Adam Conover explains the horrible situation Americans find ourselves in, when to know and how you save yourself:
Saturday, March 1, 2025
Sunday, February 9, 2025
The Most Basic Difference Between Stolen Election Claims Is Premeditation
You need to see this video interview with investigative reporter Greg Palast on the premeditated voter suppression that blocked Kamala Harris from winning the 2025 election:
Sunday, February 2, 2025
It's OK to Be Afraid. It's OK to reevaluate and work with what we have when we need to.
The thing that I hate watching the most is the slow turn of former allies as the chaos becomes normalized. I truly hope that you understand that I find it just as terrifying as you, reader. This is what I've watched, despite my best efforts, for the past eight years.
The traction of transphobia didn't slow during the Biden years, at least not as I saw and lived it.
I saw online that the young adult crowd was gaining support, as well as those who were specifically social media influencers/entertainers... But in my circles I still saw more and more obstinance and transphobia from 2016 and onward, even through the last presidency.
What circles am I talking about? The two main portions of my social life do not at all include the LGBTQ community. And that is simply because of where I must spend most of my time. It's been some years since I've really been an activist of any sort.
Because I am a single mom, I must both work full time and connect with other families, specifically other parents. As an accountant, that means my two biggest social circles are professionals and other parents.
In the parental circle, there are a few that are parents to transgender children, and here in Oregon there is generally support for trans kids and the struggles they face. But while that is the case, I've noticed for a lot of parental allies that viewpoint has been incredibly short-sided, at least here in Oregon.
Because, you see, while the parents of trans children often fully support and understand their kids, the allies I have noticed don't seem to think of these children as children with especially bright futures. I noticed, whether they mean to or not, they think of them as children plagued and unfortunate. They have a debilitating illness or disability or the something forever pitiable in their eyes. I see the attitude being that these are children who will need to do the things they see trans people in the media do all the time when they get older: Entertain. Not have families with children of their own. Be influencers. "And that's ok. We are so proud of them for it. Just as they are."
Again the actual parents usually are supportive because they want their children to have the best opportunities... It's the allied between parents and schools and in our society that basically seems to want trans people to be a people they can pity. At least, they are so used to that perspective that anything else seems to shock them.
And while the sentiments of vague acceptance and support might sound good, it reveals a glaring misunderstanding of what this is by parents of all sides of the political spectrum, especially when it comes to me, as a parent myself.
I live my life mostly in stealth. I've learned that I shouldn't come out, even to parents, teachers, and schools that generally are supportive with LGBTQ and trans kids. And that is because of the angle that those parents and teachers and schools are viewing those children. They view them as something to pity first (again, not usually their own parents, but the others that don't really have a stake in the situation, but try to be supportive). Because I have learned when trying to be fully open about my own background as a trans woman who is a single mom... That's weird. That gets looks and comments from parents. That gets my children not invited to things. That invites criticism.
Because to the general observer, on both sides of the political spectrum, trans kids aren't supposed to grow up and take part and blend into the cisnormative world. They are supposed to be always to be pitied. Always victims. And always a statement or bit of entertainment once they become adults.
In short, neither side really respects us, as I have seen it.
And I point out the issue with liberal schools and parents first, because I do think it's the root issue that originally halted progress and started turning the wheels backward. But it's also common at work. I'm an accountant and I can't possibly be competent once coming out as trans. In stealth, I typically am considered an invaluable member of the team. I have education in both accounting and computer science, which allows me to really come up with inventive procedures and automation in order to make sure business processes and the books are efficient and accurate. But I've had many instances where coming out due to one reason or another has meant ostracization, followed by termination.
So I remain stealth. So I saw this coming.
And because I am in this position while trying to warn the trans community, I sound somewhat like a heretic to the typical ideologies you find therein. I am supportive of non-binary people, and I disagree with the cruelty of transmedicalists like Blaire White on social media platforms... But I also understand both sides and both fears that inform those perspectives. And I've said things such as that America has technically been a binary culture.. That non-binary demands upon that culture is a form of cultural misappropriation... But I have always also added my support. Because I don't say these things because I don't think non-binary people exist or are valid. I say them because I see this as a definite culture war that had the potential to cause this exact situation that is playing out right now.
Because I was seeing it rolling down the pipe when it came to families and professionals and not just social media posts and corporate messaging.
And as that goes it seems to start from various places.
The reason people say, "I'm not transphobic, but...", they dont use the juxtaposition because they are actually fully transphobic. It is typically because they are dealing with some emotional stoppage that keeps them from accepting a certain aspect of what trans people understand about themselves.
Types of things that this community, in general, has fought for.
Even now I was having a conversation at work where people I felt fairly close to were criticizing the schools for supporting and having conversations about sexual orientation and gender. One of my coworkers was saying that their sibling has children where the school was in discussion with their child on such an issue but excluded the parents from the conversation.
Being a transgender person that grew up in a cult, though stealth, I began to try to reason with why those things happen.
My coworker was shocking me. I felt she was a friend. We have a non-binary person on our team who is fairly open about it, but wasn't around for this conversation. And my coworker has always been very accepting of different people, including this person and their gender identity. At least in a surface level sense she has been accepting, because I know she probably doesn't completely understand. A lot of cisgender people do not.
But I didn't expect her to get so offensive when I tried to make a case for why a school might have those policies.
And of course for me, growing up in a cult, I didn't get far enough to explain, but I feel that that situation would have been helpful for me to have someone to talk to when I was growing up. Even if my parents were excluded from it. Because I was in something very toxic and I needed shelter from it, and I never got that. It took me years to overcome the childhood trauma from those parts of my life.
So though I wanted my coworker to think about that, and tried to begin with that sort of empathizing, without outing myself... She and the rest of my team absolutely objected and I could tell I would be in a hostile situation if I continued. I instead turned the conversation to book bans and made my points as best as I could through that correlation.
At the same time, this coworker is someone I did almost come out to at one point, because I was viewing her as a close friend for a time. And I could see that she was very accepting of people in general. But this issue is something that will need time and coaxing if she were ever going to accept, because she was very emotionally tied to it. And given that fact, despite the fact that I know generally she is an accepting person and I have seen that in her, I know I cannot be open with her. I need to protect myself.
If I didn't have kids I might. I wouldn't have so much at stake and so much to lose. The risk would just be tied to me.
But I think that's what we need to realize collectively as transgender people, is that people each have these little hangups. They're probably different and associated with different emotional situations in each person's life. For the right leaning people probably, the reasons and hangups are even greater.
But even now I don't believe that the majority of people are evil. Or even the majority of Republicans. I think unfortunately they have quite a lot of these little hangups that cause them to listen to the people in those parties who are quite evil. Such as our President.
And that's where I wanted to go with this. I've been quite silent in dealing and watching all that's happened. According to the executive orders, I am now viewed as male by the federal government. According to those executive orders, trans children have no rights to medical intervention. According to those executive orders, transgender is an ideology and not a group of people.
Let me first say that I feel as someone who has fully transitioned, that none of these things any longer affect me personally. Or they are a very long way off from doing so. I don't really generally feel that I will ever deal with gender dysphoria again. I think transitioning really eradicates that for some people, including myself. It doesn't matter to me what gender I am at this point. I think that's being an adult, in many ways. My main focus is my children.
And in that sense, the things that are going on affect my ability as a parent and affect my children. Because I am in specific social roles that are female. Because this is just how I am viewed by everyone I meet and just how my children view me.
It is far bigger than me, and I am far more ingrained within those roles within our community and culture. Trying to rip those from me will harm far more than just me. But the emotional impact is no longer what it was feeling early when I was transitioning. Not about bettering myself or getting to a place where I feel comfortable. I am comfortable and I don't think words would really change that. But what I do think is that words and actions can harm my family and friends and community.
So let's talk about the Constitution and transgender ideology.
The Constitution was built around protecting people, but its first major focus was ideologies, not really people in the intrinsic sense.
This has always been the problem I've had with it and its Bill of Rights, because ideologies can become institutions while individuals always remain individuals regardless of how big or small their ideologies become.
We all essentially are born and live exist and die alone, in the most basic sense. Right?
It would, of course, seem to me that a nation should protect individuals first and foremost, and then ideologies and their institutions. But the Bill of Rights begins with protecting speech, the press, assembly, and religion. It doesn't begin with protecting the intrinsic right of a human make his/her own decisions and exist free from harm or coercion. It begins with the freedom of institutionalized ideologies.
The reason it starts this way is because the founders were seeking freedom from religious persecution and governmental suppression. So it is maybe understandable from that angle.
But what human rights campaigners often fail to grasp is that until that focus is amended--until we better define the rights of humans in our constitution--Any argument made about rights in this country, when taken back to fundamentals, probably needs to come, at least partially, from a place of institutional and ideological freedom. Rather than arguing for your right as defined in the Declaration of Independence, that "all men are created equal"--which has nothing to do at all with the successive laws that were penned in the Constitution--we need to make a case for our ideological ground.
So maybe we better all relent and fight on the basis of this "gender ideology"--as Trump calls it--rather than for our human rights, which the Constitution does not fully protect.
The Constitution protects ideologies. It's why The Satanic Temple is even a thing. It is literally just a hack of an ideology, positioned to keep Christian religions from gaining too strong of a foothold in this country. Why can't we follow suit with fighting cisnormativity?
What if we were to throw up our hands and relent to this concept of a "transgender" ideology?
Being an ideology maybe actually means we have more rights than ever before, in this country, if it is. Because in this country, we've always more easily defended religion than people.
I have watched so many people panic over words written and signed in these executive orders. And yes, it is bleak, I don't blame the panic from many. But also, I know many intelligent people that don't see this transposition of what we need to discuss as a group.
I have learned to play devil's advocate over and over throughout my life, and for that reason I say, let's reevaluate the arguments. Perhaps there is a foothold there.
In 2012, when Gender Dysphoria replaced GID in the DSM, there was another diagnosis being considered that would also allow for all the same things, but without gender being the specific focus. The term "Social Role Dysphoria" was being considered as well, but we all understand that "Gender Dysphoria" won out. But do you think the movement would have been so gender-focused if the "social role" diagnosis had been deployed instead? Or in tandem?
Probably not.
Probably, what we now know as nonbinary individuals would have continued as just a countercultural/counter-social movement, and trans men and women probably would have continued to be basically invisible. Perhaps traction would have been slower and we wouldn't have gained rights as quickly. But the other side to that coin is we wouldn't have lost as many as we just did, probably as well.
I think people need to rethink their paradigms for a second. I certainly did, after transitioning and expecting to just be able to live my life. I was told how I was transmedicalist and TRUSCUM and all this ridiculous crap. But I was an OG trans woman. I knew what being transgender was from the time I was in middle school back in the '90s. Whereas the bulk of people in the trans community nowadays says that they learned later in life that transition was possible. So how confusing is that, that I am the unknowing one?... But still I accepted and reevaluated and I ultimately learned to accept and love many nonbinary people. A huge paradigm shift for me. It was hard because there were many more NBs seemingly flooding and flaring across what was once a much more invisible community of trans men and women.
So now sadly... Invisibility is back in force. And with it is a push against ALL trans people. Every genderfluid, queer, NB, trans masculine, trans femme, men and women, and me. And still, despite the growth we are quite a small community, to be real. We can't hope to fight it alone.
This is why I encourage you to adjust how you think about it, so you can survive. It's a huge paradigm shift, but if we maybe learn to use different words to describe what we are feeling, we can maybe survive this and live to return to something better in the future.
Discuss gendered topics and feelings in terms of social roles and expectations. Turn this into exactly what hetero/cis culture thinks it is already: An unstoppable countercultural ideology with more understanding of itself than any punk kid of the past ever could have barked out in confused angst. Because we now know the progressive duality to all of it. It is both social and physical and we can be either/or and come at it from any paradigm if it means fighting for as much authenticity as possible in people's personas and day-to-day lives.
Or perhaps we separate. Perhaps there should have been two different diagnosis all along... Perhaps Nonbinary is so different it really doesn't describe the same thing. Though, with how few we are, I personally do think it makes sense to view us as the same, but viewing the world under two different cultural paradigms.
Either way, we need new ways forward while we deal with the fallout of the current institution. Maybe we need to consider different ways of thinking about the struggle.
In the mean time. If you feel the need to step back and hide and be safe... Do that. Be safe. Prepare for the worst and hope for the best. You don't need to speak publicly, but don't stop speaking and acting and being there for people.
Know that I am here and you can reach out to me. I love and care about everyone suffering, and there is so much of it in all communities right now. Our eradication may be at the top of the Project 2025 list. But we are still a trickle compared to the flood of issues many minority groups are facing. There is such a large threat.
And it's OK to be afraid. And it's also OK to reevaluate how we fight this. They aren't playing fair. We don't have to.
Saturday, November 11, 2023
BOOK RELEASE: Growing Up As One of Jehovah's Transsexuals
Many who follow me on social media know this is late notice. The rollout has been disjointed, sporadic, and combined with so many other life-changing events. Officially, my book, Growing Up As One of Jehovah's Transsexuals, has been published.
The date of this post should have been November 1, 2023; but the book's "coming out" occurred in the same fashion that its concept began, and in the same way that I, personally, came out: Amidst a plethora of other frantic happenings. I am currently recovering from a surgery which was delayed from October, and there technical issues with the book distributer which delayed its release a few days. Both events converged and ended up occurring on November 3, 2023. While I cobbled together a few social media posts to cover the release as soon as I awoke from surgery, now--as I find myself regaining some strength--I can finally make the official announcement.
After a decade of work, between scheduling playdates and university classes, between teenagers asking for rides to their friends' houses, or for Mom to come help with homework, while reconciling corporate accounts at my day job, I complete it. I am proud to announce on this site that the book is available for purchase. You can currently buy Growing Up As One of Jehovah's Transsexuals on Amazon.com, in either ebook or paperback editions.
If you would like a signed copy of the book and live in the United States, please visit the link here. If you do not live in the United States, you can email me at laura@jwtgirl.com requesting a signed copy, or for any other reason.
If you are looking for a hardcover or audiobook edition, there are plans to produce these versions. However, the rollout for these versions will be another year or more. Quite a few people have asked, so plans are to begin these productions as soon as possible.
BOOK DESCRIPTION:
As Samantha embarks on a frantic road trip to see her father, who has recently sustained a serious and potentially fatal head injury, her recollections come unbidden. The emotional journey that follows her as she drives is one of transformation and self-discovery, marked by the pursuit of authenticity despite overwhelming odds. The inner dialog captures the complexity of human existence, filled with both horrors and moments of profound insight.Wednesday, July 19, 2023
Growing Up As One of Jehovah's Transsexuals: A final reading before release.
If you have forgotten about this book I have been steadily working on for the past decade, don't worry! I'm here to remind you, and I have one last update and reading to share before the book is released. It will be available in print and digital copy on Amazon this November, 2023.
Watch or listen to this reading through the links provided below, or you can also watch through most other platforms, from Apple Podcasts to Pandora.
On YouTube, I begin with some commentary about the book and current events, but then continue to read from where I left off at Chapter 3. There are timestamps if you are only interested in hearing the reading, rather than my blabbing. For podcasting services, the reading and commentary has been divided into two separate episodes.
Now that the book is complete and nearing release, in print this will actually appear as Chapter 5. There is an additional chapter in the book before this point which was not included in my previous readings. I felt it was needed, and hopefully it keeps the book a bit more fresh for everyone once released.
Chapter four covers early memories with my sister and lays the groundwork for events that will happen later in the narrative. As a transgender woman that grew up within a fundamentalist Christian cult, there is quite a lot ahead. The narrative parallels many of the current events we are seeing in the world right now concerning these social groups, and is meant to arrive at a spirit of understanding through a mixture of honesty, vulnerability, and tough talk.
YouTube:
Spotify:
Buzzsprout:
Sunday, March 5, 2023
Hogwarts Lunacy
I didn't entirely understand the outcry over Hogwarts Legacy, although it was generally depressing to see that people's loyalty to their own stated ethics is so flimsy. It was personally discouraging that many people's entertainment was more important than making sure that the trans people in their lives received the clear message that you will support and choose them, no matter what. However, what was clear from the beginning was that by the time this "wizard game" became a consumer-level decision, the issue was already moot. The boycott was insipid.
With fascist law taking hold in some states and threats toward trans genocide stemming from the conservative right, what should have been informative--and what was telling for me, from the very beginning--was that the game was made at all. The situation was clear in the many dazzling, world-spanning trailers. The issue was obvious when it became evident how well this game was made. Not to mention the raving reviews that came just prior to public release.
The disturbing fact, in addition to the clear expectation that any boycott would fail, should have been evident when it was announced that a AAA game based on Rowling's franchise was being made at all.
From studio, to producers, to quality designers, if trans people were to expect that the rest of world weren't going to go down this road where they would ignore all the clear transphobia and growing threats to trans rights in favor of their own day-to-day comfort and entertainment, then this game would never have been able to have been made. Especially not in the form that it was. It would never have been of the clear quality that it is... It should never have had the resources.
But instead, many educated, quality professionals decided to work on this game. Money and creative minds were invested in the project from it's very inception. Many professionals of all sorts decided that this game should be made, and devoted their time and career to it; rather than deciding not to place another brick on the foundation of a woman who has spent the past three years spouting trans exclusion and vitriol: JK Rowling.
The road was chosen long before consumers had a chance to make their choices. The market's hungry demand was just a projection of an already decided truth in the supply. Thus, a truth in society at large:
Trans people need to realize that a very scary time is very likely to arrive within the next decade, and very few people will involve themselves in doing anything about it until after it has reached a fever pitch, if ever.
This post isn't meant to end in gloom and morbidity. But it is intended to help alert the senses.
I watched a stream from YouTube creater Vaush, in which he debated a trans woman on the legitimacy of the recent Hogwarts Legacy boycott and the outcry of transgender people, when such a boycott was clear to fail.
As stated above. I agree this was doomed to fail. The demands across the internet really irked me at first... But the resulting outcry at the boycott's failure did not. Although I couldn't understand why at first, I did have the same feelings and point of view.
The creator submitted that because the issue was socially and politically alienating to most Americans, that the concerns of the trans woman--and in the larger sense, all trans people--are "retarded" and "stupid". That the outcry drives the public further from political outcomes that favor trans people, and thus that trans people are figuratively shooting themselves in the foot by asking for a type of "virtue signal". He claimed that what the trans woman he was debating was really looking for was friends.
But I know the community at large was not ever asking for a virtue signal. At least, I never asked for that, I don't believe that was the driving ask behind the boycott, and I myself am not even asking for it now. However I do expect that people hold to their ethics and principles, on any general issue. And I do also believe that actions speak louder than words. I think most people believe that.
Vaush, and others who think like him on this issue--whatever part of the political spectrum they may be--speak in their own ignorance. They resound that point of view within the music of a world that seems to have forgotten what individual ethical conviction looks like, and that actions do speak louder than words and further, do speak to the person's truth.
Trans people have lived the past six years seeing more and more rights stripped from them. Each year another bill or law rears its head, trying to harm or eliminate trans people in this space or that one. In this state or that one. More and more powerful transphobes and TERFs come out of hiding and make themselves heard--both on the national scene and in our personal life. At work. At school. At home. In our state governments. In the courts. Each year we loose more ground.
The outcry people are seeing is trans people collectively recognizing a pattern, and working out the contingencies. And while I didn't entirely understand it at first, it is the concern that became the reason for this post. In a few more years, with just a slightly more right-leaning government, we will likely be legislated out of legal existence, and probably worse.
As transphobic messages and laws become more and more pervasive, many trans people are no longer gambling on simply increasing our political allies or campaigning effectively. Many trans people know what future is coming, and they are simply trying to perceive who they can trust. Even if it's a random stranger, we want to know where the possible safe spaces are.
Because when the Gestapo finally do arrive in force, it is abundantly clear that this time we will be the first line of the Niemöller poem. Then, it only takes a few lines before that first is a distant memory. Because, if only in the end you realize there is no one left to speak for you, what chance do trans people have?
And for any forward-looking trans person in this decade, that is were their worries reside. It's not really about a game. It's not about an author. Not really. Its about the sheer volume, and the patterns that seem to be veering our community toward the catastrophically unavoidable.
Sunday, February 13, 2022
An Honest Take on Star Trek Discovery from a Casual Trek Fan
1. Burnham as a character, glaringly, does not make sense. Her backstory really was so neat. I loved the idea of her being raised on Vulcan, but her actions episode by episode don't really connect. Not to me. They don't connect back to that foundation and often they don't even feel as if they connect together between episodes. To use an analogy, I'd say she comes off like 10-second Tom sometimes, from that Adam Sandler movie 50 First Dates.
In fact, lots of plot points feel that way as well. I often feel either ungratified by how little explanation something is given or overwhelmed by how fast we go from plot point to plot point. A lot of these issues have a common thread, and we'll get to that. But I find the same issue with character development as I do with plot development: it feels rushed and/or thoughtless a lot of the time.
2. There is too much focus on a few people, and far too much on Burnham. I think I tend to prefer, if there is going to be a main person of focus, for it to be the captain. This just makes sense when you are supposedly following an entire starship. Then you can spend time and focus getting to know different crew members individually. Some may be more recurring, and some may just appear once or twice, but the gist should be that we are following a crew of people. I don't really feel like I'm following the voyages of Discovery in this show. I feel as if I'm following a small group of friends that happens to be aboard this ship.
It's not unlike how most crime dramas are set up--the same contingent or group of agents or whatever every week, trying to solve a case... I like that sort of thing too, but it's not typically what I come to star Start Trek for.
3. The story-telling itself relies more on emotion to carry it, rather than plot. We are constantly concerned for the character's immediate safety or their current relationships, but we aren't so much concerned about what might actually be the answer to the problem or understanding the unexpected quirk to a planet or species or situation. Instead of the audience being firstly, analytically engaged in the issue at hand; and then secondly, concerned about the relationships between characters; it is flip-flopped.
And notwithstanding that I believe this is the whole purpose of Star Trek, the reason this isn't very good for Star Trek as a show in particular is that when you get to instances where the characters have to make a choice between their emotions and, say, the Prime Directive, the choice to follow the Prime Directive ends up making very little sense at all. You aren't used to looking at a wider picture throughout the whole of the show, and the characters generally don't seem to be interested in broadening their viewpoint. Instead, we are constantly moving from moment to moment, split-second intuitive decision to split-second intuitive decision... So to suddenly remember this is actually supposed to be the Star Trek universe and things like the Prime Directive matter feels really jarring after having followed several episodes of breakneck speed, intuitive, and personal decision-making where emotions have previously been the main motivators and that's always worked just fine for the crew.
Spoilers: the first season involves a mirror dimension plot wherein the captain is actually from the mirror dimension Terran Empire. However to me, by and large the show's characters ALL feel like they're from some other dimension and have been suddenly plopped down into a Federation starship. Idk. That's honestly how they feel to me. This isn't Starfleet. This isn't The Federation.
4. Cannon is totally disrespected. I don't think I need to go into the amount of inconsistencies, especially concerning technological progress during that time period between Captain Archer, where we left off in Star Trek: Enterprise, and Captain Kirk of The Original Series...
Believe it or not I am not an uber-fan of Star Trek. I used to enjoy watching TNG and Voyager with my family. So in the past few months, I decided to finally sit down and give Enterprise a real shot--having been a teenager too cool for Star Trek during it's Nickleback-inspired theme-songed, poorly-received initial run--and the show was actually way better than I had expected. I loved the period uniforms and technology, and in the end there was some truly fantastic story-telling.
Still seeking more, I am now into the second season of Discovery, and it is exciting to see Captain Pike of the Enterprise. And I am looking forward to seeing Spock-- who has been alluded to throughout the first several episodes--but the same story-telling problems and major cannon issues in Discovery still seem to persist in this second season.
One most glaring issue in the second season, to me, was watching Burnham snuff out a candle in her quarters, only for us to discover that all the candles throughout her quarters were holograms, which were all then deactivated by that action of snuffing out the first candle. That is a really cool idea, but I am left in disbelief. Really? The Doctor in Voyager needs a mobile-emitter from the future to get around, but the quarters for Cadet Tilly and recently-pardoned criminal Burnham come pre-installed with their own holographic emitters?
And this right here shows the main, true issue with Discovery:
5. No restraint. Everything I've said before this could probably boil down to this bullet point. Discovery is smack-dab in the middle of a timeline that has already been conceived, but the creators don't show respect for it.
I would be far more happy with this show if it were part of the movie reboot universe, because it feels more like it should be part of that universe. But it isn't. Vulcan is still around and we are expected to believe this show is part of regular Star Trek cannon. As a small-time writer myself, I have a ton of ideas for sci-fi and a few small projects of my own, and if I were ever given an opportunity to write for Star Trek, I'd have so much I would want to include. However, if something I was working on was in a timeline that just wouldn't allow for certain technologies, or relied on certain interstellar relationships, I would have to work within those paradigms as I write my story, unless I could think of some legitimate way to explain why something was majorly different. Otherwise, I would have to just drop those ideas that didn't mesh into that time period. That's not fun or easy to do sometimes, but to be able to do this and write a good story anyway is really the mark of a great writer and even producer. The creative teams churning out Discovery, on the other hand, don't seem to be able to help themselves from just including whatever they want into the universe, nor from allowing their characters to make selfish, poorly thought-out, poorly explained decisions that just happen to work out.
Honestly, my suggested ending here could even explain why women are treated so poorly in TOS. Perhaps it's a rather dark time for women in the Federation's history after Burnham did what she did, and the final episode not only reveals that not only had Burnham been delusional this entire time, but there is a resistance to the poor treatment of women, breaking her out. Idk. At this point, I am just making-up anything that might work as a logical explanation for the events and characters I've been witnessing. That is how little I want to believe that the events of Star Trek Discovery are actually a part of cannon.
For what it's worth, I do like some things. I loved the opening scene of episode one. I adore Saru, in both character and species design. I do really like the idea of the spore drive, and utilizing some sort of multidimensional mycelial network for interstellar travel. This idea is probably no less fantastical than warp drive, and I enjoyed the inclusion of the macroscopic tardigrade within the plot. I loved the creativity of those ideas very much, but again--far past this point in future cannon there is only warp drive--I feel disappointed that this couldn't have been introduced as an aside with another species, rather than something so big and vital being now a part of Starfleet and included as cannon.