{"version": "1.0", "type": "rich", "title": "The Road to Terfdom \u2013 Lux Magazine", "author_name": "kontextmaschine", "author_url": "https://kontextmaschine.com", "provider_name": "kontextmaschine", "provider_url": "https://kontextmaschine.com", "url": "https://kontextmaschine.com/post/648803034739195904/", "html": "<p class=\"npf_link\" data-npf='{\"type\":\"link\",\"url\":\"https://href.li/?https://lux-magazine.com/article/the-road-to-terfdom/\",\"display_url\":\"https://href.li/?https://lux-magazine.com/article/the-road-to-terfdom/\",\"title\":\"The Road to Terfdom \u2013 Lux Magazine\",\"description\":\"The Road to Terfdom \u2013 Lux Magazine\",\"site_name\":\"lux-magazine.com\"}'><a href=\"https://href.li/?https://lux-magazine.com/article/the-road-to-terfdom/\" target=\"_blank\">The Road to Terfdom \u2013 Lux Magazine</a></p><p>This is an article about what exactly Mumsnet is, and why it&rsquo;s so critical to the UK/US split on trans discourse</p><p>I see it&rsquo;s not just a forum, but also sort of an evolution of those young-kid parenting magazines you&rsquo;d subscribe to for the time, with scored reviews of products, but also definitely a forum, for 20 years, drawing users to stay for and become the culture</p><p>Author&rsquo;s thesis is it&rsquo;s about all these middle-class women who have a child and for the first time feel the world isn&rsquo;t built for them and connect that with their experience of using their body to bear a child and their continuity with Womanhood through doing so in honestly a really &lsquo;80s Second Wave way</p><p>And I can&rsquo;t help but wonder how much we escape that cause our equivalent online scenes like, uh, Pinterest? are suffused with a culture that vocally affirms motherhood-as-purpose in not a feminist but a Christian or even Mormon-flavored idiom</p>"}