction, where conjuring the specific emotion resulting from a potential scenario is a slightly useful skill. Trust me, though, I've tried a lot. The best I can do is mute it with meds, which cause other problems, or create workarounds where I redirect the pathway of my future-thinking towards how I might deal with those scenarios. Yes, I've tried yoga. Yes, I've tried mindfulness. The latter is contraindicated for someone like me.

Conversely, I am very often around people who do not suffer from anxiety. They may feel anxious about a given situation—a job interview, an illness, even climate change in general when they think about it—but they're not constantly doing this. These people are generally assured that things will work out as they should, or that worrying won't help. "It is what it is," they'll say, or "it'll be fine." 

I don't really know what causes someone to have one personality type versus the other. Certainly, I have lived experience where things have expressly not worked out for the best. But I've met folks who live on the street who've had much worse lives than I do, for whom things are still not working out at all, and they're more optimistic than I am. It isn't just trauma, or even primarily trauma. I'm sure there's a genetic or familial component too—Jews are neurotic, and all the women in my family are like this, really. 

Anxiety is, in many ways, a motivator for me. I mentioned the depression as well. If anxiety is living too much in the future, depression is dwelling in the past. Depression brain tells you to sleep all day and eat chips; anxiety brain reminds you that if you do that, you'll be out of a job. And if you don't perform at 110% at that job, you'll be out of a job. Your employers have already started planning as to how they're going to fire you, in fact, so get on that now. You shouldn't have made this post public because if they find out you have a mental illness, it's over for you.

A disproportionate number of teachers suffer from anxiety. A disproportionate number of administrators do not. A surprising number of students don't (you hear that they're all anxious these days, but I promise it's not all of them). This makes for a lot of clashes, as you can imagine. It's frustrating for someone who does not have the reassurance that things will work out for the best to have to interact with someone who does. Especially when we're in a global pandemic. I'm a person who reads that there's somewhere between a 1 in 5 and a 1 in 20 chance of getting long covid, and so I assume I'll be that one. But I'm surrounded by people who either don't think it's a possibility at all, or don't think it'll be anyone they know.

But while anxiety is devalued, and sucks, on a personal level, it honestly has its benefits on a broader societal level. A common theory for humans evolving this tendency is that while you need people who are bold and confident to lead a community, said little community gets wiped out pretty quickly without the person who can't sleep because they're watching the grass for tigers. We spend a lot of time talking about wellness and self-care and living in the moment, but we are right now living the consequences of having all lived in the moment, without worrying one bit about the future. It's pretty obvious with the pandemic that we'd all probably do a lot better if we'd heeded the many experts who warned about the possibility of a coronavirus pandemic, or even if we behaved more like the people who think they'll contract long covid if they catch it than the people who don't believe it will happen to them.

Soft climate change denial is another great example of this. It's not outright Fox News MAGA denial of the climate crisis. It's the sense that you might have (that I sometimes even have) that while obviously man-made climate change exists, and is a problem, but...someone will have to work it out, right? Governments will have to cut emissions because this is untenable. And hey, there's probably some genius working on a solution right now. Tech will save us! 900 million people in China and 33 million people in Pakistan probably have very different ideas about how well that will work out. Each successive government kicks the can down the road, waiting for some better future where it'll get fixed.

And of course, I've been thinking about Barbara Ehrenreich, who wasn't a perfect person but in many ways was a brilliant person who changed my life. She died last Thursday, at the age of 81. Her book, Bright-Sided: How the Relentless Promotion of Positive Thinking Has Undermined America, covers the pitfalls of optimism and magical thinking, from her own breast cancer diagnosis to capitalism itself. By subscribing to the belief that if we're just positive enough, everything will be okay, we risk substituting those happy thoughts for tangible action. Cynical cancer patients are have a better prognosis; nations that plan for disaster mitigation do better when extreme weather strikes, and so on.

I recently learned about chronic wasting disease, and hoo-boy my life would have been better if I hadn't. It's a prion disease, similar to bovine spongiform encephalopathy, that affects deer. We caused it by trying to domesticate deer in the 60s, and now it's escaped into the wild. It's transmitted through soil. It hasn't jumped to humans, but there's a good chance that it will. So far, the same eggheads sounding the alarm over coronaviruses are also sounding the alarm over this, but nothing is happening on a policy level. Everyone is just...kinda hoping it works out.

Politics is a career that, alas, tends to attract people who are confident and not anxious. And thus we have leaders who live in the moment, who plan for four years at a time maximum, who don't wake up at 4 am with nightmare scenarios of zombie deer and agricultural workers dying of heatstroke. Our society is structured, in fact, around the present, the eternal now during which we can never learn from the past nor contemplate the future.

And that's why anxiety is a gift that causes me a great deal of misery, but which I dearly wish sometimes that I could pass on to others.

Everything will not be okay. The sooner we wake up to this, the better.
sabotabby: (anarcat)
 I feel like I should be posting about more important things, like Salman Rushdie (holy fuck) or Doug Ford (more of a holy fuck than people are willing to admit b/c we are all in denial), and I think I will, but those are each more lengthy and thoughtful posts than I can manage right now.

So in the meantime, I have been going to shows again. This is a huge big deal for me, as 1) concerts, in the Before Times, were one of the only things that got me through life, 2) I have been utterly terrified to go to a concert, and 3) no way I would go to a concert without a tightly fitting mask, but the tighter the mask, the more it hurts, so I wasn't sure I would even be able to enjoy the experience.

The first thing I attended in the Covid Era (I refuse to fall for the propaganda that we're in a post-covid era) was a very lovely performance of Swan Lake with a mask and vaccination policy and quite remote seats. Then two comedy shows, Hannah Gadsby and Henry Rollins (did you know Henry Rollins did comedy? he's very funny). And then I took the plunge and saw Rage Against the Machine, which was a huge big show with most people unmasked, but it was also in a giant cavernous space and I emerged, miraculously, unscathed.

I've worked out a thing where the masks that are slightly too small for my face and pull at my ear are bearable if I wrap a piece of foam around one of the earpieces. It's weird and unwieldy but it reduces the pain enough that I can, in fact, enjoy myself.

So this week was Concert Week, wherein my friends and I saw three shows in five days. Ahaha. Look, I'm making up for lost time. 

Monday was Elvis Costello, who I have never seen play before. Nick Lowe, who wrote one song you know about and a bunch of others that you've heard before, was the opener. Elvis Costello is such a strange artist—he's hard to pin down in a particular genre but he rocks many of them—and writes such weird, interesting songs, and it was an awesome show.

Tuesday was Orville Peck. You've heard me rant about Orville Peck before. I am very grateful that he exists because I think with many of us, we hit a certain age and we can appreciate new artists but we don't bond with them emotionally in the same way that we do as teenagers. But Orville Peck proves that isn't true for me. His songs live rent-free in my head and grip me emotionally in the way it felt when I discovered a new artist as a kid. I think I've seen him every time he's played Toronto—the first time at the Monarch Tavern, before he'd really worked out his stage performance and the sound engineers had worked out the acoustics. This time he played Massey Hall in a space that actually is worthy of his voice. And he's such a mesmerizing performer. Also it was his 6-year-old niece's birthday, so he paused a song so that we could all sing "Happy Birthday" to her and he gave her a rose, which basically made my heart explode.

Last night, Friday, was Peter Hook and the Light. In the Before Times, every year my friends and I used to go to see him play at the Danforth Music Hall. He generally does one set of New Order songs, one set of Joy Division songs. I love New Order but Joy Division is baked into the very fabric of my being and cannot be detached from the rest of my personality. So he ended up opening with a short set of New Order songs (mostly with his guitarist singing) and then two sets of Joy Division, which was almost their entire discography. 

Definitely a scarier scene than the Massey Hall shows for me—general admission, and a smaller space. But it also meant that I got to dance for the first time in three years. I hope I didn't get sick from it but also I really think there is something in me that needs to dance to Joy Division songs or I wither up and die inside, because I feel better than I have in ages.

If you are interested, the best mask compliance (still not great) was at Orville Peck. I think maybe because a lot of his audience are gay men and they know from plagues? And also because he quite famously wore a mask before it was cool, and there is literally nothing stopping Peckerheads from attaching beads and fringes to their masks, which is a great idea and why didn't I think of that? Gonna do it next time. I was a little shocked at how few people at either Elvis Costello or Peter Hook were masked. Look, if you even know who either of them are, you have at least one underlying condition for covid. Trust me on this.

I too would very much like to go back to shows and not even have to think about it and feel free. But in the meantime this is loads better than how it was for a very long time.

sabotabby: (furiosa)
Do you think I could start a conspiracy theory? "There's a new, deadly virus that disables up to 50% of the people who get it. It's stealing kids' livers and doubles your chances of heart disease and diabetes. It shrinks your brain. And the GOVERNMENT DOESN'T WANT YOU TO KNOW! Wake up, sheeple!"
sabotabby: (teacher lady)
The Hamilton-Wentworth District School Board courageously voted to keep masking mandates and protect children until April 15, and Toronto and Toronto Catholic District School Boards meekly asked if Ford and his Goatfucker flunky might hold off a few more weeks before conducting their province-wide experiment on innocent kids.

Ford's response was predictable. While he spent most of his high school years outside dealing hash, and the Goatfucker attended a pay-to-play private school, they have decided that elected school boards will no longer have autonomy to protect the students in their care. This contravenes the advice of their own science table, doctors, and even Sick Kids (a corrupt institution that bears no small amount of responsibility for our current mess). It is anti-science, anti-democratic, and anti-human. One can only conclude that they want kids to die.

An interesting legal conundrum will be whether the kids who end up with their health, and potentially futures, curtailed by this decision will be able to launch a class action lawsuit. Given the poor settlements afforded to residential school survivors, I doubt it will make up for the trauma, but if I were a lawyer I'd be looking into this.
sabotabby: there's no point to an apocalypse if you still have to work (pointless apocalypse)
I appear to be stepping on toes no matter what I say. Today I've managed to piss off a number of people across the political spectrum by piecing together a conclusion based on the following information.

Assertion #1: Masking works better if everyone does it.

chart describing the different infection rates with different types of masks
Now, I don't know if this is accurate. It's definitely outdated, as Omicron is more contagious than Delta, and BA.2 is more contagious than Omicron. But if it's accurate (here is a link so you can investigate the veracity of the source), this is troubling. I wear a non-fit-tested KN95 FFR to work. The majority of my students and colleagues wear cloth masks or surgical masks. After March 21st, some will not wear any masks at all. The length of each class is 75 minutes. I teach 4 classes a day. At best, if there is an infected student wearing a similar mask to what I'm wearing, I will make it through the day without being infected. If the infected student is not wearing a mask, I have a strong likelihood of being infected by the end of the period.

Most schools will have 30 kids in a class. Statistically, some will not wear a mask. Protection drops with every unmasked student.

Assertion #2: There is no reporting on infection rates in schools, and no testing. Ontario currently has 2000-20,000 cases a day.

Assertion #3: While the mortality of covid is fairly well studied, morbidity is less so. We know that covid infection has a system-wide effect. To me, the most scary symptom of long covid is brain damage. Even mild covid can cause brain damage. It is also linked to heart and lung damage, fatigue, dizziness, and a host of other weird symptoms. We don't know its full effects or how much of this damage is reversible.

Assertion #4: The rates of long covid are completely unknown. How much do vaccines help? A study in Denmark (pre-print) suggests about a third. Here's another study with a breakdown of symptoms. Children are not immune. A British study showed 2-14% of infected children reported long covid symptoms, an Israeli study showed 11.2% showed some symptoms and 1.8-4.6% of them continued to experience symptoms six months later. It is unclear how much vaccination has an effect (non-peer-reviewed study, a study in Lancet). Vaccination in the 5-11 age group in Ontario is 55%, and kids under 5 can't be vaccinated.

conclusion, trigger warning )Logically, I know why people are not freaking out.

1. Everyone is exhausted.
2. Epidemiological data is super hard to understand, especially when you're exhausted.
3. There is a certain amount of denialism that's natural because you don't want to think about whether sending your kid off to school runs a 2% or a 30% chance of giving them brain damage.

Emotionally, I cannot understand why people freak out about a 13-year-old seeing cartoon mouse peen and not about the same 13-year-old experiencing lifelong neurological symptoms.

And I feel as though I'm inhabiting a completely different reality. I'm not even a science person! I'm not that well informed. But I gathered from my offensive post this morning that a lot of people are just unaware of the risks so I'm putting this out in the hopes that I'm either wrong and someone smart can explain why, or that someone more educated than I am will sound an alarm that will be heard.
sabotabby: gritty with the text sometimes monstrous always antifascist (gritty)
 I've seen a lot of Americans (and Canadians who get all their news from American TV) confused about what's happening in Ottawa.

1) Canada does not have a First Amendment. Well, Manitoba does, I guess, but it has nothing to do with freedom of speech.
2) No one gets read their Miranda rights when they get arrested here. That is a US thing.
3) Trudeau is a piece of shit but not for the reasons people are saying.
4) The convoy is not a protest, it's a sustained campaign of terror and intimidation against ordinary people, particularly queer and racialized people. Think Jan. 6th but lasting a whole month.
5) Two levels of cops and government are directly complicit with the occupiers, and many within the RCMP and military are also on side.
6) This is not a working class uprising, and does not represent the 90% of truckers who are vaccinated, the majority of whom are BIPOC and against the convoy. This is a well-funded movement led by wealthy and petit-bourgeois fascists who fly around on private jets and are attempting to overthrow a democratically elected government. When I say fascist, I don't mean it as hyperbole. They are white nationalists.
7) The provincial government in Ontario, as well as in many other provinces, is already dropping vaccination mandates, either in compliance with the terrorists or just because they enjoy mass death.
8) This is not a "non-violent protest" and the protesters are not "innocent." They assaulted people, stole food from homeless shelters, left shit on houses with queer flags, threatened hospitals and schools, and attempted to set an apartment building on fire.
9) Even after the Emergencies Act (which shouldn't exist), the cops have been making every effort to be gentle with arrests and crowd control, in stark comparison to how they treat any other protesters ever.
10) Canada has a complicated political system with multiple levels of jurisdiction, and sometimes it's really challenging to figure out who is responsible for what! Civics is only a 0.5 credit in Ontario high schools and many politicians blew it off when they were in Grade 10, apparently.
11) A lot of the funding is coming from Americans, but Canada also has a major white nationalist problem, and a lot of far-right thought leaders are Canadian.
12) Maxime Bernier and Rebel News are bad sources of information and if you are not specifically interested in keeping tabs on what they're up to (i.e., you're not Canadian or involved in intel gathering), you should probably block them.
13) Canada is a racist settler-colonial state, and many people, myself included, believe that the flag can't be reclaimed or rehabilitated. Many people, especially Indigenous folks and now everyone who lives in Ottawa, get nervous or even triggered when they see large groups of white people flying it. 
14) FFS no one has been trampled to death by horses or anything like that.

I'm not used to the level of frustration that people outside the US must feel all the time whenever the news reports on their country. It also doesn't help that with a few exceptions, Canadian news has not even been great about what's happening right now. But I'm seeing a lot of well-meaning people share bad information about something that I do happen to know a fair bit about.

Anyway, if anyone wants to be directed to good sources or has a question about it, I am happy to help!

ETA: 15) And no Justin Trudeau isn't Fidel Castro's son. It would be way more rad if he was but he's actually just a milquetoast centrist who wasn't even cool enough to say "just watch me" even though the vast majority of the country wanted him to.
sabotabby: there's no point to an apocalypse if you still have to work (pointless apocalypse)
Ford and his dastardly crew have surrendered to both the #FluTruxKlan and covid. Having seen Denmark's covid rates shoot sky high after they lifted all restrictions, our provincial government looked at the chart and said, "welp, I bet we can beat that death toll." In case you're wondering, they haven't brought back PCR tests or contact tracing, haven't lowered class sizes or improved ventilation in schools, nor have they provided students with n95 masks. They've just decided that a high amount of death and disability is acceptable now.

I'm sure the fascist occupiers of Ottawa are rejoicing. Though. They haven't left.

Meanwhile, Trudeau has invoked the Emergencies Act in order to deal with the continuing fascist occupations in Ottawa and at the border. That headline suggests that this is the first time ever, which is not strictly speaking true. It's just that the better known version of it, the War Measures Act, was rebranded after Trudeau's father used it to crack down on the FLQ during the October Crisis. It's basically the same thing with some of the more authoritarian options removed, and subject to the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

In 10th grade, I wrote an essay arguing that the use of the War Measures Act by Trudeau the First was state overreach and a violation of the rights of ordinary Quebecois, many of whom were arrested and detained for no good reason, and that the FLQ was not a significant enough threat to justify said brutality. I still basically agree with that. I think it's substantially more justified in order to head off a coup, especially since the responsible levels of government are not doing anything, but it's stupid strategically. For one, the military and police that would exercise these new powers on the ground are largely in sympathy with the fascists. For another, the fascists' entire argument hinges on Trudeau the Second being a tyrant, so using tyrannical powers to crack down on them is really not going to be a good look.

This is the world's stupidest coup. 

sabotabby: gritty with the text sometimes monstrous always antifascist (gritty)
The situation in Ottawa continues to get weirder. The Ram Ranch Resistance* managed a series of counter-protests this weekend, after cops continued to allow the FluTrucksKlan to set up a soundstage and a hot tub and throw a street party, all while carrying jerry cans of gas to refuel in defiance of the injunction. You can't even make this shit up.

Do you know how hard it is to get Ottawa residents to do a protest? They're that pissed.

The thing is, fascists are really cowardly and in my experience, will back away from any kind of opposition. Even if it's 25 neighbourhood moms and dog-walkers.

And, in fact, it was 25 neighbourhood moms and dog-walkers who did what three levels of government, police, and military failed to do. They blockaded an intersection, and in what has been dubbed the Battle of Billings Bridge, forced incoming truckers to surrender their flags, jerry cans, and signs, and turn around and go the fuck back.

Please enjoy this short clip of the lead trucker having to scrape a sticker off his stupid truck.

Now, it is still very far from over, especially as Mayor Jim Watson is still attempting to negotiate with the terrorists. This pampering of far-right extremists is likely to embolden them, as is the PPC serving them a free pancake breakfast for some reason. But we've learned some important lessons here.
  • State actors will move against the far-right only when it affects Bay St. (e.g., clearing the bridges) but not Main St. (regular people and economies). Otherwise, their interests are aligned.
  • Defunding the police will have no negative impact on ordinary people.
  • Community defence can be done by a small number of unarmed civilians.
  • Fascists will increasingly use tactics like this to pressure governments, but there are hard limits on what they are able to do.
For those keeping track, the heroes in the battle to liberate Ottawa so far are:
  • 21-year-old public servant Zexi Li, who filed the injunction against the occupiers
  • Catherine McKenney, councillor for Ward 14 Somerset, who seems to be the only politician trying to do anything about this
  • A handful of journalists who've done decent reporting on this when our national media failed
  • A much larger group of people on Twitter who got information out
  • The Algonquin Nation of Ottawa for calling out occupiers who appropriated Indigenous ceremony on their unceded territory
  • The RamRanchResistance, who collected valuable intel on the occupiers' Zello chat and also subjected them to Ram Ranch
  • Grant MacDonald, for writing a banger of a song
  • The citizens of downtown who rose up and actually turned some of these bastards back
(I may have missed some; feel free to let me know of any omissions in the comments.)

I think the copycat protests in Paris and New Zealand have driven home the danger here. There is a lot that's theoretically funny about this situation if it is not happening in your city, but the 4chan-esque absurdity is part of the strategy. The occupiers have, in many ways, been successful. The police and military are largely on standby for an official coup if need be, and cannot be contained by any level of government. Doug Ford and Theresa Tam have acquiesced to the terrorists' demands and have signalled the rollback of public health measures and the full eugenicist, pro-covid agenda. The occupiers have demonstrated that you can absolutely paralyze a nation with a tiny minority of people who do not represent public opinion in any way, so long as you have the right equipment and steady funding.

We need to be prepared for similar, sustained, and repeated attacks. Brace yourselves. Shit is fucked up and terrifying and there's no end in sight.

* Do I need to explain or can I trust you to Google it for yourself? Don't Google it at work please.
sabotabby: gritty with the text sometimes monstrous always antifascist (gritty)
I was out most of the day having an actual life, so I'm just now catching up on the attempted January 6th that the Karen Convoy was doing.

You see, friends, every time America does a thing, Canada does a shittier version of the thing a year or ten later. Anyway some dudes tried to do a coup.

I'm not normally on Twitter but there is some ace material there.

While these shit-for-brains represent only a tiny minority of truckers, 90% of whom are vaccinated, and only a minority of today's superspreaders were even truckers at all, they have powerful backers, from Tory leader Erin O'Toole to Elon Musk (you know, the guy who wants to replace actual truckers with self-driving vehicles). The Ottawa police, predictably, laid out the red carpet for these schmucks. Even the national media is determined to add ahem-nuance to a blatantly fascist, pro-plague agenda, giving them sympathetic coverage all week. 

So quite a lot of people have egg on their face after these bastards:
1) Paraded around downtown Ottawa waving Confederate flags, Gadsden flags, and pro-Trump memorabilia
2) Did so on the fifth anniversary of the Quebec mosque massacre, resulting in the cancellation of a vigil to remember the dead victims of another fascist
3) Parked on the National War Memorial and did a little dance on the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier
4) Raised a giant Nazi flag on Parliament Hill
5) Desecrated the Terry Fox monument

Now, there are many differing stripes of political opinions in this so-called country of ours, most of them quite terrible, but there are two things that everyone agrees on: Nickelback suck, and Terry Fox was a goddamn hero. Like, you can't be against Terry Fox. It's like being against sunshine or puppies. I don't care how cold and twisted your heart is, you're gonna get misty-eyed thinking of this one-legged kid trying to run across the country. I was on a group chat a few minutes ago with a bunch of cynical-as-fuck commies and they were all like, "but but but Terry Fox," and I can guarantee that there were right-wing group chats saying the same thing.

If you're a Brit, think about that juxtaposition of BoJo partying while the Queen is sitting in mourning black in church. That's what this image does for Canadians.

This, my friends, is what is known as a Big Oopsie. I live in a country that is very tolerant of the extreme right, with many sitting MPs in all parties expressing support for fascists*, but there is a line and I believe they may have stepped over this line. If it were normal times and not 2022 this would be the end of a good many people's political careers, but shame is dead so I'm sure this little escapade and all who supported it will be forgotten by the next election. We have very short memories here.

ETA: Parliament Hill sits on unceded Algonquin territory. Note that when Indigenous and Black people organize protests, they are not treated warmly by the authorities.

* Oh no, Liberals and NDP. I'm not letting you off the hook either. I'm no fan of Putin but I'm no fan of Ukrainian neo-Nazis either.


sabotabby: (furiosa)
 If you want to understand why this country is so fucked up, just look at the news and compare the following stories.

1. The FluTruxKlan, a convoy of extremist truckers representing under 10% of the industry and endorsed by high-profile sociopaths like Elon Musk, are taking their plague trucks to Ottawa.

2. The Williams Lake First Nation has discovered at least 93 unmarked graves of children, murdered by the Canadian state and their church allies.

Guess which one has been the top story all week?
sabotabby: (doom doom doom)
 A few hours ago, walking down the street, an old man who seemed to be in rough shape looked at me and said, "There's so much pain."

Here's hoping 2022 brings us all less pain.
sabotabby: (books!)
Just finished: Leviathan Falls by James S. A. Corey. I've loved pretty much everything about this series, show and book, and the grand finale did not disappoint. I didn't sob as much as I expected to, which is fine because the last book already went there.

Anyway! This series was a master class in how to keep a story moving through ever increasing stakes (human sentience, essentially) while still keeping the narrative grounded and focused on character. Without too many spoilers, the dynamics of the Big Existential Threat mirrored covid and the inability of authoritarian regimes to handle it. It was in keeping with the series' emphasis on flawed but well-intentioned ordinary people navigating a grimdark world.

I'll leave you with my favourite quote from the book:

“I absolutely believe that people are more good on balance than bad,” he said. “All the wars and all of the cruelty and all of the violence. I’m not looking away from any of that, and I still think there’s something beautiful about being what we are. History is soaked in blood. The future probably will be too. But for every atrocity, there’s a thousand small kindnesses that no one noticed. A hundred people who spent their lives loving and caring for each other. A few moments of real grace. Maybe it’s only a little more good than bad in us, but…”


Currently reading: Plagues and Peoples by William H. McNeill. Yes, I am one of those weirdos for whom reading about historical plagues helps a bit. What's really interesting about this is not just how it goes through the mechanics of how plagues work, but some of the startling sociopolitical insights. McNeill is a white dude writing in the 70s and the vocabulary reflects that, but he has a very astute class and anti-imperialist analysis. Like he continuously refers to colonizing forces and rentier capitalism as "macroparasites," as opposed to the "microparasites" of disease.

Anyway, at first it was cheering me up because it was talking about plagues in terms of two-year cycles, but then I got to the bubonic plague section and yeah, it just really stayed around for a few centuries fucking everyone over.

So. Would recommend, if this kind of thing helps.
sabotabby: (lolmarx)
DW's tweetposting sucks, which normally is one of the things that I appreciate about this platform, so you need to trust me that it's worth clicking through to the thread.


Okay okay if you don't trust me, here's what happened. Doug Ford's daughter, Krista, is a militant anti-vaxxer. This is a different one from the one who tried to open up a cookie shop named after the KKK. (It's very difficult and to be honest, despite being a little obsessed with this dynasty that has made my life so hellish, I did have to look it up.)

She's married to a cop (of course) named Sergeant Dave 'Juggernaut' Haynes (of course). He's an anti-vaxxer too. Owing to her daddy's vaccine mandate (which, admittedly, I agree with), Juggernaut is now on unpaid leave from Toronto Police Services because he refused to stop infecting people with covid.

Krista then went on Instagram (of course) and went on a weird, sweaty rant while working out at the gym about how God will prevail over the evildoers (her father). If you click the horrible BlogTO link, you can watch it if you find that kind of thing funny (I do).

This is SO GOOD. Jay Rosales on Twitter beat me to the punch on the obvious.

FE-nMhcWQAI_Znn

I'm just sitting here cry-laughing. I know Ontario voters are really stupid and won't remember this come election time but I'm still going to enjoy this while I can.
sabotabby: (doom doom doom)
World War I killed 20 million people.

The Great Influenza epidemic killed between 17 million and 100 million during and immediately after.

The odds of a soldier dying in WWII were 1 in 26.

The odds of a kidnapped Indigenous child dying in a residential school at the same time was 1 in 25.

As a culture, the choices we make around whose deaths are mourned and whose are forgotten are significant. 
sabotabby: (teacher lady)
The Ford Regime has said that rapid antigen testing is unnecessary in public schools, where the children of plebes and unimportant people go. But it's available for the children of the elite in private schools. Funny how these tests are able to not only detect covid but also detect how much your parents make.

Also I somehow missed that the company that makes the tests is called the Creative Destruction Lab. WTF?

Private schools were also able to lower class sizes and improve ventilation. Some even have plexiglass installed between desks. Part of the reason I'm so pessimistic about us ever getting out of this covid mess is that the wealthy and powerful always manage to buy their way out of the dangers and inconveniences.
sabotabby: (teacher lady)
All this week, I've been ruminating over September.

Our All-Knowing Overlords have made several declarations about the new school year. Vaccinations will not be mandatory for staff and students. Families will be free to kill or cripple others because God forbid we should trample on anyone's deeply held beliefs (that they acquired from reading Facebook). They're instituting a bizarre timetable for high schoolers that combines the worst parts of the semester schedule—jugging four courses at a time—with the worst parts of the quadmester system—condensed time frame and extra-long classes—with alternating weeks to maximize how confused the kids can get. I bet you're confused just reading that. Add to this that teachers will be required to simultaneously teach to the virtual kids at home and the live classes, with zero instruction as to how to do this and I'm sure zero technology to assist with it, and you've got another year where students will learn nothing. Masking is mandatory, except for the 40-minute period where students will sit in underventilated rooms and expose each other and their teachers to covid over lunch. There will also be sports and wind instruments to ensure that outbreaks happen. In theory, there's an attempt at cohorting with the alternating schedule, but in practice everyone's together for lunch, recess, extracurriculars, and the bit at the end of the day when all the kids get out of class and immediately start licking each other's faces.

The emphasis continues to be on hygiene theatre and fomite transmission. Cleaning surfaces is much cheaper than reducing class sizes, but doesn't actually make much of a difference in covid transmission.

At the same time, our new provincial chief medical officer of health has issued a call to "normalize" covid in schools.

Basically, the authorities—who, I might add, haven't set foot in a high school since their own school days, and many of them were "educated" at private schools or homeschooled—have thrown their hands up and said, "let's just infect all the kids."

I've been reading a lot of about Delta, Delta+, and especially Long Covid. Long Covid can occur in up to 2% of children, whether or not these children were asymptomatic or seriously ill. It's been linked to an average 7-point drop in IQ.* It's linked to neurological problems, lung and heart issues, chronic fatigue—and no one knows if it's permanent.

This morning, I was talking to a teacher on Facebook who contracted covid in March from a student who lied on the self-screening that is also part of the hygiene theatre we were required to perform. Five months later, they remain ill with constant headaches and exhaustion. They have no idea how they will function in September. This is not an uncommon story. It is unlikely that anyone responsible—be it the school, the board, or the government—will be held accountable for deliberately giving this person a chronic disability that they may need to manage for the rest of their lives.

It boggles my mind that workers can be injured at work, entirely due to the negligence of the employer, and have to muddle on with no compensation or support. It's not just teaching, of course, and this isn't a new issue. I believe our discussions around health and safety would be very different if every time a worker was injured by employer greed, that employer was responsible for providing for them. But workers are disposable—teachers especially, since there are more teachers than jobs—and so we'll be chewed up and tossed out.

Do parents really want to risk sending their kids to school, knowing that they may come out physically or cognitively damaged? I suspect parents are just tired, more than anything else. The US has normalized the risk of school shootings, so there's definitely precedent. Apparently it's an acceptable balance of rights. Some kids will get shot so that gun hoarders can continue to hoard guns. Some kids will be permanently disabled, and a few will die, so that anti-vaxxers can continue to peddle their conspiracy theories and the province doesn't go into deficit spending.

I want to go back in person too. I loathe teaching online and I desperately want to return to normal. But I'm terrified. Unlike the people making these decisions, I know what it's like to have your life curtailed by chronic illness and disability. It's made me unkind. It's made me wish brain fog and shortness of breath and heart palpitations and chronic pain on the government that has decreed our lives and our kids' lives to be worthless, and to their accomplices in the medical field who've provided a smoke screen for the impending atrocity.

* Obligatory reminder that IQ is a eugenics-inspired bullshit measure of intelligence. That said, normally if you take two IQ tests, you should score better on the second one, because one thing IQ tests are very good at measuring is one's ability to take IQ tests. If you do worse on the second, it's an indication of cognitive decline, which is a very real thing.
sabotabby: there's no point to an apocalypse if you still have to work (pointless apocalypse)


At about 30:30, Ford confesses on camera to violating his own stay-at-home order to stalk an underage, unrelated child who does not live with him, without asking permission of the parents.

He should at least be fined $750, no?
sabotabby: (furiosa)
Last week, Drug Fraud cried crocodile tears because the mean journalists called him names on Twitter and said it was hypocritical of him to use a cop-shaped peg to fill a paid-sick-days-shaped hole. Obviously he was not at all sorry because while he said he was "working on" paid sick days, he did not in fact do anything about it.

This weekend, a 13-year-old girl in Brampton (a primarily racialized city where the covid positivity rate is 22%), died of covid. School has been out for awhile, so she likely contracted it from her father, a warehouse worker. Warehouse workers have no access to paid sick leave, so they frequently go to work with covid, infecting their co-workers. Despite the assertion of Ford and his goatfucking henchthing that covid is not dangerous to children, young Emily Victoria Viegas was infected and died.

Today, MPPs held a moment of silence for Emily before Question Period. After Question Period, the Tories voted down paid sick days. For the 21st time.

There's an election in a year. Here are all the names of so-called representatives who salivate at the thought of more little kids like Emily dying:

174318602_10164932297125417_3374533467773117873_n



All of these people deserve to be fired. Preferably into the sun.
sabotabby: there's no point to an apocalypse if you still have to work (pointless apocalypse)
Doug Ford's response to people objecting to martial law and no paid sick days was to go into hiding.

Then he claimed he was exposed to covid from a staffer and was self-isolating, even though he'd tested negative.

Except the timing doesn't work out. He was in hiding before the staffer's positive test, and he was tested too soon after for the results to be accurate.

Most of all, people pointed out that he himself is taking advantage of paid sick leave, a necessity that he denies to essential workers who are risking their lives and health. In fact, he is making more in one day of isolation than someone on disability makes in an entire month. And he's on his third consecutive paid sick day.

That's not even the hilarious part. What's hilarious is the reason he was out of touch: His staff needed to get him a laptop and teach him how to use it. He still uses a 2014 Blackberry for his shitposting needs, and doesn't know how to use a computer.

This is a man who lambasts the public on not being able to navigate the byzantine system(s) for booking vaccines in Ontario, who believes in forced elearning for all students, who talks about being a businessman and open for business. He's a millionaire. He doesn't know how to use a computer. He claimed it was because he was an ancient 56, so now #hes56 is trending on Twitter.

Meanwhile, there's a 22.4% positivity rate in Brampton.

This is like Rob Ford but way less funny because Rob Ford only killed, like, the one dude.

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