Fash Watch 4

Nov. 26th, 2025 12:32 am
[syndicated profile] zompist_feed

Posted by zompist

I haven’t written one of these since April, and people have asked for an update. This is by no means complete; in fact it’s just what stuck in my mind. With this administration there is always something outrageous, stupid, and/or illegal every week.

(BTW, on my machines, WordPress has been absolutely awful. It’s either horribly slow, or I can’t update at all. If this continues I’ll have to move the blog.)

Executive summary: Things are bad, especially the war on Hispanics. The GOP is still ruining the economy and trying to bully the world. But things are not going the Republicans’ way.

My feeling is that the Republicans have shown their hand: most administrations do most of what they can do within the first year. I think they will fall short of the Orbánist state they want: they’re getting significant pushback and the November elections showed that they’re hemorrhaging votes.

First let’s go over some positives. It’s important to avoid doomerism and to recognize that fighting back works. (That doesn’t mean that everything is or will be OK.)

The Democrats won big in the 2025 election.

  • California: Proposition 50 won, countering Texas’s gerrymander. For foreigners: normally seats are reassigned every 10 years. The GOP had the bright idea of doing it this year to try to pick up new seats by drawing absurd districts (‘gerrymandering’). Theoretically Texas would pick up 5 House seats for the GOP; now the Dems can pick up 5 Dem seats in California.
  • Democrats won the governorship and expanded their control of the legislature in Virginia, and kept the governorshi pin New Jersey.
  • 3 Dem judges retained on the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, keeping their 5-2 majority.
  • First statewide offices go to Dems in Georgia since 2006.
  • Mississipi: Democrats flipped two seats, ending a GOP supermajority.
  • New York City: Democratic Socialist Zohran Mamdani elected mayor; this is mainly a defeat for the stodgy old party establishment, and for pundits who think the Democrats are “too progressive.” NYC is an outlier, but Mamdani is extremely savvy and pragmatic, and his campaign for affordability was a winner.
  • Pennsylvania: Dems flipped Bucks County sheriff’s office and ousted all Reps from school boards. The county went for Trump last year.

Democrats have been taking school boards across the country; this is important because, decades ago, this was the strategy conservatives used to launch their 1980s resurgence.

Trump is wildly unpopular– his approval rating is 40%. As Paul Krugman has pointed out, authoritarians like Viktor Orbán were able to take power and attack democracy precisely because they were popular. It’s a lot harder when the majority is strongly against the would-be dictator.

Trump had a big public falling-out with Elon Musk, who sulked back to his companies and darkly threatened to start a new party. The good news is that this was pretty much it for Musk’s destroy-government project, DOGE; the bad news is that most of the damage is already done.

The Supreme Court has mostly allowed Trump to overthrow the rule of law, but at least they seem unimpressed with his declaring fake emergencies to levy tariffs. No final decision yet, though. (Two appeals courts have found his tariffs illegal.)

The Republicans got Jimmy Kimmel off the air for criticizing Trump, a chilling blow to free speech. But after widespread protests, he was back on the air after a little more than a week.

About 7 million people joined one of over 2000 No Kings protests in October— more than the previous event.

Trump has not been able to bully China. Xi Jinping holds the high cards here, largely due to China’s near-monopoly on rare earths… to say nothing of having the largest economy in the world (by purchasing parity). He’s also pissed off rather than intimidated India.

House Speaker Mike Johnson has been losing control over the House. An increasingly successful strategy is bipartisan groups using discharge petitions to force votes on their bills.

The Republicans, for years, built up hope in their base that the Epstein files would be released, presumably damaging their enemies. Once in office they released nothing. Then, this fall, Trump and Johnson both exerted enormous efforts to keep Congress from forcing releases of the files. This is pretty baffling: it annoys their own base, and makes everyone wonder what they’re hiding. It’s likely enough that nothing big is there: if there were anything that could be used against Democrats it would have been used months ago. (And if there were anything big against GOP , Biden would have used it.) It’s a mystery, and not a good look, why the GOP leadership tried to keep the files hidden. But also unsuccessful, which is a big defeat for Trump: Congress was willing to vote against him. To save face, he turned around and supported the release of the files.

On Trump’s Asia trip, many noted that he seemed to have trouble moving around, kept losing focus, and was more incoherent than usual. He seems to be experiencing an increasing cognitive decline. In the short term this probably is welcomed by the cronies and cranks who are handling him, since they can do as they want. In the longer term it’s a big problem for the GOP, since Trump is the glue that holds the party together. Though outsiders don’t see him as charismatic, his base sure does, and no one else has been able to do what he does.

On to the negatives.

On ICE’s campaign of terror, I can’t explain it better than this page does. Some quotes:

Every day my phone buzzes. It is a neighborhood group: four people were kidnapped at the corner drugstore. A friend a mile away sends a Slack message: she was at the scene when masked men assaulted and abducted two people on the street. A plumber working on my pipes is distraught, and I find out that two of his employees were kidnapped that morning. A week later it happens again. […]

On the night of September 30th, federal agents rappelled from a Black Hawk helicopter to execute a raid on an apartment building on the South Shore. Roughly three hundred agents deployed flashbangs, busted down doors, and took people indiscriminately. US citizens—some women and children—were grabbed from their beds, marched outside without even a chance to dress, zip-tied, and loaded into vans. Residents returned to find their windows and doors broken and their belongings stolen. Despite the violence of the raid, it appears no criminal charges were filed.

This is real fascism, and the only upside is that a lot of people who voted for the GOP are realizing that they don’t want this. The country needs immigtants, businesses need workers, Hispanics need to live in safety. Last year lots of Hispanics voted for the GOP; that shift was erased in this month’s election.

In previous posts I talked about the economic ruin caused by tariffs, hobbling education, impeding foreign tourism and study, alienating allies and China alike. The economy is propped up by AI boosterism, and that lools like it’s cracking.

But there’s a more insidious problem: the Republican goal is crony capitalism. There’s at least some amusement in letting the arch-libertarians at Cato explain it.

The administration has been bombing ships at sea. There have been threats to invade Venezuela, Colombia, and Nigeria (?!). Trump bombed Iran in June. Ironically such posturing annoys some of his base, which is not in favor of wars abroad.

Trump directed the Justice Department to indict his political opponents, notably former FBI director James Comey. As of this week this was falling apart, as the courts declared that his move of naming his personal lawyer as a federal prosecutor, bypassing the Senate, was illegal.

The Supreme Court has disallowed a few minor things (e.g. it ordered the return of Kilmar Garcia to the US— the administration is now apparently planning to deport him to Africa— and turning down a chance to undo its decision legalizing same-sex marriage), but it has done nothing to stop Trump’s power grabs, notably impoundment. (For the less politically obsessed: this means the executive ending programs at his whim that were authorized and funded by Congress. It’s illegal and unconstitutional: Congress decides what the laws are and how to spend federal money.)

The problems with having a demented toddler in charge are becoming evident. Trump held up a trade deal with Canada because a provincial governor ran TV ads he didn’t like. At the same time, thoes who know how to flatter and charm Trump become his favorites, even temporarily. Obviously the bad guys know how to do this most easily, but Mamdani got along with Trump surprisingly well. (Apparently he did this by being laser-focused on “affordability”, which Trump has belatedly realized is a big issue for Americans.)

Less than a week after the invigorating Democratic wins on November 5, eight Senate Democrats voted with the Republicans to end the government shutdown, widely seem as a pathetic betrayal. The Republican position on the government shutdown has been aptly described as “We’ll stop feeding poor kids until you let us take away millions of American voters’ health insurance.”

Climate change denialism continues. Of course it’d be pretty bad to ruin the ecosphere that keeps billions of us alive; but it’s truly idiotic to cede leadership on renewable energy to China. I don’t begrudge them their success— they’re making non-carbon-producing energy available all around the world. But it’s insane to cut back on our own promising renewables industry in favor of an all-in bet on climate-harming AI.

Oh, and just this week Trump has been pushing to end the Ukraine war by having Ukraine give into all of Putin’s demands. The details are readily available if you like stories where evil wins. However, the administration is now backpedalling furiously as Europeans, Ukrainians, and quite a few Republicans are objecting to Trump’s Putin-worship.

Krugman again:

The administration has been doing all it can to dismantle institutions, like the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, that were created to help keep investors and markets safe after the 2008 financial crisis. Scott Bessent, the Treasury secretary, and other Trump officials and allies — including some officials at the Federal Reserve — have also been doing all they can to undermine bank supervision, which tries to limit the kind of risk-taking that brought on the 2008 crisis.

Blind Dog returns to St Dunstans

Nov. 25th, 2025 08:30 pm
lethargic_man: (beardy)
[personal profile] lethargic_man

Last summer, I was thinking about where we could go as a day trip from London whilst we were visiting the UK, and hit upon the idea of Canterbury, as a city I'd not yet visited. Of course, Canterbury is steeped in history, with the cathedral, and its associations with the murder of Thomas à Becket, and Chaucer's Canterbury Tales and so forth, but for me a good half the reason to go was the desire to recreate the cover of one of my favourite albums, Blind Dog at St Dunstans by Caravan:

View album cover )

This is one of the cases where reduction in album cover sizes, from 12" LPs to 12cm CDs to tiny thumbnails for MP3s is a real loss; the cover is packed with dog-related jokes most of which you can't see except on a high resolution image. Have a zoom in and see how many you can make out.

Caravan, in case you've never heard of them, were a prog-rock band, part of the so-called Canterbury scene, in the 1970s. (The liner notes on a best of Caravan album describes them as "a break-up product of the Wilde Flowers, one of the most influential bands never to sign a record contract", which phraseology I like.) This album was where they abandoned their prog-rock roots and went poppier, which didn't go down well with fans at the time, but if, like me, you discovered this album (over thirty years ago, good grief!) before their earlier prog-rock material, then you can appreciate the album on its own merits, free from any prior expectations. A few readers might even have heard it without realising: The entire album was part of my playlist at my fortieth birthday party. Here's a playlist for the entire album on YouTube, if you'd like to listen.

Anyhow, I achieved my ambition when I went to Canterbury:

View album cover remake )

(The camera angle is slightly different because (a) I couldn't stand in the middle of the road, and (b) I was covering up some unsightly roadworks with the position of my body.)

[syndicated profile] smbc_comics_feed

Posted by Zach Weinersmith



Click here to go see the bonus panel!

Hovertext:
The good news is they're also telling the aliens to do something about the dolphins.


Today's News:
[syndicated profile] bruce_schneier_feed

Posted by Bruce Schneier

Democracy is colliding with the technologies of artificial intelligence. Judging from the audience reaction at the recent World Forum on Democracy in Strasbourg, the general expectation is that democracy will be the worse for it. We have another narrative. Yes, there are risks to democracy from AI, but there are also opportunities.

We have just published the book Rewiring Democracy: How AI will Transform Politics, Government, and Citizenship. In it, we take a clear-eyed view of how AI is undermining confidence in our information ecosystem, how the use of biased AI can harm constituents of democracies and how elected officials with authoritarian tendencies can use it to consolidate power. But we also give positive examples of how AI is transforming democratic governance and politics for the better.

Here are four such stories unfolding right now around the world, showing how AI is being used by some to make democracy better, stronger, and more responsive to people.

Japan

Last year, then 33-year-old engineer Takahiro Anno was a fringe candidate for governor of Tokyo. Running as an independent candidate, he ended up coming in fifth in a crowded field of 56, largely thanks to the unprecedented use of an authorized AI avatar. That avatar answered 8,600 questions from voters on a 17-day continuous YouTube livestream and garnered the attention of campaign innovators worldwide.

Two months ago, Anno-san was elected to Japan’s upper legislative chamber, again leveraging the power of AI to engage constituents—this time answering more than 20,000 questions. His new party, Team Mirai, is also an AI-enabled civic technology shop, producing software aimed at making governance better and more participatory. The party is leveraging its share of Japan’s public funding for political parties to build the Mirai Assembly app, enabling constituents to express opinions on and ask questions about bills in the legislature, and to organize those expressions using AI. The party promises that its members will direct their questioning in committee hearings based on public input.

Brazil

Brazil is notoriously litigious, with even more lawyers per capita than the US. The courts are chronically overwhelmed with cases and the resultant backlog costs the government billions to process. Estimates are that the Brazilian federal government spends about 1.6% of GDP per year operating the courts and another 2.5% to 3% of GDP issuing court-ordered payments from lawsuits the government has lost.

Since at least 2019, the Brazilian government has aggressively adopted AI to automate procedures throughout its judiciary. AI is not making judicial decisions, but aiding in distributing caseloads, performing legal research, transcribing hearings, identifying duplicative filings, preparing initial orders for signature and clustering similar cases for joint consideration: all things to make the judiciary system work more efficiently. And the results are significant; Brazil’s federal supreme court backlog, for example, dropped in 2025 to its lowest levels in 33 years.

While it seems clear that the courts are realizing efficiency benefits from leveraging AI, there is a postscript to the courts’ AI implementation project over the past five-plus years: the litigators are using these tools, too. Lawyers are using AI assistance to file cases in Brazilian courts at an unprecedented rate, with new cases growing by nearly 40% in volume over the past five years.

It’s not necessarily a bad thing for Brazilian litigators to regain the upper hand in this arms race. It has been argued that litigation, particularly against the government, is a vital form of civic participation, essential to the self-governance function of democracy. Other democracies’ court systems should study and learn from Brazil’s experience and seek to use technology to maximize the bandwidth and liquidity of the courts to process litigation.

Germany

Now, we move to Europe and innovations in informing voters. Since 2002, the German Federal Agency for Civic Education has operated a non-partisan voting guide called Wahl-o-Mat. Officials convene an editorial team of 24 young voters (under 26 and selected for diversity) with experts from science and education to develop a slate of 80 questions. The questions are put to all registered German political parties. The responses are narrowed down to 38 key topics and then published online in a quiz format that voters can use to identify the party whose platform they most identify with.

In the past two years, outside groups have been innovating alternatives to the official Wahl-o-Mat guide that leverage AI. First came Wahlweise, a product of the German AI company AIUI. Second, students at the Technical University of Munich deployed an interactive AI system called Wahl.chat. This tool was used by more than 150,000 people within the first four months. In both cases, instead of having to read static webpages about the positions of various political parties, citizens can engage in an interactive conversation with an AI system to more easily get the same information contextualized to their individual interests and questions.

However, German researchers studying the reliability of such AI tools ahead of the 2025 German federal election raised significant concerns about bias and “hallucinations”—AI tools making up false information. Acknowledging the potential of the technology to increase voter informedness and party transparency, the researchers recommended adopting scientific evaluations comparable to those used in the Agency for Civic Education’s official tool to improve and institutionalize the technology.

United States

Finally, the US—in particular, California, home to CalMatters, a non-profit, nonpartisan news organization. Since 2023, its Digital Democracy project has been collecting every public utterance of California elected officials—every floor speech, comment made in committee and social media post, along with their voting records, legislation, and campaign contributions—and making all that information available in a free online platform.

CalMatters this year launched a new feature that takes this kind of civic watchdog function a big step further. Its AI Tip Sheets feature uses AI to search through all of this data, looking for anomalies, such as a change in voting position tied to a large campaign contribution. These anomalies appear on a webpage that journalists can access to give them story ideas and a source of data and analysis to drive further reporting.

This is not AI replacing human journalists; it is a civic watchdog organization using technology to feed evidence-based insights to human reporters. And it’s no coincidence that this innovation arose from a new kind of media institution—a non-profit news agency. As the watchdog function of the fourth estate continues to be degraded by the decline of newspapers’ business models, this kind of technological support is a valuable contribution to help a reduced number of human journalists retain something of the scope of action and impact our democracy relies on them for.

These are just four of many stories from around the globe of AI helping to make democracy stronger. The common thread is that the technology is distributing rather than concentrating power. In all four cases, it is being used to assist people performing their democratic tasks—politics in Japan, litigation in Brazil, voting in Germany and watchdog journalism in California—rather than replacing them.

In none of these cases is the AI doing something that humans can’t perfectly competently do. But in all of these cases, we don’t have enough available humans to do the jobs on their own. A sufficiently trustworthy AI can fill in gaps: amplify the power of civil servants and citizens, improve efficiency, and facilitate engagement between government and the public.

One of the barriers towards realizing this vision more broadly is the AI market itself. The core technologies are largely being created and marketed by US tech giants. We don’t know the details of their development: on what material they were trained, what guardrails are designed to shape their behavior, what biases and values are encoded into their systems. And, even worse, we don’t get a say in the choices associated with those details or how they should change over time. In many cases, it’s an unacceptable risk to use these for-profit, proprietary AI systems in democratic contexts.

To address that, we have long advocated for the development of “public AI”: models and AI systems that are developed under democratic control and deployed for public benefit, not sold by corporations to benefit their shareholders. The movement for this is growing worldwide.

Switzerland has recently released the world’s most powerful and fully realized public AI model. It’s called Apertus, and it was developed jointly by the Swiss government and the university ETH Zurich. The government has made it entirely open source—open data, open code, open weights—and free for anyone to use. No illegally acquired copyrighted works were used in its training. It doesn’t exploit poorly paid human laborers from the global south. Its performance is about where the large corporate giants were a year ago, which is more than good enough for many applications. And it demonstrates that it’s not necessary to spend trillions of dollars creating these models. Apertus takes a huge step forward to realizing the vision of an alternative to big tech—controlled corporate AI.

AI technology is not without its costs and risks, and we are not here to minimize them. But the technology has significant benefits as well.

AI is inherently power-enhancing, and it can magnify what the humans behind it want to do. It can enhance authoritarianism as easily as it can enhance democracy. It’s up to us to steer the technology in that better direction. If more citizen watchdogs and litigators use AI to amplify their power to oversee government and hold it accountable, if more political parties and election administrators use it to engage meaningfully with and inform voters and if more governments provide democratic alternatives to big tech’s AI offerings, society will be better off.

This essay was written with Nathan E. Sanders, and originally appeared in The Guardian.

Bolted! BACK TO LIFE on Kickstarter

Nov. 25th, 2025 08:24 am
[syndicated profile] wondermark_feed

Posted by David Malki !

While my card game Bolted! is being prepped at the factory, there’s a little window of time here for an additional round of pre-orders!

If you missed the first round of preorders earlier this year, Bolted! is available again for a limited time. Reserve your copy now:

Bolted! on Kickstarter

I spent a ton of time on the promo video and I had a lot of fun! I hope you like it.

A couple of things worth highlighting:

  • Want this to be a holiday gift? The game won’t ship to backers until the spring, but all backers WILL get a downloadable certificate that you can wrap as a present, if you like!
  • I’ll be doing livestreams all month long, playing the game with some of my creative friends! The first one already happened – with Ryan North, Gillian Goerz, and Pat Race – and you can watch it here:

Upcoming scheduled livestreams include:

  • Wed Nov 26 • 5:15pm Pacific • Good As Hell Block
    🐈‍⬛ Sara McHenry (Your McHenries, Hey Pais)
    🐎 Tom McHenry (Your McHenries, Horse Master)
    ⚙ Jess Fink (Chester 5000 XYV)
    🍄 Eric Colossal (Rutabega the Adventure Chef)
    ↪ Add event to your calendar
     
  • Mon Dec 1 • 12:15pm Pacific • Sickos Block
    🐶 KC Green (Gunshow, Greatures)
    ✒ Mattie Lubchansky (Boys Weekend, Simplicity)
    💧Tom Harrison (Anime Sickos)
    ↪ Add event to your calendar
     
  • Wed Dec 3 • 12:15pm Pacific • Webcomics Weekly Block
    🐤 Dave Kellett (Sheldon, Drive)
    😈 Brad Guigar (Evil Inc, The Webcomics Handbook)
    📺 Kris Straub (Chainsawsuit, Local58)
    ↪ Add event to your calendar

All livestreams will be at: twitch.tv/davidmalki

More are still TBD! I’ll be posting schedule updates on Bluesky!

If you have backed any of my previous Kickstarter projects, be sure to send me a DM and I’ll include a bonus card with your pledge for free!

(If you backed Bolted! on BackerKit earlier this year, the same offer applies! We should already have your details on file from that one!)

Twenty years

Nov. 24th, 2025 10:37 pm
[personal profile] cosmolinguist

I had a pretty good day for it being the blackest day on my calendar.

Twenty years ago today my brother died. It was thanksgiving day, that year. He died in a car accident. No other cars involved, he wasn't drunk, the weather was fine, he was on familiar roads...

So there was no reason for it, no lesson to be learned from it or cause to take up because of it.

Normally I will have a wee dram for the occasion, but tonight I went to the gym instead, knowing that the rest of the week is too full to allow it and not wanting to let the good effect of actually making it to trans gym on Saturday wither away already. It was a good choice but means I got home and as usual went upstairs to a shower and bed.

It was a pretty good day. I woke up absurdly early as usual but didn't feel tired. I got up and did my morning chores (opened the curtains, emptied the dishwasher, made a pot of tea), made breakfast and started work an hour early. My manager is off all week and his manager is off today, so while I'm awaiting feedback from them on a report that's perilously close to its deadline now, it's not my problem if they don't get it to me. I didn't have many meetings either (though the two I did have were bad enough), it was much warmer than it had been at the end of last week and the sun was even out sometimes.

Most of all, what made this November good is that I wasn't fretting about my dog dying (like last year), I didn't break my ankle and need an operation (like two years ago), and a dear friend wasn't having a psychotic episode where I was the only person she'd talk to (like three years ago).

November just sucks.

But this one has been okay. Yes it's been full of work and of counterprotesting fascists, but it's also had some fun stuff and there's more happening this week: a birthday party, a wedding, a new Knives Out movie, a thanksgiving dinner that I'm not cooking...

Twenty years.

It doesn't feel long ago.

And yet I've also been so many people since then. I'm sad I didn't have the chance to find out who he would have been.

3D printing software? [tech]

Nov. 24th, 2025 03:51 pm
siderea: (Default)
[personal profile] siderea
I want a widget that doesn't exist so I might be stuck designing it for 3D printing. I have never done this before. For design software, I gather both Onshape and TinkerCAD are available for free. Anybody with experience have opinions which I should start with? I have never used any CAD program before, but am not new to drafting. OTOH my drafting experience was all about 40 years ago. Open to other suggestions available for the Mac for free.

Also, I don't have my own 3D printer, so I'll be availing myself of various public-access options. But this means the iterative design feedback loop will be irritatingly protracted. Also I might have to pay money for each go round, so I'd like to minimize that. Also I am still disabled and not able to spend a lot of time in a makerspace. But I am a complete n00b to 3D printing and have zero idea what I'm doing. Does anybody have any recommendations for good educational references online about how to design for 3D printing so your widget is more likely to come out right the first or at least third time? By which I mean both print right and also function like you wanted – I know basically nothing about working with the material(s) and how they behave and what the various options are, while the widget I want to make will be functional not ornamental and have like tolerances and affordances and stuff. So finding a way to get those clues without hands-on experience, or at least minimizing the hands-on experience would be superb.
[syndicated profile] aih_heraldry_feed

Posted by Principal Secretary

New issue of the heraldic magazine “ADLER. Zeitschrift für Genealogie und Heraldik” (Series 33, 2-3, April-September 2025).

The magazine ADLER is published by the Heraldisch-Genealogische Gesellschaft ADLER: https://www.gesellschaftadler.org/publikationen/zsa/zsa-33-iv.

Contents (studies on heraldry and sigillography):

  • Karl P. WERNHART – “Der Habsburgische Doppeladler auf einem peruanischen Kero”;
  • Michael GÖBL – “Biographische Notizen über den Freiherren Hans von Karg-Bebenburg und seine Siegelsammlung”;
  • Idem – “Von Eisbären und wilden Männern – das dänisches Königswappen im Focus der Weltpolitik?”;
  • Idem – “Henrik Klackenberg, Heraldik i Riksarkivet (Heraldik und Reichsarchiv), Veröffentlichungen des schwedischen Reichsarchivs Nr. 48, Stockholm 2025”.
[syndicated profile] openrightsgroup_feed

Posted by Pam Cowburn

In the summer of 2025, the Home Affairs Committee launched an inquiry “to explore the potential benefits and risks of the use of government-issued digital ID”.


This submission draws on interviews with over 40 migrants, as part of a collaborative research project funded by the ESRC Digital Good Network, “Digitising Identity: Navigating the Digital Immigration System and Migrant Experiences.” This was a joint initiative between Open Rights Group, Migrant Voice and academic researchers Dr Derya Ozkul (University of Warwick/Oxford) and Dr Marie Godin (University of Leicester/Oxford).

The project examined the introduction of eVisas and share codes for migrants to verify their immigration status. It found that migrants have effectively been used as test cases for digital ID systems, and their experiences reveal important lessons for policymakers, which the Home Affairs Committee should take into account when considering digital ID for all UK citizens.

The main problems identified included:

  • System errors and technical failures
  • Inaccessible design
  • Amplified burden of proof
  • Exclusion from employment, housing and travel
  • Lack of transparency
  • No effective support or appeal process
  • Erosion of trust and growing distress among migrants

Read the full submission here.

lethargic_man: (Berlin)
[personal profile] lethargic_man
Random trivia discovered by looking up a term on Wikipedia: During the Ice Ages, the glaciers advanced southwards across Europe, but the further one went south, the higher up the land was, so the meltwater from the end of the glaciers couldn't flow south, and couldn't flow north (because the glaciers were in the way), so ended up carving out valleys running roughly east-west, called Urstromtäler (a German loanword into English). One of these ran from Warsaw to Berlin and beyond.

Because of their low situation, and the high water table, they frequently became boggy in the post-glacial world, which posed obstacles to movement in the Middle Ages. As a result, trade routes converged on points where the valley could be crossed comparatively easily, at which points settlements arose.

And this is how Berlin came to be founded where it is—you can clearly see the constriction in the Urstromtal at Berlin in the map on the Wikipedia page. (The edge of the Urstromtal to the northeast is also clearly (to me) the location of the really hard incline on my way back from the Polish border a year ago.)

Catching up on other news

Nov. 24th, 2025 04:32 pm
[personal profile] cosmolinguist

Last Monday morning I was supposed to have a voice therapy appointment but our internet was borked. I had to drag D out of bed just after 9 and make him deal with a confusing and mysterious problem. He bodged a solution really quickly but I was supposed to have a voice therapy appointment at 9:30 and I'd texted the clinician warning her that I wasn't sure I'd be able to make it. We had

Thank you for letting me know. Unfortunately as it is such late notice this will count as a missed appointment. Please let me know if you would like to re-book the session, and if there is anything we can do to support attending going forwards. If you do not reply within 7 days we will assume that you do not wish to continue voice therapy and you will be discharged.

Something about that "if you would like to re-book the session" rubbed me the wrong way -- I waited years for this referral! -- and all of a sudden I didn't want to re-book. I was put off by how the technical problems were handled at the first appointment, and even though they didn't recur and I was confident I wouldn't have them again because once she agreed to use Teams I gave her my work address where Teams works fine every day so I didn't anticipate any recurrence.

I just. Still felt weird about it, like I was doing it wrong by treating this as an investigation about something I'm curious about rather than something where I had clear and specific Transition Goals in mind. Indigo might be a little too patient-led for me, heh; I appreciate the ways it's more flexible and less judgmental than the old Gender Identity Clinic system, but this isn't the first time I've struggled with mismatched expectations: I'm expecting some kind of information that doesn't exist and even when I ask for it I'm told to look at social media websites I don't use; I'm like you're the NHS, don't you have a photocopy-burned brochure for me?

(This feeling I'm having here is like a grain of sand in comparison to the deserts-worth of the same feeling that I'm having when it comes to top surgery... I've written thousands of words about that so far and it's still not ready to share.)

It just felt like too high a hill to climb, so I've let the seven days go by and now I'm discharged from the service. I hope someone else who's chomping at the bit for their voice to sound different in some particular way is making good use of the appointment instead.

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