Cait the Proud Trans Woman

Cait the Proud Trans Woman's avatar
Cait the Proud Trans Woman
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Cait is a grandmother, activist, translator (πŸ‡«πŸ‡· πŸ‡©πŸ‡ͺ πŸ‡·πŸ‡Ί > πŸ‡¬πŸ‡§), writer, artist, musician, gamer, footy fan, and a bit of a flirt (show me yer shoulders, sweetie!). Transition 11/92, HRT 11/94. Hugs and flirting welcome. I will never lie about your appearance. #ProudToBeTrans Striving every day to be anti-racist & equity-based. I have a #PrivilegeJar. PFP by [@SummerKnight](https://mastodon.art/@SummerKnight ) I live in poverty. No blood from stones. :/ YouTube: Historical gaming, war gaming, and FM24 #nobridge Pronouns: She/her/elle/ella/sie/ΠΎΠ½Π° - https://en.pronouns.page/@oldladyplays Usually found in: Waterloo CANADA - on the Haldimand Tract, land owned by the Haudenosaunee, Anishinaabeg and Chinonton peoples, the latter of whom were wiped out by the European settlement of the land. Mental brassiere: aka Sisyphus' boulder-holder Youtuber: https://www.youtube.com/c/oldladyplays
At school* Friday morning, I was mildly disturbed to see one of the few masc-presenting people in the class arrive dressed as Harry Potter. Others were in various costumes. I waited through the guest speaker, then caught up with him at break. I said, "this is unofficial, k? I'm speaking here as a trans woman in your community, not a lab instructor. This will not affect my evaluation of your work. "But you do know that that gear is going to make for unhappy days for any trans or nonbinary person, and many other queer groups?" He says, "Oh, yeah, I know about Rowling being TERF and such, but i thought since I do know that, it would be ok." I looked at him dubiously. Social work student, mind. "For me? That doesn't really mitigate you helping to fund my loss of rights. So...why not subvert it instead? You wanna do HP, first, don't buy any more merch. Second, you don't do Potter. "You do Herman Grainger. A trans guy. Curly hair, haughty attitude, swot, top student vibe. Subvert it! Make it something JKR would hate. That's a powerful message of allyship, instead of building her anti-trans war chest." He liked the idea. And I think got the deeper lesson, about being in a social justice field, you need to think about these things. If you had a trans client who came in on Hallowe'en, how are they going to feel seeing you wear merch that enriches someone who wants them not to exist? Great teachable moment, and I think he got the idea. No further action needed, to me. * I'm working, as every autumn, at a local small college that has a Bachelor of Social Work program, as well as a summer intensive MSW program. I'm one of three long-time activists teaching community organising alongside a prof of social work. We 3 are the lab instructors. Class goal: plan and execute a social action. A rally, sit-in, whatever. Something disruptive. They get 10 weeks to plan what we each could do and have done in three days. It's a fun job. Radicalising young social workers. πŸ’š
Russian invasion of Ukraine: why I believe it will be over soon, with Ukraine winning clearly
Okay, a promised infodump. So, the war on Ukraine. By Russia. To be utterly clear from the beginning about whose choice this was. Ukraine has fought this war with an incredible application of sheer brainpower: innovation after innovation, new tactics, new technology, homemade weapons, incredible things. And they haven't just fired them off randomly to just cause Russian deaths. They've actually built an incredible strategy based on turning the Russian myth of invincibility upside down. So first I need to explain that myth, where it comes from, and why it's a mythmaking exercise, and not at all what it's sold as. First, then, we need to look at Napoleon Bonaparte. The first one. When he invaced Russia, in 1812, he did so from a start line more or less in modern Poland. He gathered 600,000 troops, from several forcibly allied nations. And off the went to take Moscow. So they marched and they marched, and as they marched, the summer passed, and autumn came. By this time their supply lines were literally thousands of km in length. In a time with no railroads or air transport, that was a HUGE distance. Everything that moved moved by horsepower, or mulepower. The Russians didn't stand and fight. They fought delaying actions, while their troops destroyed supplies, broke down shelters, and basically scorched the earth for the incoming French armies. This meant that they couldn't forage from the countryside, as had been Napoleon's innovation earlier in the Napoleonic wars. His men would march much more quickly than other troops, and did so spread out enough to be able to feed themselves by basically taking everything the nearest peasants had. Ruining those people's existence, of course, but keeping themselves fed. In Russia, this was no longer possible. All supplies had to be brought a couple of thousand km to the front, a wagonload at a time. 1/10