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I know it feels good as fuck to cast spells from up there

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Took a brief detour today to read “Genocide Bad” by Sim Kern. I don’t feel like this warrants a full analysis; I was debating even reading it because the title alone is childish and off-putting, but I see it recommended a lot, and it’s a very quick read. I meant for this to be shorter, but I had a lot to say; I think their writing is very reflective of the average American who gets their news from social media, and that made it a very different read from academic texts. There’s a lot to be angry at in here, but also a lot to laugh at.
- Sim Kern describes themself as “Jewish in a secular, patrilineal, fun-holidays-only kind of way”. They are a middle school teacher, YA author, and self-described “influencer” and “Booktoker.” The book is written with about the level of maturity you would expect from someone who spends all of their time either on social media or around thirteen year-olds; chapter one ends: “If we can free Palestine, we can save the world, and if we can’t free Palestine, we’re all fucked!” This is the general tone of the book.
- They vehemently deny being a self-hating Jew, and I don’t like using that phrasing, but what was very clear is that — while they might not hate themself, they do hate Judaism. “The Book of Joshua is morally repulsive to me. Many of the commandments G-d gives to Moses are morally repulsive to me. The G-d of the Torah’s genocidal plans are morally repulsive to me. And Abraham, the first Jew, is morally repulsive to me…. I’m too horrified by the foundational text of Judaism, on its face, to want to spend my precious life grappling with its hidden meanings. Not when there are so many other books to read!” I’m reminded of the Wicked child at the Seder.
- The other media that they consume seems to primarily consist of the Hunger Games, which is very inappropriately used as a framing device for Israel/Palestine for the better part of a chapter, and Star Wars, where Yahya Sinwar is inexplicably and heroically compared to Obi War Kenobi. I actually felt so embarrassed for them reading this. They want to be Katniss Everdeen so badly.
- I have this theory, that a lot of grade school teachers think they know everything, and everyone is eagerly waiting to hear their great knowledge, because their job is to talk at length in front of very small people who have everything to learn. And this isn’t inherently a bad thing; I’m very grateful for teachers everywhere. However, sometimes, in areas where they are not the authority, I think it’s necessary to take a step back and ask “do I actually know what I’m talking about and is my opinion needed?”
- “Even I, a Jew, can’t look at a Star of David without feeling sick to my stomach. I flinch at the sight of it, the same way I flinch at the Confederate Flag. I’ve packed away in the attic all our Judaica, because I can’t stand to look at it anymore. Thanks for that, Israel!…. If it would do Palestinians any good for me to renounce my Jewishness… and cease referring to myself as a Jew, I would do so in a heartbeat.” This is odd. Antizionism has become their primary self-identifier.
- When they talked about the complications they had in labor during the birth of their child, they paused and interrupted to tell us that really, they couldn’t complain, because Gazans had it worse. That’s not a normal way to process the milestones of your life on a different continent. They switch away from their Jewish doctor because they “needed a C-section and [were] too scared to go under the knife of a potential Zionist.” They see a Jewish family in kippot in their neighborhood and “couldn’t sleep that night for fear of the Jews living across the street.” I think Adam Louis Klein said that what most defined antisemitism to him was obsession, and that comes through in every line of this book; Kern acts deeply unstable and proud of upending their life over nothing.
- When they talked about getting into Harvard, they mentioned that they were probably selected due to a Jewish poem they wrote, because Harvard is controlled by Zionists (considering the writing quality, I kind of wish that were true). The online backlash to their “Palestinian advocacy,” was probably just an Israeli bot farm trying to silence brave truth-speakers. Their YA novel was rejected from major publishers, probably because of Zionists (I’m reminded of Xiran Jay Zhao). They fully endorse Khazar theory in a very uncomfortable, blood-and-soil way, while admitting that they know nothing about genetics, and misrepresent what the Hannibal Directive was. I genuinely don’t know if this is ignorance or malice; they are a terrible researcher and clearly got their sources from social media before bothering to find an article that vaguely supports their claim (Our primary sources for this book are Al Jazeera and Middle Eastern Eye; hilariously, Mamdani’s dad makes an appearance, as does an instagram post).
- This is interesting: “Palestinian Jews, continuing to resist Zionist aggression, might still have some claim to indigeneity. But those who embrace the Mizrahi identity gleefully serve in the IDF… they have become colonizers. And a colonizer is not indigenous.” See, I could take this same argument back a thousand years and say that indigenous Jews who converted to Islam to rule over the Dhimmis became colonizers. Their entire argument is that the indigenous people are the good guys and the colonizers are the bad guys, and if you switch loyalty to the wrong side, you’re also one of the bad guys. This is the Star Wars metaphor again! This has nothing to do with the actual people living on the land. They’ve turned an actual war into a fandom war.
- “Indigenous people wouldn’t uproot olive trees. Indigenous people would not have drained the marshlands [for the love of G-d please learn about Roman deforestation and malaria]. Indigenous people wouldn’t have broken up the West Bank into 227 enclaves.” Do you genuinely think that indigenous people are magical elven beings with a special metaphysical connection to the land who always make correct policy decisions? Look at what the indigenous people of Britain have done to their island. We’re using fairytale logic.
- This person is, unfortunately, responsible for Holocaust education in Houston, Texas. They decided to read the Protocols to prepare for this. They pause for a moment to say that the Protocols are a forgery, of course, and not an actual historical text — but that doesn’t really matter because Israel is doing everything in them anyway. They actually recommend reading the Protocols to learn about Zionism. They are outraged and indignant that their Jewish family members have called them antisemitic and cut ties with them.
- What does being Jewish mean to Kern? “Ethnically, I have Ashkenazi ancestry — that fact can’t be changed — but why consider calling myself a Jew? Because I like the pretty lights and fried potatoes of Hanukkah? Because I like to pepper my vocabulary with a little Yiddish, for spice?” They do add in occasional Yiddish words with footnote definitions: “mishpocha is a Yiddish word for family, a term I lovingly use to refer to my followers on social media.” They also helpfully define terms like “fascism” for us: “a fascist government is a capitalist government without the nice window-dressings of neoliberalism.” I feel bad for their students.
- They do some surface level research into the ways that Jews were persecuted in Christian Europe, and tie this to paganism and the witch-hunts. They seem a lot more interested in the pagans than the Jews. They skim over Mizrahi history, and blame the expulsions on Zionists. We neglect the effect that Naziism had on Arab countries at the time. They claim the Dhimmi protected the Jews, who “didn’t have to” (weren’t allowed to) serve in the army, taking the word at its literal meaning and glossing over the centuries of discrimination and humiliation (“This is our land and the Jews are our dogs”). Again, their arguments are based on whether the good or the evil side is acting, rather than the actions themselves. I could say that the Palestinians of Israel are under the special protection of the IDF because they don’t have to serve in the army, but that would be dishonest; we both know that serving in the army is not the primary marker of status in society.
- I’m immensely unimpressed by their persecution complex. They’re scared of Jews because of online backlash to their TikTok account, and imaginary Zionists pulling the strings to harm their YA novelist career. In my actual neighborhood, I’ve seen a synagogue firebombed by antizionists and cannot walk to the store without seeing graffiti calling for violence against Jews; I have known someone who was shot and killed in the street by a man shouting Free Palestine, and polls in my country find that 50% of Muslims hold antisemitic views, but I’m not going to lose my mind and have a panic attack if I see a woman in hijab on the street, because I thought we all agreed a few years ago that being afraid of people on the basis of their religion and ethnicity is bad, actually. If an Arab man walks up to me and calls me sister, I’m going to talk to him, not run home and hide. It’s a lot harder to be afraid of the people in your community if you take the time to get to know them. That’s part of why I’m reading these books; having read Khalidi and Pappé and whatever the hell this is, I feel a lot less afraid. Antizionism is a house of cards; it is built on lies and therefore fragile. If you’re so afraid of Zionists that you can’t walk past a Jew in the streets, I think that says a lot more about you than the Jews.
- What happens to half the world’s Jews when Palestine is free? Easy answer for Kern: they don’t care. A whole chapter is titled “Debunking Hasbara: ‘Won’t somebody please think of the colonizers?’” Yes. Seven million Jews live there and both Palestinian governments are invested in killing all of them. What happens to the Jews is half of the equation here.
- Here’s one of the last pages: “Wouldn’t it be nice, Zionists, to put down the fear and hate?” I don’t know if they’re talking to themself or to the Jews.
- As with Pappé, I was curious to see their answer to the question: “what does a free Palestine look like?” The answer is “sounds of winds, waves, and children laughing, no drones, bombardment, gunfire, or screaming.” Sounds nice, if vague. How to we get from here to there? Their proposed idea for a Palestinian future looks like “Israelis giving up the settlements and the homes taken in 1948.” I — that’s it?? 200 pages of arguing that Israel is the greatest, evilest, most genocidal apartheid state there ever was, and the way to fix it is “maybe a two state solution, maybe one, I don’t know; a ceasefire with Hamas, and ending the settlements?” I’m baffled. Those have been mainstream Israeli political positions for decades; that’s entry-level debate material for the conflict. They have a preschool understanding of what’s going on and they wrote a book about it.
- When Israel implements Kern’s revolutionary policies, and Palestine is finally free, we will achieve “a world beyond imperialism and capitalism.” It’s going to be hard, like in Batman, they say, or like in Mad Max, Black Mirror, Wall-E, and the Lorax, but we can do it. “When I say free Palestine, people want to know what kind of nation state do you have in mind once Israeli apartheid is toppled. But I don’t dream of nation states. Because I’m an anarchist!”
- A lot of this book made me angry, but in the end, I was laughing. I wasn’t reading a political argument, I was reading a YA novel written by a middle school teacher/booktok influencer, using the Gaza war as set dressing for their dystopian hero’s journey. It was deeply inappropriate, insultingly shallow, and everything a YA book should be. I would rather believe that my old friends view the war this way than the alternative. “For now, I remain a small child, cocooned in my parents’ dreams, hopeful for a future where love conquers all.” How American.
One, what happened with Xiran Jay Zhao
Two, what the fuck
This book was a bestseller because the only thing that matters is flattering the politics of the popular and it doesn't matter if you're a cretin
Oh, fun story! I actually knew Xiran from a Les Mis community pre-10/7, and they were always a little unhinged (literally cosplaying as Robespierre while visiting the real Versailles), but they had been normal about the Israelis in the Les Mis server and didn’t seem to care at all about Palestine until 2023. The week of 10/7, they went full conspiracy-theorist and started claiming that the battle plans for 10/7 that the IDF had found had to be planted and fake because Gazans were too poor and backward to own color printers.
Blocked them pretty quick and left the group after they started sharing color pencil drawings of Les Mis characters in Hamas uniform, but last I heard of them, they’d been complaining about Zionists cancelling their book deal for the Iron Widow sequel because they’d been “too busy protesting for Palestine” to actually write the book they were commissioned to write. I believe they made a blacklist of all the “Zionists” (Jewish writers) that they held responsible for “silencing” them and their YA novel.
The funniest part of this is that the only reason I know Kern’s book is that I saw it in an Indigo while shopping for books on politics(I ended up buying a book about Pierre Polievere instead because I wanted something on Canadian politics). I put it down because it was obviously conspiracist drivel just by reading the summary but the relevant point was that it was in An Indigo. You know, the brand owned by a Zionist Jew, which has had stores vandalized because the owner is a Zionist Jew? There is no conspiracy to silence these people though sometimes I question if it wouldn’t be so bad if there was.
I'd wager that it was on the shelf for the same reason it was on the NYT Bestseller list: nobody actually read it.
I thought I recognized that name. Their book The Free People's Village has to have one of the worst book summaries Ive ever come across.
It's like a buzz word soup about every social issue.
Woman murders man in broad daylight
beautiful like to reblog ratio on this
That's because people are reblogging it every time they see it. Like I'm doing right now lmao
"christianity—" stop. what you just said only applies to american evangelical protestantism.
“Christianity is evil because *insert thing that applies to 5 other religions at least*”
“I grew Christian and-“ *goes on to describe a cult found deep in the Appalachian Mountains that only has 15 members*
“The ridiculous Christian belief that—” *describes something that is literally the opposite of what Christians believe*
"In Christianity-" *describes something that has affected every single human civilization ever*
Finished Jukai Maze
This game certainly goes places, some I really wish it didn't, but alas. It wouldn't be a visual novel if it didn't.
Anyways it was an enjoyable if a bit clunky visual novel. The premise is bonkers and only gets more insane and confusing as time goes on. If you played Zero Escape its that but more convoluted. I enjoyed it except one plot point that randomly appeared. I wish the UI and flowchart were a bit more manageable.

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starting the countdown until gaylors start saying that Adam Sandler officiating Taylor's wedding (sorry if this is how you found out) is actually proof that it's a sham because it's a reference to I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry (2007), in which Sandler and Kevin James play heterosexual men who enter a mutually beneficial fake gay marriage, a dynamic that Taylor is inverting as a queer woman pretending to be straight while cleverly flagging the obvious farce to those with the eyes to see
aiba throws true extinguisher aitsf true gif
Danganronpa 2x2 delayed til early 2017
https://www.spike-chunsoft.com/news/danganronpa-2x2-new-slayhem-mode-enhanced-world-map/
Picked up a random switch Visual Novel. Still early in the game but its got some charm. Jukai Maze. Despite its dark subject matter its pretty funny.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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It's not DiscussionFish.
Someone needs to stop Netflix.
Not even Persona fans deserve this
i've had this garfield panel saved forever and i even marked in my calendar today as "the monday that wouldn't die" so uh. happy(?) monday the 22nd aka the monday that wouldn't die
Rereading the Boxer (Manhwa)
It's just so peak. JH (the creator) has such a way with storytelling that it's perfection. It's just one of the few manhwas that really benefits from phone scrolling. Genuinely, one of my favorite not just manhwas but fictional stories.
It makes me cry, laugh, and feel human.
i feel like this is more funny

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Riza and her totally legit son- Yuru
Fandom people are not real