paroles de chanson Future Feminism - Antony and the Johnsons
"I've
been
thinking
all
day
about
the
moon.
Like,
is
it
an
accident
that
women
menstruate
once
a
month
and
that
the
moon
comes
once
a
month?
Are
other
animals
synchronized
in
this
way
with
the
moon?
You
know,
my
brother
works
in
mental
health
and
he
says
that
there's
a
lot
more
hospitalizations
and
periods
of
activity
during
the
full
moon.
It's
a
known
fact
in
mental
health
that
people
are
more
excitable
around
the
full
moon.
"And
then,
what
about
the
fact
that
we're
made
of
70%
water?
And
then
the
whole
ocean
reacts
to
the
full
moon,
right?
In
a
serious
way.
Everything's
ticking
around
that
moon
and
if
we're
70%
water
I
must
be
having
some
— at
least
homeopathic
— relationship
with
the
changing
cycles
of
the
moon.
"I
can't
escape
my
obsession
with
the
idea
that
I'm
made
out
of
this
place,
because
I
was
raised
to
believe
that
I
fundamentally
was
constituted
of
spiritual
matter
that
was
from
somewhere
else
like
Heaven
or
from
a
Sky
God.
Like
Gore
Vidal
talks
about
Sky
Gods
and
I
really
picked
up
that
language
because
in
patriarchal
monotheisms
we
all
worship
a
God
elsewhere
who
has
a
plan
for
us
in
a
paradise
elsewhere:
After
we
die
there
will
be
a
paradise
waiting
for
us
and
this
place
is
like
a
work
station
where
we
sort
of
get
all
our
'T's
crossed
and
our
'I's
dotted
before
we
go
off
to
a
real
spiritual
dimension.
"But
I'm
a
witch.
I
actually
de-baptised
myself.
And
what's
great
about
being
transgender
is
you're
born
with
a
natural
religion.
It
applies
almost
across
the
board
no
matter
what
culture
or
economic
group
or
nation
that
you're
from
— you're
almost
automatically
a
witch.
None
of
the
patriarchal
monotheisms
will
have
you.
It's
very
clear
that
in
most
of
those
religions
you'd
be
put
to
death.
In
many
parts
of
the
world
you
still
are
put
to
death.
"Did
you
hear
what
the
Pope
said
a
couple
years
ago
on
Christmas?
He
said
that
the
marriage
of
gays
and
lesbians
was
as
much
a
threat
to
the
future
of
our
world
as
the
collapse
of
the
rain
forests.
[audience
laughter]
So,
that
gives
you
a
sense
— just
an
inkling
to
his
approach
to
the
homosexual
question.
[laughs]
And
that's
just
the
homosexual
question.
He
didn't
even
address
the
transgender
question.
[sarcastically]
God
knows
what
we've
caused.
All
sorts
of
wars
and
strife
— all
manner
of
hurt.
"I'm
worried
that
the
ecology
of
the
world
is
collapsing
and
that
I
won't
have
anywhere
to
be
reborn
because
I
actually
believe,
like,
where
is
any
of
us
going?
Where
have
any
of
us
ever
gone?
We've
come
back
here
in
some
form.
Did
you
know
that
whales
were
once
land
roaming
mammals?
And
then
they
crawled
back
into
the
ocean
trying
to
find
something
to
eat?
And
then
eventually
they
got
rid
of
their
hands
and
legs.
"I've
been
searching
and
searching
for
that
little
bit
of
my
constitution
that
isn't
of
this
place
and
I
still
haven't
found
it.
Every
atom
of
me,
every
element
of
me
seems
to
resonate,
seems
to
reflect
the
great
world
around
me.
So,
I've
come
to
the
conclusion
that
this
is
God's
best
idea
— that
this
manifest
world
is
the
frontier
of
his
dream,
or
her
dream
in
my
opinion.
So,
that's
just
my
point
of
view
from
where
I
can
start
to
establish
a
new
way
to
value
the
world
that
I'm
a
part
of.
Cause
if
I'm
not
heading
off
to
paradise
elsewhere
when
I
die
then
I
have
more
of
a
vested
interest
in
observing
a
sustainable
relationship
with
this
place.
"It's
a
very
indigenous
idea
that
the
Earth
is
a
female,
that
the
Earth
menstruates,
that
the
water
of
the
world
is
the
blood
of
a
woman's
body
and
that's
what
we
crawled
out
of
just
in
the
same
way
that
we
crawled
out
of
our
mother's
wombs.
It's
the
most
basic
idea;
any
child
could
come
up
with
it
and
it's
so
obvious.
And
yet
we've
been
straining
for
these
Sky
Gods
for
a
couple
thousand
years
now.
And
I
remember
praying
to
God
when
I
was
like
six
years
old.
I
was
raised
Catholic
and
I
prayed
really
hard,
and
I
waited
and
waited
to
hear
that
summons.
I
think
in
a
funny
way,
a
lot
of
my
music
I'm
listening
for
that
response
still.
"I've
heard
two
rumors
about
the
Dalai
Lama.
One
is
that
he
said
he
wasn't
going
to
be
reincarnating
because
the
world
was
going
to
be
too
dangerous
and
that's
probably
just
a
rumor.
But
then
I
heard
a
far
more
interesting
new
rumor,
which
is
that
the
Dalai
Lama
said
the
next
time
he
incarnates
it
will
be
as
a
girl,
which
will
be
the
first
in
the
history
of
Buddhism.
But
I
think
that
that
is
the
most
revolutionary
thing
he
could
possibly
do
and
the
most
helpful
spiritual
gesture
that
he
could
make.
And
I'm
very
interested
in
the
feminization
of
the
deities.
I'm
very
interested
in
Jesus
as
a
girl.
I'm
extremely
interested
in
Allah
as
a
woman.
And
contrary
to
popular
opinion,
it's
not
bad
to
say
that
— you
can
say
it.
I
mean
you
might
get
a
little
letter
in
the
mail
but
I'm
probably
due
a
hundred
letters
in
the
mail
already,
so...
[laughs].
It's
a
wonderful
day
to
die.
"But
nonetheless,
Allah
as
a
woman
is
a
critical
threshold
and
Buddha
as
a
mother
is
another
one
because
I
truly
believe
that
unless
we
move
into
feminine
systems
of
governance
we
don't
have
a
chance
on
this
planet
[applause].
And
there's
no
one
else
that
can
lead
the
masses
to
do
that
except
for,
like,
the
major
religious
institutions.
And
I'm
someone
who's
looking
for
a
reason
to
hope,
and
for
me
hope
looks
like
feminine
systems
of
governance
being
instated
in,
like,
the
major
religious
institutions
and
throughout
corporate
and
civil
life.
And
it
might
sound
far-fetched,
but
if
you
look
at
your
own
beliefs,
just
imagine
how
quickly
you
accepted
the
idea
that
the
ocean
is
rising
and
the
ecology
of
our
world
is
collapsing.
We
can
actually
imagine
that
more
readily
than
we
can
imagine
a
switch
from
patriarchal
to
matriarchal
systems
of
governance
— a
subtle
shift
in
the
way
our
society
works.
"It's
obviously
a
very
broad
statement
— and
of
course
Sarah
Palin
exists
so
don't
bother
me
with
that.
But,
Sarah
Palin
is
working
very
much
within
patriarchal
systems.
I
just
love
that
moment
when
Benazir
Bhutto
was
being
interviewed
and
she
just
talked
about
motherhood
and
daughters
and
how
she
wished
she'd
had
done
more
for
the
girls
of
her
country.
For
as
problematic
as
she
was,
she
was
an
exciting
forerunner."
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