WTH America!

Third times the charm with this baby! I don’t even want to tell you how long it took me to retype this. After the first attempt at posting I felt it was my duty to rewrite this topic from my perspective because there isn’t any better time than the present. You can see my initial reaction to WordPress not saving my work here, even after I had clicked on the save draft button numerous times.

While I have attempted to remain rather neutral on this issue, as Ezra Klein recently pointed out, doing just that is rather impossible and is a political act in itself.

Continue reading “WTH America!”

Lost in Translation…

Lost in Translation...

I asked my husband to pick up my prescription (das Rezept) from the Apotheke (pharmacy/chemist) as he himself had to go to the doctor (das Ärtze) today. This is what he brought home.

In other news, I am having an international baby, which has been preoccupying my time (along with a ton of work) as of late…sorry I haven’t really been around much.

FYI: Retardtabletten apparently means “prolonged release tablets”

The Kissing Sailor

On September 30, 2012 the Crates and Ribbons blog posted an excellent piece about “The kissing Sailor” and a follow up piece in response to all the comments the original post received. I highly recommend you read both blog posts as they offer something very important to ponder not only for American culture, but western culture and possibly even other cultures around the world that perpetuate ‘rape culture’ by making women secondary to men.

From The Kissing Sailor, Part 2:

“Our living in a rape culture doesn’t mean that everyone thinks rape is fantastic. What it does mean is a culture where rape and other forms of sexual violence are normalised, to be expected. It’s a culture where attitudes towards women’s bodies and attitudes towards perpetrators combine to tolerate and condone sexual violence, even while we pay lip service to the monstrosity of rape. It’s a culture where victims are criticised for their choice of clothing, their behaviour, and their sexual freedom, as though they are partly to blame for their fate. It’s a culture where women’s bodies are public property; they undergo scrutiny in the media, and weight gain in female celebrities like Christina Aguilera or Lady Gaga seems like a justification to hurl abuse at them. And the fact that Greta’s comments were given no attention in the news articles is certainly a manifestation of rape culture, contributing to and reflecting it.

[…]

I’m sorry that the term ‘rape culture’ makes people uncomfortable. But perhaps it’s time we stopped being comfortable. After all, it is when we start to acknowledge that society isn’t as perfect as we thought it was, that progress can be made.”

 

The Kissing Sailor, or “The Selective Blindness of Rape Culture”

and the follow up piece from October 5, 2012:

The Kissing Sailor, Part 2 – Debunking Misconceptions