akhra

🏴🚩⚧️⚢♾️ΘΔ⚪

  • &🍯she/her 🐲xie/xer 🦡e/em/es

wenchcoat system:
🍯 Akhra (or Melli to disambiguate), ratel.
🐲 Rhiannon, drangolin.
🦡 Lenestre, American badger.

unless tagged or otherwise obvious, assume 🍯🐲🦡 in chorus; even when that's not quite accurate, we will always be in consensus. address collectively as Akhra (she/her), or as wenchcoat (she/her or plural).

💞@atonal440
💕@cattie-grace
❤️‍🔥(not#onhere)
🧇@Reba-Rabbit


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@akhra
Discord server ostensibly for the Twitch channel but with Cohost in hospice y'know what let's just link it here
discord.gg/AF57qnub3D

pervocracy
@pervocracy

thinking once again about the tendency in teen dystopias to feature "the government chooses your lifelong career for you when you turn 18" as a plot point

it's probably meant to preach to 11th-graders that they should appreciate their freedom when they reach adulthood and start figuring out their path

but in a lot of these books (thinking here of The Giver and Divergent)* the career assignment is extremely thoughtful and personalized, and (until the protagonist shows up) it is never wrong. you're always meeting a guy who was assigned gardener at graduation and loves it because it turns out he has the exact combination of traits that make a person ideally suited for gardening. you're never meeting a guy who was told "doesn't really matter what your little hobbies are, son, we need truck drivers."


it's an evil authoritarian government that really sees you, y'know? they go to the trouble of doing little personality tests on you and somebody actually reads your answers.

it's pitched as dystopia but it's also a wish fulfillment fantasy (especially for 17-year-olds) of simply being told your place in life. no tuition fees, no job hunting, no uncertainty. you don't even have to arrange your own transportation to Gardening Academy. you just get whisked there and then you find that they've already got your lodging and meals and daily schedule sorted out. there's uniforms folded on your bed when you show up. and they fit.

and every time I think "but I'd get sick of that in ten minutes in real life," I run back into the nigh-infallible personality test. The one that's supernaturally good at finding something I won't get sick of. That's not exactly the same as having a choice, but it's also not the same as being forced into a role purely at society's convenience.

basically what I am saying is yes, if it worked like this, of course I would want a faceless institution to tell me what to do with my life and then facilitate all the logistics. that sounds lovely, thank you


*and Brave New World, sorta, although that's more about tailoring people to jobs, but it seems to be equally effective. and Enter The Game (or something like that?) which was a more obscure one I read in the 90s. that one was particularly funny because the main characters got assigned unemployed, but the government still set them up with housing and a food stipend. didn't even have to fill out forms

and then they go to a weed coffeeshop by mistake and the bouncer gets mad at them for not smoking weed

and then they get into this VR game which is secretly training them how to survive on a distant planet after they get launched into space because Earth has too much unemployment

I'm like 75% certain this book actually existed

EDIT: It's called Invitation To The Game


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in reply to @pervocracy's post:

you can sell things and you can also scrounge freely from the most abundant wasteland ever. the characters are constantly doing things like "so we painted a mural with some scrap paint we found, then made a biometric security system with some scrap electronics we found..."

Yeah. There's a YA series I read* where it's got the All-Knowing All-Seeing Personality Test and everyone's results are right (or it's aware that it's prioritizing "someone has to do this job and no one else can so you have to" over "you'd actually like it" and will compensate you accordingly) and every job comes with food and housing and healthcare, and... it's not a dystopia. It's got its issues, but the All-Knowing All-Seeing Personality Test is genuinely not portrayed as one of them.

The main character is, of course, one of those people who was told "you have to do this job because no one else can and someone has to". It's a YA novel, there's some things you just kind of expect. But the people who were assigned to be gardeners? Pretty much anyone can be a gardener, so everyone who's assigned gardening is there because they genuinely like it as a job.

  • Hive Mind, Janet Edwards - note that the series isn't done, the publication schedule... varies based on the author's health, and the editing's kind of hit-and-miss, but I really like the worldbuilding.

That one also provided the fantasy where it's perfectly fine to stereotype an entire category of people as thugs because, hey, they're only in that group because the Magic Hat perceived their true criminal nature.

You do not, under any circumstances, got to give it to JKR at this stage, but tbf the group that the Magic Hat has decreed to be thugs is upper-class British WASPs who have strong opinions about blood purity. So I think the Magic Hat might be onto something on that one.