this post was submitted on 03 Sep 2023
80 points (97.6% liked)

Creepy Wikipedia

3929 readers
41 users here now

A fediverse community for curating Wikipedia articles that are oddly fascinating, eerily unsettling, or make you shiver with fear and disgust

image

Guidelines:
  1. Follow the Code of Conduct

  2. Do NOT report posts YOU don't consider creepy

  3. Strictly Wikipedia submissions only

  4. Please follow the post naming convention: Wikipedia Article Title - Short Synopsis

  5. Tick the NSFW box for submissions with inappropriate thumbnails.

  6. Please refrain from any offensive language/profanities in the posts titles, unless necessary (e.g. it's in the original article's title).

Mandatory:

If you didn't find an article "creepy," you must announce it in the thread so everyone will know that you didn't find it creepy

image

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] BromSwolligans@lemmy.world 14 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

Sure. Here's one for example. Geimer's take is 100% going to ruffle feathers; when she speaks about her angle on feminism, I mean. But the thing that makes this one philosophically very interesting to chew on, in a "what would Jesus do" kind of way, is that, again, she is the victim, and she was even 'over it' at the time it happened.

I think people are very quick to extrapolate out that understanding a position like Geimer's is tantamount to a tacit endorsement of the kind of abuse she suffered, or of letting people off the hook willy-nilly. I find it the sort of idea-challenging wrinkle that makes existing as a human being so fascinating.

When we think about crime and punishment, morals and ethics, abuse and victimhood, we really, very often, just do not know how to handle something like a person saying, "no, this is my problem, not yours, and I'm saying this has been overblown", or whatever the case may be. Or like, to put it another way, when a family of a murder victim don't believe, for religious or whatever other reasons, in the death penalty, and they advocate against the death penalty for the person who murdered their loved one.

I think it's really important that we sit with those challenging thoughts rather than gloss over them. Glossing things over is really easy, and it's a kind of intellectual shortcutting that often gets us into more and more difficult positions where we find it impossible to see eye to eye...in cases like this, even with the people who we're trying to stick up for. Somebody can can definitely think Geimer is wrong, but they can't deny that it's at least her right to feel how she feels, because she's the one we're all arguing about.

That said, there were a few other accusations about Polanski at that time, and I don't know much about them because Geimer's was, as I understand it, the one for which he was going to court. Unsure if there was ever litigation on those others.

I can't remember where I saw it, but there's some interesting video footage of her talking about this stuff as well. More on those notes about how she feels to watch other people get riled up in her defense even while she's sitting here telling them they don't have a right to. It's certainly all a lot of food for thought.

*Edit: this reminded me of another one I like to sit back and fascinate over. There's a fellow called John McWhorter who is, I believe, a libertarian, and he is a linguist, and he is black. He has written some very interesting stuff about language, which I really love, but I also find his attitudes to be really endearing as well. But what I must point out is I'm a big leftie. Bernie Sanders leftie. "In this house we believe..." sign out front Leftie. So I don't see eye to eye with McWhorter and his bootstraps attitudes about everything.

So one thing he brings up a lot is what would help the African American lower class. Pretty much anyone with eyes to see in this country understands African Americans are, for historical reasons, systemically disadvantaged; but where a progressive fellow like myself is very quick to say, "we need to understand, and accommodate, and effect this, that and the other kind of change to make things more equitable," John McWhorter will refer to those suggestions as ineffectual and coddling. His attitude about how to help Black America is more rooted in holding people to higher standards rather than lowering the standards to which they're asked to rise. His ideas for helping black folks economically are more of a "rising tide lifts all boats" sort that suggest that rather than targeting black folks with economic stimulus policies, we just target the poor class to which so many black folks belong, and perhaps, in the process, reduce the 'us vs them' mentality that so many poor whites harbor toward blacks.

Now, again, if those ideas were coming out of a white person's mouth--a Rand Paul, let's say--someone like me might find them problematic and disagreeable. But McWhorter is a black person, he's of the afflicted caste here, and isn't it unsavory of me, well-meaning white person, to suggest that his ideas are wrong? Like, what do I even know about it? And I'm not saying that makes him right by default. Goodness knows you have your Larries Elder and your Candaces Owens out there who are black but also sewing the ideology of white supremacy to make their personal fortunes being the white-appeasing token political pundits. I'm only saying that it gives me cause to think a little harder about what McWhorterhas to say, politically. It gives me that little 'check' that I don't know everything about the world, and my ideology is not fully informed, and that just because I think I have heard out the situation and attitudes of a class of people, that is not necessarily so, and so on and so forth.*

[–] SCB@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Now, again, if those ideas were coming out of a white person’s mouth–a Rand Paul, let’s say–someone like me might find them problematic and disagreeable

Not gonna lie dude that's a weird take. Don't understand that mindset at all.

Enjoyed the rest though. Great post.

[–] BromSwolligans@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

Sure. At that point I was so deep in a long internet comment I was bound to express myself poorly. I guess I just mean that context is important. A dominant group person telling a person from a non-dominant group they just need to get their act together has all sorts of baggage that is different from a person within that non-dominant group expressing a similar idea. Of course McWhorter and, say, Rand Paul, are different people with different ideas...I was just swinging wild for my shoddy example, I guess. All I mean, is, I'm more inclined to listen to a black man's take on black culture than a white man's take. And to loop all the way back to the point, I'm inclined to listen to Geimer's take over, say, random internet commenters with no actual stake in the matter. But my hearing out how Geimer feels doesn't just mean that she speaks for all sexual assault victims, or that I can't value just as much another sexual assault victim's opposing attitude on the subject of sexual assault, or even on Geimer's own situation. I just mean bias and prejudice are inescapable, complicated components of discussions like these.

I don't think I'm doing any better right now so I'm just going to knock it off, but I appreciate you giving my sloppy comments some consideration. It's very gracious of you. And since this is the internet I must clarify I'm not being sarcastic.

[–] SCB@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

You are doing much better now in terms of my understanding

I dig your take.