kat_lair: (GEN - cuervo)
kat_lair ([personal profile] kat_lair) wrote2025-06-18 02:07 pm

Cobra Starship Drabble: electric dreams

***

Title: electric dreams
Author:[personal profile] kat_lair
Fandom: Bandom, Cobra Starship
Pairing: Ryland/Alex
Tags: Drabble, Pining, Drunkenness
Rating: G
Word count: 100

Summary: Ryland can count the times he’s seen Alex drunk with one hand.

Author notes: 
Prompt = title

electric dreams
on AO3

electric dreams )

***

sovay: (Viktor & Mordecai)
sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2025-06-18 07:29 am
Entry tags:

Why don't you ever let me love you?

Allison Bunce's Ladies (2024) so beautifully photosets the crystalline haze of a sexual awakening that the thought experiment assigned by its writer-director-editor seems more extraneous than essential to its sensorily soaked seventeen-minute weekend, except for the queerness of keeping its possibilities fluid. The tagline indicates a choice, but the film itself offers something more liminal. Whatever its objectivity, what it tells the heroine is real.

It's more than irony that this blurred epiphany occurs in the none more hetero setting of a bachelorette weekend, whose all-girl rituals of cheese plates and orange wine on the patio and drunkenly endless karaoke in a rustically open-plan rental somewhere down the central coast of California are so relentlessly guy-oriented, the Bechdel–Wallace test would have booked it back up 101 after Viagra entered the chat. The goofiest, freakiest manifestation of the insistence on men are the selfie masks of the groom's face with which the bride's friends are supposed to pose as she shows off her veil in the lavender overcast of the driftwood-littered beach, but it's no less telling that as the conversation circles chronically around partners past and present, it's dudes all the way down. Even jokily, their twentysomething, swipe-right femininity admits nothing of women who love women, which leaves almost literally unspeakable the current between ginger-tousled, disenchanted Ruby (Jenna Lampe) and her lankier, longtime BFF Leila (Greer Cohen), the outsiders of this little party otherwise composed of blonde-bobbed Chloe (Ally Davis) and her flanking mini-posse of Grace (Erica Mae McNeal) and Lex (Tiara Cosme Ruiz), always ready to reassure their wannabe queen bee that she's not a bad person for marrying a landlord. "That's his passion!" They are not lovers, these friends who drove down together in Ruby's SUV. Leila has a boyfriend of three months whose lingering kiss at the door occasioned an impatiently eye-rolling horn-blare from Ruby, herself currently single after the latest in a glum history of heterosexual strike-outs: "No, seriously, like every man subconsciously stops being attracted to me as soon as I tell him that I don't want to have kids." And yet the potential thrums through their interactions, from the informality of unpacking a suitcase onto an already occupied bed to the nighttime routine of brushing their teeth side by side, one skimming her phone in bed as the other emerges from the shower and unselfconsciously drops her towel for a sleep shirt, climbing in beside her with such casual intimacy that it looks from one angle like the innocence of no chance of attraction, from another like the ease of a couple even longer established than the incoming wedding's three years. "He's just threatened by you," Leila calms the acknowledgement of antipathy between her boyfriend and her best friend. It gets a knowing little ripple of reaction from the rest of the group, but she even as she explains for their tell-all curiosity, she's smiling over at her friend at the other end of the sofa, an unsarcastic united front, "Probably because he knows I love her more than him."

Given that the viewer is encouraged to stake out a position on the sex scene, it does make the most sense to me as a dream, albeit the kind that reads like a direct memo from a subconscious that has given up waiting for dawn to break over Marblehead. It's gorgeous, oblique, a showcase for the 16 mm photography of Ryan Bradford at its most delicately saturated, the leaf-flicker of sun through the wooden blinds, the rumpling of a hand under a tie-dyed shirt, a shallow-breasted kiss, a bunching of sheets, all dreamily desynched and yet precisely tactile as a fingernail crossing a navel ring: "Tell me if you want me to move my hand." Ruby's lashes lie as closed against her cheeks as her head on the pillow throughout. No wonder she looks woozy the next morning, drinking a glass of water straight from the tap as if trying to cool down from skin-buzzing incubus sex, the edge-of-waking fantasy of being done exactly as she dreamt without having to ask. "Spread your legs, then." Scrolling through their sunset selfie session, she zooms and lingers on the two of them, awkwardly voguing back to back for the camera. She stares wordlessly at Leila across the breakfast table, ἀλλ’ ἄκαν μὲν γλῶσσα ἔαγε λέπτον δ’ αὔτικα χρῶι πῦρ ὐπαδεδρόμηκεν to the life. Chloe is rhapsodizing about her Hallmark romance, but Ruby is speaking to her newly sensitized desires: "I just really hate that narrative, though. Pretending that you don't want something in the hopes that you'll get the thing that you're pretending that you don't want? Like, it just doesn't make any sense." It is just not credible to me that Leila who made such a point of honesty in relationships would pretend that nothing had happened when she checks in on her spaced-out friend with quizzical concern, snuggles right back into that same bed for an affectionate half-argument about her landlord potential. "I'm sure there are dishwasher catalogues still being produced somewhere in the world." Still, as if something of the dream had seeped out Schrödinger's between them, we remember that it was Leila who winkled her way into an embrace of the normally standoffish Ruby, who had her arms wrapped around her friend as she delivered what sure sounded like a queerplatonic proposal: "Look, if we both end up single because we both don't want kids, at least we'll have each other. We can have our own wedding." The last shots of the film find them almost in abstract, eyes meeting in the rear view mirror, elbows resting on the center console as the telephone poles and the blue-scaled Pacific flick by. It promises nothing and feels like a possibility. Perhaps it was not only Ruby's dream.

I can't know for certain, of course, and it seems to matter to the filmmaker that I should not know, but even if all that has changed is Ruby's own awareness, it's worth devoting this immersive hangout of a short film to. The meditative score by Karsten Osterby sounds at once chill and expectant, at times almost drowning the dialogue as if zoning the audience out into Ruby. The visible grain and occasional flaw in the film keep it haptically grounded, a memento of Polaroids instead of digitally-filtered socials. For every philosophizing moment like "Do you ever have those dreams where you wake up and you go about your day and get ready and everything feels normal, but then you wake up and you're still in bed, so you're like, 'Oh, was I sleeping or was that real?'" there's the ouchily familiar beat where Ruby and Leila realize simultaneously that neither of them knows the name of Chloe's fiancé, just the fact that he's a landlord. Whatever, it's an exquisite counterweight to heteronormativity, a leaf-light of queerness at the most marital-industrial of times. I found it on Vimeo and it's on YouTube, too. This catalogue brought to you by my single backers at Patreon.
iq: (Default)
iq ([personal profile] iq) wrote2025-06-17 11:00 pm
Entry tags:

Daily Grateful

Grateful! For society-supporting behaviours. For lemon curd. For my seasonal traditions.
shadowkat: (Default)
shadowkat ([personal profile] shadowkat) wrote2025-06-17 12:01 pm

The Weekly Good News Report from the American Resistance & It's Global Allies

[Note, I'm home sick or under the weather at the moment, so apologies for typos, etc - due to brain fog.]

As always, Good News is more often than not in the eyes of the beholder. So mileage may vary.

1. 13.14 Million or 4% of the population of the US came out and protested for "No Kings". "We’re honored to announce a final count of 13.14 million in attendance across 2,300+ No Kings protests nationwide. It took a little longer to finalize due to the sheer scale, but the turnout was historic!
So far, 71 MAGA agitators have been arrested, with 62 additional investigations still underway. We’re actively reviewing online threats and working on escalating where needed. If you see something, say something." - per Alt National Parks.

What does this mean: The 3.5% Rule or How a small minority can change the world
excerpt )

2. 81% of U.S. adults say that if a federal court rules that an action is illegal, then Trump has to follow its ruling, per NBC poll. Among Trump supporters, 50% agree.

3. From limiting who can purchase most semiautomatic rifles on the market today to raising the minimum age to buy ammunition, Colorado Democrats in the Colorado legislature were busy this year imposing new gun regulations - specifically in the state of Colorado.

The 12 gun bills passed by the Colorado legislature this year and signed into law

4. Disgraced Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein has been found guilty of committing a sex crime by a jury in New York, more than a year after the state Supreme Court overturned his 2020 conviction on felony sex crime charges. Read more... )

https://www.msnbc.com/top-stories/latest/harvey-weinstein-guilty-retrial-sex-crime-new-york-rcna202460

5.The House approves four nominees to the governing board of the Office of Congressional Conduct, providing the board with enough members to operate and continue its role of investigating and uncovering misconduct by Congress members.

https://campaignlegal.org/update/win-ethics-clc-partners-succeed-preserving-office-congressional-conduct

6.Library of Congress employees uphold the Constitution’s separation of powers by not admitting two DOJ officials appointed by the president to lead the agency who have not been confirmed by the Senate.

https://www.cnn.com/2025/05/12/politics/library-of-congress-trump-justice-blanche?bt_ee=2QgjkqKxaHyuagkHOeb0m6RbI2h%2FZ9394%2B4e4zEovFoF9q%2BF2LTnhSUP%2BuXHEzeX&bt_ts=1747140898649

7.A federal court orders the administration to promptly facilitate contact between Widmer Josneyder Agelviz Sanguino and his lawyers after immigration enforcement illegally deported Sanguino to a notoriously abusive prison in El Salvador.

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/venezuelan-man-admitted-us-refugee-sent-salvadoran-prison-rcna207642

8.Six weeks after being seized off the streets and detained under a false claim by DHS, doctoral student Rümeysa Öztürk is released from ICE detention to resume her studies and live in the community while attorneys seek reinstatement of her visa.

https://www.cnn.com/2025/05/09/us/rumeysa-ozturk-tufts-bail-release

9. Attorneys general from 20 states file two lawsuits against the administration over its threats to illegally withhold billions of congressionally allocated funds from states if they don’t meet federal immigration enforcement demands.

https://thehill.com/homenews/5298257-20-states-sue-trump-administration-grants-immigration-enforcement/

10. Colorado becomes the ninth state to pass a state-level Voting Rights Act into law.

https://coloradonewsline.com/2025/05/12/polis-signs-voting-rights-act-colorado/

11.Florida: A bill that would have required proof of U.S. citizenship when registering to vote fails to advance in the legislature.

https://floridaphoenix.com/2025/05/08/the-failed-florida-election-bill-that-angered-voting-rights-and-voting-integrity-advocates-alike/

the rest )

Okay, I found 98 items. And I'm tired.

[I feel at times that reading through the news is akin to watching a television serial with a really annoying villain, and I keep thinking, come on writers, kill it already. But alas no, they kill off the characters I like instead. I want new writers. That said, it's not all doom and gloom, there's spots of good news in there - actually more good than bad if you know where to look - and depending on your perspective. I've been watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer - and it's not only weirdly comforting for a horror series, but also made me a bit hopeful and optimistic.]

Good night and Good Luck all.

I'd cough you to sleep, but I think that would be a tad discomforting? So here's a photo of a flower instead:


kat_lair: (BH - mitchell red)
kat_lair ([personal profile] kat_lair) wrote2025-06-17 07:34 pm

Being Human Drabble: Home

***

Title: Home
Author:[personal profile] kat_lair
Fandom: Being Human (UK)
Pairing: Annie/George/Mitchell implied
Tags: Drabble, Dark, Codependency, Alternate Universe - Dystopia
Rating: T
Word count: 100

Summary: The house smells of old roses and dried blood.

Author notes: 
Prompt = "You don’t get to leave. Not again."

Home on AO3

Home )

***

iq: (Default)
iq ([personal profile] iq) wrote2025-06-17 02:06 am
Entry tags:

Daily Grateful

Grateful! For keeping my temper. For translucent stars. For finding the celebratory nibbles.
sovay: (Sovay: David Owen)
sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2025-06-17 01:59 am

With that you're-on-camera smile like she wants to try me on

Shortly after we had headed off to collect fish and chips for dinner with my mother, [personal profile] spatch's delivery of "Frying tonight!" led into my description of Kenneth Williams as the "total package." We had earlier in the day been discussing the cultural relativity of communicating in quotations. At one point in order to indicate that it was time to leave the house, I called, "To the lighthouse!"

(Fresh Pond Seafood gave us extra of everything and I had a lovely interaction with a young trans woman wearing all the jewelry she had been able to find in her newly moved house. The treasury looked spectacular on her, especially the rhyme of the silver heart bangle on her wrist with her heart-framed, literally rose-tinted glasses.)

WERS has introduced me to Muna's "Silk Chiffon (feat. Phoebe Bridgers)" (2021), which I assume is on rotation either because it's Pride or because it's a banger. I am as incapable of selecting one favorite fictional lesbian as any other single shot, but the first contenders look like the ironclad classics of Florian del Guiz in Mary Gentle's Ash: A Secret History (2000), Manke and Rifkele in Sholem Asch's גאָט פֿון נעקאָמע/God of Vengeance (1907), and Corky and Violet in the Wachowskis' Bound (1996).
radiantfracture: a white rabbit swims underwater (water rabbit)
radiantfracture ([personal profile] radiantfracture) wrote2025-06-16 11:00 pm
kat_lair: (LoM - sam)
kat_lair ([personal profile] kat_lair) wrote2025-06-16 08:10 pm

LoM Drabble: Boiling Point

***

Title: Boiling Point
Author:[personal profile] kat_lair
Fandom: Life of Mars (UK)
Character: Sam Tyler
Tags: Drabble, Summer, Hot Weather
Rating: G
Word count: 100

Summary: Something will boil over soon.

Author notes: 
Brace yourselves, 14 drabbles in 14 different fandoms coming your way over the next 14 days. But you knew I was a snake multifandom bitch when you took me in subscribed so ¯\_(ツ)_/¯   Prompt = title

Boiling Point on AO3

Boiling Point )

***
sovay: (What the hell ass balls?!)
sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2025-06-16 04:19 am

When you go to hell, I'll go there with you, too

I wish to express my strenuous distaste for this week starting off with the curtain rod falling onto my head as I stepped into the shower with such force that [personal profile] spatch heard the noise of stainless steel onto skull from the bedroom. It hurt appallingly. It still doesn't feel so hot. I called after-hours care and was duly presented with a checklist of symptoms of concussion and brain bleed to watch out for, an activity not exactly compatible with attempting to plunge myself into unconsciousness for the few short hours before I need to be functional for already scheduled calls and appointments. I would like to know who I need to sacrifice to get a break. I always liked haruspicy. I know it's your own liver that counts.
iq: (Default)
iq ([personal profile] iq) wrote2025-06-15 10:49 pm
Entry tags:

Daily Grateful

Grateful! For communicating via colour. For 3.5%. For learning correct pronunciation.
serafaery: (Default)
serafaery ([personal profile] serafaery) wrote2025-06-15 06:45 pm

father's day when your dad is dead.

there is no lonelier feeling, than sitting with my in-laws, listening to them talk about family members, and having no family of my own other than an estranged brother, no kids, no parents, no way to relate, no history with these people, no cousins in contact, no stories to share. And being shown pictures of someone's toddler eating spaghetti, as if it's supposed to mean something to me.

it didn't help that today my husband was in one of his autism moods where he just sat and silently scowled at the table the entire time and refused to answer any questions, other than to shake his head dismissively and keep scowling. I am hypervigilant and was trained to never allow anyone to sit unhappy, lest I risk my worthiness of being part of the family at all, so when he does this it makes me unbearably uneasy. he can't understand or care or even be brought to the awareness to even consider the effect he might be having on others when he acts this way.

...

My in-laws are perfectly lovely people, there is nothing wrong with them, and I cannot expect them to keep in mind or understand what it's like for me to keep going through these holidays with them, it isn't their fault, they never met my parents because they weren't here to meet, when Josh and I started dating, they don't know, and it's my fault for refusing to talk about it, I don't want to bring everyone down.

Josh is usually not like this and I love him to pieces, so I am diving into work and not lashing out at him about it, I know he doesn't understand how painful this is for me. I will explain later when I am feeling better and will maybe avoid Mother's/Father's day going forward. I've been trying to hard to connect with my in-laws in a meaningful way and I just need a break. I am emotionally spent.

I'd say I miss my dad, but I honestly don't right now. I miss having one, and he was great, but he left when I was a toddler, I barely knew him, I know he did his best but he never really parented me. It wasn't his fault. I am not mad at him. But I do have neglect and abandonment issues. I had to sort of realize how much he sucked as a father this year and it has been really painful, a big part of me wanted to glorify him and that has kind of fallen apart. One of his cousins who found me online back when he died sent me a letter he had written to his sister back in the early 90s, I was a young teenager, and he got my birthday entirely wrong in this letter, neither the day or the month were close at all. (I have always been annoyed that my brother also can't remember my birthday.) Dad was a chronic drug and alcohol user so I can't really expect him to have been able to remember things clearly, but how sad is that, that he didn't even know when my birthday was.

...

Edited to add: Josh came into my room once I was done with work tonight and apologized, slightly tearfully. He realized it must have been a hard day for me. "I got tired." He was slightly teary. Poor thing. It was very sweet. He's good.

My dad was a good person, too. He did his best, he really did. He came from poverty and had absolutely no support or modeling of any kind, as far as I could tell. And he gave me all the love he had to give, while he was here. I can't really ask for more than that. I know many people didn't really feel loved by their fathers, I am grateful that he was kind and loving with me. We were all so lost and confused, trying to navigate the world together, our little substance-soaked dysfunctional family, sigh.

...

So much has happened and I've wanted to come journal so many times in the past week or so, but I'm just barely stumbling through my days and I am so tired. I am doing my best to process what life will look like going forward with bone spurs and arthritis and no hope for any sort of treatment. I am trying to adjust to a new activity level. I continue to gain weight instead of lose any, I think part of this is the estrogen I am taking, but most of it is stress. I need to do something about my stress levels. My CRP is 1, which is mildly elevated, this is typical of people suffering with depression. sigh. Chronic stress is so bad for our bodies.

Josh and I tried so hard to hunt for houses, we've looked at so many places, but honestly, despite all of our hard work and efforts, we can't afford anything worth buying, in or around Portland. We feel drained and demoralized and very defeated. We hate living in this apartment complex, but we are afraid moving to rent some other apartment will end up somehow being even worse.

It's still possible we could end up buying a very old dark quirky weird low-ceilinged not-level-floored tiny 2br house in Tigard, a distant suburb, which would mean an hour of driving for me each work day at the studio. But. We would not have to deal with all of these random water shut-offs, these astronomical utility bills (they charge us far more than anyone in any house we know pays, like at least double, for our little 2br 1bath apartment, it is a corrupt management company that is notorious for this and there are documented cases of them doing this to renters in other complexes, but no lawyers are willing to help us, we pay 400+ a month for water and electricity), Josh being interrupted during calls, the theft and vandalism and screaming that goes on from all the campers in the neighborhood, our windows getting banged on by prowlers, who stake out apartments here weekly, not to mention the dog upstairs that tried to kill my cat. The little house in Tigard has a yard, it would be hell to maintain (so much bamboo! a wall of arborvitae! grass on a slope!) but I could build an enclosure for Avalanche, to give her safe outdoor space in which to play. I would feel bad for Josh having to work in a weird dark low-ceilinged office, which would also be his bedroom. I don't know. It doesn't seme right to buy a house sheerly because we loathe our apartment experience so much, when we don't really like the house. It's not horrible, but we would not be at all excited about it, we would be trying to make do, which just sucks. It's all of our savings, it seems like it should maybe be something we actually like and would want to live in. But no such thing in our budget exists. So. What do you do. I'm so tired of thinking about it.
shadowkat: (Default)
shadowkat ([personal profile] shadowkat) wrote2025-06-15 05:52 pm

(no subject)

Methinks I've contracted a chest cold, or a head cold, feels like a chest cold. Lovely, I need to get blood work done on Thursday, and have a virtual appointment on Friday. I'll just wear a mask on Thursday. Also, apparently for most of this week.

I blame Breaking Bad, whose been under the weather of late. Or the subway.
God knows.

I did not go protest in the No Kings Protests yesterday, outside of the fact that I was feeling poorly and not sleeping well, so exhausted, plus digestive issues (one does not march with digestive issues in a huge city with no easily accessible bathrooms - it's just not done), and bum knees, with a sciatic nerve. The people doing it in their walkers, just protested outside of their homes on the sidewalk, not quite the same thing.

Not that I feel guilty or anything. (well maybe a little).

The official count is 12.1 million. Palantir is collecting data for the evil Empire (aka Trump Administration and his Republican cronies), so various sources have put up protections and aren't re-posting videos, photos, or addresses any longer. Things are starting to get heated in the US, and I'm not quite sure where its headed. I most likely have the same news resources that you all have, so we're kind of in it together?

Between the chest congestion, digestive issues, lack of sleep, sciatic nerve, and the news...I've fallen into a malaise of sorts and am finding it difficult to concentrate. As a result, I didn't get any of the things I intended to do - done this weekend. Oh well, I did at least do some exercises, took out the trash, and got a lot of water. (The water went out in my building on Friday night, so I went and picked up some.)

Did finish watching a few things of note:

1. Dept. Q on Netflix. Will it get a second season? Forbes thinks so, since Netflix submitted it for the Emmy's and doesn't tend to do that otherwise - also it got a good reception. But honestly, it's Netflix, so who knows?
It's a mixed bag, and I agree with the critics. Excellent performances, Mathew Good is rather brilliant in it, as is the rest of the cast. But, like most of these mystery series - it spends far too much time on the convoluted sadistic Case of the Arc or Lost Case, and not enough on the other mysteries. Read more... )

That said? Compelling characters, and I want to see more of them, and I liked them. Also I want more of the series. So...I was like all of the other critics willing to handwave the Lost Case.

2. Season 2 of My Buffy Re-watch

Take aways? Becoming Part II is a lot better than Becoming Part I, mainly for the Spike, Buffy, and Joyce scenes. Also the Drusilla, Jenny, Angel and Giles scenes. It's a lot more fun, and a little less on the campy/cheesy side.
See more )

3. Murderbot I'm about five episodes in? Saw the latest at any rate, and kept falling asleep during it. It's a slow series. The books were too.
It's funny, but there's too much time spent on the space opera parody that the Murderbot is a fan of. Yes, yes, I get what the writers are doing there, but a little parody goes a long ways. I kept going to sleep.

4. Andor - it's almost too political for its own good. And convoluted. Reminds me a little of the second of the Star Wars prequels, which was also very political. I'm enjoying it, but my attention kept drifting today during it, which again may be due to an overall lack of focus on my part.

***

In the 60sF/10sC, wet and rainy. I've stayed in, since I'm a bit under the weather and tired. I'm supposed to go on a tour of Grand Central tomorrow with the big headhoncho, but I may cancel and just hide in my cubicle.
This chest cold is threatening to be annoying. Maybe it's just allergies?

Good news, is it is a short work week. I have Thursday and Friday off. So just have to somehow get through Monday through Wed.
kat_lair: (Default)
kat_lair ([personal profile] kat_lair) wrote2025-06-15 08:59 pm
Entry tags:

spag check?

***

Anyone feel like doing a spag check on 9k of m/m fic in a fandom i cannot name for ~reasons~?  It is E rated but has nothing in it that would require a specific kink tag. 

Volunteer rewarded with gratitude and a ficlet of their choice in any fandom I know enough to write in or original.


Goal achieved, thank you [personal profile] smallhobbit!

***
radiantfracture: All is not well (Ian's Eye)
radiantfracture ([personal profile] radiantfracture) wrote2025-06-15 09:47 am
Entry tags:

A book, a Blight, a light in the deep and obscure night

Happy book birthday to Rachel Ash Rosen's Blight, second in the Sleep of Reason trilogy.

I am excited to see this book in the world! The author is Known to Me as a fine stylist and a word-puncher on behalf of this often desperate global conspiracy we call trying to keep our human hearts alive.

(I consulted on the future aquatic subduction of my home city for this series and have no regrets.)

What is this book about? I will quote:

anti-fascism, revolution, queer longing, and like, giant fucking bone tentacles.

Would you like to read about a different end to the world? One in which, the characters, like you, have survived and find ways to make meaning and keep fighting after unimaginable loss?

Maybe you will like it, in that case.


(I was tempted to remove the "maybe" there, but my training tells me not to alter the sense of a quotation. Anyway. You will like it.)

Places to order Blight:

From the publisher

From the big river with all the books

From Books2Read


§rf§
iq: (Default)
iq ([personal profile] iq) wrote2025-06-14 10:10 pm
Entry tags:

Daily Grateful

Grateful! For a brain that stalls in useful ways. For shinier queries. For showing up however you can.
sovay: (Mr Palfrey: a prissy bastard)
sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2025-06-14 10:49 pm

Perform the ritual that puts me in the part

Being left to my own devices this week with a pile of unfamiliar Agatha Christie, I naturally read them one after the other. I have nothing especially to note about Why Didn't They Ask Evans? (1934) or The Sittaford Mystery (1931) except that it turned out to be a duplicate of the US-titled The Murder at Hazelmoor and I swapped it out for Dolores Hitchens' Cat's Claw (1943), but Christie's They Came to Baghdad (1951) is a reasonably wild ride of a novel which mixes several different flavors of spy thriller with a romance conducted on an archaeological dig at Tell Aswad, which I didn't even need to bet myself had been excavated by Max Mallowan. Minus the nuclear angle, its global conspiracy is right out of an interwar thriller—Christie to her credit defuses much of the potential for antisemitism with references to Siegfried and supermen instead—as is its Ambler-esque heroine gleefully launching herself into international intrigue with little more than her native wits and talent for straight-faced improvisation, but its spymaster is proto-le Carré, the chronically shabby, fiftyish, vague-looking Dakin, a career disappointment rumored to drink who never looks any less tired when dealing with affairs of endangered state. He gave me instant Denholm Elliott and never seems to have recurred in another novel of Christie's, alas. I made scones with candied ginger and sour cherries and lemon tonight.
shadowkat: (Default)
shadowkat ([personal profile] shadowkat) wrote2025-06-14 09:46 pm

No Kings Day...2025

On the day that a wannabe king held a military parade (allegedly) in favor of his seventy-ninth birthday [in reality it was for the Army's 250th Birthday and the army was in very poor spirits, shuffling down the road - they also protested in their own way by marching to Creedence Clearwater's Fortunate Son] - across the United States, in all fifty states and territories, and in and around Europe inclusive of London, Paris, Frankfurt, Berlin, etc, people marched and protested against the wannabe king, and all dictatorships, fascism and kings, peacefully, side by side, carrying signs and singing songs in protest. Shouting so all could be heard: This is what Democracy Looks Like!

Over 11 million [ETA: actual headcount is now 12.1 Million] or 3.5% of the overall population showed up in the US alone [as reported by Alt National Parks and those who counted on the ground and provided reports as they happened - they use drones, and handcounters apparently, and multiple by size of crowd and square footage of the area], more than any other protest on record in the United States. They marched in solidarity and peacefully. Waving signs. They marched in the rain. It was pouring in New York City and in the sixities. They marched in scorching heat, across the Southwest and in California and in Florida, and Mississippi, and Texas. Veterans marched up the Capital Steps, and elderly women from nursing homes came out in their wheelchairs and canes and walkers, to march in their small communities. They stood on sidewalks in Metropolitan DC waving signs, and along highways, in towns. They formed signs with their bodies along the beaches of California. And in Mountain Towns they shouted down the slopes. They came out in droves. Filling city blocks for as far the eye could see.

All chanting. No Kings. Impeach. Remove. This is What Democracy Looks Like.

From sea to shining sea. Every single State across the country showed up and protested the wannabe king. Every one.

While very few attended the military parade, which had prepared for 200,000 and got maybe 10,000 [ETA:8,900 was the official count, don't trust the broadcast news media - they are lying. It was 8,900.] if that. And many were people protesting it, discreetly.

NYC outdid itself, with about 25,000 by 9 am, after noon, it had risen to well over 50,000, among the largest protests in its history astonishing those who've gone to them. San Francisco got creative and made Human Banner that can be seen from the sky ...



The police stood silently by. Some helped and marched with them.



They protested in small towns across America. They protested on Long Island. They protested in Alaska. They protested in Boise, and they protested in Grand Rapids. They protested in Arizona and in Texas. They protested in Nashville, Tennessee, and Talahassee, Florida. They protested in Red States and in Blue States. They came out rain or shine.

The people came and stood shoulder to shoulder, shouting and waving signs.
No Kings! No Kings! No ICE! Everyone is legal here! This is what true Democracy Looks Like!

And those of us who watched, cheered them on, and were there in spirit if not in body.

Links:

NBC NEWS - No Kings Day Protests

ABC NEWS - No Kings

https://www.lohud.com/story/news/2025/06/14/livestream-video-of-no-kings-protests-from-across-the-us-how-to-watch/84200645007/

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/no-kings-day-demonstration-protest-rally-trump-military-parade/

ETA:Mid-year estimates: U.S. pop is 345,275,807. Which puts 12 million at 3.5 percent. (If 3.5% of the population protests continuously, studies state they win. )

ETA:*Note a No Kings Rally wasn't held in Washington DC - and held instead in Philly, which had over 100K show up. Also people did protest in DC, they stood on the sidewalks holding signs in the Metropolitan Area, and some went to the parade to protest discreetly, but bravely, making their voices heard.

ETA: per the headcounters in their towns - posting on FB, it's reliable. They were on the ground and counting and got it from their local outlets.
the headcount in various cities, towns and villages across the US for the protests - pretty much all the towns and cities came out to protest on Saturday, regardless of weather. Do not trust the broadcast networks - they are run by corporations. )