Link Roundup!
Welcome back! We missed you! We may republish a few things you might have missed, but we may not. Poke around!
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Super cool old pictures of the Ross Sea Party.
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There is actually not much point in telling you if you live in a state where your signed DNR is automatically invalidated by being pregnant, but in case you want to know if you can be used as an incubator against your wishes and those of your family, here you go! Maybe you don’t want to be kept on a vent for eight months to bring a motherless child into the world, but, again, not your call. (I live in one of these states.) I mean, maybe you DO want that, which is also totally valid, so maybe they should make DNRs with a line that says “ignore this if I am pregnant/do not ignore this if I am pregnant,” and then you can make your own decision, which is surely what the government wants, right? Right?
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The New Inquiry has a piece on the intersection between libertarianism, biological determinism, and paleo diets, a synergy which is apparent to anyone who just wants to eat a lot of meat and vegetables and eggs in the privacy of their own home without also having to hear about Rond Paul (a portmanteau of my own invention.)
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We don’t want your breakup poems, but these people do!
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I was so late reading this fabulous Poirot retrospective, but, happily, they don’t really become dated after a month, do they?
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Virginia Woolf asks (well, “asked,” in 1924) what Jane Austen’s fiction would have become, had she lived longer:
Her sense of security would have been shaken. Her comedy would have suffered. She would have trusted less (this is already perceptible in Persuasion) to dialogue and more to reflection to give us a knowledge of her characters. Those marvelous little speeches which sum up in a few minutes’ chatter all that we need in order to know an Admiral Croft or a Mrs. Musgrove forever, that shorthand, hit-or-miss method which contains chapters of analysis and psychology, would have become too crude to hold all that she now perceived of the complexity of human nature. She would have devised a method, clear and composed as ever, but deeper and more suggestive, for conveying not only what people say, but what they leave unsaid; not only what they are, but (if we may be pardoned the vagueness of the expression) what life is. She would have stood further away from her characters, and seen them more as a group, less as individuals. Her satire, while it played less incessantly, would have been more stringent and severe. She would have been the forerunner of Henry James and of Proust—but enough. Vain are these speculations: she died “just as she was beginning to feel confidence in her own success.”
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This is a really interesting conversation, not really about Beethoven’s actual ethnicity, but about historiography and defensiveness and asking people to explain things to you, which is one of the reasons Medieval POC is an awesome Tumblr. Hat-tip to @sassycrass (who wrote this great thing for us.)
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Wisconsin is attempting to use cheese to de-ice their roads, because when all you have is a hammer…
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Depressing, yet informative, dispatch from the ACLU’s trip to GITMO.
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Tags: feminism, link roundup, the internet
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"You have to use provolone or mozzarella," and for whatever reason, that made me laugh for a good minute. I must be very tired.
I also saw you tweet about the DNR thing over the weekend and had my FLAMES ON THE SIDE OF MY FACE feelings then, and I honestly don't have it in me to feel that rage again… so I am refraining from clicking the link. Self restraint! Woo!
You must be tired?
I read 'libertarianism' as 'librarianism' three times and concluded that yes, the synergy is apparent… I suppose.
Sleep-reading: we are pros!
I LOVE MedievalPOC! It's got great points about the construction of whiteness vs "color" and just how much history we're *not* taught.
I am consistently glad I followed medievalPOC, but especially when the blogger uses their incredible collection of medieval art reaction images on people.
I just wish the conversation linked here didn't sound so angry and defensive. I feel like the squabbling tone on both sides obscures a really interesting question that I (and probably 90% of music/history majors) hadn't considered open. In short, where can I learn more, sans trolls?
My mom and I were leaving the gym together the other day (best part about being home on Christmas break is watching your mom totally school you in lifting weights) and the tv in the lobby had some Fox News man ranting about the DNR thing and my mom was LIVID. I told her I absolutely didn't want my DNR invalidated should that happen to me, but of course we live in Texas so my incubator status is sacred.
Anyway, she promised she would still sue on my behalf if it came to that.
I'm pregnant in Texas, and while I probably would want them to do whatever they can to make sure my baby gets as long as possible in the womb, it would be nice if that was my choice. It's beyond creepy that women would be forced to be a human incubator against their legally stated will. It also reminded me that I don't have a living will, and I definitely need one.
Totally. I would probably, as a woman with a partner and another child, want to be kept alive to deliver too, but I\’ll be damned if Utah should be able to decide that for me.
I saw the DNR thing when I was helping my parents fill out forms a while ago, and it made me LIVID. Thankfully not an issue for them — but it also made me realize how much the DNR / Advance Directive forms vary from state to state.
Maryland is great — who do you want your agent to talk to when making decisions? Do your wishes for a vegetative state differ from an end-state condition? Should anything be different during pregnancy? Do you want to donate specific organs? What funeral arrangements would you prefer?
Kansas, on the other hand, basically has no specifics, other than saying that nothing applies during pregnancy. If your state doesn't have very detailed forms, it might be helpful to look at another state — those are still the kinds of questions you should talk about with your agent, so they're not just wondering what you would have wanted. (And yes, I filled out all of these forms years ago as a healthy 23 year old, because you never know.)
A good source for state forms and things to think about (funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation): http://www.caringinfo.org/
Thanks for that; I had a chat with my mother over Xmas asking her to get on writing these things down, so having an easy link for her is helpful.
I'm job-hunting right now, and my parents keep asking me if I'll consider moving back to my home state. Between it having the automatic DNR invalidation rule and its recently passed and totally insane "rape insurance" law, I can comfortably tell them that there's NO WAY IN HELL THIS WILL HAPPEN.
The fact that, in 17 years, Minnesota went from being one of the ten states with URTIA (the second most restrictive pregnancy exclusion) to one of the five that specifically offer women a choice is pretty much a perfect microcosm of Minnesota politics.
ok, dumb question on the DNR thing — what does it mean if a state is not listed? Does that mean your advance directive is applied as written regardless of pregnancy status?
Did anyone else read the piece that ran in Carolyn Hax's column while she was away about contacting other people's doctors if you're worried about them? Because seriously what the hell was that.
I did, and I was APPALLED. Though a lot of the "while Carolyn is away" stuff was a bit… less than great.
True. I kind of assumed she would have some sort of veto power over these kinds of things, but either she doesn't or she let that one through anyway, neither of which is a fantastic option.
The streets really are paved with cheese, Feivel!
If I leave now, I can probably pick up a bunch of roadcheese and make it to Canada by nightfall… Could be my big break into the cheese-smuggling rings of Toronto! So long deskjob!
I am weeping for that waste of cheese.
It's the waste brine that they're using – not actual cheese! That headline is alarming though.
Exactly. The people of Wisconsin Use All Parts of the Cheesemaking Process.
Thank Toast this is back. My formerly non-evangelical friend is going on about leaning on the Lord and letting Him fight ones battles again, etc, and I really needed a damn good distraction.
Last night I realized that I forgot to order the " you can always take to the sea" shirt and I am saaaaaaaaaaaaaaad because that one was perfect for me in so many ways and I don't think I I'll really have the ovaries to wear the other one in public.
Wait when was that an option? HOW DID I MISS IT. I NEED THAT SHIRT. NEED IT.
/2013/12/09/psst-wanna-buy-wo…
Nicole and/or Mallory bring this one baccccccccccccckkkk! Pleeeeeeeeeeeeeeease!
Dunno if you guys caught this already, but Elizabeth Gilbert linked to you! https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=562683377…
thought that was pretty nifty.
Poirot! I can't wait to read this! I can, however, wait forever and a day to watch Curtain. As long as I never watch it, I will technically never run out of Poirot movies.
I had no idea the show was still running but now I know how I'm spending new year's!
DC Toastie Book Club Update – just sent out an e-mail with details on our first meeting. If you've e-mailed me before at any point, check your inbox!
I suppose I needed something else to be really, really pissed off about…And a convenient reminder that living wills are a thing I should totally get on top of at some point (and the standard dead person version as well, I suppose).