I'm starting to think authors blogging is a bad idea. Besides EB failing publicly (comparison of her earlier statements and most recent here), I hear KC has now started threatening legal action (not bothering to link to her blog, because she changes the page locations and redirects to spam sites and such). On one hand, I would love to see her laughed out of court. On the other hand, that would cause undue stress and financial burden for anyone she dragged in with her, and scare many others into silence, and I don't want that.
This made me thing about names. Generally, I consider any name which someone uses over a long period of time, and which that person's community also uses, to be a "real" name, even if it isn't registered with the government as a legal name. This most recent development finally made it click for me what the big deal is with the widely-known-and-used-for-one-person type of name vs. a legal name: if you know the legal name, it's easier to use the legal system to harass someone. And if your legal name has more prestige and power than someone else's, you have an advantage. (ETA:
thingswithwings said it more eloquently, plus linking it to the burden of proof.
Link for the day:
Birchbark Books, Louise Erdrich's Native-oriented bookstore.
This made me thing about names. Generally, I consider any name which someone uses over a long period of time, and which that person's community also uses, to be a "real" name, even if it isn't registered with the government as a legal name. This most recent development finally made it click for me what the big deal is with the widely-known-and-used-for-one-person type of name vs. a legal name: if you know the legal name, it's easier to use the legal system to harass someone. And if your legal name has more prestige and power than someone else's, you have an advantage. (ETA:
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Link for the day:
Birchbark Books, Louise Erdrich's Native-oriented bookstore.