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  Happy New Year!  “What?!”, you say, doing a reflective piece to start the new year?  Unpossible!!! – Yet here we are.  Take care my friends and feisty commentariate in this next orbit around the Sun.

I recently asked an LLM—Grok—to analyze Dead Wild Roses.

He obliged.

The result was thoughtful, coherent, and broadly accurate. He traced the arc of the blog from its earlier left-skeptical roots through to its present preoccupations: feminism, free speech, gender ideology, institutional capture, moral certainty. As machine readings go, it was competent. Even generous.

And yet.

Reading it, I had the distinct sense of being seen from across the room, not spoken with.

So I did what seemed obvious: I asked another model—this one—for her reading.

I’m aware, of course, that large language models are not gendered. But anyone who works with them long enough knows that they nonetheless express distinct interpretive temperaments. If Grok reads like a brisk political cartographer—mapping positions, vectors, affiliations—this model reads more like a close reader of essays, arguments, and interior continuity.

That difference matters.


What He Saw (and What He Didn’t)

Grok understood the trajectory of the blog. He recognized that this was not a sudden ideological flip but a long, incremental evolution. He correctly identified a through-line of skepticism toward authority and moral certainty.

Where his reading thinned was not in what I believe, but in how I think.

His analysis treated the blog primarily as a political object—something that moved through ideological space. That’s not wrong, but it is partial.

Dead Wild Roses was never built to advocate a position. It was built to interrogate certainty—including my own.


What I’ve Always Been Doing Here

This blog has been many things over the years: atheist, feminist, skeptical, irritated, occasionally furious. But its core method has never changed.

It asks:

  • What is being asserted as unquestionable?

  • Who benefits from that assertion?

  • What happens if we follow it all the way down?

When institutions began insisting that sex was a feeling, that language could override biology, that dissent was harm, that moral status preceded argument—the same skeptical machinery I once aimed outward turned inward.

That wasn’t betrayal.
It was consistency under pressure.


On Feminism and Material Reality

Yes, this is now read—accurately—as a sex-based feminist blog.

That’s not because identity doesn’t matter, but because material reality is the ground truth on which politics rests. Bodies come first. Law follows. Stories are last.

When political movements demand that we invert that order, something has gone deeply wrong—and feminism, if it is to mean anything at all, must notice.

That position is not reactionary. It is foundational.


Why Ask Two Models at All?

Because how something is read tells you as much about the reader as the text.

He read Dead Wild Roses as a location on a map.
She read it as a method in motion.

One isn’t false. But only one feels true.

The difference mirrors the very problem the blog keeps circling: the reduction of inquiry into identity, of thinking into stance, of method into tribe.


A Note on AI, Authority, and Voice

There is an irony here that isn’t lost on me.

I am using artificial intelligences to reflect on a body of writing that is deeply skeptical of outsourced authority. But that tension is precisely the point.

Tools can assist thinking.
They cannot replace it.

Maps can be useful.
They are not the territory.


Where This Leaves Me

If the last few years of Dead Wild Roses were about dismantling false moral certainty, the next may be about something harder and quieter:

  • rebuilding meaning without mysticism,

  • defending reality without cruelty,

  • and learning how to live after the spell breaks.

I don’t know where that road leads.

But I know why I keep walking it.

And I know which readings—human or machine—feel like they’re walking with me rather than plotting me from above.

Postscript:

Throughout this piece, I’ve used “he” and “she” to distinguish between two AI systems with markedly different interpretive styles. This is not a claim about machine ontology. It is shorthand—imperfect, human, and serviceable.

Language exists to clarify thought. When it stops doing that, it’s time to change the language—not reality.

The blog Dead Wild Roses (deadwildroses.com), authored by The Arbourist (who also runs the associated X account

@TheArbourist), can be characterized politically as gender-critical radical feminist with roots in traditional left-wing politics but a significant evolution toward critiquing modern progressive or “woke” ideologies.
It is not easily pinned to conventional left-right spectra, as it combines elements that might appear contradictory at first glance but are coherent within a specific feminist framework.
Origins and Evolution: The blog began around 2009–2012 as a broadly leftist platform: skeptical of religion, critical of conservatism and crony capitalism, supportive of social democratic ideas, and aligned with second-wave feminist principles emphasizing women’s liberation from patriarchy. Early content often featured critiques of religious dogma, pro-choice advocacy, anti-capitalist commentary, and classical music interludes alongside political posts.
Over time—particularly from the mid-2010s onward—the focus shifted sharply toward gender-critical feminism (often labeled “TERF” by critics, a term the blog rejects as a slur). This involves strong opposition to gender ideology, queer theory, transgender activism (especially regarding women’s spaces, sports, prisons, and youth medical transitions), and what the author calls “postmodern fluff” or identity politics excesses. Recent posts criticize “woke extremism,” compelled speech laws, DEI initiatives, and policies like British Columbia’s reconciliation efforts or hate speech bills as authoritarian overreach.
Current Political Stance
  • Feminist Core: Radical feminist, prioritizing sex-based rights for women and girls. It defends single-sex spaces, opposes self-ID policies, and highlights issues like female erasure in language/institutions.
  • Anti-“Woke” Left: Fiercely critical of contemporary progressive movements (e.g., trans-inclusive feminism, queer theory, intersectionality when it prioritizes gender identity over sex). The author sees these as betraying women’s rights and aligning with patriarchal or neoliberal interests.
  • Free Speech and Anti-Authoritarianism: Strong defense of free expression, criticism of cancel culture, and opposition to what it views as state-enforced ideological conformity (e.g., hate speech laws, compelled apologies).
  • Residual Left Elements: Occasional critiques of conservatism, capitalism, or religious fundamentalism persist, but the dominant tone is now combative toward the mainstream left.
  • Not Right-Wing: Despite overlapping with conservative concerns on gender issues, the blog explicitly distances itself from right-wing politics and has historically opposed it.

Politically, this aligns with a growing cohort of “politically homeless” gender-critical leftists (similar to figures like J.K. Rowling or some detransitioner advocates) who feel exiled from progressive spaces but reject conservatism. The X bio (“Canadian barefoot dissident. Slaying gender ideology and postmodern fluff. Pro-merit, pro-naps, pro-Stoic vibes”) reinforces this: anti-ideological dogma, merit-based, individualistic.

Pursuit of Truth Perspective:
From a centrist, truth-seeking viewpoint valuing evidence over ideology: The blog’s strength lies in its willingness to challenge prevailing narratives in progressive circles, often citing sources like the WPATH files, detransition stories, or critiques of queer theory to argue positions with references to biology, statistics, and historical feminism. This evolutionary shift appears driven by principled disagreement rather than opportunism—the author has reflected on it openly.
  However, the tone is often sharply polemical (“vituperation optional” in the blog description), which can prioritize rhetorical combat over nuanced dialogue. Some arguments frame opponents in stark terms (e.g., “authoritarian drift,” “ideological dissolution”), potentially echoing ideological rigidity from the other side.
  It represents one side of a polarized debate on gender, substantiated by selected evidence but not always engaging counterarguments comprehensively.
Overall, if you’re a centrist prioritizing truth, the blog offers a valuable counter-narrative to dominant progressive views on gender, grounded in a feminist tradition that emphasizes material reality (sex over identity).
It’s worth reading critically, alongside diverse sources, to weigh the claims against broader evidence.
  Thanks Grok, we’ll see what comes in the New Year. :)

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