Jyvur Entropy’s Reviews > Hood Feminism: Notes from the Women That a Movement Forgot > Status Update

Jyvur Entropy
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There's so much wrong with this book, both factually and from a common sense standpoint. This will absolutely be a one-star for me. But for now, I don't even know where to start with this damn book. It will be easier to talk about the few areas of agreement I share with the author: the soda tax is stupid and food should be a human right not tied to labor. Reporting sexual assault is scary and police don't seem...
Dec 26, 2021 04:48PM
Hood Feminism: Notes from the Women That a Movement Forgot

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message 1: by Jyvur (new) - added it

Jyvur Entropy Continued....understanding or trustworthy. It WOULD be nice if some of that intersectionality could be applied to severely mentally ill women. Women with psychosis. It's like anybody believed me when I was raped, because let's be real...I imagine a lot of shit. If I could imagine a character from a movie was following, I suppose it's possible I could have imagined that. Except that he bragged about it a a bunch and told a bunch of people. So I lost my shit and police were involved and I ended up in a mental health unit. The police were not kind or understanding during that mental health crisis intervention. Neither were any of the doctors to be honest. If feminism is really going to be intersectional, like, do y'all want to fucking remember that mentally ill women exist? And psychotic women can also be victims. No doctor or police officer ever believed me.

Anyway, yeah, when am I gonna see some of this SJW shit turned towards the horrible mental health system? Y'all got a hate boner for cops and the mental health system and criminal justice system overlap a ton. Cops are almost involved in mental health crises that require hospitalization.
The middle class woke people love how special therapy makes them feel and the pretty little lables they get (anxiety/ADD) that make them feel interesting too much to ever really look at what's going on for the most severaly mentally-ill.

Okay, that whole tangent aside, yes, I agree with the author that reporting is scary for victims. It was scary for me because I have mental health issues. So I never did. I'm sure it's just as scary or more so for women of color living in poverty.

So the food thing and the way reporting to police is intimidating: I agree.

Everything else....I am gonna have some notes and some debunking to do.


message 2: by Jyvur (new) - added it

Jyvur Entropy *not like anybody believed me


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