“Birthing people,” for example, is not only inclusive to trans men and nonbinary parents who give birth but also to surrogates or women who plan on making their baby available for adoption and don’t plan on being mothers.
This, of course, is the cultural rub for conservatives and their gender-critical allies, all of whom consider birthing and raising children to be the raison d’être of being a woman.
Instead of being chill about potential differences in life experience, they instead try to force others to conform to their beliefs about womanhood and motherhood. And they enforce this through incessant mockery and outright cruelty. Some, like actress Rose McGowan, attack trans women over the language, even though trans women have literally nothing to do with any of this (because trans women understand that womanhood is more than motherhood destiny).
Literally no one criticizing Bush stopped for a second to listen to her harrowing and painful story, nor do they care a wit about the crisis over Black and Indigenous maternal mortality. Several years ago, racial disparities in maternal mortality rates were ostensibly a bipartisan issue in Congress; now they’re a punch line for every loser on Twitter eager to take a rhetorical punch at trans people.
I just read this without reading the larger quoted text and wondered who was the author and what had they done with Kyle Burns? Had Kyle experienced an epiphany after a near brush with death? No, he was just being the same old hypocrite. The projection is off the charts."Instead of being chill about differences in life experience, trans activists instead try to force others to conform to their beliefs about womanhood and motherhood. And they enforce this through incessant whining, suicide baiting, and outright cruelty toward women who deny them consent."
My favorite part in the thread is how the "Stop sending my advice" tweet comes after he's waffling about whether or not to go to the ER. Yes, Kyle is obviously on top of his medical condition, retards. He got the wrong prescription, noticed something was wrong, then took it for a month, felt like death, asked a question about what he should do about it, and then got mad when people sent him advice.Kyle almost died because he got the wrong thyroid prescription and wasn't on a high enough dose.
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This was a great exchange.My favorite part in the thread is how the "Stop sending my advice" tweet comes after he's waffling about whether or not to go to the ER. Yes, Kyle is obviously on top of his medical condition, retards. He got the wrong prescription, noticed something was wrong, then took it for a month, felt like death, asked a question about what he should do about it, and then got mad when people sent him advice.
What an ungrateful asshole. Maybe next time the pharmacy will "accidentally" fill his prescription with bleach.
Getting a lot of engagement off this post: https://twitter.com/transscribe/status/1399180131843854337
I guess he didn't get untagged from that tweet last week like he wanted and now he needs some asspats. Will they be enough or will we get a suicide bait next week?Getting a lot of engagement off this post: https://twitter.com/transscribe/status/1399180131843854337
Kyle, letting his delusions go so far as to recommend a book that will tell women to trust their gut when they feel uncomfortable around a man trying to be 'just one of the girls', behaving inappropriately, and calling them a bigot if they don't do what a troon wants.

And then there are the roads. I’m a rank amateur on Cities: Skylines, with just under 200 hours played. When I make streets and roads, they end up looking like the worst conglomerations of urban spaghetti. I end up jamming in pedestrian connections and bike lines after the fact.
My current build, Springfield, is hopelessly choked with cargo train traffic, and my downtown grid is too compact to place large attractions or buildings. I don’t have the foresight yet to plan for such things.
But these pros frequently build their cities around pedestrians and future uses, planning out intensely interesting and interconnected worlds in increasingly unexpected and delightful ways. It reminds me of watching timelapse videos of artists, who go from sketch to finished work in very satisfying-to-watch content.
Imagining myself in the world of these city builds is one of my favorite ways to consume Cities: Skylines content, especially living in a country with crumbling infrastructure and squabbling politicians.
If you find yourself looking for new game content to consume as the pandemic lifts, check out Cities: Skylines creators. Their videos are filled with unexpected delights.
Timely.One day you're a dashing young dame journalist, featured in places like Vox, out on the town in DC running into old flames while buying wine -- the next? You're a "journalist" self publishing on medium writing stories about vidya in between rounds of Overwatch.
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