Sunday, 27 March 2016

The Guardian `journalist` hasn't seen the Matrix

Disclaimer: The contents of this blog are entirely the opinion of the author and are in no way be interpreted as a statements of fact nor as professional or personal advice of any kind. If in doubt, research it yourself.



I was watching a video by Sargon Of Akkad where he brought up this article from the Guardian, titled "Will Matrix film-makers coming out as women turn off men's rights activists?".

I wouldn't normally give a crap about The Guardian, but I thought this article perfectly highlights the kind of nonsense, fact-free journalism that you can find from the regressive left.

Directly under the title are the words "It’s ironic that a film popular with men fearing a world controlled by women turns out to have been made by transgender siblings". It then goes on to describe the film The Matrix (1999) as being "built on the ideas that dreams happen to everyone, all at once. They’re mass produced – which means that your most private thoughts are put there by someone else.". It's almost like the person writing the article has never actually seen the film they're writing about. Let's break down what the article says about The Matrix so far.

"men fearing a world controlled by women"
Is it? I don't think anybody thinks that women run the world. It is true however that women are given certain advantages over men that feminists typically refuse to acknowledge.

"built on the ideas that dreams happen to everyone, all at once."
No. The film is built on the idea that almost everybody is trapped inside the same simulation under the belief that it is real. 

"They’re mass produced – which means that your most private thoughts are put there by someone else."
No. Even inside The Matrix, your thoughts are your own. Everything else however is part of the simulation.

Now some more of what the article says.
" As Parker Molloy points out at Flavorwire, there’s a “delicious irony” in the fact that the directors of The Matrix are trans women."
I'll get to the "delicious irony" part later, as this one is a little bit sticky. At the time The Matrix was filmed, both Wachowski's were publicly identifying as male. As I understand it the older sibling Lana (formerly Larry) came out as transgender in 2002, although she says she had been unsure about her gender since being at school. Lilly (formerly Andy) came out as transgender in 2016. This brings about what I find an interesting question. At what point does a person become transgender? At the time The Matrix was released they were Andy and Larry, The Wachowski Brothers. Clearly they were identifying, at least publicly, as male. Does their apparent later decision the transition retcon their previous identities, or are they to be considered male up until a certain point? And when would that point be? Would it be at the point of them being unsure in terms of gender, at the point they decide to make a change, at the point they start taking hormones, at the point they start wearing what is typically considered female clothing, or some other time? If the decision to transition retcons previous gender identity then does that mean that for years they were using the `wrong` bathrooms and changing rooms? What would this mean for people like Caitlyn (formerly Bruce) Jenner who won 2 gold medals in men's decathlon?

" That’s because The Matrix is one of the most celebrated cultural touchstones of the men’s rights movement – and MRAs hate transgender women."
Citation needed. I don't know much of the MRA movement, except that to know that feminists see it as a bad thing so it's probably ok, but I've never actually seen or heard of someone identifying as a MRA hating on transgender people.
What's also worth nothing is that the linked article(I didn't add this, it was in the original) is about a feminist film maker who suffered feminist backlash when she made a balanced film about the Mens Rights movement after her investigation led to her beliefs changing. She mentions not being able to secure funding as there was no grant application category for a men's film but several for women and minorities, not being able to find an executive director who wanted to make a balanced film and not a feminist one, and was accused of making propaganda by David Futrelle of the We Hunted The Mammoth website (pot, kettle) for not making a films that didn't show MRA's in a bad light. Futrelle's open letter can be read here. The comments section is just a flood of self-righteous indignation and ad hominem attacks, so pretty standard feminist fare.

Back to the original article, that describes the red pill/blue pill scene, then says " MRAs refer to “taking the red pill” as the moment they realize that women control the world, and men are the oppressed underclass."
This would seem to indicate that the author is saying that women do rule the world and that men are the oppressed underclass, and that the red pill is the moment that MRA's come to realize that. I'm not sure I buy that, I'm also not sure MRA's think that way either. Feminists and SJW's on the other hand do believe that men rule the world as some secret oppressive patriarchy and that women are an oppressed underclass. It almost seems like the author is projecting.

" This is of course not at all what happens in the film; Neo discovers his world (or our world) is a mental construct created by malevolent computers, not by women."
It seems like half way through writing this the author decided to actually watch the film. Incidentally, " mental construct created by malevolent computers" makes me think of `social construct created by patriarchy`, which is how intersectional feminists see gender.

The author then whines about how Trinity is better trained and more committed than Neo but that Neo is literally the most important person in the world so he gets to be the star, the subtext being that it's because he's a man. He then whines about how in the Harry Potter books "Hermione is the studious, bright, dedicated, competent one, but despite that (or because of it?), some guy gets to be the title character and savior. And you can see nebbishy guys become empowered badasses in any number of superhero films directed by men. The world is made of entertainment designed for the approval of MRAs."
This is typical oppression narrative from feminists. Harry Potter gets to be the main character because firstly the plot is that his parents were killed by the series' antagonist, and secondly there is a tradition of the smartest or most knowledgeable character (or at least the character whose presence is absolutely essential at least once) not being the lead and it's not exclusive in superhero fiction. Examples include:
Hermione in the Harry Potter series,
Yoda in Star Wars,
Spock in Star Trek,
Whistler in the Blade series,
Egon in Ghostbusters,
Simon in The Chipmunks,
Lex in Jurassic Park,
Donatello in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles,
Panthro in Thundercats
Gandalf in Lord Of The Rings,
Ramirez in Highlander,
Tao in The Mysterious Cities Of Gold,
etc.

The author also seems to forget that the Harry Potter author, JK Rowling, is actually a woman. I don't think she, or anyone else for that matter, thinks when they are about to create some work of fiction `I had better make this pleasing to Mens Rights Activists 'cos they've got the big bucks`. You might call this the argument from incredulity, but I call it the author not providing any evidence to back up their assertions.

In answer to the articles headline question(Will Matrix film-makers coming out as women turn off men's rights activists?) I would have to say no, probably not.

It's worth noting at the bottom of the article is a note about the article being edited on 10 March 2016, partly to correct the spelling of Laurence Fishburne, and partly because the author was so knowledgeable of the source material that they thought the antagonists name was Agent Johnson and not Agent Smith.

Friday, 11 March 2016

The curious case of Bahar Mustafa

Disclaimer: The contents of this blog are entirely the opinion of the author and are in no way be interpreted as a statements of fact nor as professional or personal advice of any kind. If in doubt, research it yourself.



Bahar Mustafa was the Diversity and Welfare officer at Goldsmiths University. She was elected to the position after she ran unopposed. You can read her re-election manifesto here(dubbed a "WOmanifesto"), and read more here(complete with women in Burkhas firing AK47's) and her original election Facebook page here. I'm actually going to break her manifesto down a little before I go on.
" As a BME, queer, disabled woman from a working class immigrant family, I have first hand experience in the multiple ways that barriers to education manifest, and have therefore developed strategies to challenge this:
Facilitated workshops for liberation groups, such as BME and women, in the run up to elections to encourage traditionally marginalised groups to participate in Students’ Union."
Firstly, disabled? Really? Last time I checked Narcissistic Personality Disorder wasn't classed as a disability.
Secondly, working class? Apparently she lives in a £450,000 house with her parents (I can't actually find a citation from a news source for this valuation though).
I'm sure all of this posed a great barrier for her to overcome on the path to her degree in, you guessed it, gender and media studies.
Also, notice there is no mention of doing anything whatsoever to help the male members of the student body? Approximately 1/3 of the students at Goldsmiths are male, that makes them the minority gender.

The "No-white-cis-men" image was posted after she arranged a meeting on campus, apparently to discuss the university's diversity policies no less, and deliberately excluded anybody who was male and/or white (see below).

 
She also had a habit of using hashtags such as #killallmen and #killallwhitemen.
 


Remember, she was at the time employed as the Diversity and Welfare Officer at a university where male students are a minority group. I shit you not.
At this point she was given the chance to explain her situation, and presumably apologise. However, in `sorry/not sorry` fashion she instead doubled down and read a statement stating that she couldn't be sexist because she was a woman, and she couldn't be racist because she is an ethnic minority, and partly because she also chose to redefine the words "sexism" and "racism".
A student started a petition to get her removed from office. This student gives in interview here.
In October 2015 she was arrested for the tweets and faced one charge of sending a threatening message and one charge of sending a menacing or offensive message via a public network. She was scheduled to appear in Bromley Magistrates court in November but the courts decided to drop the charges due to lack of evidence. Apparently making several tweets promoting the sentiment of killing on the grounds of race or gender, along with pictures of yourself with images of "male tears", is not sufficient evidence to prove anything these days. It's a wonder anybody ever gets sent to prison at all. Mustafa went on to say that she never made the tweets, but that she didn't condemn them either.
By the end of November 2015, she had announced that she would be quitting her job "for the preservation of my mental and physical health". I'm sure this isn't to deflect away from the allegations of bullying at all. 
She had been accused of bullying and harassment (again, Diversity and Welfare officer) of the student's union president, Adrihani Rashid, who had a day earlier resigned from her role. It is alleged that Mustafa badmouthed Ms Rashid and created a hostile working environment.

So, she pretends to be disabled and working class, excludes white people and male students (men making up only 1/3 of the university), seemingly promotes hatred on the grounds of gender (#killallmen) and race (#killallwhitemen), claims that the rules don't apply to her, when it goes further claims that she didn't post the hatespeech but also refuses to condemn it (surely defacto endorsement if nothing else), allegedly bullies her co-workers to the extent that they resign then resigns herself when an investigation is announced.

Thursday, 10 March 2016

Everyday Propaganda

Disclaimer: The contents of this blog are entirely the opinion of the author and are in no way be interpreted as a statements of fact nor as professional or personal advice of any kind. If in doubt, research it yourself.



I was actually Googling for feminism today, just to see how it defines itself and how it's proponents conduct themselves and if there is any disparity between the two (there is) when I happened across the everyday feminism website. To give you a clue as to the content here are some of the headlines:

I can see this site is going to be a goldmine of bullshit and propaganda. I'm certain to write a few more rants about it when I can find the time, but I happened across this article and just had to rant.
For the purposes of this rant, the text quoted from the linked page will be written in this colour
 

1. ‘You’re the Real Racist for Talking About Race’

"We have Group A: People like Dylann Roof, violent racists who fantasize about and commit violence against people of color.
We have Group B: People who don’t believe they hold racist views, but who are complicit in the system of white supremacy because they don’t do anything to stop it.
But instead of those two groups, you want to blame Group C, the people who are naming what’s happening and trying to put a stop to it, for causing racism?"

Group A does exist. People like the KKK who harbour resentment for other people based solely on their skin colour. Arguably also intersectional feminists, although I don't think they've ever directly killed anybody. Yet.

Group B is where the problem lies. The author asserts "complicit in a system of white supremacy" but provides no evidence to backup the assertion that a "system of white supremacy" exists, or that there are people who don't believe that they hold racist views but that are complicit in such a system(although it does actually provide some evidence that there are people that hold racist viewpoints but who maintain that they aren't: intersectional feminists). This is why feminism is a faith based ideology, and it being based on faith as opposed to logic, reason and evidence is a fundamental flaw.

2. ‘Just Don’t Talk About Racism and It’ll Go Away’

I don't think anybody with any common sense advocates the approach of ignoring a problem and it will go away. I'm sure people used to, after all that's how we ended up with university faculties full of Marxist intersectional feminists preaching their propaganda to impressionable minds that don't know any better than to drink the koolaid, but I hope people have since learned that ignoring a problem is a bad idea.
However constantly looking for a problem, such as racism, will only result in finding it. Some of it will be legitimate, but in much greater regularity than under normal circumstance (if you doubt this try Googling for an innocuous term and recording the percentage of porn sites that appear in the results, then Google for a porn term and do the same thing) and some of it will just be Confirmation bias. 

3. ‘I Don’t Have This Experience, So It Must Not Be True’

"Are you noticing a pattern? These responses silence people of color and prioritize white folks’ voices as more important."

Oh really? Let me share an anecdote from someone I know. She was actually talking to me about racism once a few years ago, and her experiences of it as a mixed race woman. She said that she has never experienced racism, but that she did have a friend at college who was very much into feminism and who claimed she experienced racism all day every day.
So here we have 2 people, both female, both mixed race, both the same age, in the same environment, but the one just gets on with things and doesn't experience racism whereas the one that goes looking for racism in everything manages to find it.
Essentially I'm reiterating the point I made above, that if you go searching for something you're going to find it.

4. ‘I Don’t Understand This, So It Must Not Be True’

Only the deliberately ignorant would make such a statement. I'm not saying that there aren't people like this on the outside of feminism, but there's definitely plenty on the inside. Just find any video with people who aren't a feminist trying to use feminists own reasoning against them and you will find that the feminists feign ignorance to avoid answering the question.

5. ‘But I’m Not a Bad Person’

"Look, I’m sure you’re swell. Now that I’ve acknowledged this, can we move on to what white privilege is really about? Because it has nothing to do with judging your character."
This is why intersectional feminism is divisive, racist, sexist, bigoted, and all the things they claim to be against. It doesn't matter that you're a genuinely good person, it doesn't matter if you do volunteer work, donate or raise money for charity, because if you happen to be white then you're benefiting from `white privilege`(even if you're having to work 2 jobs for minimum wage just to get by) and that makes everything your fault.
On the other hand if you spend all day smoking weed and sitting on your arse, blaming everybody else for your problems whilst waiting around for your next benefits payment, but also happen to be a disabled transgender homosexual black woman, then you are flawless.

6. ‘I Never Enslaved or Colonized Anyone, So White Privilege Has Nothing to Do With Me’

"If your idea of “freedom” includes being able to oppress other people, then we’ve got bigger problems. Anti-racism is about fighting for liberation – for all of us to be free to be who we are."
The lack of self reflection here is astounding. The author is arguing that anti-racism is about freedom `to be who we are`, but simultaneously promoting an ideology that oppresses and demonises one group of people based solely on their skin colour. Utterly shameless. 

7. ‘I Know an Exception to the Rule’ (Or ‘My Black Friend Said Something Different’)

"I have to wonder what white privilege deniers would do if they didn’t have Barack Obama or Oprah Winfrey to point to. Maybe they’d have to realize the realities of everyday Black folks can’t be invalidated by just two people?"
What about virtually the entirety of the NBA? What about all the black musicians, actors, sportspeople, business people, and people in various other jobs that aren't celebrities or multimillionaires but still do just fine? Do they all sit on their arses complaining about racism (well, some in the entertainment industry do every time something doesn't go their way) or do they just get on with the task at hand?
And what about all the other racial groups? The author refers to herself as a "queer Black woman". Is that why her article is only concerned about black people? Is that not a little racist and self-serving?

8. ‘Aren’t There More Important Things to Worry About?’

This is just a non point. The author defends her whining about alleged `microaggressions` by saying that anyone saying they don't matter is "disgustingly insensitive". Perpetually offended professional victims whining about insensitivity to a problem that to any reasonable person does not exist is not something I can even be bothered to rant about any further.

9. ‘You’re Too Angry About This’

"Is there really such a thing as “too angry” about issues of oppression?"
There is when you've not demonstrated that such oppressions actually exists. Maybe if you were to actually articulate and provide evidence for the alleged oppression in a calm and thoughtful manner people would not feel the need to tell you to calm down. I have to question what it is about the authors conduct that causes so many people to tell her to calm down with such regularity that she felt the need to include it here.

10. ‘There’s No Such Thing as Race’ (Or ‘I Don’t See Color’)

"Related to this is the claim that you “don’t see color.” There are lots of problems with the colorblind approach, and one of them is that it fails to recognize the reality we’re living in."
No, it does not recognise your narrative because you have not met the burden of proof.
Again, your self-proclaimed ideals about anti-racism and allowing people to be who they are without oppression is shown to be a total fabrication by your actual conduct. You cannot demonise one group based solely on race and then claim that you're against racism. The levels of hypocrisy exhibited by intersectional feminists are almost beyond belief.

There was once a very famous speech given by Martin Luther King Jr in which he stated that he had a dream. That one day his children would be judged by the content of their character, by who they are as people, and not by the colour of their skin. It seems to me that some people need to go back and listen to that speech.