Defiance: How Institutions Protect Women’s Exploitation
When reporting fails, investigation begins. A deep examination of how law, marriage, and institutions normalize women’s exploitation.
The Calm Voice of the Patriarchy, the Moving Line, and the Lie of “Shame” as Justice
When accountability threatens power, restraint is rebranded as wisdom—and surrender as maturity.
Relentlessness is not obsession. It is continuity — the refusal to let what was taken become legitimate through silence.
From Diaspora to Passover, a meditation on memory, law, and refusal — and why abandoning a claim means accepting erasure.
When Civic Institutions Fail the Women Who Built Them
A woman’s name is on a library wall. She cannot safely return. A story of civic pride, institutional failure, and public silence.
Merit As Defined by Those Who Never Fought Fair
That is the real engine behind the backlash against equity, affirmative action, and access programs. Not a principled defense of excellence, but fear—fear of losing unearned advantage. The game is rigged and that's the only way men stay in it at all.
Powerful Men Get Out-of-Jail-Free Cards. Women Never Do.
She Went to Prison. He Went to Santa Barbara. This is why what happened to me is allowed to happen. This must end.
My Family and Friends Abandoned Me to Die a Horrific Death: This Was Structural. And It Was About Being a Woman.
Which exposes the truth beneath all the explanations: this was never about uncertainty. It was about whose life was worth mobilizing resources for.
I’m Not a Feminist. I’m Sane. This is a post-ideological human rights enforcement theory.
The word "Feminist" suggests this is something you can opt into or out of—like a lifestyle brand or a political tribe—rather than a foundational truth.
Din v’Cheshbon: Why Judgment and Accounting Matter Now
We live in an era of language without consequence.
Validation Is Not a Vice
Look closely at how prestige actually moves through the world. Awards follow institutions, not courage. Grants follow networks, not need. Platforms follow safety, not truth. The people most likely to be recognized are the ones least likely to be punished for speaking.