unironically so important
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@emunahinparis
unironically so important
some of my favorite tidbits from american history in honor of the 250th!!
clara barton, a battlefield nurse for the union army and eventual founder of the american red cross, was dubbed the "angel of the battlefield" for her vital and timely assistance to soldiers and doctors alike. during the 1862 battle of antietam, barton discovered that one of the soldiers she was tending to happened to be a young woman -- mary galloway, who had disguised herself as a man, joined the war effort following her lover lieutenant harry barnard, and would later name her daughter clara after barton eventually reunited the couple
stetson kennedy helped take down the kkk by exposing their code words and secret rituals on a 1947 superman radio show
in 1777, sixteen-year-old sybil ludington rode forty miles to warn the local militia of an upcoming british attack. traveling twice the length of paul revere's journey, she roused around 400 men by banging on their doors with a large stick, and it's even said that she gained recognition from george washington himself
robert smalls, an enslaved man in south carolina, emancipated himself as well as fifteen others in 1861 by disguising himself as a confederate ship captain and sailing the css planter into the union territory (simultaneously providing another warship to the union). not only that, but in 1864, smalls purchased the former mansion of henry mckee -- the man who had once enslaved him
during the 1969 chicago seven conspiracy trial, abbie hoffman reportedly once came in wearing judicial robes with a chicago police uniform underneath, called judge julius hoffman "julie" several times, and raised his middle finger when being sworn in as a witness
after american troops arrived in france In 1917, they made a (mostly symbolic) march through paris, stopping at the grave of the marquis de lafayette to honor his immense contributions during the american revolutionary war. with the tomb at his feet, colonel c. e. stanton declared, "lafayette, we are here!" (over a century too late after the us decided not to aid the french during the revolution, but a cool statement nonetheless)
in 1930s america, a pro-nazi organization called the german american bund was active across america. however, another group was also gaining traction at around the same time: the minutemen. while those in new york were mostly made up of jewish mobsters and those in new jersey mainly consisted of jewish boxers, both had a common goal of breaking up bund meetings by beating the shit out of their members
between 1913 and 1915, there were at least seven instances of people mailing their children through the postal system, since it was cheaper to buy a stamp for your child and have them transported by a trusted mail carrier than purchasing a train ticket for them
the first minnesota volunteer infantry regiment captured a confederate flag from the twenty-eighth virginia infantry regiment in the 1863 battle of gettysburg, and the minnesota historical society still has it today, despite virginia requesting for its return in 2000, 2002, 2003, and 2013. governor jesse ventura famously responded to the 2000 request with "why? i mean, we won"
although many members of various native american nations served as code talkers during the world wars, the most famous of which are probably the navajo code talkers. between 1942 and 1945, over four hundred navajo worked as code talkers for the marines, providing a system that even the most skilled code breakers couldn't crack -- largely due to the fact that navajo has no written alphabet and highly complex tonal qualities. for decades the contributions of these men went unrecognized, but in 1992 they were finally honored at the pentagon for their vital involvement in the allied war effort
founding fathers thomas jefferson and john adams both died on july forth, 1826, with adams allegedly declaring "jefferson still survives" on his deathbed, unaware that his former colleague was already dead
after woodrow wilson had a stroke in 1912, his wife edith wilson took over many of his presidential duties, making her the first female president in practice. she and physician cary grayson decided to keep her husband's condition hidden from the public, even staging several pictures of him to make it seem like he was hard at work in the white house
the youth international party (yippies) held a rally for their presidential nominee, a hundred and forty-five pound pig named pigasus, outside the democratic national convention in 1968. his acceptance speech was being read by jerry rubin when he and six other yippies were arrested along with pigasus and a sow apparently called "mrs pigasus"
after hitler banned bold makeup from public functions in 1933 because he deemed it improper for a good german woman, wearing red lipstick became a symbol of solidarity against fascism. allied militaries were quick to implement it as a part of their female uniforms and issue propaganda encouraging women to wear it. in 1941 elizabeth arden created a shade of lipstick called victory red for civilian women, and in 1942 the us women's marines corp adopted her shade montezuma red as a standard part of the uniform
harriet tubman was not only the most famous conductor of the underground railroad, but also a nurse, soldier, and spy for the union during the civil war. the first woman in american history to lead an armed military raid, in 1863 she commanded the combahee river raid, which included the liberation of over seven hundred and fifty enslaved people
in 1782, deborah sampson disguised herself a man, adopted the alias robert shurtleff, and joined the fourth masschusettes regiment. she managed to protect her true identity for over two years -- however, after she lost consciousness due to illness, her sex was discovered and was given an honorable discharge. after her death, her husband petitioned congress for pension as the spouse of a soldier, and surprisingly he was awarded the money
adolf hitler had a nephew who fought for the united states navy during world war ii. born william patrick hitler, in 1933, he declined his uncle's request to denounce his british citizenship, earning himself the nickname "my loathsome nephew." after his 1939 lecture tour of the united states where he warned americans about the nazi threat, he enlisted in the us military because he wasn't allowed in the british forces. he eventually became a us citizen in 1946 and legally changed his name to william patrick stuart-houston
in 1970, richard nixon signed the poison prevention packaging act, which required all prescription and over-the-counter drugs to have childproof packaging. stephen bull, a former presidential aide, recalled that he was once asked by the president to open his allergy medicine, and the childproof cap had numerous teeth marks on it from nixon's apparent attempts to gnaw it open
the elephant became the mascot of the republican party to demonstrate union war strength (as "seeing the elephant" was slang for experiencing combat). the donkey became the democratic mascot because people frequently called andrew jackson a jackass
alice roosevelt, daughter of president theodore roosevelt, was infamous for various antics she pulled, which include but are not limited to: smoking on the roof of the white house after her father told her to stop smoking inside of it, sneaking whiskey into parties, jumping into a pool fully clothed and convincing a congressman to join her, carring her pet snake named emily spinach in her purse, burying a voodoo doll of first lady nellie taft in the white house lawn and consequently getting herself banned from the taft white house, cutting her wedding cake with a sword she borrowed from a military aide, racing cars through the streets of washington, and putting a tack on the chair of a congressman
i hate how casually accepted antisemitism is at my university. i feel like i’m in the boiling frog pot trying to convince people that israel isn’t inherently evil
I got into the research master’s program I wanted!!
It’s basically the last year of coursework prior to PhD research. Not funded, but I’ve been working the last 2 years of my MEd so I’ll figure it out. (A great opportunity to work on my bitachon?) And the program is really strong so it gives me a good shot at a funded PhD place next year.
MRI machines and cooling units and AC and IT systems in hospitals are breaking due to the heat. Lab equipment is failing. Some cancer treatments cannot be done due to machine failures. A&E overcrowding is worse due to heat related health issues and sheer amount of people is making the heat in hospitals worse (and the AC! Is breaking!) Patients with appointments are being advised to bring in "a lot" of water with them to be able to safely attend. Fans cannot be used in hospitals. Norwich has no functuoning MRI scanners right now. And the staff have to keep working through all of this, they are getting ill and sleep deprived which is compounding issues further. This is not normal 👍
In France, the vast majority of hospitals, daycares, schools, and nursing homes are not air conditioned. Our buildings are designed to keep as much heat in as possible during long, cold winters. If it’s 95F/35C outside it’s easily 104F/40C in some of the classrooms in my school when you add the body heat of 30 teenagers.
Babies, sick people, and the elderly are subject to dangerously high temperatures — and so are their caregivers. Almost exclusively women, often immigrants, we (nurses, teachers, daycare workers, health aides…) are keeping society running in unbearable conditions while white-collar men in air-conditioned offices tell us to drink water and suck it up.
I TURNED IN MY MASTERS THESIS!!!
THE THESIS HAS BEEN DEFENDED.
i repeat: THE THESIS HAS BEEN DEFENDED.
officially done with all my master’s coursework and classes!! i still have to prep and sit the teaching exam (plan b) and apply for research programmes (plan a) but now i actually have TIME to do it instead of rotting in a lecture hall
I graduated with highest honors!!!
best thing to do during a heatwave
lie on the floor
kvetch
cry
eat popsickle
go to the movies
I feel like Jane Austen's novels are often minimized as "cozy" and "cutesy" when actually they are defining works of English language novels and insightful, often biting social commentary. and Im tired of people reducing her to like a "cozy author" or boiling her books down to a few bland romance tropes. she refined the novel form to an art. she defined genres of literature. she continues to influence creative works all over the world now. and idk im tired it is late and I dont have all the right words for this but it is just so frustrating
i am an american who has never once seen eurovision in my life but im listening to the music from it just for fun and like. the way people are so violently hateful towards israelis is already insane racist xenophobic antisemitism but something i keep thinking: literally every other country that has ever been in that competition has done the same or, in most cases, WORSE than whatever israel has done.
like ok spain is boycotting? spain who colonized entire continents? ethnically cleansed indigenous people for centuries? had the fucking inquisition? spain the country that burned jews alive???
ok what about germany lol??? if you really hate jews and the holocaust isnt a bad enough thing that germany did then maybe consider their colonialism and violence in africa???
portugal who did the same shit as spain????????
turkiye has been in it, what about the armenian genocide? what about their current policy of violence against kurds??
sweden??? sweden's treatment of Sami?? Norway?? Finland???
the united fucking kingdom????
Australia?????
FRANCE?????? ITALY??????
fucking POLAND?????????
zero consistency. yet literally every comment or review on a song by an israeli musician is "this is slop", "this is hasbara", "this is meant to normalize apartheid and colonialism and genocide", "this is as garbage as all israeli art ever is garbage and so is their food and culture and everything"
This is the point. It’s scapegoating. Every country with a dark, bloody, colonial, genocidal past is absolved of all their sins by pinning them on Israel. It’s terribly convenient for them, they get to be on the "good side" and care about "human rights" without lifting a finger.
Second heatwave of the year is hitting Paris, but who’s counting?
Can’t wait to spend the week before summer vacation in a 35 degree classroom with 25 middle schoolers in opaque tights and hoodies (sheers are nerdy and so is the uniform shirt)
The US should stop funding Israel and the money should go to Americans first. AOC and Bernie needs the money for healthcare
The math on "fund Medicare for All instead of Israel" doesn't math.
The US sends Israel roughly $3.8 billion a year - $3.3 billion baseline under a 10-year Memorandum of Understanding (MOU), plus the emergency supplementals Congress passed after October 7. The nonpartisan Urban Institute puts Medicare for All at $32-34 trillion over ten years.
That's at least $3.2 trillion per year in new federal spending.
Most people zone out and their brains go to static when they try to understand numbers on this scale - so let's do it visually:
Do you see it, Anon?
Ceasing support for Israel aid won't build an American Universal Healthcare system in the same way that giving up avocado toast won't enable Gen Z to buy a house.
The "fund healthcare with Israel aid" crowd consistently ignores the fact that most of the aid for Israel already goes to Americans.
Israel is required to spend the entire Foreign Military Financing (FMF) amount on American weapons, systems, and defense equipment manufactured and sold by US companies - a requirement the Obama administration tightened.
The money goes to Lockheed Martin, Boeing, and Raytheon. It produces jobs in Alabama and Connecticut.
So...why do we keep hearing this nonsensical association between aid to Israel and the US failing to have universal healthcare?
Antisemitism has always worked by inserting Jews between people and whatever they feel they're owed.
We've seen this before:
The Crusades failed because of military overreach and strategic collapse. Instead of taking responsibility, the Church blamed the Jews, thereby protecting its own authority and giving humiliated crusaders a scapegoat instead of a reckoning.
The Black Death swept Europe because of a bacterial pandemic. Instead of accepting a natural explanation, authorities blamed the Jews for poisoning the wells. This gave terrified populations someone to punish and deflected scrutiny from their own powerlessness.
France's military was humiliated in the Franco-Prussian War of 1870 because of poor leadership and strategic failure. Instead of holding their own commanders accountable, the French military establishment blamed a Jewish officer, Alfred Dreyfus. This protected the careers and reputations of the actual culprits.
Germany lost World War One because of military collapse and strategic exhaustion. Instead of accepting defeat, the military leadership blamed the Jews for stabbing the army in the back, which shielded the officer class from accountability and planted the seed for the next war.
Weimar Germany experienced hyperinflation because of war reparations and catastrophic fiscal policy. Instead of addressing structural economic failure, politicians blamed Jewish financiers, giving a desperate population an enemy to hate and buying the political class some time.
Tsarist Russia had endemic poverty because of serfdom's aftermath and imperial mismanagement. Instead of reforming their own institutions, the Tsar blamed the Jews for exploiting the peasantry, redirecting revolutionary anger away from the throne and toward the shtetl. Nothing lets off steam like a good pogrom.
American culture has been shaped by industrialization, commercialization, and mass media. Instead of grappling with those forces, cultural conservatives blamed the Jews for controlling Hollywood, neatly avoiding any serious examination of the market forces they themselves championed.
The United States lacks universal healthcare because of lobbying, Senate procedure, and forty years of political failure. Instead of addressing any of that, they blame Israel for eating the budget, letting the actual obstacles off the hook entirely.
The specific grievance changes. The structure doesn't.
Jews make a convenient scapegoat precisely because Jews are a small, visible minority with enough presence in public life to be a plausible explanation, but not enough numbers to outvote the lie.
Blaming Jews is what a society does when it has failed its people and needs to deflect the consequences of that failure. It is the political coward's way to avoid the hard, unglamorous work of building coalitions, passing legislation, and holding their own institutions accountable.
It's much easier, they realize, to have an enemy than a problem.
I’m talking to the beit din about my giyur tomorrow
It’s not the final meeting, they do a couple of "progress report" interviews (this one’s on hilchot shabbat) but still nerve-wracking
Last time I couldn’t sleep I was so anxious, I’m slightly less nervous this time but still shaking in my boots
Praying this goes well and that I’ll have another meeting soon 🤍
good news: i passed!!
bad news: there’s supposed to be like 8 weeks between interviews but the rosh beit din is going on vacation so i have to wait until september booooooooo
I’m talking to the beit din about my giyur tomorrow
It’s not the final meeting, they do a couple of "progress report" interviews (this one’s on hilchot shabbat) but still nerve-wracking
Last time I couldn’t sleep I was so anxious, I’m slightly less nervous this time but still shaking in my boots
Praying this goes well and that I’ll have another meeting soon 🤍
applied for a predoctoral program today!!
so, I was taking a survey on orthodox jewish english, and it had a bunch of phrases and examples of grammar that you had to answer if/how often you’d actually say them
and apparently my english is jewish to the point where i was baffled that some of those were not just…regular things to say
We need the link, if one exists!
for people asking for the link, here it is! It did say seeking participants from orthodox jewish backgrounds, so if that’s you and you feel like taking a survey, it was pretty fun!
Hmm the consent form says it's for people who are Modox. To take or not to take...
Lol who am I kidding, I can't pass this up. I hope it doesn't mess up the data 😬
"Felt badly for him" is yinglish?????????????? Are they sure????
anyway I am with you, a couple of them I was like "yes I am aware this is yinglish, goyim don't talk like this" but...
*takes long look in the mirror*
I need someone to translate all of those phrases into English for me, please.
how else would i say it
lollll it’s the ‘going ON’ rather than saying ‘going BY’, which would be the more grammatically correct way
"I felt badly for him" = "I felt bad for him."
In conventional English grammar, badly describes the manner in which you felt (you didn't do a good job feeling), bad describes what you felt for him.
Having seen that I'm starting to wonder if it's applicable for me. I'm Israeli, so my English in general wouldn't be normal. So maybe not because of that?
As someone with a linguistics background, I would expect you to use features of Orthodox Jewish English that are derived from Hebrew (ex. if/so construction), but not those that are derived from Yiddish (ex. nonstandard use of "should"). Unless you’ve spent a lot of time with Anglo Ashkes.
It would be interesting to see how you use (or avoid) Hebrew loanwords!
Take the survey, every data point is precious!
“Sunset over the Grocery Box,” by me. The view from my father’s front yard in January 2014.
“Sunset at the End of My Driveway (Excluding Pavements Covered With the Shite of One Million Dogs)” by me.
“Sunset from My Front Yard Taken on an iPod Touch in 2010″
“Sunset in Nov 2021 Taken in the Parking Lot of the Pharmacy”
Taken from a stepladder putting up Christmas lights
-2014, front yard
“Brewing Storm on an Evening Commute”
And “Finally, no Power Lines”
-Sept. 30, 2020, passenger seat of a moving Buick
Behind a near-defunct mall in super small-town OK. HUGE rays.
Park And See The View 2020
(it took seconds to happen)
Waiting for The Pharmacy Line to Move, 2021
Outside the McDonald’s Drive-Thru Window, 2018
Sunrise in early Mars 2022 at 05:09am, Walking Home from Work
Sunset from the commie bar I occasionally volunteer at, 2023, taken five minutes before someone tripped down the stairs with a glass bottle in their hand while singing the Internationale
Marble sky before I storm on my walk to the grocery store - 2023
some nondescript residential area that could be anywhere in the Netherlands - 2022
Sunset mackerel sky in Surrey, 2022
random train station 2018
Sunsets from my backyard, 2025
Butterfly sunlight, from the end of my driveway, 2025
Late Autumn Sunset at the Taco Bell, 2021
Sunset and The London Eye, As seen from the back of a speeding Uber on a rainy July evening because my feet finally gave out, 2023
both of these were taken on walks at 2020 or 2021
high school parking lot, 2016