osea, no sé qué es más divertido: "vamos a follar con dinosaurios FOR SCIENCE" o daniel "mi crush ha ignorado mi cadera ancha, mi estado de celo y las feromonas que he producido especialmente para él, ¿qué estoy haciendo mal? 🥺" summer
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Vengo aquí huyendo del infierno en la tierra que es goodreads. Leo mucho, sobretodo fanfics y relatos cortos. I'm also available on english, don't expect language consistency from me!
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Content warning ligero spoiler. sólo lo etiqueto porque ha sido muy divertido descubrir por mí misme de qué va la novela
Rapaz commented on Compañeros de caza by Rafael de la Rosa
Content warning ligero spoiler. sólo lo etiqueto porque ha sido muy divertido descubrir por mí misme de qué va la novela
no sé qué me esperaba de esta novela, pero "científico se conecta a lo avatar con un velocirraptor artificial para cortejar a un velocirraptor que odia sus tripas" no estaba entre ellas, definitivamente
Rapaz started reading Compañeros de caza by Rafael de la Rosa

Compañeros de caza by Rafael de la Rosa
El estudio de Daniel es muy importante para los laboratorios en los que trabaja. Del resultado de sus experimentos depende …
Rapaz finished reading Llamando a la Tierra
este año he leído novelas muy buenas y esta novella más cortita se ha hecho un buen hueco entre ellas. el libro es toda una conversación, un formato interesante y que va como un guante a la premisa de la historia, y todo el diálogo está escrito con una naturalidad y una frescura asombrosa. la dinámica entre arthur y daniel es divertidísima e interesante, con muchas capas si las quieres buscar. y el final es fantástico. me quedé con la sensación de haber leído una historia muy redonda. súper recomendable
este año he leído novelas muy buenas y esta novella más cortita se ha hecho un buen hueco entre ellas. el libro es toda una conversación, un formato interesante y que va como un guante a la premisa de la historia, y todo el diálogo está escrito con una naturalidad y una frescura asombrosa. la dinámica entre arthur y daniel es divertidísima e interesante, con muchas capas si las quieres buscar. y el final es fantástico. me quedé con la sensación de haber leído una historia muy redonda. súper recomendable
Rapaz finished reading Se buscan mujeres sensatas by Sarah Gailey
I actually quite liked this book. I mean, it's a book about a travelling guild of rogue, lesbian librarians, so of course it was amazing!
I actually quite liked this book. I mean, it's a book about a travelling guild of rogue, lesbian librarians, so of course it was amazing!
At an embryonic level, Miles and Singal (2010) have begun to question Salamanca Statement’s inability to see disability as part of the human condition and to discuss how such a groundbreaking policy failed to take account of intersectionalities and of the multi-dimensionality of discrimination operating with education systems.
— The Future of Inclusive Education by Valentina Migliarini, Brent C. Elder (Page 7)
I struggle with these authors' inability to look deeper than the surface level and to fail to understand how the Salamanca Statement operated. In order to recognise this, a person needs to understand that the people who wrote this were "representatives of governments" that were present at the World Conference on Special Needs Education. The first question that should be asked is this: How many of these people were disabled? How many of them had needs related to their disability that went unmet during school? How many of them would even acknowledge that they were disabled?
And the answer is very few. We can look at our current governments, not even the ones in 1994 (when the statement was drafted), and see that the representation of disabled people remains quite low. Knowing this, it should've prompted the authors to question how this "groundbreaking policy" (which it isn't; I'd argue …
I struggle with these authors' inability to look deeper than the surface level and to fail to understand how the Salamanca Statement operated. In order to recognise this, a person needs to understand that the people who wrote this were "representatives of governments" that were present at the World Conference on Special Needs Education. The first question that should be asked is this: How many of these people were disabled? How many of them had needs related to their disability that went unmet during school? How many of them would even acknowledge that they were disabled?
And the answer is very few. We can look at our current governments, not even the ones in 1994 (when the statement was drafted), and see that the representation of disabled people remains quite low. Knowing this, it should've prompted the authors to question how this "groundbreaking policy" (which it isn't; I'd argue that it is yet another example of a "saviourist policy," where non-disabled people pat themselves on the back for remembering that disabled people exist) could further miss other intersections of marginalisation with disability.
Granted, they also are questioning the "multi-dimension of discrimination operating within education systems," but they're rarely looking at the education system itself as being the site of that discrimination. When teachers fail to recognise that the system they work in was built to fail most people, we cannot get an accurate picture of how things work. Most of these people are reformists who think we can tweak the schools as they are in order to better meet people's needs rather than demolish them and find better and more inclusive tools for learning. In fact, the latter is almost never a consideration among teachers (I guess because they're afraid of losing something, like position).
Car Garcia quoted Gideon la Novena / Gideon the Ninth by Tamsyn Muir (La tumba sellada, #1)
Content warning ¿Quién para?
—¿Alguien más quiere aprovechar la oportunidad para admitir que ya está muerto, y que es un constructo de carne o cualquier otra cosa? ¿Alguien?
— Gideon la Novena / Gideon the Ninth by Tamsyn Muir (La tumba sellada, #1)
¿Quién para?
Rapaz started reading Se buscan mujeres sensatas by Sarah Gailey

Se buscan mujeres sensatas by Sarah Gailey
Esther es una polizona. Se ha escondido en el carromato de las bibliotecarias para intentar huir del matrimonio concertado que …
Rapaz finished reading System Collapse by Martha Wells (The Murderbot Diaries, #7)

System Collapse by Martha Wells (The Murderbot Diaries, #7)
Everyone’s favorite lethal SecUnit is back in the next installment in Martha Wells’s bestselling and award-winning Murderbot Diaries series.
…
Rapaz started reading Fugitive Telemetry by Martha Wells (The Murderbot Diaries, #6)

Fugitive Telemetry by Martha Wells (The Murderbot Diaries, #6)
No, I didn't kill the dead human. If I had, I wouldn't dump the body in the station mall.
…
Rapaz finished reading Network Effect by Martha Wells (The Murderbot Diaries, #5)

Network Effect by Martha Wells (The Murderbot Diaries, #5)
Murderbot returns in its highly-anticipated, first, full-length standalone novel.
You know that feeling when you’re at work, and you’ve …
Rapaz commented on Network Effect by Martha Wells (The Murderbot Diaries, #5)
Content warning here be spoilers
the grey people are descended from the first colonist that arrived at the planet. this is like, not a great mystery? they look odd because the alien renmants they've been living atop of have done something to them. either that, or they ARE the aliens themselves. I have a half-cooked theory that the weird algae on ART's engines (ha, I knew ART would be fine) is the alien, and it was mind-controlling the human/humanish people thru the implants. like, as a parasite. so yep, that's my thing for now
Rapaz commented on Network Effect by Martha Wells (The Murderbot Diaries, #5)
Content warning here be spoilers
oh no, no way you've deleted ART!! it probably partitioned itself into a thousand pieces and hid itself into its subsystems' spare memory. it purporsefully miscalculated its firing vectors! and murderbot kind of foreshadowed all the way back in artificial condition that purely "bot" intelligences couldn't be as advanced as ART, which would imply that it has an organic neural component. whose memory can't be erased. so ART is going to be FINE







