User:Natsuki Marx

Monkeys can climb Crickets can leap Horses can race Owls can seek Cheetahs can run Eagles can fly People can try But that's about it.

Hi! My pseudonym name is Natsuki Marx. I am, unfortunately, stuck on TERF island, with seemingly no way of escaping to  Spain or  New Zealand any time soon.

My RationalWiki achievements

 * One. I have one. I created the English counties map on the England page. I'm sure that table could do with some improvements.
 * You could maybe say the amount I've posted to the WIGO boards counts, too.

Natsuki's leftist content creator recommendations:

 * Actual Jake
 * Big Joel
 * Brenton Lengel
 * Celiac Attack
 * ContraPoints
 * CopsHateMoe
 * Demon Mama
 * DylanBurnsTV
 * Hbomberguy
 * HeyIt'sVadim
 * Jangles ScienceLad
 * Jimmy Snow
 * Philosophy Tube
 * Radical Reviewer
 * Shaun
 * Socialism Done Left
 * Some More News
 * The Gravel Institute
 * The Serf Times
 * The Serfs
 * Three Arrows
 * Unlearning Economics
 * Vaush
 * Zoe Baker

Natsuki's Substack reccomendations

 * AI Snake Oil – A newsletter about A.I. and its developments that actually isn't run by cranks.
 * Beccacore – Completely non-political fashion and aestetics newsletter. Learn to dress stylish!
 * Big Tech Alert – Big Tech Alert is a Twitter bot that sends a Tweet every time an account associated with big tech professionally follows someone, unfollows someone, or changes their bio (and is supposed to check when their account gets verified and unverified, but I'm not so sure that works yet). The Substack newsletter posted its first article on December 18th, 2022, and was introduced as a "weekly recap" of the important things the @BigTechAlert picked up. They uh... haven't posted since. Which is a shame, as I think it would be a very useful newsletter. It will remain here anyway, even if it never posts again (unless it's announced it'll never post again, I guess).
 * The David Pakman Show – A newsletter that posts some of the biggest events that have happened in politics every weekday. All stuff that's rehashed from the YouTube show.
 * Erin In The Morning – Gee, that capitalisation of "In" and "The" annoys me! Erin very regularly posts updates about the situation regarding transgender people in the U.S.. Every month, she's been posting the "Anti-Trans Legislative Risk Map", where she breaks down all fifty states (and Washington, D.C.)'s legal situation regarding trans people and their rights to healthcare, or to exist at all. Don't worry, each "ATLRM" always has a list of safe states with protective measures in place.
 * Experimental History – Psychologist Adam Mastroianni's newsletter in which he writes about psychology, as well as tons of stuff relating to general scientific methodology.
 * Friendly Athiest – Hemant Mehta writes near-daily about happenings related to religion and all its dastardly deeds in the U.S. of A..
 * Garbage Day – A newsletter about all the new happenings in internet culture. It's very well-known. Without knowing how to check checking, it's probably the most subscribed-to newsletter in this list(?). Posts every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, and at least once during the weekend if you pay for your subscription. Update: On a (I think) temporary kinda-break, where an article is only posted on Wednesday and probably still the weekend.
 * Internal Tech Emails – Internal Tech Emails showcases internal tech industry emails that surface in public records. A lot of these emails/text conversations are pretty interesting. They post semi-regularly.
 * Ken Klippenstein – Ken Klippenstein posts news—usually about shady shit the U.S. government is doing—on a very irregular basis. You may get a post every 1-2 months.
 * The Road to AI We Can Trust – Similar to AI Snake Oil in the sense that it's a non-crank perspective on A.I. and its future.
 * SocDoneLeft – SDL posts articles usually using statistics to argue things. Oftentimes arguing against conservative talking points. They also quite often debunk fake leftist revolutionary quotes spread around by conservatives and discuss where they actually came from. That's always fun.