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Feminism: Sex and gender discussions

Bunbury’s Eighth- Sealion training for beginners

999 replies

SophocIestheFox · 13/02/2021 21:08

Old thread nearly full!

————————————-

The useful Bunbury Guide to Spotting Community Disruptors is constantly evolving.

The best research and advice is not to engage with community disruptors and trolls. As ever, if you suspect troll activity, report it to MNHQ.

Remember there are people out there who would like to silence us by fair means or foul.

This is a continuation of the Public Service Announcement thread:

www.mumsnet.com/Talk/womens_rights/3944572-Bunburys-guide-to-community-disruptors-part-5?pg=40

If and when you see threads plopped into FWR, especially a curious repeat of well worn topics, maybe check for poster history before engaging. AS is your friend.

There are a number of posts/posters/threads that are reproduced on Twitter or Facebook to foment controversy using screen shots & flagging to either MNHQ to have threads or posters deleted.. Sometimes, it’s used to approach commissioning editors with ideas for articles. It’s a tiresome tactic that we always have community disruptor posters who themselves post the comments that they then highlight elsewhere as purported evidence of racism, religious intolerance, anti-men sentiments, or transphobia.

Some helpful links can be found in the ‘Break it Down for me’ and ‘It never happens’ threads but in essence FermatsTheorem recommended “that in the absence of a block/hide poster button, I suggest the following strategy (given that you're talking to the lurkers).

Do not name check the sealion. Instead, respond to a depersonalised paraphrase:

"It is sometimes erroneously suggested that blah. Blah is wrong for the following reasons (short and pithy). If you need more information re. debunking blah, here's a link."

Then (this next step is important to combat derailment) go back up thread to the last useful contribution to the discussion, make sure you do name check that contributor, and pick up the discussion from that point.”

OP posts:
Thread gallery
17
ArabellaScott · 18/02/2021 20:09

Did you know wombats do cube shaped poos?

HermitsLife · 18/02/2021 20:12

Did you know wombats do cube shaped poos?

Ouch!

Winesalot · 18/02/2021 20:13

Wombats are very cute. But squeal very loudly when they think that someone snoring in a tent is an invader of their territory.

I do miss wombats. And have yet to see a badger. I think badgers are mythical creatures.

Winesalot · 18/02/2021 20:17

Their incisors also keep growing and they have to gnaw to keep them the right size.

ErrolTheDragon · 18/02/2021 20:34

I've only seen a live badger once. It was a young one, blissfully sunning itself (despite allegedly being nocturnal) in an enclosure (meant for wildfowl, it wasn't meant to be there) at caerlaverlock WWT. Couldn't have chosen a better place to pose in front of nature lovers armed with binoculars (not that they were needed) if it had tried.

ErrolTheDragon · 18/02/2021 20:36

Caerlaverock that should have been. There's also a moated triangular castle there.

BoreOfWhabylon · 18/02/2021 20:38

I saw a blonde badger with ginger stripes once. It was dead at the side of the road though.

ErrolTheDragon · 18/02/2021 20:43

I'm not sure why we're talking about wombats and badgers, but if you want a really distracting mammal then I'll recommend the opossum. It's incredibly weird in all sorts of ways and the photo of possum mummy carrying her young is surely a fitting symbol of female sexed oppression. Grin

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opossum

MaudTheInvincible · 18/02/2021 20:45

All but one of the badgers I've seen were dead at the side of the road. The one live one was legging it down a country lane at nights and was surprisingly large (to a city girl anyway). 🦡🦡🦡🦡🦡

Is this a wombat 🦫 ?

fatblackcatspaw · 18/02/2021 20:48

@ArabellaScott

Did you know wombats do cube shaped poos?
I did - tho normally described as cubioid
fatblackcatspaw · 18/02/2021 20:49

[quote ErrolTheDragon]I'm not sure why we're talking about wombats and badgers, but if you want a really distracting mammal then I'll recommend the opossum. It's incredibly weird in all sorts of ways and the photo of possum mummy carrying her young is surely a fitting symbol of female sexed oppression. Grin

[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opossum]][/quote]
solidarity with Opossum mums!

fatblackcatspaw · 18/02/2021 20:49

I would posit they are not playing dead - just bloody exhausted!

Oldstyle1 · 18/02/2021 20:53

Ladies, I give you the Quokka.

Bunbury’s Eighth- Sealion training for beginners
BoreOfWhabylon · 18/02/2021 20:58

@MaudTheInvincible

All but one of the badgers I've seen were dead at the side of the road. The one live one was legging it down a country lane at nights and was surprisingly large (to a city girl anyway). 🦡🦡🦡🦡🦡

Is this a wombat 🦫 ?

Not a wombat. Looks more like a beaver.
MaudTheInvincible · 18/02/2021 21:10

That poor opossum mum. Talk about touched out!

BuntingEllacott · 18/02/2021 21:11

Is the cube of poo thread still in classics? I still remember the stitch I got reading it.

AskingQuestionsAllTheTime · 18/02/2021 21:19

I once encountered a badger that was very much alive and very angry after having been run into by a mini-bus full of a rugby club on a night out.

The mini-bus was going nowhere because the front was stove in; the badger was apparently unhurt and daring the bold lads who had boiled out of it to see what was going on to come on if they were hard enough.

They weren't.

Winesalot · 18/02/2021 21:27

Here is a different kind of visitor to the hospital.

twitter.com/RitaPanahi/status/1362302432475156482?s=20

ArabellaScott · 18/02/2021 21:28

Mon the badgers!!!!

I say that, they're decimating the poor blooming hedgehogs.

ArabellaScott · 18/02/2021 21:31

Did you know, Wines, that there is a colony of wild wallabies on an island on Loch Lomond? True fact.

www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-glasgow-west-53345309

Sophoclesthefox · 18/02/2021 21:32

Badgers can run surprisingly fast on those wee legs. I surprised one driving a land rover up a farm track one night, and it ran in front of me for ages, going like the clappers, bobbing in and out of the headlights.

Sophoclesthefox · 18/02/2021 21:33

Oh, reading that back it sounds like the badger was driving the Land Rover Blush It was not, they’re smart, but they’re not that smart (and can’t reach the pedals, obvs).

ErrolTheDragon · 18/02/2021 21:57

[quote Winesalot]Here is a different kind of visitor to the hospital.

twitter.com/RitaPanahi/status/1362302432475156482?s=20[/quote]
Grin
I noticed the woman who posted that had a great quote up on the sidebar
The truth is incontrovertible. Malice may attack it, ignorance may deride it, but in the end, there it is.

RufustheSniggeringReindeer · 18/02/2021 22:02

@Sophoclesthefox

Badgers can run surprisingly fast on those wee legs. I surprised one driving a land rover up a farm track one night, and it ran in front of me for ages, going like the clappers, bobbing in and out of the headlights.
Someone i know was chased by one when she was riding her bike

Trouble was whenever i saw her on her bike id hear the wicked witches bike music from the wizard of oz

So imagining her riding her bike to that music while being chased by a badger made it incredibly hard to keep a straight face when she was telling a group of us the terrifying story

RufustheSniggeringReindeer · 18/02/2021 22:03

I think you are supposed to report it if you see a dead one...