Showing posts with label Chipping Away at Roe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chipping Away at Roe. Show all posts

We Resist: Day 370

a black bar with the word RESIST in white text

One of the difficulties in resisting the Trump administration, the Republican Congressional majority, and Republican state legislatures (plus the occasional non-Republican who obliges us to resist their nonsense, too, like we don't have enough to worry about) is keeping on top of the sheer number of horrors, indignities, and normalization of the aggressively abnormal that they unleash every single day.

So here is a daily thread for all of us to share all the things that are going on, thus crowdsourcing a daily compendium of the onslaught of conservative erosion of our rights and our very democracy.

Stay engaged. Stay vigilant. Resist.

* * *

Here are some things in the news today:

Earlier today by me: Mueller Is Still Investigating and Garrison Keillor Is Also a Liar.

Melanie Schmitz at ThinkProgress: Republican Senator Meets with Justice Neil Gorsuch to Discuss Unspecified 'Important Issues'.
Hours after he nearly shattered a glass elephant by tossing a "talking stick" at Sen. Mark Warner (D-VA) during bipartisan spending talks on Monday (yes, that actually happened), Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-TN) decided to buff up his image further by hastily tweeting that he was having dinner with a Supreme Court justice to discuss "important issues."

"I enjoyed having dinner tonight at the home of Senator John Cornyn and his wife Sandy with our newest Supreme Court Justice, Neil Gorsuch, Transportation Secretary Chao and a few of my other Senate colleagues to talk about important issues facing our country," the senior senator wrote.

Alexander's tweet prompted a flurry of angry responses, with many concerned the event was a breach of ethics, or at best bad optics.

...Objectively speaking, there's nothing wrong with a member of Congress (or the executive branch) dining or hunting or hobnobbing with a Supreme Court justice. ...What's troubling about Alexander's dinner with Gorsuch, rather, is the fact that the two met to discuss unspecified "important issues facing our country" — something which Supreme Court justices are rightfully discouraged from doing, as it gives an obvious appearance of partiality and may flout certain ethics rules.
Gorsuch is a fucking disgrace.

* * *

[Content Note: War on agency] Teddy Wilson at Rewire: Republicans' Forced Waiting Period Laws Could Proliferate in 2018. "State-level GOP lawmakers are ready to unleash a new crop of medically unnecessary proposals to force people to wait a day or two — or three — before they receive abortion care. Mandatory waiting periods are among the most common restrictions that have been pushed by abortion rights foes and approved by legislatures in recent years. Already in 2018, Republicans in New Jersey, New Hampshire, and Colorado have introduced forced waiting period bills."

I think my favorite (cough) part about this is how Republicans, including the new Secretary of Health and Human Services, believe in "fetal personhood," but still don't believe in the personhood of people who carry those fetuses. Our personhood, our autonomy, our agency, and our right of consent are nonexistent to the same wrecks who believe that a fetus is a rights-bearing person. Cool.

[CN: War on agency] Amanda Michelle Gomez at ThinkProgress: Texas' Sneaky Plan to Defund Planned Parenthood. "Republicans in Congress weren't able to 'defund' Planned Parenthood last year, but some remain hopeful that they can in 2018. While eyes fixate on Congress, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) — an agency packed with anti-abortion sympathizers — signaled it would approve efforts to withhold federal dollars to Planned Parenthood if states asked. Texas has already sought federal permission to do so and the green light could come any day now."

[CN: Transgender harm] Amy Littlefield at Rewire: When Their Doctor Disappeared, Transgender Patients Scrambled to Find Care in Pence's Indiana. "[W]hen they pulled into the parking lot, they found the lot empty, the lights off, and the door locked. There was no note to explain where Dr. Wallace had gone. Keener called the office; a representative told her Wallace no longer worked for Parkview Physicians Group, and referred her to another doctor in the network. When Keener explained to that new office that her son was on hormone therapy, the receptionist's voice grew cold. 'We don't do that here,' she said, according to Keener. ...[T]he ripple effect of Wallace's disappearance highlights a national problem that goes beyond policy: The shortage of doctors trained and willing to care for transgender people, particularly in rural or right-wing areas, where patients frequently rely on informal networks and word-of-mouth to find care."

[CN: Racism; whitesplaining] Afua Hirsch at the Guardian: I've Had Enough of White People Who Try to Deny My Experience. "To be black, in a society that invented race for the specific purpose of dehumanising people who are black, and then invented an equally formidable system of denial, is to carry the burden of history that others would rather forget. I found myself having to explain this reality last week, on the Sky News show The Pledge, in what I had hoped would be a debate about the utility of Trump's 'shithole countries' remark, and the racism of Jo Marney, girlfriend of the Ukip leader. Remarkably, given the premise, the argument became a race to the bottom. 'Does racism exist any more?' my white co-panelists wanted to know. They thought not. There are so many ways to prove the simple falsehood of this belief, it's hard to know where to start."

[CN: Class warfare] Monique Judge at the Root: Bank of America Can Kick Rocks: Here Are Some Free (or Low-Fee) Checking Alternatives. "Bank of America, the second-largest U.S. bank by assets, decided this month that providing free checking accounts to lower-income customers was too much of a burden to bear and removed the option from its account offerings. Customers must now either maintain a daily balance of $1,500, have a direct deposit of $250 or more, or pay a monthly fee of $12. I'm going to guess that if you don't have a direct deposit of $250 or more going into your account, $12 being taken out of it is going to hurt a bit. There is no shame in that. A great many people are just one missed paycheck away from financial disaster. This is the country in which we live. No one, however, should be penalized for that. If Bank of America wants to put its foot on the neck of already marginalized people, then The Root is here to provide you with some alternatives to free checking accounts."

[CN: Class warfare] Matt Krupnick at the Guardian: 'People Will Sign Anything': How Legal Odds Are Stacked Against the Evicted. "Just 1% of New York City housing court defendants were represented by an attorney in 2013, compared to 95% of landlords, according to a recent city report. It is a situation that is echoed nationwide. But recently New York, which handles at least 150,000 eviction cases annually, became the first city in the United States to guarantee evicted tenants the use of an attorney. In the Massachusetts city of Quincy, a pilot project to provide lawyers to tenants led to two-thirds of represented tenants staying in their homes, compared to one-third of unrepresented tenants. And those with lawyers received almost five times the financial benefit, such as damages and cancellation of past rent. 'In housing court, it makes a tremendous difference,' said John Pollock, a Baltimore attorney who leads the National Coalition for a Civil Right to Counsel. 'When you introduce a defendant's attorney to the process, it changes the expectations.'"

* * *

[CN: Sexual harassment and assault. Covers entire section.]

Tracy Connor at NBC News: Gymnastics Doctor Larry Nassar Sentenced to Up to 175 Years for Sex Abuse.
After a remarkable hearing that featured gut-wrenching statements from 156 of his accusers, former Olympic gymnastics doctor Larry Nassar was sentenced Wednesday to 40 to 175 years in prison for molesting young girls under the guise of treatment.

"I wouldn't send my dogs to you, sir," Judge Rosemarie Aquilina said in the Ingham County, Michigan, courtroom where Nassar was forced to listen to victims for seven days before learning his fate.

...Nassar, 54, agreed to a minimum 40-year sentence when he pleaded guilty last year to seven counts of first-degree criminal sexual misconduct in Ingham County. He still faces sentencing in Eaton County for three more counts, and he's already been sentenced to 60 years in federal prison for possession of child pornography.

"I signed your death warrant," Aquilina said.

...The judge took out a six-page letter he sent the court last week in which he insisted what he had done to the victims "was medical not sexual," that he was a "good doctor" and the victim of a media frenzy, and that prosecutors had pressured him to to admit to things he had not done.

"'Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned,'" she read, her voice full of scorn.

...Although Nassar admitted he molested seven girls — including a family friend, starting when she was 6 — the judge allowed all accusers to speak before she announced the penalty. She could not have imagined the result: a wall-to-wall outpouring of anger, grief, and demands for accountability from world-famous athletes to unknown teenagers.

"I feel nauseous even standing in front of you," 18-year-old Kaylee Lorincz told Nassar, who sat in the witness box crying. "Like the feeling as if I'm being assaulted by you all over again."

Lorincz, who said she was 13 when [she was abused], told Nassar she didn't need an apology. What she and the other victims wanted, she said, was accountability from the institutions that employed him.

"I only hope that when you get a chance to speak, you tell us who knew what and when they knew it," she said. "If you truly want us to heal, you will do this for us."

A day earlier, Brooke Hylek offered another suggest to Nassar.

"Enjoy hell," she said.

🔥 🔥 🔥

Emma Graham-Harrison at the Guardian: U.S. Military Fails to Tackle Sexual Abuse of Children by Afghan Allies, Report Finds. "The U.S. military showed little interest for years in tackling widespread sexual abuse of children by Afghan security forces it still funds and trains, according to a newly declassified report by a US government watchdog. The exact scale of the problem remains unclear due to a lack of guidance on how to respond to suspected cases, a lack of training on how to report them, and in some cases reluctance to do so for fear of reprisals, said the special inspector general for Afghanistan reconstruction (SIGAR) in the report. 'The full extent of child sexual assault committed by Afghan security forces may never be known,' the report from SIGAR said. But two-thirds of the individuals and organisations interviewed for the recently declassified report said they were aware of 'child sexual assault incidents or related exploitation by Afghan security forces,' the watchdog said. The investigation was requested by 93 members of Congress, after an article in the New York Times warned that child sex assault was 'rampant' among Afghan forces."

Tom Ley at Deadspin: WWE Releases Enzo Amore Following Rape Allegation. "Pro wrestler Enzo Amore, whose real name is Eric Arndt, was released by WWE today. In a statement announcing his suspension yesterday, WWE said that the organization has 'has zero tolerance for matters involving sexual harassment or sexual assault.' Before WWE's announcement, Pro Wrestling Sheet reported that Arndt is currently being investigated by Arizona police in connection with a rape allegation. ...According to ABC 15, local police have confirmed that they are investigating Arndt, and that the alleged incident took place on Oct. 19, 2017 at the Clarendon Hotel and Spa. FightfulOnline is reporting that Arndt was aware of the charges against him but did not disclose them to WWE."

So, just to recap: World Wrestling Entertainment, Inc. is apparently taking sexual assault more seriously than the U.S. military.

Jonathan Tamari at the Philly Inquirer: Pat Meehan Says He Saw Younger Aide as 'a Soul Mate' But Denies Harassment. "U.S. Rep. Pat Meehan acknowledged Tuesday that he had a deep 'affection' for a younger aide and told her last year that he saw her as 'a soul mate,' but said he never pursued a romantic relationship with the woman and, despite paying her a secret settlement, denied her claims of sexual harassment. ...Meehan confirmed the outline of the Times story, which said the married 62-year-old expressed his romantic desires to his aide after she began a serious relationship with someone else, then grew hostile when she did not reciprocate. ...The report by the New York Times was amplified in part because as a member of the House Ethics Committee, Meehan had been helping review sexual harassment claims against several other representatives." Whoooooops.

Kieran Corcoran at Business Insider: 'An Incessant Stream of Harassment': Undercover FT Reporter Describes High-Powered Charity Dinner Where She Was Groped 'Several Times'. "The Financial Times journalist who went undercover as a hostess at a seedy, men-only gathering of Britain's elite described the experience as 'an incessant stream of harassment.' Madison Marriage, who is an accounting and tax correspondent for the newspaper, was hired to work at the Presidents Club Charity Dinner at London's Dorchester Hotel, which took place last Thursday. Along with around 130 other women, she was told to wear a revealing black dress, matching underwear, and high heels while entertaining guests from the highest echelons of business, the media, sport, and entertainment. ...In an interview with the BBC's Victoria Derbyshire, Marriage described the 'uncomfortable' experience, and said she was personally groped several times."

David Folkenflik at NPR: New York 'Daily News' Exec Investigated After Harassment Complaint. "A top editor at the New York Daily News has been accused of sexual harassment and is now under investigation by the paper's parent company after inquiries by NPR. Managing Editor Robert Moore has been accused of creating a sexualized atmosphere, pressuring women for attention, and punishing those who objected. Tronc would not say whether he remains on the job or has been suspended or placed on leave. ...Moore is the second Tronc newspaper executive in four days to be put under investigation owing to NPR's reporting. Last week, Los Angeles Times Publisher Ross Levinsohn went on leave after Tronc started an investigation of him too, following an NPR report that he had been a defendant in two sexual harassment suits in earlier jobs and faced accusations of misconduct toward women. Levinsohn initially stayed on the job but within a day had taken what was called a voluntary leave of absence."

Emily Peck at the Huffington Post: Five Women Sue Monster Energy over Abusive, Discriminatory Culture.
Even as he awaits a criminal trial for allegedly strangling his girlfriend during a business trip in 2016, Brent Hamilton is still the head of music marketing at Monster Energy, the multibillion-dollar beverage company partly owned by Coca-Cola.

John Kenneally is a vice president at Monster despite three women accusing him of bullying, harassment and retaliation. They say he actively undermined their reputations and forced them out of the company. HuffPost obtained text messages he sent to one of these women, in which he described her as a 'whore,' made a racially charged comment about 'black dicks,' and used the term 'bitch' to refer to both her and another female employee.

Another manager, Phillip Deitrich, regularly humiliated a female subordinate in front of co-workers and sabotaged her ability to work effectively, according to a sex discrimination lawsuit she filed. He still has a job. She left the company.

Hamilton, Kenneally, and Deitrich are at the center of four lawsuits that women filed against Monster last year. Hamilton stands accused of assault, and the three lawsuits involving the other two men are about sexual discrimination, HuffPost has learned.

A fifth lawsuit, filed in 2016 by a woman who worked in the company's human resource department, alleges she experienced harassment that was enabled by the company's female former head of HR.

HuffPost interviewed all five women who have sued the company, which is best known for its highly caffeinated energy drink. A sixth woman, a former employee who says she was also mistreated, declined to go on the record because she wants to protect her privacy.

The women's lawsuits and personal stories paint a detailed and disturbing picture of what systemic sex discrimination does to women's lives and careers. Women at Monster allege that they were punished for speaking up, saying their professional reputations were tarnished and careers derailed. Egregious behavior by mainly male executives went without consequence.
Fucking hell. And, as we are all now painfully aware, if we weren't already, this is hardly an anomaly.

What have you been reading that we need to resist today?

Open Wide...

We Resist: Day 333

a black bar with the word RESIST in white text

One of the difficulties in resisting the Trump administration, the Republican Congressional majority, and Republican state legislatures (plus the occasional non-Republican who obliges us to resist their nonsense, too, like we don't have enough to worry about) is keeping on top of the sheer number of horrors, indignities, and normalization of the aggressively abnormal that they unleash every single day.

So here is a daily thread for all of us to share all the things that are going on, thus crowdsourcing a daily compendium of the onslaught of conservative erosion of our rights and our very democracy.

Stay engaged. Stay vigilant. Resist.

* * *

Here are some things in the news today:

Earlier today by me: The Collusion Is (Still) Right Out in the Open; Blackout at the Atlanta Airport; and Trump Will Unveil "America First" National Security Doctrine.

[Content Note: Train derailment; injuries; image of crash at link] AP/Guardian: Amtrak Train Crashes from Bridge onto Freeway Near Seattle. "An Amtrak train has derailed roughly 40 miles south of Seattle [near Tacoma, Washington], spilling cars onto a busy interstate. Authorities said 'injuries and casualties [were] reported.' The train derailed just before 8am on Monday. All southbound lanes of Interstate 5 were closed south of Joint Base Lewis-McChord, and motorists were being warned to avoid the area." Just awful. My thoughts are with the passengers, all the people waiting to hear from loved ones, first responders, and medical crew.

[CN: War on agency] Ian Millhiser at ThinkProgress: The Trump Administration's Orwellian Plan to Gut Roe v. Wade.
Two women, known by the pseudonyms "Jane Roe" and "Jane Poe," are being held at federal facilities for undocumented minors who enter the country without an adult guardian. They are pregnant and want abortions. Yet they cannot obtain one because the Trump administration will not let them leave the facility to obtain the medical care they seek.

If this scenario sounds familiar, it should. Last October, the Trump administration made a similar attempt to hold a woman prisoner to prevent her from terminating her pregnancy. The woman eventually received her abortion, but only after she obtained a federal court order.

But that court order may have only taken effect because of a tactical error by Trump administration lawyers, who delayed seeking review in the Supreme Court until after the woman already obtained her abortion. These lawyers are unlikely to repeat this error now that Roe and Poe seek a similar court order.

That means that, as soon as this week, the Supreme Court is likely to weigh in on whether the federal government can physically detain a woman to prevent her from obtaining an abortion.
A Supreme Court that now leans conservative, thanks to the addition of Neil Gorsuch, care of Mitch McConnell. Seethe.

Matthew Goldstein at the New York Times: The Next Crisis for Puerto Rico: A Crush of Foreclosures.
Puerto Rico is bracing for another blow: a housing meltdown that could far surpass the worst of the foreclosure crisis that devastated Phoenix, Las Vegas, Southern California, and South Florida in the past decade. If the current numbers hold, Puerto Rico is headed for a foreclosure epidemic that could rival what happened in Detroit, where abandoned homes became almost as plentiful as occupied ones.

About one-third of the island's 425,000 homeowners are behind on their mortgage payments to banks and Wall Street firms that previously bought up distressed mortgages. Tens of thousands have not made payments for months. Some 90,000 borrowers became delinquent as a consequence of Hurricane Maria, according to Black Knight Inc., a data firm formerly known as Black Knight Financial Services.

Puerto Rico's 35 percent foreclosure and delinquency rate is more than double the 14.4 percent national rate during the depths of the housing implosion in January 2010. And there is no prospect of the problem's solving itself or quickly.
Meanwhile, Arelis R. Hernández reports at the Washington Post that Puerto Rican Governor Ricardo Rossello has "ordered all government agencies to reopen their books and initiate a recount and review of certified deaths that have occurred since Hurricane Maria, after weeks of reporting by various news outlets pointed to a possible severe undercount of storm fatalities."

I don't even know when the last time Donald Trump mentioned Puerto Rico was.

* * *

Amanda Becker and Lindsay Dunsmuir at Reuters: Republicans Confident Tax Bill to Become Law This Week. "Top U.S. Republicans said on Sunday they expected Congress to pass a tax code overhaul this week, with a Senate vote as early as Tuesday and [Donald] Trump aiming to sign the bill by week's end. John Cornyn, the No. 2 U.S. Senate Republican, said in an interview on ABC's This Week that he was 'confident' the Senate would pass the legislation, 'probably on Tuesday.'"

[CN: Video may autoplay at link] Trump, Real Estate Investors Get Late-Added Perk in Tax Bill. "Lawmakers scrambling to lock up Republican support for the tax reform bill added a complicated provision late in the process — one that would provide a multimillion-dollar windfall to real estate investors such as [Donald] Trump. The change, which would allow real estate businesses to take advantage of a new tax break that's planned for partnerships, limited liability companies, and other so-called 'pass-through' businesses, combined elements of House and Senate legislation in a new way. Its beneficiaries are clear, tax experts say, and they include a president who's said that the tax legislation wouldn't help him financially."

Guardian Staff and Agencies: John McCain Will Not Vote on Republican Tax Cuts This Week. "Trump confirmed reports the Arizona senator has gone home to spend the holidays with his family, after spending several days in hospital in Maryland because of side effects from his treatment for glioblastoma, an aggressive form of brain cancer. The president, who called McCain's wife Cindy on Friday, told reporters at the White House: 'I understand he'll come if we ever needed his vote, which hopefully we won't. But the word is John will come back if we need his vote. It's too bad. He's going through very tough time, there's no question about it. But he will come back if we need his vote.'"

* * *

Mike Allen at Axios: Muddying Mueller: Trump Allies Say Strategy Working. "Trump said yesterday 'No, I'm not' when asked if he's considering firing Special Counsel Bob Mueller. Truth is, his high-level Republican allies don't think he will need to. Be smart: The Trump lawyers' strategy is to cooperate with Mueller on the inside game. The outside chorus tries to rough up Mueller, in case his findings are trouble for POTUS. The rising conservative drumbeat to discredit the investigation and the investigators is gaining GOP converts."

Mike Memoli at NBC News: House Republicans Prepare to Wrap Up Contentious Russia Investigation. "As House Republicans make the case for special counsel Robert Mueller to end his investigation of Russian meddling in the 2016 election, they appear ready to bring their own intelligence probe to an end. Senior Republicans on the House Intelligence Committee tell NBC News that they hope and expect to draw their year-long investigation to an end in the coming weeks, saying they have largely completed all interviews relevant to the narrow scope of inquiry Democrats had agreed to last spring. ...Though Democrats say they have requested as many as 30 additional interviews with new witnesses, none have been scheduled beyond the end of this month."

Aaron Blake at the Washington Post: The White House's Odd Statement About Giving U.S. Intelligence to Putin. "The second half of the readout is almost completely Trump: The emphasis on defeating terrorism as Goal No. 1, stressing the importance of a positive relationship with Russia, the reference to 'very talented people' at the CIA, and most notably the exclamation point at the end. (I tried to find another White House readout that ended with this punctuation and came up empty.) As The Post reported last week in its extensive recap of the first year of Trump's handling of Russia, Trump has often found his efforts to forge a more fruitful relationship with Russia stymied by the political realities of the day. This feels a lot like Trump trying to put his own brand of positive spin on this particular episode."

* * *

[CN: Sexual harassment and assault. Covers entire section.]

Edward-Isaac Dovere at Politico: Franken Urged to Reverse His Resignation.
At least four senators are urging Al Franken to reconsider resigning, including two who issued statements calling for the resignation two weeks ago and said they now feel remorse over what they feel was a rush to judgment.

Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), who urged Franken not to step down to begin with — at least not before he went through an Ethics Committee investigation — said the Minnesota senator was railroaded by fellow Democrats.

"What they did to Al was atrocious, the Democrats," said West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin in an interview for POLITICO's Off Message podcast... "The most hypocritical thing I've ever seen done to a human being — and then have enough guts to sit on the floor, watch him give his speech and go over and hug him? That's hypocrisy at the highest level I've ever seen in my life. Made me sick," Manchin said.
Manchin will probably use this as his excuse for switching his party affiliation to Republican in short order.

Matt Zapotosky at the Washington Post: Federal Appeals Judge Announces Immediate Retirement Amid Probe of Sexual Misconduct Allegations.
Alex Kozinski, the powerful judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit who was facing a judicial investigation over allegations that he subjected 15 women to inappropriate sexual behavior, announced Monday that he would retire effective immediately.

In a statement provided by his lawyer, Kozinski apologized, saying that he "had a broad sense of humor and a candid way of speaking to both male and female law clerks alike" and that, "in doing so, I may not have been mindful enough of the special challenges and pressures that women face in the workplace."

"It grieves me to learn that I caused any of my clerks to feel uncomfortable; this was never my intent," he said. "For this I sincerely apologize."

Kozinski, 67, said that although family and friends had urged him to stay on, "at least long enough to defend myself," he "cannot be an effective judge and simultaneously fight this battle. Nor would such a battle be good for my beloved federal judiciary. And so I am making the decision to retire, effective immediately."
Oh godddddd I definitely have Predator Apology Bingo. With the inclusion of "the investigation will be a distraction," I didn't even need the open space in the center!

Mike Snider at USA Today: MSNBC's Chris Matthews Was Reprimanded over Inappropriate Comments About Woman in 1999. "The network told USA TODAY that in 1999, an employee approached CNBC executives with a claim that Matthews made inappropriate jokes and comments about her in front of others. The network's investigation into the incident found that the remarks were inappropriate and sophomoric and in poor taste, but not meant as propositions. Matthews received a formal reprimand, the network says, and the matter was thoroughly reviewed and dealt with at the time. The network said it would not elaborate on the employee's payment and departure because of confidentiality."

The network also told USA Today that the incident "resulted in the woman getting separation-related compensation from the network," which sounds an awful lot like she was fired with a payoff.

Add Matthews to the ever-growing list of men who covered the last election and had a demonstrable history of misogyny toward Hillary Clinton.

[CN: Racism; video may autoplay at link] L. Jon Wertheim and Viv Bernstein at Sports Illustrated: Jerry Richardson, Panthers Have Made Multiple Confidential Payouts for Workplace Misconduct, Including Sexual Harassment and Use of a Racial Slur. "On Friday evening, the Panthers announced that they had commenced an internal investigation into allegations of workplace misconduct against Richardson... On Sunday morning the NFL announced it was taking over the investigation. During its own investigation in the weeks prior, SI learned that on multiple occasions when Richardson's conduct has triggered complaints — for sexual harassment against female employees and for directing a racial slur at an African American employee — he has taken a leaf from a playbook he's deployed in the past: Confidential settlements were reached and payments were made to complainants, accompanied by non-disclosure and non-disparagement clauses designed to shield the owner and the organization from further liability and damaging publicity."

What have you been reading that we need to resist today?

Open Wide...

We Resist: Day 271

a black bar with the word RESIST in white text

One of the difficulties in resisting the Trump administration, the Republican Congressional majority, and Republican state legislatures is keeping on top of the sheer number of horrors, indignities, and normalization of the aggressively abnormal that they unleash every single day.

So here is a daily thread for all of us to share all the things that are going on, thus crowdsourcing a daily compendium of the onslaught of conservative erosion of our rights and our very democracy.

Stay engaged. Stay vigilant. Resist.

* * *

Here are some things in the news today:

Earlier today by me: Weinstein Made Us Pay Attention. What Next?

[Content Note: War on agency] AP/USNWR: Bill Bars UW Employees from Working at Planned Parenthood. "University of Wisconsin employees would no longer be allowed to work part-time at Planned Parenthood under a bill supported by anti-abortion advocates that's up for a public hearing. ...The measure would prohibit UW employees from performing abortions or providing training at facilities where abortions are performed, other than hospitals. It targets an arrangement between Planned Parenthood and UW in which faculty members work part-time at the organization's Madison clinic."

As Eastsidekate, who sent me this item, said (which I'm sharing with her permission): "They're specifically trying to prevent med students and young doctors from obtaining training on reproductive health. There was a bill this Spring prohibiting UW from teaching abortion, this is meant to close the loop."

This is another part of the "chip away at Roe" strategy: Anti-choicers don't need the Supreme Court to overturn Roe v. Wade if they render it an empty statute by eroding abortion access the nation. And what better way to erode access to abortion than to make sure no doctors are trained to terminate pregnancies?

This puts me in the mood to tell you a story.

Once upon a time, a hundred million years ago during the Bush Era, there was a movement on the feminist blogs to teach women how to perform abortions. And a bunch of people (progressive dudes) were all WHAT A BUNCH OF HYSTERICAL ALARMISTS ALSO YOU ARE TERRIBLE ABORTIONS SHOULD BE DONE BY PROFESSIONALS YOU CREEPS, and we were all, uh, yeah, we agree, but what about when that's not an option? We're planning for that. And people (progressive dudes) were like SHUT UP THIS IS WHY WE HATE FEMINISTS. The end.

Now I'm just an ancient feminist harpy who doesn't know how politics work and you should definitely never listen to me, but I think this is a very compelling case study in how often the most intransigent barriers to feminist work aren't conservatives but progressive men.

It wasn't right-wingers who were raising hell about feminists trying to disseminate information about how to perform abortions. To them, it was just like, of course that's what feminists are doing because they love abortion and are demons.

It was the progressive bros who were SLIPPERYSLOPE!-ing us and telling us that we were the problem with the left and all the usual horseshit, silencing us under the auspices that we were going to "hurt the movement" with our alarmism and extremism, instead of listening to us and understanding that we were sounding alarms with good fucking reason.

Instead of taking us seriously and allying with us, they pushed back against us, doing the work of our opponents. And now here we are. Again.

Way back when, a hundred million years ago, Shakesville used a different commenting system, which is now defunct, and that is sad, because I wish I could link to a thread that reached 500+ comments and was about disseminating abortion instructions and followed this exact dynamic. Aphra_Behn and I were just recalling how TERRIFIC that thread was; some of you longterm readers may remember it, too — as a libertarian dude now famous for his Hillary hatred was a prominent participant.

I literally had progressive dudes screaming at me that I was the reason Bush was reelected because I supported sharing information about how to perform abortions, in the event access was completely eroded in some or all parts of the country.

And now here we are. It turns out that we were not the worst threat to the progressive movement, but ahead of the fucking curve. Again. And the people shouting at us that we were the worst threat to the progressive movement misdirected their energies. Again. And conservatives just marched right on to enact the agenda we were trying to tell you was their agenda in the vacuum of inattention caused by the progressive dudes who are convinced that feminists are their worst enemy. Again.

Whoops.

* * *

Here is a clip of Donald Trump just boasting about his malice (specifically, destroying the Affordable Care Act):

At best you could say it's in its final legs. The premiums are going through the roof; the deductibles are so high that people don't get to use it.

Obamacare is a disgrace to our nation. And we are solving the problem of Obamacare, okay?

Thank you all very much. Thank you.
"Obamacare is a disgrace to our nation" may be the ultimate statement of projection.

* * *

Matt Shuham at TPM: Trump: I've Called 'Virtually' All Gold Star Families. "Donald Trump on Tuesday said he had called 'virtually' every family of service members who have died during his presidency. The White House did not answer TPM's questions about whether 'virtually everybody' included the families of the four Green Berets who were killed in Niger on Oct. 4. On Monday, Trump acknowledged in an impromptu press conference that he had not yet contacted the families, 12 days and counting after the ambush that left their loved ones dead. ...Trump also baselessly accused former President Barack Obama and other former presidents of not calling the loved ones of fallen service members, an accusation that multiple former Obama administration officials swiftly denied." This fucking guy.

Rachel West, Katherine Gallagher Robbins, and Melissa Boteach at the Center for American Progress: This Is How Much Average Americans Will Pay for Trump's Tax Cuts for the 1 Percent. "According to analysis by the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center, under Trump's plan, the average household in the bottom 99 percent would see its taxes decrease $343 in 2027, the final year of the conventional 10-year budget analysis. Meanwhile, the average household in the top 1 percent would see a tax cut of $207,060 — more than 600 times larger. And while ultrawealthy households would reap huge benefits, by 2027, 1 in 4 households would actually see their taxes increase under Trump's plan."

Jason Zengerle at the New York Times: Rex Tillerson and the Unraveling of the State Department. This whole thing is quite a read, but woo this shit right here:
But building a good rapport with the head of state of his own country has, so far, proved to be beyond Tillerson's formidable abilities. According to some people who are close to Trump, his disappointment with Tillerson is as much personal as it is professional. "Trump originally thought he could have a relationship with Tillerson that's almost social," says one Trump adviser, "the way his relationships are with Wilbur Ross and Steve Mnuchin."

But unlike Trump's commerce and treasury secretaries — plutocrats who, like Trump, are on their third, younger wives — Tillerson, who is 65 and has been married to the same woman for 31 years, has shown little interest in being the president's running buddy; instead of Saturday-night dinners with Trump at his Washington hotel, Tillerson favors trips home to Texas to see his grandchildren or to Colorado to visit his nonagenarian parents.

(The White House, provided a detailed list of questions relating to Tillerson and his relationship with Trump as described in this article, responded with the following official statement: "The president has assembled the most talented cabinet in history and everyone continues to be dedicated towards advancing the president's America First agenda. Anything to the contrary is simply false and comes from unnamed sources who are either out of the loop or unwilling to turn the country around.")
I love (ahem) how that authoritarian garbage is just a parenthetical in the story. The normalization is extraordinary.

Speaking of which, this is such a good observation:


[Content Note: White supremacy] Lois Beckett at the Guardian: Florida Governor Declares State of Emergency Before White Nationalist's Speech. "Governor Rick Scott of Florida has declared a state of emergency ahead of a speech by a white nationalist leader this week at the University of Florida, in order to free up resources to prepare for possible violence. Richard Spencer's speech on Thursday in Gainesville is part of a national campaign to use outrage over racist events on university campuses to draw attention to white nationalist ideas. The tour is also designed keep fringe provocateurs like Spencer in the media spotlight." But one million thinkpieces on how progressive snowflakes are ruining college campuses.

Craig Silverman at BuzzFeed: Outbrain Is Investigating Whether Russian Trolls Used Its Platform for Election Propaganda. "The content recommendation ad network Outbrain, whose clicky content sprawls across the web, is investigating whether Russian ads or other forms of election tampering took place on its service during the 2016 election. Outbrain claims to reach more than 550 million visitors per month via content recommendation modules it places on websites of publishers such as CNN, People, and ESPN. Outbrain is 'currently conducting a thorough investigation specific to election tampering and continue[s] to monitor our index,' the company said in a statement to BuzzFeed News."

I'd argue that, at this point, any content network shouldn't be asking "if" Russia used its platform for election influence, but "how."

What have you been reading that we need to resist today?

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Oh, McCain.

I've got a new piece over at Shareblue about John McCain and his desperate, cynical, shameful maneuvering as he's locked in a tight battle for reelection to the Senate:

John McCain has some Trump Trouble.

Trump is not the sort of candidate a war hero like McCain wants to support, given Trump's willingness to refer to the U.S. military as "the gang that couldn't shoot straight" and attack a Gold Star family. Trump even attacked McCain himself, saying, in reference to McCain having been a prisoner of war, that he prefers "people who weren't captured."

Still, McCain knew he risked alienating the Republican base if he didn't support the nominee, so he endorsed Trump. But that decision is hurting him, too: Because of Trump's relentless bigotry against undocumented immigrants, a recent poll shows more than 70 percent of Arizona Latinx are less likely to vote for McCain as a result of his endorsement.

What's a 'maverick' to do?

First, he tried walking the tightrope between Trump's appeal to white nationalism and his own need to appeal to Latinx voters by publishing two different versions of his immigration position. The version on his new Spanish-language site emphasizes his record supporting a pathway to citizenship, which is noticeably absent from his English-language campaign site, where he instead positions himself as an advocate for tougher border security.
Whooooooops!

There is a whole lot more (unfortunately) at the link, including his latest gambit, which is pretending that he's pro-choice. (No, really.) So, if you've long missed my concentrated fury being aimed in John McCain's direction, head on over and luxuriate in my pools of scorn!

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In the News

Here is some stuff in the news today...

Today is Malcolm X Day, and would have been his 91st birthday. To mark the day at Colorlines, Kenrya has compiled nine of his "Most Important Quotes About Freedom and Justice."

RIP Morley Safer. The 60 Minutes mainstay has died at age 84. My condolences to his family, friends, colleagues, and fans.

[Content Note: Carcerality] "Chelsea Manning has formally appealed against her conviction and 35-year prison sentence for leaking a huge cache of government documents, arguing that her punishment was 'grossly unfair and unprecedented.' Describing the sentence as 'perhaps the most unjust sentence in the history of the military justice system,' attorneys for Manning complained that she had been portrayed as a traitor to the US when 'nothing could be further from the truth.' 'No whistleblower in American history has been sentenced this harshly,' states the appeal, which also alleges that Manning was excessively charged and illegally held while awaiting trial in conditions amounting to solitary confinement. It suggests that her sentence be reduced to 10 years."

[CN: Homophobia] Good grief: "In a chaotic floor vote in the U.S. House of Representatives, an amendment to a defense authorization bill that would have blocked funding from anti-LGBT government contractors was rejected after a last minute rally from Republicans. The amendment was put forth by openly gay Congressman Sean Patrick Maloney. He initially had the votes to pass the measure until Republicans made a last ditch effort to block it, which they did narrowly by one vote. Maloney's amendment would have voided a provision in the defense authorization bill passed Wednesday by Republicans which provides broad 'religious freedom' exemptions for religious and religiously affiliated organizations that receive federal contracts. Those exemptions can be used to discriminate against LGBT people." I am so sick of "religious freedom" being invoked to cloak bigotry.

[CN: War on agency] Goddammit: "Lawmakers in the US state of Oklahoma have passed a bill that would make the act of performing an abortion a crime. Under the bill, a doctor who performs an abortion could be sentenced to up to three years in prison and be barred from practicing medicine the state. Abortion is legal in the United States and abortion-rights activists say the bill is unconstitutional." And they "say" that because it is.

[CN: Abortion stigma] "Presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump in a New York Times Magazine interview published Wednesday tried to spin his controversial suggestion that abortion patients should be punished if the GOP outlaws the procedure. 'I didn't mean punishment for women like prison. I'm saying women punish themselves,' Trump claimed when questioned about saying in March that patients should face 'some form of punishment' for receiving abortion care. 'I didn't want people to think in terms of 'prison' punishment. And because of that I walked it back.'" 1. Bullshit. 2. Fuck you.

In totally not breaking news, Trump's a liar: Although he claims to never settle his court cases, Think Progress found 13 times he did.

[CN: Misogyny; fat hatred] I mean: "A [Louisiana] state representative proposed—then pulled—a measure in the state House Wednesday that would have required strippers in Louisiana to be no older than 28 and weigh no more than 160 pounds. Associated Press Capitol reporter Melinda Deslatte reported via Twitter that the House was discussing a bill to raise the age minimum for strippers to 21. During the discussion, state Rep. Kenneth Havard, R-Jackson, proposed an amendment to the bill that would make it against the law for strippers to be older than 28 and weigh no more than 160 pounds. According to Deslatte, state Rep. Julie Stokes, a Kenner Republican, was outraged by the amendment, telling her colleagues that she's 'never been more repulsed to be a part' of the Legislature." I can't imagine why. There's so much dignity in being part of a legislative body where your colleagues are submitting legislation based on what gives them a boner.

[CN: Video autoplays at link] In better news: NEW GHOSTBUSTERS TRAILER!!!

Whoa: "Traces of tsunamis on Mars are the newest clues yet that the Red Planet once had oceans, which could have supported life, researchers said. These killer waves might have been triggered by giant meteor impacts, scientists added. Although the surface of Mars is now cold and dry, there is a great deal of evidence suggesting that an ocean's worth of water covered the Red Planet billions of years ago."

Neat! "A new species of horned dinosaur has been unearthed by scientists in southern Utah. Remains of the animal, named Machairoceratops cronusi, suggest it was about 26 feet long, weighed two tons and ate plants. The first traces were found a decade ago in an area rich with the remains of centrosaurines—large-bodied, plant-eating dinosaurs that roamed North America and Asia 77 million years ago, during the Late Cretaceous period."

And finally! Looooooove: "Stray Dog Walks into Police Station, Gets a Job: 'Everyone loves him. He will have everything he needs for as long as he lives.'" ♥

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In the News

Here is some stuff in the news today...

[Content Note: War; bombing] "President Obama will make a historic trip to Hiroshima, Japan, on May 27, becoming the first sitting U.S. president to visit the site of the world's first atomic bombing. The White House formally announced the visit Tuesday after weeks of speculation that Obama would stop in the city after attending the Group of 7 economic summit in Ise-Shima. The president is expected to deliver a speech on nonproliferation of nuclear weapons. Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe will join Obama on the visit, where the president will 'highlight his continued commitment to pursuing the peace and security of a world without nuclear weapons,' the White House said in a statement."

Oh for fuck's sake these Bundys: "Environmental groups have called on the government to round up Nevada rancher Cliven Bundy's cattle with a mass seizure of livestock that some fear could lead to a tense standoff between armed militia groups and federal authorities. A coalition of wildlife organizations wrote to the US Bureau of Land Management (BLM) on Monday urging the agency to remove Bundy's cattle in the Gold Butte area of Nevada where the 70-year-old has for years allowed his cows to graze freely on public lands in defiance of federal land-use restrictions. ...Although the Bundy men are locked up, the cattle are still grazing without restrictions in an area that the government and environmentalists say is critical habitat for the Mohave desert tortoise, a threatened species. ...BLM, however, currently has no seizure plan for the livestock, agency spokesman Jeff Krauss said in an email. 'Mr Bundy's cattle continue to be in trespass. There are no plans for a gather at this time as we continue to cooperate with the Department of Justice on the ongoing legal matter.'"

[CN: Police brutality; racism] "A police officer charged in the Freddie Gray case chose Tuesday to stand trial before a judge rather than a jury, eliminating a potential wild card in the divisive and emotionally charged case. Officer Edward Nero...one of six officers charged, faces assault, reckless endangerment and misconduct in office charges. His trial is scheduled to begin Thursday and is expected to last about five days. The trial is seen as a bellwether case for the other two arresting officers who face the same charges. They have all pleaded not guilty. Nero is the second officer to stand trial. Late last year, a jury couldn't reach a unanimous decision in the case against Officer William Porter, who checked on Gray several times after he was put in the police van."

[CN: War on agency; NB: Not only women need abortions] "A new Utah law that goes into effect on Tuesday will force doctors to shirk their promise to 'do no harm' by dangerously over-anesthetizing women who seek a later abortion. Informed by anti-abortion state lawmakers rather than by medical experts, the 'Protecting Unborn Children Amendment' requires physicians to administer an anesthetic to any women seeking an abortion at 20 weeks of pregnancy or later, to 'eliminate or alleviate organic pain to the unborn child.' Like many anti-abortion laws on the state level, Utah's law rests on the unscientific belief that a fetus can feel pain at 20 weeks of gestation. ...Utah physicians have strongly opposed the bill since its inception, arguing that unscientific opinions from state lawmakers have no place in a safe doctor-patient relationship—especially if they put a woman's life at risk." Rage seethe boil.

[CN: War on agency; anti-choice terrorism] Another must-read by Jessica Mason Pieklo: "This distinction—between spiritual violence and physical violence—is exactly the cover the radical anti-choice movement has sought from the law for decades. And that's exactly what the Dillard jury gave them when they found Dillard not liable for threatening Means out of providing abortions in Wichita. Although the circumstances of the cases are obviously different, the idea that being spiritually compelled toward the threat of violence should be enough to excuse that threat in the court of law echoes the reasoning used by other anti-choice extremists."

[CN: Rape culture; sexual exploitation and assault] My god: "An Arkansas judge has resigned his position after thousands of nude photos of defendants who appeared before him in court were discovered on his computer. Judge Joseph Boeckmann reportedly swapped sex with young, white, male defendants for reduced sentences of 'community service' at his home. At least one of Boeckmann's victims was under the age of 18. Beckmann allegedly gave his victims a hand-written note with his phone number accompanying the 'community service' sentence. Photos recovered from Boeckmann's computer show that Boeckmann had a penchant for paddling his victims before posing them for nude photographs." I take up space in solidarity with his victims. And with survivors in this community. Just more terrific encouragement for survivors to trust the justice system.

[CN: Islamophobia] Newly-elected London Mayor Sadiq Khan "has rejected US presidential hopeful Donald Trump's offer to make the new London mayor an 'exception' to a ban on Muslims travelling to the US. 'This isn't just about me. It's about my friends, my family and everyone who comes from a background similar to mine, anywhere in the world,' he said. Mr Khan also warned that Mr Trump's 'ignorant' views of Islam 'could make both our countries less safe.'" A+

[CN: Misogyny; objectification] This is polite, ahem: "Trump's crude talk on-air with Stern between 1990 and 2005 was part of an image the businessman cultivated as a Manhattan playboy who had so many women that he barely had time to sleep... That reputation was useful as Trump, in his 40s and 50s, built a brand designed to equate his name with success and the high life. But it is problematic as Trump, 69, the presumptive Republican presidential nominee, tries to wash away his tabloid past and fashion a more dignified persona—as a potential commander in chief and leader of the free world." Problematic. Yes.

[CN: Misogyny; dehumanization] Good grief: "Mika Brzezinski and a panel of four men reinforced Donald Trump's disgusting attack on Hillary's marriage, with Brzezinski saying there were 'unanswered questions' and that Hillary should start acting 'vulnerable.' ...Mike Barnicle opined that Hillary is 'capable of real emotion.'" Can you even imagine being a dude who thinks it's his place to be the auditor of whether a woman running for the presidency is an actual human being? JFC.

[CN: Climate change; displacement] Yiiiiiiiikes: "Rising sea levels that submerge entire islands were supposed to be a distant possibility of an apocalyptic future. But in the idyllic Pacific, that future is here. Five of the Solomon Islands have completely disappeared under water over the past seven decades, one drawing its last breath as recently as 2011, according to a study published in Environmental Research Letters. Another six islands have lost more than 20% of their surface area, forcing communities to relocate as the shoreline closes in on their homes. 'The human element of this is alarming. Working alongside people on the frontline who have lost their family home—that they've had for four to five generations—it's quite alarming,' the study's lead author, Simon Albert of the University of Queensland, told CNN."

And finally! "Gentoo Penguins Hatch at Edinburgh Zoo." Sooooo cute! "Due to the decline in their populations, Gentoo Penguins are listed as 'Near Threatened' on the IUCN Red List. ...Penguins have been an integral part of RZSS Edinburgh Zoo for over 100 years and the Zoo has the largest outdoor Penguin pool in Europe. They were one of the first species that arrived, and the Zoo and the Society became world renowned when they were the first outside the southern hemisphere to breed King Penguins. The world famous daily Penguin Parade began in 1951 when a keeper accidentally left the gate open and the penguins went for a short walk and then returned to their enclosure; keepers still open the gate every day at 2.15pm and birds who voluntarily want to take part go for a short walk outside their enclosure."

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Quote of the Day

[Content Note: War on agency.]

"We all agree that protecting our children is a top priority. But this law isn't about protecting Alabama's children. It's about making a sure a woman who has decided to have an abortion can't get one."—Susan Watson, executive director of the ACLU of Alabama, quoted in a piece at Think Progress by Alex Zielinski on a bill passed by the Alabama state legislature yesterday which prohibits "abortion clinics from being within 2,000 feet from any K-8 public school—the same rule a sex offender must follow in the state."

Open Wide...

In the News

Here is some stuff in the news today...

[Content Note: War on agency] Bad news in both Florida and Indiana: In Florida, the Republican-controlled state legislature has "passed an omnibus anti-choice bill that would include targeted regulation of abortion providers. HB 1411, sponsored by Rep. Colleen Burton (R-Lakeland), would create restrictions on abortion clinics, ban organizations that provide abortion care from receiving state Medicaid funds, and redefine the trimesters of pregnancy." In Indiana, the Republican-controlled state legislature has "authorize[d] an entire menu of grotesquely unconstitutional anti-choice TRAP (Targeted Regulation of Abortion Providers) laws, as well as new forms of authoritarian, misogynistic devilry... [T]he new Indiana bill is in keeping with a series of laws that don't outright ban abortion, but which makes it really, really difficult to have a safe and legal abortion."

[CN: Antisemitism; Christian Supremacy] FUCK. THIS. "A North Carolina pastor warmed up the crowd at a Donald Trump rally by urging Sen. Bernie Sanders to become a Christian. Televangelist Mark Burns spoke to Trump supporters at a campaign event in Hickory ahead of Tuesday's North Carolina primary election, reported the Friendly Atheist blog. 'Bernie Sanders, who doesn't believe in God, how in the world (are) we going to let Bernie—I mean, really?' Burns said, as the crowd applauded. 'Bernie's got to get saved, Bernie's got to meet Jesus. He's got to have a coming to Jesus meeting.' Sanders describes himself as a secular Jew who is not 'particularly religious.'" This is inappropriate in half a dozen different ways, and I am really angry that anyone would talk about Sanders this way.

[CN: Bigotry] Sounds like Paul Krugman is reading Shakesville again! "Let's dispel with this fiction that the Trump phenomenon represents some kind of unpredictable intrusion into the normal course of Republican politics. On the contrary, the G.O.P. has spent decades encouraging and exploiting the very rage that is now carrying Mr. Trump to the nomination. That rage was bound to spin out of the establishment's control sooner or later. Donald Trump is not an accident. His party had it coming."

GOOD GRIEF THESE GUYS: "Dr. Ben Carson, who endorsed Donald Trump's presidential candidacy on Friday, appears less than enthusiastic about that decision. And the real reason the unsuccessful GOP presidential hopeful endorsed his former rival could be a violation of federal law. Carson told the conservative online site NewsMax TV on Monday that he backed Trump based on a practical calculus. 'I didn't see a path for [John] Kasich, who I like, or for [Marco] Rubio, who I like. As far as [Ted] Cruz is concerned, I don't think he's gonna be able to draw independents and Democrats unless has has some kind of miraculous change… Is there another scenario that I would have preferred? Yes. But that scenario isn't available.' Pressed to clarify, Carson said he meant he'd prefer to have backed one of the other candidates. Carson then said that Trump had promised him a role in his administration, 'certainly in an advisory capacity.'" Whoooooooops!

[CN: Rape culture; clergy abuse] "The Church of England is to make far-reaching changes to the way it deals with cases of sex abuse following a damning independent report that details how senior church figures failed to act upon repeated disclosures of a sadistic assault. The first independent review commissioned by the church into its handling of a sex abuse case highlights the 'deeply disturbing' failure of those in senior positions to record or take action on the survivor's disclosures over a period of almost four decades. The church acknowledged the report was 'embarrassing and uncomfortable.'" How terrible for them. Seethe.

[CN: Racism; class warfare] "Today (March 14) the U.S. Department of Justice charged state judges with the task of tossing out policies that effectively create debtors' prisons, filled with poor people who are unable to pay exorbitant fines for minor offenses. These policies are a major part of the government's lawsuit against Ferguson. 'The consequences of the criminalization of poverty are not only harmful—they are far-reaching,' Attorney General Loretta Lynch said in a statement. 'They not only affect an individual's ability to support their family, but also contribute to an erosion of our faith in government. One of my top priorities as Attorney General is to help repair community trust where it has frayed, and a key part of that effort includes ensuring that our legal system serves every American faithfully and fairly, regardless of their economic status.'"

Heads-up, gamers: "Xbox gamers will soon be able to play online against people using other systems such as PC and possibly even Playstation, Microsoft has announced. Currently gamers can only play together online if they use the same system. One of the first games to support cross-platform play will be Rocket League, which Xbox and PC gamers will be able to play together via Xbox Live. There is 'an open invitation' for other networks to collaborate, the tech giant said. ...'Cross-network play has been the number one most requested feature our community has asked for since Rocket League was first announced on Xbox One,' said Psyonix, the studio behind Rocket League. 'Today's announcement is a dream come true.'"

Neat! "The enigmatic circles of sand—burnt orange, almost impeccably round and rimmed by a fringe of tall grass—are spaced at surprisingly regular intervals across the otherwise barren landscape. Over the course of decades, they appear, expand and then fade, almost as if they had a life cycle of their own. And, viewed from above, they seem so perfect and improbable their existence can only be ascribed to something not of this world. ...It's not gods, scientists said on Monday in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, and it's not dragons or bugs. It's the plants themselves. They've self-organised."

And finally! Fluffy Cat is soooooooooo fluffy! Hooray for fluffy cats!

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Chipping Away at Roe...

[Content Note: War on agency. NB: Not only women need access to abortion.]

Congressional Republicans continue to refuse to do the will of the majority of the people, wasting time and resources trying to pass anti-choice legislation for which there is no scientific basis nor overwhelming public support:

On March 15, the Senate Judiciary Committee is holding a hearing on two separate bills that would, among other things, impose a federal ban on abortion at or after 20 weeks post-fertilization (equivalent to 22 weeks' gestation). Both bills would do nothing to advance public health and are instead yet another attempt to politicize women's health and limit women's access to abortion care.

The first bill, a 20-week abortion ban misleadingly labeled as the Pain-Capable Unborn Child Protection Act, is premised at least in part on the assertion that fetuses can experience pain starting at 20 weeks post-fertilization—a claim that is not supported by the preponderance of scientific evidence. The bill is patently unconstitutional, since it would prohibit abortion before viability without any exception to preserve a woman's health. The bill also includes particularly callous and cruel rape and incest exceptions that force rape victims to wait 48 hours and make two visits to see two different providers before having an abortion.

Moreover, the 20-week abortion ban would fall hardest on low-income women, the very group bearing a disproportionate burden of unintended pregnancies.

...The 20-week abortion ban bill would also impose a little-noticed provision that could be used to target abortion providers.

...The second proposed bill to be taken up at the Senate Judiciary Committee hearing, The Born-Alive Abortion Survivors Protection Act, is redundant and harmful. Existing legislation, The Born Alive Infants Protection Act of 2002, already requires that a fetus that survives an abortion is entitled to emergency medical care. Critically, the current law does so without undermining the rights protected under Roe v. Wade. In contrast, The Born-Alive Abortion Survivors Protection Act would not only roll-back this carefully crafted bipartisan agreement reached in 2002. It would also add new criminal penalties against doctors and clinicians as a scare tactics that serves the sole purpose of scaring women away from seeking safe, legal abortion.

Taken together, the proposed legislation, if enacted, would constitute a significant failure of public health policy.
Naturally, "a significant failure of public health policy" is a feature, not a bug. Indeed, it's the very objective.

I have been writing so often for so long about the erosion of abortion access that I don't even know what I could say at this point that I haven't said a dozen times.

ABORTION IS HEALTHCARE. And any legislation that values the potential life of every fetus more highly than the people who carry them is dehumanizing horseshit.

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HB2 at SCOTUS: Updates

[Content Note: War on agency. NB: Not only women need access to abortion.]

As I mentioned yesterday, the Supreme Court heard oral arguments in Whole Women's Health vs. Hellerstedt, a case challenging parts of Texas' omnibus abortion bill, HB2.

For some additional background reading, see Jessica Mason Pieklo's "The 36-Year-Old Abortion Rights Case Emerging Again in Whole Woman's Health" and Tina Vasquez's "For Undocumented Women in Texas, HB2 Is Life or Death."

For coverage of yesterday's events at the Court, see:

Dahlia Lithwick: "The Women Take Over."

Irin Carmon: "No Clear Signal from Supreme Court on Abortion."

Lyle Denniston: "Argument Analysis: Two Options on Abortion Law?"

If you want to see what mainstream media sources are saying about the arguments, Molly Runkle's got a good round-up of coverage.

The transcript of the arguments is available in PDF format, and one thing that is abundantly clear: It matters a whole lot that there are liberal women on that Court.

Here, for example, are Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Elena Kagan, and Sonia Sotomayor calling bullshit on the fundamental inconsistency in Texas' argument, made by Solicitor General of Texas Scott Keller, that steep requirements for clinics are to "protect women's health" but that the closing of clinics as a result does not constitute an undue burden:

JUSTICE GINSBURG: Well, how many women are located over 100 miles from the nearest clinic?

MR. KELLER: Justice Ginsburg, JA 242 provides that 25 percent of Texas women of reproductive age are not within 100 miles of an ASC. But that would not include McAllen that got as-­applied relief, and it would not include El Paso, where the Santa Teresa, New Mexico facility is.

JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR: It includes— ­­

JUSTICE GINSBURG: That's—that's odd that you point to the New Mexico facility. New Mexico doesn't have any surgical—ASC requirement, and it doesn't have any admitting requirement. So if your argument is right, then New Mexico is not an available way out for Texas because Texas says to protect our women, we need these things. But send them off to Mexico—New Mexico,­­ New Mexico where they don't get it either, no admitting privileges, no ASC. And that's perfectly all right. Well, if that's all right for the—the women in the El Paso area, why isn't it right for the rest of the women in Texas?

MR. KELLER: The policy set by Texas is that the standard of care for abortion clinics should rise to the level of ASCs for clinics, and admitting privileges for doctors. Texas obviously can't tell New Mexico how to regulate, but the substantial obstacle inquiry examines whether there is the ability to make the ultimate decision or elect the procedure. And when there's— ­­

JUSTICE GINSBURG: Then why should it count those clinics?

MR. KELLER: Well, here, the evidence in the record showed that this particular clinic was 1 mile across the border that was still in the El Paso metroplex, and women in El Paso often used that facility to obtain abortions. So that would go into the contextual analysis of this particular as­-applied challenge. This doesn't go to the facial challenge, but the as-­applied challenge and whether women in El Paso do have access to abortion. In any event, over 90 percent of Texas women of reproductive age live within 150 miles of an open clinic as of today.

JUSTICE KAGAN: Mr. Keller, the—the statistics that I gleaned from the record were that 900,000 women live further than 150 miles from a provider; 750,000, three-­quarters of a million, further than 200 miles. Now, that's as compared to just in 2012, where fewer than 100,000 lived over 150 miles, and only 10,000 lived more than 200 miles away. So we're going from, like, 10,000 to three-­quarters of a million living more than 200 miles away.

MR. KELLER: Well, Justice Kagan, first of all, I believe the statistics at JA 242, which is their expert testimony, would not account for McAllen or El Paso, but in looking at the fraction of women affected. And that would be the facial challenge standard, that at a minimum, a large fraction of cases, there would have to be invalidity even if there was an undue burden. The travel distance of—even in Casey, the district court found over 40 percent of Pennsylvania women were going to have to travel at least one hour, sometimes over three hours, and there was a 24­hour waiting period. Texas reduces that waiting period to two hours for traveling over 100 miles. And in Casey, that was not a facial substantial obstacle. Here, that relevant fraction is—is lower. And under Casey, then the facial challenge would not succeed. And Petitioners have a heavy burden, and they haven't shown any capacity evidence— ­­

JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR: When there's a need. Meaning, where are you taking an account in the undue ­burden analysis the value of the need being—of being imposed? Meaning, even if I grant you that in some circumstances travel time is necessary because you just can't get any kind of abortion clinic to go into a particular area, so you might have to impose a burden that might be undue in other circumstances. Where do we evaluate the benefit of this burden? What—what's the need? You—you seem—your brief seemed to be telling us that there's no role for the Court to judge whether there's really a health benefit to what you're doing.

MR. KELLER: Well, there would be three elements of the doctrine. There's the rational basis test— ­­

JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR: I'm not talking about the doctrine. I'm talking about the question I asked, which is, according to you, the slightest health improvement is enough to impose on hundreds of thousands of women—even assuming I accept your argument, which I don't, necessarily, because it's being challenged—but the slightest benefit is enough to burden the lives of a million women.
DAMN.

If Justice Kennedy is persuaded by that exchange alone, I don't even know.

Justice Ginsburg once said: "People ask me sometimes, when do you think it will it be enough? When will there be enough women on the court? And my answer is when there are nine."

I don't disagree. And in related news on that front, President Obama is reportedly vetting Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals Judge Jane L. Kelly as a potential nominee to replace Justice Scalia. According to Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid, announcement of the President's pick could come within the week.

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HB2 at SCOTUS Today

[Content Note: War on agency.]

Today, Texas' omnibus abortion bill, HB2, which was signed into law by then-governor Rick Perry on July 18, 2013, following then-state senator Wendy Davis' filibuster, will be considered by the Supreme Court, as they hear arguments in Whole Women's Health vs. Hellerstedt.

Eesha Pandit has written a terrific piece, "The Supreme Court's Massive Abortion Case: Everything You Need to Know about Whole Women's Health vs. Hellerstedt," which I recommend reading it its entirety, but here I'll excerpt her explanation of what's at stake:

Now for the politics: What's at stake when the lawyers stand before our eight Supreme Court Justices this week? Quite simply: The fate of abortion access all over the country, not just in Texas, hangs in the balance.

The Supreme Court case Planned Parenthood v. Casey held that legislators may restrict abortion rights, but not if those restrictions cause women an "undue burden." Thus, the key question in the case is whether the Texas law, with its four core restrictive provisions, is unduly burdensome to someone seeking an abortion.

Before the death of Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, who made it clear that he believed Roe v. Wade was wrongly decided, many pro-choice advocates worried that this case could serve to bring Roe down altogether, if enough justices decided to use this opportunity to declare that there is, in fact, no constitutional right to an abortion. With Scalia's seat now vacant, that scenario is off the table, since there simply aren't enough votes left on the bench for such a ruling.

Now all anticipation and anxiety shifts toward Justice Anthony Kennedy, the notorious swing vote. If Justice Kennedy voted to uphold HB2, the Court will likely hand over a 4-4 decision. In this scenario, the decision of the lower court, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, that HB2 is constitutional, will stand. In that case, the Texas law would be upheld, but only in Texas, establishing the abortion restrictions until the law, or one similar, makes its way to the Court again, after the appointment of a new justice.

In addition to Texas, 23 states have passed laws — called TRAP ("Targeted Regulation of Abortion Providers") laws — that regulate abortion providers above and beyond federal law.
If the law is upheld in Texas, it would restrict abortion access so severely in the state that abortion would be virtually inaccessible for millions and millions of people who need it.

I desperately hope that the Supreme Court—by which I mean one man, Justice Kennedy, who holds the fate of millions of women et. al. in his hands—does the right thing and overturns HB2.

And I will say, once again, that I am, and will always be, pro-abortion for any person who wants or needs one. Because abortion is healthcare, and healthcare is a right.

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In the News

Here is some stuff in the news today...

[Content Note: Refugee crisis] "Europe is 'on the cusp of a largely self-induced humanitarian crisis' because of a rapid build-up of migrants on Greece's borders, the UN has warned. 'The crowded conditions are leading to shortages of food, shelter, water, and sanitation,' UN refugee agency (UNHCR) spokesman Adrian Edwards said. Close to 24,000 migrants in Greece are in need of housing." Fucking hell.

[CN: Refugee crisis; abuse] Reuters details the horrendous conditions in which the refugees in Greece are trying to survive: "Mohammed Asif and his family have no food, no shelter, and no security. 'Home,' for now, is a thin green blanket spread over a piece of plastic on a pavement in a grimy neighborhood of the Greek capital. ...There are no public facilities and soiled nappies are strewn on a sidewalk next to bins brimming with rubbish. A Christian charity distributes biscuits and orange juice, and the occasional local turns up with a saucepan of food. Further down, young mothers with month-old babies sat on the sidewalk. A man held a child aged about 10 in his arms, looking stonily ahead. 'I'll stay here until Macedonia opens its borders,' said Ali Khan Ranjbar, 28, from Ghazni, a city in central Afghanistan and a Hazara like Asif. As of Feb. 20, crossings of Afghans to Macedonia have ceased, with witnesses reporting migrants being forcibly removed from border outposts and sent by buses back to Athens. On Monday Macedonian police fired tear gas to disperse hundreds of migrants who stormed the border from Greece as a deeply divided Europe traded barbs over how to tackle its biggest humanitarian crisis in decades."

[CN: Domestic violence; austerity] "According to the NNEDV's annual survey of domestic violence service providers, on a given day in 2015, 12,197 victims who sought help had to be turned away. ...Most of the people turned away are seeking shelter: 41 percent of the unmet requests were for emergency shelter, while 22 percent were for transitional housing or some other housing service. Yet 72 programs reduced or eliminated their housing services last year altogether. This left victims exposed and vulnerable to their abusers. ...Beyond cutting programs, many service providers had to eliminate staff. Last year, they laid off 1,235 staff members, or an average of 1.4 people each. That comes on top of 1,392 staff that were cut in 2014. Nearly 80 percent of the staff eliminated last year were in direct service positions, such as case managers, advocates, and shelter staff. These hardships—big cutbacks at providers that leave victims without the help they need—stem from a lack of resources. The most common cause that shelters cited last year for not being able to meet all of the demand, at about a quarter of providers, was a reduction in government funding."

[CN: War on agency] Teddy Wilson has more on the recent report about the dramatic number of abortion clinic closings: "Elizabeth Nash, senior state issues associate at the Guttmacher Institute, told RH Reality Check that numerous clinic closures are due to anti-choice activists pushing state lawmakers to pass measures making it impossible for many clinics to operate. 'Unfortunately the report shows that abortion access is becoming more and more limited and that restrictions do have a direct and negative impact on access,' Nash said. ...These closings disproportionately affect marginalized populations. 'Laws like these impact women across the board, but impact rural women, lower-income women, and women of color in dramatically intensified ways,' [Laura McQuade, president and CEO of Planned Parenthood of Kansas and Mid-Missouri] said."

[CN: Racism; austerity] This is just devastating: "The Carter G. Woodson Library in Chicago's Washington Heights neighborhood is rooted in history. It was named after the 'Father of Black History' and holds the largest collection of black literature in the entire Midwest. It notably contains the Vivian G. Harsh Collection, named after Chicago's first black librarian, which features slave and genealogy records and original manuscripts from notable black authors. The library is now at risk of closing due to damage to the building after years of not being kept up by the city. ...While the library has been granted nearly $10 million by the state specifically to restore Woodson, nearly $4 million is tied up in the current state budget stalemate between state lawmakers and [Republican] Governor Bruce Rauner."

[CN: Homophobia] Good grief: "Georgia State Senator Greg Kirk has said his anti-gay First Amendment Defense Act is just fine because he's run it past his many, many gay friends. ...'Look, I'm 52 years old. I've grown up with friends who now live a gay lifestyle. But they're still very close friends to me, and I care deeply about them, and I have shared this with some of my friends and asked their viewpoint as well. That's been part of my vetting process.' ...Atlanta Journal Constitution columnist Bill Torpy took it on himself to track down these elusive 'gay friends' of Kirk. ...Torpy pushed Kirk on the issue, going so far as to have the Senator give his number to his numerous gay friends. Obviously, nobody called the reporter back because, according to Kirk 'the only one, and there are only three, that I thought would speak with you said no.'"

Whooooooooops! "On Monday, you may have seen what looked like a New York Times article floating around the internet announcing that Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren had endorsed Bernie Sanders for president. There's just one problem: Warren hasn't endorsed anyone for president. The article was created using a hoax-website creator called Clone Zone, which lets users create fake webpages and articles that look strikingly similar to popular news sites."

RIP George Kennedy: "George Kennedy, who won a supporting actor Oscar for his role alongside Paul Newman in the beloved film Cool Hand Luke, and was also a fixture of 1970s disaster movies including the Airport franchise and Earthquake, died Sunday in Boise, Idaho. He was 91."

Wow: "Fossils of an ancient creature resembling a shrimp with an armored head contain the oldest and best-preserved nervous system ever found, which could help scientists decipher the evolution of nervous systemsin animals alive today, according to a new study. The remarkable remains belonged to Chengjiangocaris kunmingensis, a crustaceanlike creature that lived 520 million years ago in what is now South China. The fossils revealed a long 'ropelike' central nerve cord that extended throughout the body, with visible clusters of nerve tissue arranged along the cord, like beads strung on a thread. Even individual nerve structures could be detected, the scientists discovered."

[CN: Attempted abduction] GOOD DOG: 16-year-old "Joanna Bojorquez was saved by a dog named Willow when a man stopped and tried to abduct her this past Saturday. ...'I start kicking, trying to move him away from me, and luckily Willow saw that we weren't being friendly and she throws herself on him. He moved out of the way and I ran and we were able to get home safe,' said Joanna."

And finally! BABY RHINO! "The Toronto Zoo would like to announce that Ashakiran, an 11-year-old female Indian Rhinoceros (Rhinoceros unicornis), gave birth to a male calf on Wednesday, February 17, 2016. The recent birth is very important for Indian Rhinoceros conservation, as the species is currently listed as 'Vulnerable' on the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List of Threatened Species, and there are only approximately 2,000 left in the wild." That is one cute behbeh!

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Abortion Access Dwindling

[Content Note: War on agency. NB: Not only women need access to abortion.]

This, of course, will not come as a surprise to anyone who has been paying a modicum of attention, but just because it isn't surprising doesn't mean that it's not gutwrenchingly infuriating:

Abortion access in the U.S. has been vanishing at the fastest annual pace on record, propelled by Republican state lawmakers' push to legislate the industry out of existence. Since 2011, at least 162 abortion providers have shut or stopped offering the procedure, while just 21 opened.

At no time since before 1973, when the U.S. Supreme Court legalized abortion, has a woman's ability to terminate a pregnancy been more dependent on her zip code or financial resources to travel. The drop-off in providers—more than one every two weeks—occurred in 35 states, in both small towns and big cities that are home to more than 30 million women of reproductive age.

...Bloomberg's reporting shows that the downward trend has accelerated to the fastest annual pace on record since 2011, with 31 having closed or stopped performing the procedure each year on average.

State regulations that make it too expensive or logistically impossible for facilities to remain in business drove more than a quarter of the closings. Industry consolidation, changing demographics, and declining demand were also behind the drop, along with doctor retirements and crackdowns on unfit providers.

...That just 21 new clinics opened in five years underscores the difficulty the industry has faced in replenishing the ranks of health-care providers willing and financially able to operate in such a fraught field. The impact of that challenge is likely to be long-lived: Even rarer than the building of a new clinic is the reopening of one that has shut.
The closing of clinics is the new anti-choice strategy to chip away at Roe. Instead of overturning it, they seek to simply render it an empty statute, by eroding access, challenging the boundaries of Casey's "undue burden" rule.

All of this has happened while a pro-choice president sits in office.

There isn't much a president can do, with these restrictions being enacted in state legislatures. But there is one thing: The president can use the most prominent bully pulpit in the nation to change the conversation on abortion and to highlight the erosion of abortion access.

I desperately hope that if Hillary Clinton or Bernie Sanders get the nomination, and eventually the presidency, that they will leverage the unrivaled platform the office provides in order to speak out against this heinous assault on reproductive justice and abortion access.

Frankly, I hope both of them start doing that now.

I can't even tell you what it would mean to me to see Clinton, for example, tweet a link to this piece with a comment like: "If elected president, I will not keep silent about the attacks on abortion access across the country."

This is a promise I desperately want—and need—to hear.

And I still hope that President Obama will use some of his remaining time in office to give a dedicated national address to this issue.

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