Alicorn comments on Babies and Bunnies: A Caution About Evo-Psych - Less Wrong

52 Post author: Alicorn 22 February 2010 01:53AM

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Comment author: Alicorn 25 February 2010 12:19:57AM 1 point [-]

You don't think females are socially punished for exhibiting "male" traits, or you think it's comparatively insignificant?

Comment author: byrnema 25 February 2010 12:51:41AM 4 points [-]

This is sort of where I'm at on the issue. I understand that you don't like being referred to as 'he', and I agree that you shouldn't be.

However, my perspective is that 'he' is the default, and if someone refers to me as 'he', that is the only reason. With the handle 'byrnema', I expect people to assume I'm male. Well, it's more subtle than that. I don't expect anyone to make a positive prediction that I'm male -- they shouldn't know -- but since people assign gender in their minds when they consider a person, I expect that assignment to be male.

Does it bother you, specifically, that the default assignment is male?

Or in your case, with the handle Alicorn, that it seems unusual not to update the probability that you're female? If the latter then you really must just ask this person to find out what they were thinking (if they were). Possibly the person is either a little linguistically/socially naive or they were thinking of the name 'Ali' perhaps with an Arabic origin and the 'orn' ending is unclear -- if you don't think of unicorns.

(Why should it be though that a unicorn-associated handle must be a female? Nevertheless, that's the way it is.)

Comment author: mattnewport 25 February 2010 12:58:54AM 4 points [-]

I'd never heard of the word 'alicorn' until I started reading lesswrong and I'm comfortable saying that I am not linguistically naive. It didn't occur to me that it was an actual word until Alicorn posted in a thread that it should be obvious she is female with that user name. Consider that for the same reasons a unicorn-associated handle is associated with being female it might not be an effective handle to signal to males that one is female.

It is probably wise if one is particularly offended by incorrect gender assumptions to pick a username that clearly signals ones gender to the majority of ones audience.

Comment author: Alicorn 25 February 2010 01:03:18AM *  2 points [-]

I was not, when I started using this handle, aware of how non-present in popular vocabulary the word "alicorn" is. I thought it was a pretty girly username - maybe not up there with, I dunno, "PinkFlowerPrincess", but perhaps on a par with "Cerise" (a shade of pink), or something subtler like "Purl" (a knitting stitch, also hinting at "Pearl"). It doesn't and was never meant to declare my gender, but I always thought it suggested it. If nothing else, I think "Allison" is a more likely sound-alike than "Ali"-plus-unidentified-suffix, because that actually happened.

Does it bother you, specifically, that the default assignment is male?

It bothers me that there is a default assignment. If one were going to make a brand new default in a situation where none existed, it's my impression that there would be a better (if still very weak) case for making it female instead, but I don't think it's appropriate to make such assumptions.

Comment author: RobinZ 25 February 2010 12:57:47AM *  0 points [-]

Thanks for the not-particularly-annoyed-by-"he" datum - but I worry that you imply Alicorn should not be annoyed. Even if this is not your intent, I think it's a good idea to support the right to have a berserk button.

Comment author: pjeby 25 February 2010 02:11:24AM 4 points [-]

I think it's a good idea to support the right to have a berserk button.

I don't, and here's why: having a negative emotional response to something kills rationality dead. It causes people to forget their well-thought out goals and engage in compulsive, stereotyped behaviors attached to the specific emotion involved, whether it's going off to sulk in a corner, flaming, plotting revenge, or loudly lecturing everyone on proper behavior... ALL of which are unlikely to support rational goals, outside the evolutionary environment that drove the development of those emotions.

(And let's not even get started on motivated reasoning... which, AFAICT, is motivated almost exclusively to avoid negative emotions rather than to obtain positive ones.)

Anyway, if you allow yourself to have a "berserk button" that hijacks your rationality on a regular basis, (and aren't doing anything about it), you're only giving lip service to rationality. Okay, modify that slightly: maybe you don't know HOW to get rid of or work around your button. But you sure as heck shouldn't be arguing for a right to keep it!

(I expect that objections to this comment will largely focus on individual boo lights that people will put forth in support of the idea that some things should be allowed to set off "berserk buttons". But I hope that those people won't bother, unless they can explain why their particular boo light requires them to have a compulsive, fixated response that's faster than their conscious minds can consider the situation and evaluate their options. And I also hope they'll consider why they feel the need to use boo lights to elevate their failings as a rationalist to the status of a moral victory! Lacking a compulsive emotional response to a boo light doesn't alter one's considered outlook or goals, only one's immediate or compulsive reactions.)

Comment author: RobinZ 25 February 2010 03:02:47AM *  3 points [-]

With all due respect, I (not at all calmly) disagree. The mistakes that you can make by being emotional are not inevitable, and they are not mistakes because of your emotion - a true emotion is true - they are mistakes because you didn't say, "I can feel my heart racing - did this person just say what I thought they said, or am I misreading?" And so forth.

But if you're right? And if your response is proportionate? Your anger (or ebullience, or jubilation, or bewilderment, if you really want to be rational about analyzing the effects of emotion on rationality) is your power. Do you think Eliezer Yudkowsky works as hard as he does on FAI because, oh, it's a way to spend the time? Do you think that his elegy* for Yehuda Yudkowsky was written out of a sedate sense of familial responsibility? Do you somehow imagine that anything of consequence has ever been accomplished without the force of passion behind it?

I pity your cynicism, if you do.

Edit: I will concede instantly that "berserk button" is a deceptive term, however - what I am discussing is not an instant trigger for unstoppable rage, but merely something which infuriates.

* Edit 2: The term "cri de coeur" was suggested over the message system in place of "elegy" - I think it may well hit nearer the mark as a description.

Comment author: pjeby 25 February 2010 03:30:42AM 4 points [-]

The mistakes that you can make by being emotional are not inevitable, and they are not mistakes because of your emotion - a true emotion is true - they are mistakes because you didn't say, "I can feel my heart racing - did this person just say what I thought they said, or am I misreading?" And so forth.

If your heart weren't racing, you wouldn't have needed to ask the question.

Meanwhile, "true emotion" is rhetoric: the feeling of fear as the hot poker approaches is not rational, unless blind struggling will get it away from your face... and mostly in modern life, it will not... which means you're simply adding unnecessary insult to your imminent injury.

Do you somehow imagine that anything of consequence has ever been accomplished without the force of passion behind it?

Passion != anger. If it feels bad, you're doing it wrong.

What I am discussing is not an instant trigger for unstoppable rage, but merely something which infuriates.

Doesn't matter to my argument: at least a rage trigger is over relatively quickly, while being infuriated over a principle can ruin your life for days or weeks at a time. ;-)

Bad feelings feel bad for a reason: they are actually bad for you.

Comment author: NancyLebovitz 13 March 2011 12:42:11PM *  1 point [-]

In regards to the right to have a berzerk button: This depends at least partly on what you mean by a right.

People do have berzerk buttons. I hear "don't have the right to have a berzerk button" as "should make it go away right now-- shouldn't have had it in the first place". On the other hand, "do have the right to have a berzerk button" is problematic in the sense that it can imply that berzerk buttons are a sort of personal property which should never be questioned.

It occurs to me that this is a problem with English which is at least as serious as gendered pronouns. A sense of process isn't built into the language in some places where it would be really useful.

The problem is there in the word "can". Does "you can do it" mean you can do it right now, perhaps if you just tried a bit harder? If you tried a lot harder (and you really should)? After ten years of dedicated work? Something in between?

Comment author: wedrifid 25 February 2010 01:17:53AM 1 point [-]

but I worry that you imply Alicorn should not be annoyed.

It is hard to extract that implication given:

This is sort of where I'm at on the issue. I understand that you don't like being referred to as 'he', and I agree that you shouldn't be.

Comment author: RobinZ 25 February 2010 01:29:29AM 1 point [-]

You're right - I tried to reread byrnema's comment to avoid that kind of error, but I must have missed that sentence twice. I should not have been so pointed. Thank you for catching my mistake.

Comment author: byrnema 25 February 2010 02:03:24AM *  1 point [-]

Truthfully, it doesn't matter what a person declares in the second sentence if they then negate that sentence with the body of their comment. Perhaps you read for feeling and tone, as I do -- that's why I didn't point to a specific sentence as a defense in my reply.

However, what I was explaining was that while I don't question that Alicorn should feel the way she does, I have a tendency to overly reduce problems (which feels like I'm trivializing them) and that's probably what you were reading. I didn't intend to do that, but since my friends say I always do that, that's probably what I did. (Outside view.)

Comment author: RobinZ 25 February 2010 02:29:00AM 1 point [-]

On the other hand, it doesn't matter what a person declares in the second sentence if they then negate that sentence with the body of their comment. Perhaps you read for feeling and tone, as I do -- that's why I didn't point to that sentence in my reply.

I would question whether it doesn't count - I believe your statement was sincere, and that counts for an awful lot - but the feeling and tone was definitely what I responded to. On the gripping hand, I was being quite precise when I said "should not have been so pointed" - I think emphasizing the right to be angry is important in several contexts (example), and I would want to have still said something about the right to a berserk button ... but not the slanted "even if this was not your intent".

(Incidentally, I appreciate the degree of nuance you've been employing in your replies - I suspect this is one of the more valuable benefits you gain from your penchant to reduce problems!)

Comment author: byrnema 25 February 2010 01:12:00AM *  1 point [-]

I hope that my comment wouldn't be interpreted that way -- I support how Alicorn feels about the issue even if I don't feel the same way. (I might anyway if my handle name was Alicorn -- or Cerise.)

However, I've been told by close friends that the most annoying trait about me is that I'm a "spin doctor" -- that I think that problems can be 'fixed' just by framing them differently.

Comment author: RobinZ 25 February 2010 01:26:30AM *  3 points [-]

Y'know, given the quote wedrifid pulled out, I don't think it should be except by a careless reader - mea culpa.

That "spin doctor" thing makes me wonder, though: is there some substantial variance* in the ability of people to reframe their way away from berserk buttons? It would explain some comments I have received if I personally am lacking in that attribute.

* Edited to add link.

Comment author: mattnewport 25 February 2010 01:37:39AM 5 points [-]

Recognizing that a berzerk button (I had to google that by the way, not everyone is a tvtropes fanatic contrary to what seems to be a common assumption here) is a fact about you and not a flaw in the external world is probably part of it. From an instrumental rationality point of view it is often easier to control or adjust your own reaction than it is to change the world to avoid your triggers.

Comment author: wedrifid 25 February 2010 02:01:47AM *  2 points [-]

Recognizing that a berzerk button (I had to google that by the way, not everyone is a tvtropes fanatic contrary to what seems to be a common assumption here)

It's on TvTropes? I just assumed "less stigmatised way of saying tantrum" based off context.

From an instrumental rationality point of view it is often easier to control or adjust your own reaction than it is to change the world to avoid your triggers.

The thing is that these triggers exist only for the purpose of changing the world. The most significant emotions are a way to have a credible precomittment to do a mutually destructive thing if the other(s) do(es) not comply. For example, by damaging one's own body with excess adrenalin and cortisol while causing similar distress to those who defected in your constructed game.

Quite often the triggers are actually well calibrated to serve our interests and it isn't always wise to mess with them.

Comment author: pjeby 25 February 2010 02:22:24AM 5 points [-]

Quite often the triggers are actually well calibrated to serve our genes' interests in the evolutionary ancestral evironment

Fixed that for you. ;-)

Comment author: wedrifid 25 February 2010 02:32:42AM *  4 points [-]

Good, but let me fix it further to what I really mean, ancestral environment included. ;)

The triggers are typically well calibrated to serve our genes' interest in the environment of evolutionary adaptation. Sometimes, but not always, these interests overlap with our own interests here and now and it isn't always wise to mess with them.

Comment author: pjeby 25 February 2010 02:49:40AM *  1 point [-]

Sometimes, but not always, these interests overlap with our own interests here and now and it isn't always wise to mess with them.

In the specific case of our socially-driven negative emotions -- those associated with status and status threats, especially -- they rarely overlap with our considered interests, unless we either

  1. already have high status, or
  2. are literally dependent upon our social circle for physical survival

In most other situations, actually having a negative emotional reaction will not serve our goals.

Interestingly enough, even in the event that a display of anger is tactically useful, a fake display of anger is actually even more effective and can even be status-enhancing. (I've heard it said that this is true of horses as well: that a trainer acting angry gets respect from the horse, but a trainer who's actually angry loses their place in the pecking order.)

This is probably why sociopaths are especially effective in the corporate tribal jungle, but I've also known a few very nice, non-sociopathic company presidents who had no problem yelling when something needed yelling about... without actually being angry about it.

Comment author: mattnewport 25 February 2010 02:12:06AM 2 points [-]

It's on TvTropes? I just assumed "less stigmatised way of saying tantrum" based off context.

I guessed at the meaning but it sounded like a specific reference to me, TVTropes is the first hit on Google.

The thing is that these triggers exist only for the purpose of changing the world. The most significant emotions are a way to have a credible precomittment to do a mutually destructive thing if the other(s) do(es) not comply. For example, by damaging one's own body with excess adrenalin and cortisol while causing similar distress to those who defected in your constructed game.

True, the tactic can also backfire however. I respond badly to such tactics, presumably partially an evolved defense to their widespread use.

Comment author: wedrifid 25 February 2010 02:18:12AM 1 point [-]

True, the tactic can also backfire however. I respond badly to such tactics, presumably partially an evolved defense to their widespread use.

Absolutely, and so do I. In fact I am myself emotionally precommitted to not be swayed by the implied threat of 'berzerk buttons' even though the immediate payoff structure may make submission have a lesser penalty to me than the mutually destructive punishment. This seems to work for me on net.

Comment author: RobinZ 25 February 2010 01:44:26AM *  1 point [-]

I apologize for not defining the term - links to TV Tropes spell trouble for a lot of people.

From an instrumental rationality point of view it is often easier to control or adjust your own reaction than it is to change the world to avoid your triggers.

True - but I prefer to advocate for adaptive behavior, rather than altered emotional response, in many cases. Pronouns is one such.

Comment author: mattnewport 25 February 2010 02:02:58AM *  1 point [-]

True - but I prefer to advocate for adaptive behavior, rather than emotional response, in many cases. Pronouns is one such.

The problem with that is that the behaviour that needs adapting is that of other people (in this case, to a first approximation, all English speakers). The emotional response is ones own and therefore easier to change.

You might continue to lobby for others to change their behaviour once the emotional response has been brought under control but unless you think the emotional response is actually the optimal way to change the behaviour of others it is not desirable.

Comment author: RobinZ 25 February 2010 02:18:31AM 0 points [-]

The problem with that is that the behaviour that needs adapting is that of other people (in this case, to a first approximation, all English speakers). The emotional response is ones own and therefore easier to change.

Not what I meant, surprisingly! The example I had in mind was someone changing their macroscopic reaction from "VERBAL HULK SMASH" to "icy courtesy" in order to leave a better impression without compromising the fervor of their principle. If you want to change the behavior of those around you - and you're right, sometimes you don't - then the emotional response is a good source of motivation.

Comment author: pjeby 25 February 2010 02:38:13AM 4 points [-]

If you want to change the behavior of those around you - and you're right, sometimes you don't - then the emotional response is a good source of motivation.

That depends on what you define as "good" and "motivation". Most kinds of negative emotional responses don't promote taking positive actions, and they're strressful and harmful to the body as well.

The example I had in mind was someone changing their macroscopic reaction from "VERBAL HULK SMASH" to "icy courtesy" in order to leave a better impression

Note that this ignores the ongoing personally detrimental effect on the person having the reaction, which is unchanged by the change in external behavior. Even if nobody knows you're angry, you still get to keep the health detriments (and reasoning deficits) of being angry.

without compromising the fervor of their principle.

Most people who are using the fervor of principle to motivate themselves would be better off having goals, instead. The distinction is that a principle's Platonic purity can never truly be satisfied in an imperfect world, but goals actually have a chance.

Fervently-held principles are also often a convenient excuse to avoid doing the sometimes-difficult job of thinking about what results one would like to have existing in the real world, and what tradeoffs or compromises might have to be made in order to create those results.

In effect, I see "fervent" principles as a form of wireheading... one that, not incidentally, wasted many more years of my life than I care to think about.

(This should not be construed to be against acting on reasoned principles, just to choosing one's principles based on fervor.)

Comment author: mattnewport 25 February 2010 02:27:52AM 2 points [-]

If you want to change the behavior of those around you - and you're right, sometimes you don't - then the emotional response is a good source of motivation.

It can also cloud judgement and lead to responding in a way likely to alienate your audience. I'm not convinced it is a net win in general, though it might be in the right circumstances / given the right audience.

Comment author: pjeby 25 February 2010 02:25:27AM *  0 points [-]

I prefer to advocate for adaptive behavior, rather than altered emotional response, in many cases. Pronouns is one such.

And instrumental rationality suggests that a non-berserk advocate is a more convincing advocate... so often the best way to successfully get people to change their behavior is to first get rid of your button(s).

(Being happily married to a fellow mindhacker, I have much experience with this phenomenon, as both the advocate and advocatee. ;-) )

Comment author: RobinZ 25 February 2010 03:12:15AM 2 points [-]

Not always. I posted a link to Greta Christina's "Atheists and Anger" elsewhere in this thread:

Which brings me to the other part of this little rant: Why atheist anger is not only valid, but valuable and necessary.


There's actually a simple, straightforward answer to this question:

Because anger is always necessary.

Because anger has driven every major movement for social change in this country, and probably in the world. The labor movement, the civil rights movement, the women's suffrage movement, the modern feminist movement, the gay rights movement, the anti-war movement in the Sixties, the anti-war movement today, you name it... all of them have had, as a major driving force, a tremendous amount of anger. Anger over injustice, anger over mistreatment and brutality, anger over helplessness.

I mean, why the hell else would people bother to mobilize social movements? Social movements are hard. They take time, they take energy, they sometimes take serious risk of life and limb, community and career. Nobody would fucking bother if they weren't furious about something.

So when you tell an atheist (or for that matter, a woman or a queer or a person of color or whatever) not to be so angry, you are, in essence, telling us to disempower ourselves. You're telling us to lay down one of the single most powerful tools we have at our disposal. You're telling us to lay down a tool that no social change movement has ever been able to do without. You're telling us to be polite and diplomatic, when history shows that polite diplomacy in a social change movement works far, far better when it's coupled with passionate anger. In a battle between David and Goliath, you're telling David to put down his slingshot and just... I don't know. Gnaw Goliath on the ankles or something.

I'll acknowledge that anger is a difficult tool in a social movement. A dangerous one even. It can make people act rashly; it can make it harder to think clearly; it can make people treat potential allies as enemies. In the worst-case scenario, it can even lead to violence. Anger is valid, it's valuable, it's necessary... but it can also misfire, and badly.

But unless we're actually endangering or harming somebody, it is not up to believers to tell atheists when we should and should not use this tool. It is not up to believers to tell atheists that we're going too far with the anger and need to calm down. Any more than it's up to white people to say it to black people, or men to say it to women, or straights to say it to queers. When it comes from believers, it's not helpful. It's patronizing. It comes across as another attempt to defang us and shut us up. And it's just going to make us angrier.

It is a fact of the matter - and this is me, RobinZ, speaking now - that "anger is false power" is a popular cached thought. (Those exact words are used in a bus advertisement in my area.) What I am telling you is that you should question that one - it is less general than is commonly supposed.

Comment author: pjeby 25 February 2010 03:22:20AM 1 point [-]

I posted a link to Greta Christina's "Atheists and Anger" elsewhere in this thread

What you quoted isn't really relevant to my point, which is that anger over a principle is not very beneficial to you as an individual, vs. passion or even faked anger in the pursuit of your concrete goals.

(I'd also strongly question whether e.g. Gandhi and MLK were motivated by anger over a principle, or the passionate pursuit of concrete goals.)

In general, fervor over principles is perhaps the most anti-rational emotional response that human beings have... and there's an evolutionary reason for that. Our genes need a way to get us to do things that are stupid for us as individuals, but good for our relatives and descendants or as moves in iterated PD.

Comment author: Morendil 25 February 2010 09:14:10AM 2 points [-]

Yes, reframing is a learnable skill. Family therapist Virginia Satir had a reputation as an exemplar of that skill. One book I've read, "The patterns of her magic", goes a little into the details of how it's done.

Comment author: wedrifid 25 February 2010 01:34:05AM *  2 points [-]

That "spin doctor" thing makes me wonder, though: is there some substantial variance in the ability of people to reframe their way away from berserk buttons?

I think so. It seems to depend on personality (innate emphasis on practical vs political thinking for example), education (cognitive behavioral therapy emphazises reframing things away from awfulising and suchlike) and status ('berzerk button' is a high status only option).

(I should note that I am not trying to label the berzerk button as defective by observing that it is trained away from in CBT. CBT is intended for people who's existing thought process is not working for them. If going berzerk or otherwise allowing things to make you angry gets you what you want then CBTing it away is not advocated.)

Comment author: NancyLebovitz 13 March 2011 11:49:05AM 0 points [-]

It would surprise me if there were some psychological trait which didn't show a lot of variance.

Comment author: CuSithBell 13 March 2011 05:39:16PM 0 points [-]

We probably wouldn't even call it a trait.

Comment author: pjeby 25 February 2010 02:19:30AM 3 points [-]

I think that problems can be 'fixed' just by framing them differently.

Really, that's the best way to fix problems. Funny enough, when our brains aren't reacting to something as though it's some kind of threat to our life or status, our higher reasoning actually functions and lets us change the outside world in a more sensible way.

I don't think this makes you a "spin doctor", unless you're attempting to reframe others' problems for your benefit at their expense.

Comment author: wedrifid 25 February 2010 12:31:45AM 0 points [-]

No, I would estimate that to be roughly equal. I don't think females use 'man' or 'boy' to insult other females in the same way as males use 'woman' or 'girl' to insult each other.

The explanation I give suggests only that the use of 'girl' as an insult is not intended to be of the form "You are a girl. Girls are bad, therefore you are bad." It is inteded to be of the form "You have female traits. Female traits on a male are extremely low status. You have status below both other males and females".

Comment author: Alicorn 25 February 2010 12:34:56AM 0 points [-]

It looked like you were using the fact that males insult each other by insinuating that they have female traits to back up the hypothesis that it is more insulting for a male to be referred to with the wrong pronoun. If you think that the reverse scenario is about equal, why would this make it more insulting, rather than just as insulting?

Comment author: wedrifid 25 February 2010 12:41:45AM *  2 points [-]

For the same reason that I would take offence at being called a 'bastard' even though I actually couldn't care less that my parents happened to be married at the time of my conception.

If something is commonly used as an insult then that can be expected to cause offence independently of any factual content. So my claim is:

It looked like you were using the fact that males insult each other [by calling each other girls] to back up the hypothesis that it is more insulting for a male to be referred to with the wrong pronoun.

It's a typical insult. Insults bad. That's all.

Comment author: Alicorn 25 February 2010 12:47:37AM 1 point [-]

I think I might be talking past you. Let me try to re-frame my confusion:

Art calls Ben "girly" because Ben has exhibited stereotypically feminine trait F.

Meanwhile, Amy calls Bev "mannish" because Bev has exhibited stereotypically masculine trait M.

It looks like both Ben and Bev should be insulted, by about the same amount, and you seemed to assent to this, above.

Given this background, if Random Internet Person goes on to refer to Amy as "he" and Art as "she", whence your above indication that Art should be more insulted than Amy?

Comment author: wedrifid 25 February 2010 12:52:16AM *  -1 points [-]

Well put. I'm not myself exposed to what girls do to each other behind the scenes while I know males far better. Would you consider 'mannish' to be a ubiquitous insult? If so then Art should not be insulted more than Amy by 'he'/'she' mistakes.

My impression is that 'mannish' is used less than 'girly' to such a degree that the implied insult (by this specific mechanism) of 'he' is much less 'she'.

Comment author: Alicorn 25 February 2010 12:54:26AM *  1 point [-]

I can't think of a way to non-insultingly apply "mannish" to a woman.

Comment author: wedrifid 25 February 2010 12:57:12AM -1 points [-]

And I can't think of 'mannish' being used ever. My impression was that female competition tended to be a little more sophisticated than banal locker room banter.

Comment author: Alicorn 25 February 2010 12:58:58AM 1 point [-]

Well, I don't think it would customarily be said to one's face...

Comment author: NancyLebovitz 13 March 2011 11:46:29AM 0 points [-]

I'd say that "mannish" is an obsolete insult-- in use in the 1940s and 1950s (I'm going by feel on this).

"Looks like a man" is current, and specifically about appearance.

I'm not sure if there are standard insults used by women to other women about other masculine traits.

Comment author: mattnewport 25 February 2010 12:59:26AM 0 points [-]

And I can't think of 'mannish' being used ever.

Have you never seen Austin Powers?

Comment author: wedrifid 25 February 2010 01:05:19AM *  1 point [-]

Austin Powers: You must admit she is rather mannish. Really, if that is a woman she must have been beaten with an ugly stick.

Good point. Now I can think of one.

Vanessa: That's you in a nutshell.

Austin Powers: No, this is me in a nutshell: 'Help! I'm in a nutshell. How did I get into this bloody great big nutshell? What kind of shell has a nut like this?'

And that is just damn funny.

Comment author: wnoise 25 February 2010 02:49:28AM *  0 points [-]

Speaking as an actual bastard, I'm more familiar with the term being applied at time of birth, not conception.

Comment author: wedrifid 25 February 2010 02:56:53AM 0 points [-]

Good point.

(I wonder about people who divorce during the gestation period.)