Tag:sexist language

When a Supreme Court Declares War on Sexism

On an August morning in 2023, India’s Supreme Court tried something quietly radical: it published a style guide. Not for commas or Latin maxims,...
Auntie Spices It Out
Commentary

When a Supreme Court Declares War on Sexism

February 12, 2026

Hundreds of pages of patriarchy have been written in India’s courtrooms over decades — sometimes in the name of “tradition,” sometimes in the name of “morality,” and often in the name of “common sense.” So when the Supreme Court decided in 2023 to publish a Handbook on Combating Gender Stereotypes, some people rolled their eyes. A style guide? Really? Is sexism going to disappear because judges swap a few words? Well. Let me tell you something, my darlings: words are never “just words.” When a court calls sexual harassment “eve...
Commentary

Women, Desire and Darkness on Java’s Highways

February 11, 2026

Spicy Auntie has sat in enough roadside cafés during her work trips across Asia to know that the dim light is never just about electricity. It is about negotiation. About discretion. About survival. When we talk about warung remang-remang or kopi pangku, the conversation too often slips into easy moral drama: fallen women, corrupt men, decaying values. I’m not interested in that script. I’m interested in power. In money. In who has choices and who is improvising under pressure. East Java’s roads do not create desire — they channel it....
Commentary

Dating Apps Are Out, Matchmaking Agencies Are In

February 11, 2026

Oh, Hong Kong. A city where you can order Michelin-starred dim sum at 2am, close a seven-figure deal before lunch, and still somehow fail to schedule a second date. I read about the matchmaking boom and I both smile and sigh. Of course it’s happening. Of course people are paying professionals to find them love. In a place where time is money and money is survival, romance becomes another investment portfolio. Diversify your assets: stocks, property, and—why not—a curated spouse. And yet, beneath the irony, I feel something tender. Because...
Commentary

Regulated Abuse: The Logic Behind Comfort Stations

February 11, 2026

I’m not going to soften this with euphemisms. What the Japanese military regime did to women across occupied Asia during the Second World War was a crime against humanity. Not a “tragic by-product” of war. Not a cultural misunderstanding. Not the excesses of a few bad soldiers. It was organized, bureaucratic, systematic sexual enslavement. And calling it by its proper name matters, because anything less lets power off the hook. But here’s the part that makes people uncomfortable: this was not an isolated horror, unique to Imperial Japan, sealed off...
Commentary

The Forgotten Widows of The Civil War

February 11, 2026

I’ve met some of these women over the years in the North. Not always in formal interviews, not with notebooks open and recorders on. Sometimes it was over tea that had gone cold, sometimes sitting on a cement step while children hovered nearby, listening without being invited. They didn’t introduce themselves as “LTTE widows.” They introduced themselves as mothers, daughters, caretakers, survivors. The label came later, usually whispered, usually with a pause. What struck me most was not anger. It was fatigue. A bone-deep tiredness that comes from living too...
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