Showing posts with label AME Shooting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AME Shooting. Show all posts

Roof Sentenced to Death

[Content Note: Violent eliminationism; white supremacy; death penalty.]


I don't support the death penalty in any case, so I'm reporting this with regret, even though I loathe what Dylann Roof did with the fiery passion of ten thousand suns.

I suspect that there may be survivors of his victims who also do not support the death penalty in any case, and thus may be further grieved and/or traumatized by this verdict. I am thinking about them, with my sympathies. I am thinking of all the other survivors of his victims, too, and I wish them peace, which I'm sure will not come easy, if ever.

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Rage Seethe Boil

[Content Note: White supremacy; eliminationist violence.]

Dylann Roof, the white supremacist who murdered nine people at Charleston's Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church, was found guilty last month and now awaits his sentencing. Reporting on a hearing yesterday, this was the New York Times' headline: "Dylann Roof, Addressing Court, Offers No Apology or Explanation for Massacre."

Within the article, there is this:

Any prospects for mercy by the jury had perhaps already been drained by the prosecution's disclosure, in its opening statement, of a white supremacist manifesto written by Mr. Roof in the Charleston County jail sometime in the six weeks after his arrest.

"I would like to make it crystal clear I do not regret what I did," he wrote in his distinctive scrawl. "I am not sorry. I have not shed a tear for the innocent people I killed."

Mr. Roof, who was then 21, continued: "I do feel sorry for the innocent white children forced to live in this sick country and I do feel sorry for the innocent white people that are killed daily at the hands of the lower race. I have shed a tear of self-pity for myself. I feel pity that I had to do what I did in the first place. I feel pity that I had to give up my life because of a situation that should never have existed."
I have not shed a tear for the innocent people I killed. ...I have shed a tear of self-pity for myself.

While the Times' headline is technically correct in that Roof offered no explanation while addressing the court, the excerpt entered from his manifesto is, in fact, an explanation—whether the Times wants to construe it thus or not.

Shedding no tears for his victims while shedding a tear of self-pity is as perfect and terrible an explanation of violent white supremacy as I've ever heard.

[Commenting Note: Though the referenced hearing concerned itself in part with Roof's mental competency, discussion of his mental health is not on-topic for this thread. Or any other thread in this space.]

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In the News

Here is some stuff in the news today...

Hillary Clinton's emails! (I will have a dedicated post about this later, so save discussion for that thread, please.)

[Content Note: War on agency; anti-LGBT bigotry] "Presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump will meet in June with conservative religious leaders, including those from anti-choice and anti-LGBTQ organizations, in a closed-door 'conversation.'" Where, presumably, he will reassure them that he promises to be just as heinous on abortion access and queer rights as they want him to be.

[CN: Transphobia] "Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton will announce a lawsuit against the federal government on Wednesday over the Obama administration's guidance on transgender students." Because of course he will. And, once again, I will note: The next time you hear some asshole saying that elections don't matter, that there is no difference between Democrats and Republicans, remind them of how a Democratic president is doing everything he can to protect transgender USians, and one of the biggest organizations from which he has to try to protect them is Republicans.

[CN: Descriptions of sexual assault; rape culture; racism] This is an absolutely horrifying story, and incredibly difficult to read, about a black disabled teenager who was raped by his white teammates on the high school football team. Toxic masculinity meets white supremacy meets sports culture. I am absolutely sick about every aspect of this heinous attack, part of an ongoing and escalating campaign of bullying and assault that was not sufficiently addressed by the adults ostensibly charged with the care of these students, and I take up space in solidarity with the victim.

[CN: Eliminationist racism; gun violence; death; white supremacy; death penalty] Dylann Roof is a killer whose vicious white supremacist mass murderer whose actions probably test the convictions of many death penalty opponents. But here is "Why We Must Stand Against the Death Penalty, Even in the Case of Racist Murderer Dylann Roof."

[CN: Misogyny] Tsai Ing-wen was sworn in on Friday as Taiwan's first female president, and already she's the subject of a widely criticized opinion piece, published by the Chinese state media's Xinhua news agency, claiming that she has exhibited "erratic behavior" because: "As a single female politician, Tsai Ing-wen does not have the emotional burden of love, of 'family,' or children, so her political style and strategies are displayed to be more emotional, personal, and extreme." Sounds legit!

[CN: Racism; patriarchy] "Young Black and Latino men need trusted pathways to skills development and mental health resources to succeed, according to a new report. Market research firm Motivational Educational Entertainment Productions drew from the results of nine focus groups to develop 'Heard, Not Judged: Insights into the Talents, Realities, and Needs of Young Men of Color.' The groups featured Black and Latino men ages 18 to 24... 'BMOC are extremely stressed out, taken off task by distractions and temptation, don't believe in the American Dream, and can barely see beyond surviving. They feel trapped at the bottom of the ladder because of a lack of resources, negative peer pressure, and racism. They are afraid to fail and lack awareness and trust of resources currently available to help them.'" Fucking hell.

[CN: Discussion of homophobia] "How an Ad Campaign Made Lesbians Fall in Love with Subaru." Love. P.S. Iain and I totally own a Subaru, and that is not a coincidence!

Hahahahahahaha! "A stealthy, stronger line of female salamanders are skipping sex and stealing DNA from males instead." TEACH US YOUR WAYS.

And finally! "Is This the Most Beautiful Horse in the World?" PROBABLY!!!

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In the News

Here is some stuff in the news today...

[Content Note: Police brutality] The Texas Department of Public Safety says that the dashcam footage of Sandra Bland's arrest was not edited but that the glitches are due to "technical issues." Okay. "[DPS spokesperson Tom Vinger] said some of the video during a conversation between the trooper and his sergeant after the arrest of Bland was 'affected in the upload and is being addressed,' and that DPS was working to repost it." Sure.

[CN: War on agency; hostility to consent. NB: Not only women need access to abortion.] The New York Times editors weigh in on the undercover videos being used to try to discredit Planned Parenthood and pull no punches, right from the headline: "The Campaign of Deception Against Planned Parenthood." They conclude, bluntly: "The Center for Medical Progress video campaign is a dishonest attempt to make legal, voluntary, and potentially lifesaving tissue donations appear nefarious and illegal. Lawmakers responding by promoting their own anti-choice agenda are rewarding deception and putting women's health and their constitutionally protected rights at risk." Boom.

In other reproductive rights news: Check out this interview with Erin Matson and Pam Merritt (aka Shark Fu) about Reproaction, their new reproductive justice advocacy organization. About which, by the way, I am SO EXCITED!

[CN: AME Shooting; racist violence] According to anonymous law enforcement sources, Dylann Roof is expected to be "indicted on federal hate crimes charges as soon as Wednesday afternoon. ...The federal charges come as Roof faces nine counts of murder, three counts of attempted murder and a weapons charge, counts on which South Carolina prosecutors could choose to seek the death penalty. Roof cannot be charged with hate crimes in state court, however—South Carolina is among just five states, including the southern states of Georgia and Arkansas, that have no hate crimes laws."

[CN: Homophobia] All the mirthless laughter: "Two more Alabama counties have said they will resume issuing marriage licenses to all couple seeking them, including same-sex couples, admitting that all legal options to defy the Supreme Court's ruling on same-sex marriage have been exhausted." That news again: "Losers finally admit defeat. Sad trombone noises."

[CN: Multiple bigotries] This is a really excellent, if profoundly troubling, piece about how Republican presidential candidate Scott Walker resides firmly in the pocket of ALEC, the odious American Legislative Exchange Council. We really cannot let this guy and his heinous puppet-masters anywhere near the Oval Office.

[CN: Misogyny] Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton visits a small business in Detroit and fields questions from the press (despite how she allegedly refuses to talk to the press), and she's asked about "how the Trans Pacific Partnership might affect Detroit workers," to which she replies, "First of all I'm going to wait to see what's in it. I've said that. And I'm going to judge whether or not it creates good jobs, whether it protects the jobs we have, and whether it's good for our national security. And I've made clear some of the specifics that I think need to be in there. When I was Secretary of State, we worked with both the auto companies and the UAW to make some changes in the South Korean trade deal. The jury is still out, but we listened and responded because we inherited a deal that neither the companies nor the workers were particularly excited about. So I saw first hand how we can bring people together and try to improve the opportunity for American companies and American unions and American workers to get a better deal." And this reporter comments: "Nice dodge." I MEAN.

[CN: War] Republican presidential candidate Rand Paul, whom I'm supposed to love because FREEDOM (but no abortion) and LIBERTY (but more jails) and LESS WAR, advocates "military action against Iran to prevent them from getting a nuclear weapon, even though he says it would only delay Iran getting a bomb." He seems terrific. And highly principled!

[CN: Rape culture] Judd Apatow calls Bill Cosby "one of the most awful people that you've ever heard of" and says Cosby's serial assault is "the worst thing that's ever happened in show business." You know what, Judd Apatow? I seriously do not want to hear a fucking thing about Cosby from the producer of Superbad, the entire premise of which is two losers fixing to get ladies drunk to "have sex with" them, not to mention the producer, director, and/or writer on a number of other projects that contain scenes of rape, rape culture tropes, and rape jokes. Fuck off, hypocrite.

[CN: Sexual abuse] The Duggars are unbelievable: According to "a source who has worked closely with" the family, they are all broken up that TLC has canceled their show. The Duggars, says the source, are "heartbroken that they've now lost that platform. "The Duggars want to return to TV because they truly believe it was part of God's plan for them to spread the word about their faith. ...I think Jim Bob and Michelle honestly did expect people to just move on from this. Their thinking is, they put this behind them ages ago, so why wouldn't the rest of the world?" Rage seethe boil.

Wowowowowow: "For the first time, astronomers in Europe have observed star-forming gas clouds in the early universe—the building blocks of the first galaxies. The faint glow of ionized carbon was spotted by the European Southern Observatory's ALMA telescope, located in Chile. ...'This is the most distant detection ever of this kind of emission from a 'normal' galaxy, seen less than one billion years after the Big Bang,' Andrea Ferrara, an astronomer with Italy's Scuola Normale Superiore and co-author of a new study on the findings, said in a press release. 'It gives us the opportunity to watch the build-up of the first galaxies,' Ferrara explained. 'For the first time we are seeing early galaxies not merely as tiny blobs, but as objects with internal structure!'"

Here's another terrific story about a rescued dog saving his guardian's life. "What's even more amazing is the fact that John Boy had been adopted and returned to a shelter three times before he was adopted by his forever family." Blub.

And finally! This kitty likes being lulled to sleep with a toothbrush gently massaging his head. Hey, who doesn't?

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In the News

Here is some stuff in the news today...

[Content Note: White supremacy; racist eliminationist violence; white privilege] The New York Times has a profile of Dylann Roof, who killed nine black women and men in South Carolina last month, and it is utterly sickening the treatment this murderous white supremacist man is given compared to the black boys who are murdered at the hands of police. Instead of Roof's life and background being mined for evidence of his criminality, it's all "this poor white kid who totally had black friends but also a troubled life." This is the opening paragraph, for fuck's sake: "The young man accused of the terrible crime was a bug-eyed boy with a bowl haircut who came from a broken home and attended at least seven schools in nine years. Many afternoons he would sit silently on the curb in front of his roomy yard and, when he tired of it, move to a different curb. He helped neighbors with their yard work, but they still found him strange." BOO FUCKING HOO. If you would like to submit a complaint to the New York Times' public editor, Margaret Sullivan, you can email her here.

Way to go, Ireland! "Ireland yesterday became the fourth country in the world to allow transgender people to have their gender legally recognized based on self-declaration... Under the new legislation, people who wish to have their change of gender recognised by the state will simply make a formal declaration of their 'settled and solemn intention' to do so. ...Noting that the legislation was 'not perfect' because it excludes 'those under 18, non-binary people and people with an intersex condition,' Sara Phillips, chair of the Transgender Equality Network Ireland, said: 'This legislation marks an incredible shift in Irish society. Our community is finally stepping out of the shadows.'"

Here is just a real headline in the world today: "John McCain has a few things to say about Donald Trump." I can hardly think of anything I'd rather read less! But if you want to read it, for reasons I will probably never understand no matter how many times you explain it to me, here you go!

[CN: Rape culture; child sex abuse; video may autoplay at link] TLC has finally canceled 19 Kids and Counting two months after it was disclosed that Josh Duggar molested multiple girls. But that doesn't mean they've severed ties with the Duggar family, who are a major money-making machine for them: "TLC also announced it has teamed with two prominent child-protection organizations for an ongoing campaign to raise awareness about child sexual abuse. The multi-platform initiative will begin with a one-hour, commercial-free documentary likely airing in late August, the network said. It will include the participation of Jill and Jessa Duggar, two of the sisters Josh Duggar touched inappropriately, as well as other survivors and families affected by such abuse." Perfect. "We look forward to working with TLC on this upcoming special documentary and hope that it is an encouragement to many," said "the Duggar family" in a statement. I'll bet.

[CN: Discussion of transphobia, bullying, and self-harm; video may autoplay at link] Caitlyn Jenner gave her acceptance speech for the 2015 Arthur Ashe Award for Courage at last night's ESPYs. "If you want to call me names, make jokes, doubt my intentions, go ahead, because the reality is, I can take it. But for the thousands of kids out there coming to terms with being true to who they are, they shouldn't have to take it." Watch the video and/or read the transcript here.

More Pluto news! Give it to me! Give me all the Pluto news!!! "Latest New Horizons Images Show Pluto's Moons, Ice Mountains." I literally cannot get enough Pluto news! I know that sounds sarcastic, but it isn't! I am super excited!

Know what else I love? Pentaquark news! "Pentaquarks Have Scientists Psyched—and Baffled." I imagine that if I were a scientist, "psyched and baffled" would be my favorite state of being. I'm frankly a pretty big fan of it even not being a scientist.

OMG this video of San Francisco Board of Supervisors member Scott Wiener refusing to engage with a Fox News reporter, substituting "Fox News is not real news and you're not a real reporter" for an actual answer, is the best. A+

Do you care about the Emmy Awards? If you do, here is a complete list of this year's nominees! Please give all the Emmys to Viola Davis and Jonathan Banks and call it a day. Thanks!

Lindsay Ellis and Mara Wilson imagine what it would be like "If Tom Hardy Were Your Boyfriend." I am not a scientist, but I am the nation's leading tomhardyologist, and I will tell you that this critical thinkpiece is 100% accurate.

And finally! Farm Animals in Hats! I repeat: FARM ANIMALS IN HATS. *ded*

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Another Black Church in Flames

[Content Note: Terrorism; arson; white supremacy.]

On Monday, I wrote about six churches with predominantly black congregations that had erupted in flames since the AME Shooting. At least three of them were being officially investigated as arson.

Last night, Mount Zion African Methodist Episcopal Church in Greeleyville, South Carolina, located about an hour away from Charleston, was also set ablaze. Officials have not yet confirmed whether it was arson. But Mount Zion AME was torched by the KKK in 1995.

According to WACH Fox 57, [Mount Zion AME] burned well into the evening as two fire crews from different counties battled to get the flames under control. The news station noted that at one point the flames could be seen shooting through the roof of the more than 100 year old church.

Williamsburg County Sheriff Dudley Musier told the news station that the fire started around 8:35 p.m. Tuesday.

"We're going to continue to investigate what caused this fire. Right now, it's still fresh; we don't know what caused it," Musier told WACH.

...Tuesday's fire isn't the first time that the church and the community has had to deal with a costly blaze. On June 20, 1995, two former members of the KKK set Mount Zion African Methodist Episcopal Church on fire the Post reports. The church was rebuilt and reopened in 1996. Then president, Bill Clinton, toured the newly rebuilt church and presented Mt. Zion pastor Terrance G. Mackey with a plaque that read, "we must come together as one America to rebuild our churches, restore hope, and show the forces of hatred they cannot win," the Post reports.
At Heavy: "Mt Zion AME Church Fire: 5 Fast Facts You Need to Know."

Already, there is an "anonymous federal law enforcement source" telling media this was not arson, despite the fact that the investigation is just getting underway.

And the mainstream media coverage of this fire, no less within the context of six other fires at black churches since a white supremacist killed nine black women and men at a black church, is virtually nonexistent. Juxtapose that, as many people have observed on Twitter, with the coverage of the CVS set ablaze during protests in Baltimore, which was given wall-to-wall coverage by the cable news networks.

In the 1990s, there was a similar spate of black church burnings. Thirty-seven black churches were burned before then-President Bill Clinton requested from Congress an extra $12 million for investigations. That series of church burnings is still discussed as a "hoax" by conservatives.

The mainstream media needs to cover this, and the investigations need to be transparent.

This latest fire is not an isolated incident, and it's not happening in a vacuum. It defies credulity that seven black churches would all coincidentally burn in accidents, because of bad electrical wiring or lightning, in the weeks following a white supremacist mass murder at a black church.

My condolences to the congregants of Mount Zion AME and all the other churches which have been damaged. And to all the black parishioners at black churches who don't feel safe today.

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Six Black Churches Burned

[Content Note: Terrorism; arson; white supremacy.]

Last Thursday, I mentioned that a predominantly black Baptist church in Charlotte, North Carolina, had been destroyed by a fire which was being investigated as arson. That was not, unfortunately, the only one. In the week since the AME Shooting, there have been six fires at Southern churches with largely or all black congregations:

The first fire came late June 21 when, police said, someone set fire to some hay bales just outside the College Hill Seventh Day Adventist in Knoxville, Tenn. The church sustained minor damage. Its van was also burned.

"Horror, I was like, 'Oh my gosh, what's going on?'" Pastor Cleveland Hobdy III told WATE-TV. Police told local news stations the fire is being investigated as arson but not as a hate crime.

Early June 23, God's Power Church of Christ in Macon, Ga., was on fire. When firefighters arrived, the front doors were wired shut and they had to enter through a side door, the local newspaper the Telegraph reported.

"'What's the church doing on fire?' That was my response to it," Associate Pastor Jeanette Dudley told WMAZ-TV. "I just couldn't believe it and once I got here, I did, I cried. I cried for a little bit."

The fire was ruled an arson, though police are not calling it a hate crime.

...Early June 24, someone called 911 to report that Charlotte's Briar Creek Road Baptist Church had been set ablaze.

"The Baptist church on Briar Creek Road right before Central, it's on fire," the caller told dispatchers. "It's really big."

It took more than 75 firefighters over an hour to get the fire under control and, by then, it had caused more than $250,000 worth of damage and demolished the church's main building, The Washington Post reported. Charlotte Fire Department Senior Investigator David Williams later told the Associated Press they determined the fire "was intentionally set."

...On June 26, the Glover Grove Baptist Church in Warrenville, S.C., burned down. Police said no cause for the fire had been determined.

"Everything is gone – books, robes, all my pictures, all my degrees," the Rev. Bobby Jean Jones told the Aiken Standard. "All the history is gone."

...Two other churches caught fire last week as well — Fruitland Presbyterian Church in Gibson County, Tenn., and the Greater Miracle Temple Apostolic Holiness Church in Tallahassee, Fla. Authorities believe the fires were caused by lightning and electrical wires, respectively, though they are still investigating.

"We want to be sure, 100 percent sure, that this was an accidental fire, not on purpose," Gibson County Fire Chief Bryan Cathey told WBBJ-TV.
Writing about the arsons for the Atlanta Black Star, David A. Love observes that there is a long history of white supremacists burning black churches, because of the particular role black churches play in black life in the United States: "From slavery and the days of Jim Crow through the civil rights movement and beyond, white supremacists have targeted the Black church because of its importance as a pillar of the Black community, the center for leadership and institution building, education, social, and political development and organizing to fight oppression. Strike at the Black church, and you strike at the heart of Black American life."

Which, of course, is the entire point. As I have said many times before: These are not "senseless" crimes. They make a perfect, terrible sense inside a framework of white supremacist terrorism, where "striking at the heart of Black American life" is precisely the objective.

These are not isolated incidents. They are connected, to each other and to an ugly history of white supremacist terrorism.

The only people who can't see that are those unwilling to look.

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Amazing Grace

President Obama just delivered the eulogy at Rev. Pinckney's funeral in Charleston. I will post video and a transcript below when they become available.

He ended the service by singing "Amazing Grace," and the entire room joined him.

As @brownandbella pointed out on Twitter: "The first black president singing Amazing Grace at the podium of a black church founded by a man who planned a slave revolt."

This is a day in the United States of America, y'all.

UPDATE: Here is video of the President singing "Amazing Grace."


Video Description: President Obama, standing at a podium at the front of a large audience, and in front of black church members and Rev. Pinckney's family, begins to sing "Amazing Grace" a capella, and the people in the room join him, then musicians begin to accompany him. After one verse, the President shouts the names of the victims, saying each of them "found that grace!" He then says: "Through the example of their lives, they've now passed it on to us. May we find ourselves worthy of that precious and extraordinary gift as long as our lives endure. May grace now lead them home. May god continue to shed his grace on the United States of America."

UPDATE 2: A full 40-minute video of the President's eulogy is now available on YouTube care of PBS. Please note that the video autoplays at the link.

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In the News

Here is some other stuff in the news today...

The funeral for Rev. Clementa Pinckney has begun in Charleston, and thousands of people lined up today to pay their respects. President Obama is scheduled to give the eulogy. Letters to Rev. Pinckney from his wife and daughters were tucked into the program for the service. Blub.

[Content Note: Transphobia; anti-immigrationism; abuse] Jennicet Gutiérrez: "I interrupted Obama because we need to be heard." A must-read.

[CN: Terrorism; death] Fucking hell: "Terrorists attacked sites in France, Tunisia, and Kuwait on Friday, leaving a bloody toll on three continents and prompting new concerns about the spreading influence of jihadists. In France, attackers stormed an American-owned industrial chemical plant near Lyon, decapitated one person and tried unsuccessfully to blow up the factory. In Tunisia, gunmen opened fire at a beach resort, killing at least 27 people, officials said. At least one of the attackers was killed by security forces. And the Islamic State claimed responsibility for a suicide bombing in one of the largest Shiite mosques in Kuwait City during Friday prayers. ...Local news reports said at least 24 people had been killed and wounded in the assault, which was extraordinary for Kuwait and appeared to be a deliberate attempt to incite strife between Shiites and Sunnis. ...There was no immediate indication that the attacks had been coordinated. But the three strikes came at roughly the same time, and just days after the Islamic State, the militant group also known as ISIS or ISIL, called for such operations during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan."

As I mentioned yesterday, the Supreme Court also issued a terrific and major decision regarding a housing discrimination case, and Alice Ollstein explains how that decision could have an impact on voting rights: "The case hinged on whether victims of housing discrimination had to prove the government, banks or other entities consciously set out to discriminate against them—an often impossibly high legal bar—or whether they could simply prove they were disproportionately hurt by a certain policy." The Court decided for the latter. "Senior Attorney Kathy Culliton-Gonzalez with the Advancement Project, which is involved in several voting rights lawsuits around the country, said the ruling is 'very helpful' because it asserts that it's not necessary to prove intentional voter suppression based on race."

[CN: War; violence; sexual assault; torture; death] This is a difficult but important read: "For decades the terrible crimes perpetrated against women under the Khmer Rouge were hidden from view. BuzzFeed News' Jina Moore talked to the victims of the dictatorial regime who are now getting their day in court."

[CN: Police brutality; racism; misogyny; othering] There is a whole lot to unpack here fuhhhhhhhhk: "An interview with the Baltimore cop who's revealing all the horrible things he saw on the job." (In recommending this, by the way, I'm not at all suggesting it be read without scrutiny and skepticism. It absolutely should be!)

All right, Scotland! "New data from the Scottish government shows that the country generated 49.8 percent of its electricity from renewables in 2014, effectively meeting its target of generating half of electricity demand from clean sources by the end of this year."

Cool: "A Neptune-sized alien world about 30 light-years from Earth is unlike any exoplanet yet found. The bizarre planet, named Gliese 436b, has a huge comet-like tail of mostly hydrogen gas extending more than 9.3 million miles, computer models suggest. The cloud of gas around the planet has a circular head about 1.8 million miles in diameter. A planetary tail of that size had never before been seen around such a small exoplanet."

And finally! "Anna Paterek took her horse Magic to a murky river and attempted to coax him into the water. It takes a few tries before the horse finally makes his way to the edge of the water. Once he steps in, it only takes a few moments before..." I won't spoil it for you! *wink*

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In the News

Here is some stuff in the news today...

[Content Note: Racism; housing discrimination] In another important Supreme Court decision, Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs v. The Inclusive Community Project, Inc., the court found that "housing policies could be deemed discriminatory based on 'disparate impact.' This means that plaintiffs could prove discrimination by showing that the impact of a housing policy was discriminatory, even if there was no conscious attempt to discriminate." This is big news because: "At the most basic level, the Supreme Court recognized fight against discrimination is not over, concluding, 'The Court acknowledges the Fair Housing Act's continuing role in moving the Nation toward a more integrated society.' That's a very big deal." Yes, yes it is.

[CN: Transphobia; anti-immigrationism] Last night, during an LGBTQ event at the White House, trans immigration activist Jennicet Gutiérrez interrupted President Obama's address to request: "President Obama, release all LGBTQ immigrants from detention and stop all deportations!" There is video at the link. "As a transgender woman who is undocumented, Gutiérrez said she could not celebrate while some 75 transgender detainees were still being exposed to assault and abuse in ICE custody at this very moment." Gutiérrez was shushed by the room and dismissed by the President, and I have all kinds of thoughts about that, but instead I will just note: Lots of people are talking about Gutiérrez today and about the reason she interrupted the President. GOOD.

[CN: Terrorism; white supremacy] A Baptist church in Charlotte, North Carolina, which has a predominantly black congregation, was destroyed by a fire early Wednesday, and it is now being investigated as arson. "The church building sustained excessive damage to its back left wing, used as an education building. [Senior Fire Investigator David Williams] said it is close to a total loss. The rest of the property, including the sanctuary and gymnasium, has smoke damage. He said they estimate total damage is more than $250,000."

[CN: Racist violence] Today, funerals begin for some of the victims in the AME Shooting. "The services for Ethel Lee Lance and Sharonda Coleman-Singleton will both take place after viewings at Baptist churches in North Charleston. Ms Lance, 70, worked for the church for 30 years and was a mother of five. Ms Coleman-Singleton, 45, was a speech therapist, pastor and high school track coach, as well as a mother of three. Their funerals will be the first two of nine, with five more to take place on Friday and Saturday." State Senator Rev. Pinckney's funeral will be held tomorrow.

[CN: Terrorism] Government officials are, in the wake of the AME shooting, talking about what measures need to be taken to address the increasing threat from ideological terrorists who act alone (though not in a vacuum): "Security experts in and out of the Obama administration say this trend—which transcends national boundaries and even specific ideologies of violence—requires a major overhaul of their counter-terrorism strategies, not just debates about gun control or the Confederate flag flying over the South Carolina state house." Yep.

In honor of the two-year anniversary of the Wendy Davis filibuster, Ana Mardoll has created an automated twitter bot that will post curated tweets from the Texas transcript project: @StandWithWendy. Woot! (Shared with Ana's permission.)

To celebrate her 66th birthday, Meryl Streep "decided to send letters to every member of Congress asking them to revive the Equal Rights Amendment." Because of course she did!

[CN: Injury; plane crash] Wow: Maria Nelly Murillo, 18, and her one-year-old son Yudier have been found alive "five days after their plane crashed in the jungle of western Colombia. ...Ms Murillo had some injuries and burns while her baby appeared to be in good health." After the plane crash was located, the pilot was found dead and there was no sign of Maria or Yudier. "But according to Col Hector Carrascal of the Colombian Air Force, rescuers took hope when they noticed that the cabin door was ajar. ...'We didn't have a clue what had happened to them: they could be lost in the jungle trying to survive or they could have died already.' But then the rescuers found clues which led them to believe Ms Murillo and her baby could still be alive. Coconut shells near the plane and a discarded flip flop in the jungle lifted their hopes. They also found the baby's birth certificate near a tree, which convinced them that Ms Murillo was trying to leave a trace of her path through the jungle. ...Finally, on Wednesday, they located Ms Murillo about 500m from the site of the crash in a ravine on the banks of a river." Amazing.

WHUT! "New observations with ESO's Very Large Telescope have revealed that the giant elliptical galaxy Messier 87 has swallowed an entire medium-sized galaxy over the last billion years. ...'We are witnessing a single recent accretion event where a medium-sized galaxy fell through the centre of Messier 87, and as a consequence of the enormous gravitational tidal forces, its stars are now scattered over a region that is 100 times larger than the original galaxy!' adds Ortwin Gerhard, head of the dynamics group at the Max-Planck-Institut für extraterrestrische Physik, Garching, Germany, and a co-author of the new study." (I love the exclamation point at the end of Gerhard's comment.)

[CN: Image of critter at link] Neat: "It's white. It's hairy. It's elusive. It's a yeti…crab. Meet Kiwa tyleri, the newest member of the yeti crab family and the first to be found in the cold waters off Antarctica."

[CN: Pet hospice] This is an incredibly moving video about a sanctuary and hospice for elderly dogs in Gaithersburg, Maryland, which is run by a woman named Sher Polvinale and a team of volunteers. Major blubs.

And finally! "This Bunny Understands Short People Problems." YOU KNOW MY LIFE, LITTLE BUN!

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RIP Reverend Pinckney

[Content Note: White supremacist violence. Video may autoplay at first link.]

Yesterday, the body of South Carolina State Senator the Reverend Clementa Pinckney was carried to the South Carolina State House for a public viewing ahead of his funeral tomorrow, at which President Obama will deliver the eulogy.

The casket was brought "by horse-drawn caisson Wednesday into the South Carolina State House, past a Confederate battle flag that flies outside. In the second-floor lobby of the Capitol, where the body of the Rev. Clementa Pinckney lay in honor, a black drape was placed over a window, blocking view of the rebel flag."

Rev. Pinckney may have been obliged to travel past symbols of hatred, but he was received inside by thousands of mourners with an outpouring of love and respect:

Thousands of mourners on Wednesday streamed past the open casket of Clementa Pinckney, the esteemed pastor and state senator who lay in state under the Capitol dome a week after he and eight others were slain at a historic black Charleston church.

Pinckney's widow, Jennifer, two young daughters, Eliana and Malana, other family members and lawmakers he served with during nearly two decades in the Legislature stood by the casket greeting those paying their respects. Portraits of Pinckney, who was dressed in a black suit and red tie, stood on either side of the casket.

As Pinckney's casket disappeared inside the Statehouse, mourners, including Edna Nesbit of Hollywood, called out, "God bless you."

"We were just so heartbroken that we had to come here," Nesbit, 67, said later. "It's just so nice to see the respect given to a man who died too early and for no reason — just racism."

...Pinckney made history as the youngest African-American elected to office when he won a House seat at age 23. On Wednesday, he made history again — he is the first African-American to lie under the dome since Reconstruction.
Sob.

Some of the people who knew and loved Rev. Pinckney are saying that he will not have died in vain, that changes will come as a result of this heinous act of violence. Which is a thing that we say, to make sense of losing someone to hatred, to give a reason with which we can live to an entirely unreasonable death.

And we have to make sure that's true. We have to make sure that, for the people who survive Rev. Pinckney—and who survive Ethel Lance, Tywanza Sanders, Cynthia Hurd, Rev. Depayne Middleton Doctor, Susie Jackson, Myra Thompson, Rev. Daniel Simmons Sr., and Sharonda Coleman-Singleton—changes will come.

Among those changes must be this: That we elevate the voices of and listen to people like Rev. Pinckney. That it doesn't take death at the hands of a white supremacist to value what they had to say about social justice in life.

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Dash Cam Footage from Roof's Arrest

[Content Note: Violence; white supremacy; discussion of police brutality.]

Dash cam footage from Dylann Roof's arrest has been released. It shows several police cruisers pulling up to Roof's car, police officers calmly approaching his vehicle, taking him into custody, frisking him, cuffing him, searching his vehicle, and putting him into a cruiser, then high-fiving each other.

A couple of thoughts about the video and coverage of the video:

1. The video confirms reports that Roof was taken into custody in a very calm way. Despite the fact that he was presumed to be armed, and was, he is not roughly pulled from the vehicle and thrown to the ground or injured in any way. He is allowed to get out of his car on his own, while officers reholster their weapons and calmly take him into custody. Obviously this is a huge difference from video footage we have seen of police dealing with black people suspected of crimes far less serious than Roof's, or simply asking why they have been pulled over.

2. Many headlines about the video talk about police celebrating his capture, fist-bumping and high-fiving one another. Which, particularly alongside the news that the police report states police "pulled him over because he was driving too close to a tractor-trailer," seemingly ignoring the woman who identified Roof and followed him for a half hour before police arrived, stands to give the impression that the officers were simply being obnoxiously self-congratulatory. But what the video actually shows is a black officer on the scene turning to his white colleagues and high-fiving them. It feels a lot more personal than professionally celebratory.

Which is not to suggest police didn't have reason to be pleased for successfully taking a violent white supremacist mass murderer into custody. It's just that it's easy (at least it was for me) to lose a key aspect of that celebration beneath the legitimate anger at police treating a white suspect very differently than black suspects are often treated. And unless one watches the video, one won't know about it, because one doesn't find that aspect in the reporting.

Anyway.

I will say once more: If police are capable of taking an armed mass murderer into custody so calmly, I don't want to hear any goddamn excuses for police brutality against unarmed black women and men ever fucking again.

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Quote of the Day

[Content Note: White supremacy; racism; misogynoir; eliminationist violence; sexual trauma; disordered eating; disablism.]

I told her that loving white supremacists in the face of white supremacy is a hallmark of American evil, and a really a fundamental part of the black American experience in this country.

It's what we're supposed to do, I said.

Many of us have made a life of hoping to get chosen for jobs, chosen for awards, chosen for acceptance from people, structures and corporations bred on white supremacy. We're hoping to get chosen by people who can not see us. Knowing that they hate and terrorize us doesn't stop us from wanting to get chosen. That's the crazy thing. Everything about this country told Grandma, a black woman born in Central Mississippi in 1920s, to love, honor, and forgive white folks. And this country still tells me, a black boy born in Mississippi in the 1970s, to titillate and tend to the emotional, psychological, and spiritual needs of white people in my work.

...Like good Americans, I told Grandma, we will remember to drink ourselves drunk on the antiquated poison of progress. We will long for "shall's" and "will be's" and "hopes" for tomorrow. We will heavy-handedly help in our own deception and moral obliteration. We will forget how much easier it is to talk about gun control, mental illness, and riots than it is to talk about the moral and material consequences of manufactured white American innocence.
—Kiese Laymon, writing in the Guardian (under a headline he did not choose) about a conversation he had with his grandmother about how he learned at church that "loving white folks in spite of their investment in our terror was our only chance of not becoming them morally."

I hope you will read the entirety of this powerful piece and really hear what he is saying about his own lived experience, and further what he is saying about how white supremacy, and attendant systems of oppression like the rape culture, oblige their victims' silence for survival and invite compliance with empty promises of a better future, while never delivering meaningful accountability. "What I do know is that love reckons with the past and evil reminds us to look to the future. Evil loves tomorrow because peddling in possibility is what abusers do."

I hope white readers will hear that, and will understand that is why there is no neutral in white supremacy. If we're not actively challenging and working to dismantle white supremacist structures, we are upholding them. And we are abetting the profound and sustained abuse that is central to their very existence, that underwrites white privilege.

White privilege is not something of which we must merely be aware, something to be examined and nothing more. It's something that needs to be utterly destroyed.

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More Confederate Flags to Fall

[Content Note: White supremacy.]

Yesterday, Republican South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley promised to call for the removal of the Confederate flag from the state capitol.

In Mississippi, where the Confederate emblem is part of the actual state flag, Democratic state senator and chair of the legislature's Black Caucus Kenny Jones says he will propose legislation to remove it: "I just think it's time to change it: It's an insult, it's very offensive to all African Americans everywhere."

And Wal-Mart and Sears have announced they will no longer be selling Confederate flag merchandise. It's likely that other retailers will follow.

I'm not under the misapprehension that removing the Confederate flag from government buildings and stores will rid its image altogether. Unless it's federally criminalized, it's still going to be emblazoned on pick-up truck rear window decals, bumper stickers, t-shirts, hats, coats, belt buckles, beer koozies, and everything else conceivably emblazonable.

I'm further not under the misapprehension that removing the Confederate flag, even if from every possible public space by federal mandate, will magically eradicate the white supremacy and violent anti-blackness of which it's a symbol.

But symbols matter. Symbols convey messages, and whether those symbols are tolerated or not matters. How a culture regards those symbols communicates something about how acceptable the symbols' underlying beliefs are.

And it's not nothing to reject a symbol of racial hatred. It's not nothing for the people who are the primary targets of that hatred to not have to see that symbol over their state capitol, or embedded right in their state flag.

It's something.

And it's something for which many black Southern activists, and their allies, have been working for a very long time.

I understand the sudden political expediency, and I understand that it's not a comprehensive solution to racism, but I am happy to see this flag fall. Good riddance.

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Okay

[Content Note: Racism.]

Republican South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley has called on lawmakers in the state legislature to remove the Confederate flag that still flies over the state capitol.

"It's time to move the flag from the capitol grounds," Haley, a Republican, told reporters. The flag was a symbol of the pro-slavery South during the U.S. Civil War. "This is a moment in which we can say that the flag, while an integral part of our past, does not represent the future of our great state."
She couldn't even be bothered to say that the thing is a racist symbol. Which has nonetheless not stopped members of her party from celebrating her courage.

The thing is, it's not really "brave" to take down a flag that never should have been flying in the first place.

I see what Haley is doing as approximately as "brave" as when I clean up cat vomit. You're supposed to clean up gross messes in your home.

I'm glad the fucking thing is coming down, provided a majority in the South Carolina legislature vote to take it down. But let's not pretend that it's a Great Leadership moment, when it took 150 years of fluttering insult, and nine deaths in the last week at the hands of one of the many white people to embrace that contemptible symbol of white supremacy, to pull it off the flagpole.

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Rage Seethe Boil

[Content Note: Eliminationist violence; white supremacy and privilege.]

Sure:

At least five Shelby police officers, guns drawn, surrounded the black Hyundai sedan that had pulled off the highway on Thursday morning.

...Shelby police Chief Jeff Ledford told the Observer on Friday that authorities found a .45-caliber handgun in Roof's car.

Citing anonymous sources, the Washington Post said Roof showed no remorse and expressed racist views even as he confessed to the crimes.

...In Shelby, the FBI handled Roof's initial questioning, Ledford said. Shelby police's lone conversation with the mass-murder suspect was about food. Earlier in the day, Roof had bought water and chips at a south Charlotte gas station. Now he was hungry. Police bought him food from a nearby Burger King, Ledford said.
Roof was on the run for 16 hours, and yet is routinely said to have not resisted arrest, simply because he went quietly into custody once he was caught. And then that lie about his not resisting is used to justify all the subsequent police treatment of Roof, rife with double standards.

Not only was Roof taken into custody alive, despite having killed nine people and despite being found in possession of the weapon he used to kill them, he was given a bullet-proof vest and a warm meal. He wasn't given a "rough ride."

To be clear, I'm not suggesting that people in police custody should be denied protection and food and subjected to abuse. I'm suggesting that everyone in police custody should be given protection and food and no one in police custody should be subjected to abuse.

If police can deliver to jail an armed white supremacist mass murdering piece of shit in one piece and with a full belly, surely they can do the same for the average black person suspected or accused of a crime.

[Via The Source.]

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Primarily Speaking

[Content Note: Racism; terrorism.]

illustration by Sarah Green of the nine victims of the AME shooting, with their faces, names, ages, and mini-bios
[Illustration by Sarah Green.]

Since the shooting in Charleston, the 2016 presidential candidates have been reacting to the heinous act of white supremacist eliminationist violence, with varying degrees of sensitivity, to put it far more politely than it deserves.

Although many of the GOP candidates' campaigns reacted with tweets condemning the shooting and offering prayers, none of them gave meaningful statements about violent white supremacy, most of them danced around the issue of the South Carolina continuing to fly the Confederate flag, and some of them also went on to offer statements that were straight-up racist bullshit.

Senator Lindsey Graham defended the Confederate flag, saying the flag is "part of who we are. The flag represents—to some people—the Civil War, and that was the symbol of one side. To others, it's a racist symbol, and it's been used by people in a racist way. [But] the problems we're having in South Carolina and around the world aren't because of a symbol, but because of what's in people's hearts."

What's in people's hearts. Like using "we" in a way that writes black Southerners out of the word entirely, for example. Or pretending that there is any use for the Confederate flag that isn't racist. Or diminishing an act of anti-black terrorism by calling it a "problem we're having in South Carolina," just one of many problems "around the world."

Former Governor of Texas Rick Perry meanwhile referred to Dylann Roof's mass murder as an "accident." Definitely not politicizing the shooting himself, ahem, he used the occasion to criticize President Obama for pointing to gun access as one culprit, and then said: "This is the M.O. of this administration, anytime there is a accident like this. You know, the president's clear. He doesn't like for Americans to have guns, and so he uses every opportunity—this being another one—to basically go parrot that message."

Clearly, it is much more principled to use the occasion of every mass death at the hands of a shooter to attack the President.

Former Governor of Florida Jeb Bush, speaking at the Faith & Freedom Coalition conference, well after Dylann Roof's motive was known, said: "I don't know what was on the mind or the heart of the man who committed these atrocious crimes." Explicitly asked later if he thought the shooting had been racially motivated, he answered: "I don't know. Looks like to me it was, but we'll find out all the information. It's clear it was an act of raw hatred, for sure. Nine people lost their lives, and they were African-American. You can judge what it is."

The reason he won't just fucking say it? Because the white conservative base is busily twisting themselves into pretzels trying to find any other motivation, and Jeb Bush wants these racists' votes more than he wants to address deadly racism.

Also at the FFC garbage conference, Senator Rand Paul said this bullshit: "We had a shooting this morning [sic] in South Carolina. What kind of person goes into church and shoots nine people? There's a sickness in our country, there's something terribly wrong, but it isn't going to be fixed by your government. It's people straying away, it's people not understanding where salvation comes from."

Yes, that was it. Not white supremacy, but not enough Jesus. (Roof, by the way, was a Lutheran. And having been raised Lutheran, I can assure you that Lutherans talk a lot about salvation.)

Senator Ted Cruz, keeping with his tradition of making inappropriate jokes in the wake of a tragedy, said at a campaign event in Iowa days after the shooting: "You know the great thing about the state of Iowa is, I'm pretty sure you all define gun control the same way we do in Texas—hitting what you aim at." He also said that there's no sense talking about Root's racist motivations: "It appears to be racially driven from what it was reported this strange man said, and a racial hate crime is horrific, any hate crime is horrific. I don't think we should be using this tragedy to try and divide people and to try and seek partisan advantage. I think we should be praying for those who lost loved ones in this horrific murder."

Cruz is one of several Republican candidates who received campaign contributions from Earl Holt, the "leader of a rightwing group that Dylann Roof allegedly credits with helping to radicalise him against black people."

As is former Senator Rick Santorum. Santorum was quick to call the shooting at attack on religious freedom, but later called it an act of terrorism and said: "It was clearly racially motivated. Clearly."

Dr. Ben Carson penned an editorial [CN: disablism] for USA Today in which he wrote: "Not everything is about race in this country. But when it is about race, then it just is. So when a guy who has been depicted wearing a jacket featuring an apartheid-era Rhodesian flag walks into a historic black church and guns down nine African-American worshipers at a Bible study meeting, common sense leads one to believe his motivations are based in racism. ...We know what's at stake here, so let's stop all the interpretive dance around the obvious. ...When an event of this magnitude occurs in the middle of an election cycle, politicians are often quick to try to score political points, look for scapegoats and easy answers. That's the lowest common denominator of politics at a time when we need true leadership. ...I know we can [heal the sickness of racism]. But first we have to face the facts."

Dr. Carson is, of course, the only black Republican candidate.

On the other side of the aisle, Senator Bernie Sanders drew ire after holding a political rally "just feet from a Capitol Hill prayer vigil for the Charleston shooting victims in South Carolina," the day after the shooting. "The chants from the rally reportedly overpowered speakers at the prayer vigil." I don't even know what the fuck he was thinking.

Later in the day, he offered this message: "The Charleston church killings are a tragic reminder of the ugly stain of racism that still taints our nation. This senseless violence fills me with outrage, disgust, and a deep, deep sadness. The hateful killing of nine people praying inside a church is a horrific reminder that, while we have made significant progress in advancing civil rights in this country, we are far from eradicating racism. Our thoughts and prayers are with the families and their congregation."

Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton used [CN: disablism] the occasion of her speech to the U.S. Conference of Mayors over the weekend to talk about the shooting, to observe that racism is still a powerful force in the country, and to talk about white privilege. After reiterating the President's message about the need for gun control, Clinton said:
But today, I stand before you because I know and you know there is a deeper challenge we face.

I had the great privilege of representing America around the world. I was so proud to share our example, our diversity, our openness, our devotion to human rights and freedom. These qualities have drawn generations of immigrants to our shores, and they inspire people still. I have seen it with my own eyes.

And yet, bodies are once again being carried out of a Black church.

Once again, racist rhetoric has metastasized into racist violence.

Now, it's tempting, it is tempting to dismiss a tragedy like this as an isolated incident, to believe that in today's America, bigotry is largely behind us, that institutionalized racism no longer exists.

But despite our best efforts and our highest hopes, America's long struggle with race is far from finished.

I know this is a difficult topic to talk about. I know that so many of us hoped by electing our first Black president, we had turned the page on this chapter in our history.

I know there are truths we don't like to say out loud or discuss with our children. But we have to. That's the only way we can possibly move forward together.

Race remains a deep fault line in America. Millions of people of color still experience racism in their everyday lives.

Here are some facts.

In America today, Blacks are nearly three times as likely as whites to be denied a mortgage.

In 2013, the median wealth of Black families was around $11,000. For white families, it was more than $134,000.

Nearly half of all Black families have lived in poor neighborhoods for at least two generations, compared to just 7 percent of white families.

African American men are far more likely to be stopped and searched by police, charged with crimes, and sentenced to longer prison terms than white men, 10 percent longer for the same crimes in the federal system.

In America today, our schools are more segregated than they were in the 1960s.

How can any of that be true? How can it be true that Black children are 500 percent more likely to die from asthma than white kids? Five hundred percent!

More than a half century after Dr. King marched and Rosa Parks sat and John Lewis bled, after the Civil Rights Act and the Voting Rights Act and so much else, how can any of these things be true? But they are.

And our problem is not all kooks and Klansman. It's also in the cruel joke that goes unchallenged. It's in the off-hand comments about not wanting "those people" in the neighborhood.

Let's be honest: For a lot of well-meaning, open-minded white people, the sight of a young Black man in a hoodie still evokes a twinge of fear. And news reports about poverty and crime and discrimination evoke sympathy, even empathy, but too rarely do they spur us to action or prompt us to question our own assumptions and privilege.

We can't hide from any of these hard truths about race and justice in America. We have to name them and own them and then change them.
I have said before that Clinton has not seemed confident or well-prepared talking about race previously. This isn't perfect, but it is a marked improvement.

I am especially grateful that she drew a direct line from racist rhetoric to racist violence, and said plainly that this is not an isolated incident, but a terrorist act firmly centered in institutional racism.

I never imagined I'd have occasion to say this, but I agree with Dr. Ben Carson: Anyone who is not willing to talk about racism, even in the wake of eliminationist violence against nine black women and men perpetrated by an avowed white supremacist, is not fit to lead this nation.

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"Racism, we are not cured of it."

[Content Note: Discussion of racism and racist violence; use of a racist slur.]

Today, if you browse the news, you will probably see a lot of headlines about how President Obama used the n-word, during an interview with comedian Marc Maron on his podcast. And it is notable that the President used that particular slur, during a discussion of racism, but not for the tittering, tutting, pearl-clutching reasons around which most of the discussion is centered, eliding the import of everything else he was saying.

The full context of his use of the word is crucial, and the ideas he was elucidating are important. We need to hear everything he said.

The entire podcast is available here.

image of President Obama sitting down with Marc Maron in his studio
[Photo by Pete Souza.]

Here is an excerpt from that interview:
I always tell young people, in particular, do not say that nothing has changed when it comes to race in America, unless you've lived through being a black man in the 1950s or '60s or '70s. It is incontrovertible that race relations have improved significantly during my lifetime and yours.

[But] the legacy of slavery, Jim Crow, discrimination in almost every institution of our lives, you know, that casts a long shadow, and that's still part of our DNA that's passed on. We're not cured of it. Racism, we are not cured of it. Clearly. And it's not just a matter of it not being polite to say nigger in public. That's not the measure of whether racism still exists or not. It's not just a matter of overt discrimination. Societies don't, overnight, completely erase everything that happened 200 to 300 years prior.
It shouldn't be the least bit controversial for any black person (or any person at all) to observe that racism still exists. But it is, because there are so many white people who aggressively police anyone who states the manifestly obvious, because they are deeply invested in pretending otherwise, even as they endeavor to transmit to the next generation the language and imagery and narratives and dog-whistles and every other bit of reprehensible detritus that defines and maintains white supremacy and white privilege.

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Quote of the Day

[Content Note: Racism; terrorism.]

"This impulse to blame the massacre in Charleston on everything but race—and not acknowledge that this is indeed a hate crime and is in fact about something broader than one individual—is based on a reluctance to confront America's long and bloody past head on. Messages of #BlackLivesMatter are as much about recent killings of unarmed black people as they are about America's consistent devaluation of black lives during and after death. ...Roof, who was finally captured early Thursday after a massive manhunt, has apparent white supremacist ties, and a picture is circulating of him wearing two overt racist symbols: the South African flag under apartheid and the flag of formerly white-controlled Rhodesia (which later became Zimbabwe). In other words, Roof is literally wearing a racist's uniform. We must be able to admit the truth that is right in front of our faces. When a white supremacist walks into one of the most historic and famed black churches in the United States and massacres nine black people, the catalyst is race at the most fundamental level."—Zerlina Maxwell, in a must-read piece: "The Charleston Church Shooting Is Another Reminder That Racism Is Not a Thing of the Past."

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In the News

Here is some stuff in the news today...

Today is Juneteenth, a holiday commemorating the end of slavery and black independence in the US. Laura Saunders Egodigwe has written a terrific piece on Juneteenth, and there are tons of Juneteenth events all over the country, many of which will be stretching into the weekend, and many of which you can find online, if you want to attend or support a local celebration.

[Content Note: Racism; terrorism] This is pretty great: In an interview yesterday, Hillary Clinton called for "a candid national conversation about race and about discrimination, prejudice, hatred" in the wake of the murders in Charleston, and called out Donald Trump's profoundly racist rhetoric from his campaign announcement address as contributing to a culture in which people act on racial hatred. "For example, a recent entry into the Republican presidential campaign said some very inflammatory things about Mexicans. Everybody should stand up and say that's not acceptable. You don't talk like that on talk radio. You don't talk like that on the kind of political campaigns." The interviewer told him she could use Trump's name, but she declined, saying: "I think he is emblematic. I want people to understand it's not about him, it's about everybody. We should not accept [hateful speech in national political conversation]. Decent people need to stand up against it." Right on. This shit doesn't happen in a vacuum.

[CN: Wildfires] Fuck: "With the official start of summer just days away, wildfire season is off to a hot start across the West. As the Associated Press reports, there are currently blazes in at least four states—Alaska, Arizona, California, and Washington—and over 1,000 people have been evacuated in total. According to the U.S. Forest Service there are currently 17 large fires burning."

[CN: Appropriation; video may autoplay at link] Rachel Dolezal has been voted off a police oversight committee in Spokane during a City Council meeting. "The Spokane City Council voted 6 to 0 to remove Rachel Dolezal from the Police Ombudsman Commission due to misconduct which was originally reported in a whistle-blower complaint."

[CN: Homophobia; regionalism] Matthew Tully writes a piece for the Indy Star about what has been happening in Indiana since "the religious freedom spotlight faded, after the cable news networks and everyone else turned away." And, while I think he should have noted more prominently, and not just as an aside, that there's still plenty of homophobia and bigotry being expressed by individual Hoosiers, he's absolutely right to point out that "in public polls and public actions, in ways both quiet and loud, grassroots and corporate, the real Indiana in recent weeks has shown itself not to be a caricature of flyover-state intolerance but rather a state that, like so many others, rejects discrimination and embraces diversity." And, no, it's not because we were shamed into it. The people of the state and the government of the state are often at odds here, and often wrongly conflated by outsiders.

[CN: Near-drowning, but rescue] Kids today! "[Four] young boys are being hailed [as] heroes for their quick actions after they saw a swimmer in distress in an Orlando pond. ...'We were yelling for him to get out of the water. Then he tried to get out of the water and he got caught in a lily pad,' said Kevin Lewis, 9. Freeman Robinson, 10, said he acted fast when he saw the man struggling. Robinson said he directed his two friends, Devonta Hall, 10, and Marion Lukes, 10, to run across the street to an Orlando EMS division. ...Firefighters said the man wasn't conscious when they pulled him out and got him in an ambulance, but regained a pulse after life-saving efforts. The boys said helping rescue the man is an experience they'll likely never forget. 'I never saved somebody's life before,' said Hall. 'I feel really happy because it's, like, my first time helping somebody out,' said Lukes." Blub. THE CUTEST.

[CN: Homophobia] Cool Pope. Very progress. "Pope Francis once again stressed the importance of children being raised by heterosexual parents on Sunday (June 14), likening a long-lasting marriage to a good wine, in which a husband and wife make the most of their gender differences. ...He stressed that heterosexual marriages ensure a couples' happiness and are essential for good parenting. 'Children mature seeing their father and mother like this; their identity matures being confronted with the love their father and mother have, confronted with this difference [between women and men],' Francis said." Yawn.

Twitter is planning to launch some new project which just sounds like a terrible mess. I have never seen a company so determined to ruin the basic functionality of their product.

If you are a fan of Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul then you may be excited to hear that Vince Gilligan definitely wants Bryan Cranston (and other BrBa faves) to make appearances in the spinoff series. "All of the wonderful characters who may eventually appear on Better Call Saul will appear when it is most organic and fitting to the storytelling of Better Caul Saul and also when we can work out scheduling issues with actors. I would love to see that personally." Me too!

And if you are a fan of Friday Night Lights and/or True Detective, which is set to begin its second season this week starring (among others) FNL alum Taylor Kitsch, then maybe you will enjoy this profile of The Kitsch, especially if you like hearing about how handsome and manly he is!

And finally! This puppy is determined to get attention from hir uninterested older sibling, and it is hilarious.

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