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Semi-Contemporaneous Observations. Beans.

theatlantic:

dylla:

I wished they had links to every article, so I decided, in a rare moment of action, to compile it.
All the Single Ladies - Kate Bolick
How Serfdom Saved the Women’s Movement  - Caitlin Flanagan
The Hazards of Duke - Caitlin Flanagan
Marry Him! - Lori Gottleib
The Case Against Breast-Feeding - Hanna Rosin
The End of Men - Hanna Rosin
Why Women Still Can’t Have It All - Anne-Marie Slaughter
The Bitch is Back  - Sandra Tsing Loh
Let’s Call the Whole Thing Off  - Sandra Tsing Loh
She’s Just Not That Into You  - Sandra Tsing Loh
Tales out of School - Sandra Tsing Loh
(via Slate)

Yeah, this is pretty clever.

Glad I’m not the only one who noticed the Atlantic’s recent obsession with making women feel bad/anxious/hopeless about their choices—no matter what they choose!  
Life According to The Atlantic: A Choose Your Own Adventure book where the only possible outcome is disappointment.
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theatlantic:

dylla:

I wished they had links to every article, so I decided, in a rare moment of action, to compile it.

  • All the Single Ladies - Kate Bolick
  • How Serfdom Saved the Women’s Movement  - Caitlin Flanagan
  • The Hazards of Duke - Caitlin Flanagan
  • Marry Him! - Lori Gottleib
  • The Case Against Breast-Feeding - Hanna Rosin
  • The End of Men - Hanna Rosin
  • Why Women Still Can’t Have It All - Anne-Marie Slaughter
  • The Bitch is Back  - Sandra Tsing Loh
  • Let’s Call the Whole Thing Off  - Sandra Tsing Loh
  • She’s Just Not That Into You  - Sandra Tsing Loh
  • Tales out of School - Sandra Tsing Loh

(via Slate)

Yeah, this is pretty clever.

Glad I’m not the only one who noticed the Atlantic’s recent obsession with making women feel bad/anxious/hopeless about their choices—no matter what they choose!  

Life According to The Atlantic: A Choose Your Own Adventure book where the only possible outcome is disappointment.

Source: Slate

    • #feminism
    • #atlantic monthly
  • 10 months ago > dylla
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No one ever said the criminal justice system is pretty, or perfect, or capable of always delivering a narrative that has a clear beginning, middle, and end. There is no legal right to a happy ending — or even a dispositive one. The leavening truth here is that the Constitution worked pretty much the way it is supposed to work in these circumstances. Under the Supreme Court’s precedent in Brady v. Maryland, prosecutors have a duty to share with defense attorneys any exculpatory evidence they find. This the prosecutors did, to their eternal credit. Moreover, a district attorney has an ethical obligation not to try a case he or she doesn’t believe can be won. This, too, the district attorney considered.
Andrew Cohen of The Atlantic, in one of the more informed articles about the decision by the DA’s Office to drop the charges against DSK

Source: The Atlantic

    • #DSK
    • #atlantic monthly
    • #strauss-kahn
    • #law
  • 1 year ago
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