Showing posts with label Mike Tyson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mike Tyson. Show all posts

We Resist: Day 727

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.

* * *

Earlier today by me: Thinking Out Loud About the Mueller Investigation and Kirsten Gillibrand Announces Candidacy for President. And late yesterday: I Hate Him So Much.

Here are some more things in the news today...


If you can't view the image embedded in the tweet, Pelosi has also published her letter in its entirety at the Speaker's website.

She's so good: "Unless government re-opens this week, I suggest that we work together to determine another suitable date after government has re-opened for this address or for you to consider delivering your State of the Union address in writing to the Congress on January 29th." No government, no big-time address for a man who has an insatiable hunger for attention. Smart.

In other shutdown news...

Erica Werner at the Washington Post: Trump Administration Calling Nearly 50,000 Back to Work, Unpaid, as Shutdown Drags On. "The Trump administration on Tuesday said it has called back tens of thousands of federal workers to fulfill key government tasks, including disbursing tax refunds, overseeing flight safety, and inspecting the nation's food and drug supply, as it seeks to blunt the impact of the longest government shutdown in U.S. history. The nearly 50,000 furloughed federal employees are being brought back to work without pay — part of a group of about 800,000 federal workers who are not receiving paychecks during the shutdown, which is affecting dozens of federal agencies large and small."

Casey Quinlan at ThinkProgress: Federal Workers and Contractors Rethink Government Work as Shutdown Drags On. "Last Friday, many federal workers missed their first paychecks since the shutdown began on December 22 over demands from [Donald] Trump that Congress fund a $5 billion wall along the U.S.-Mexico border. On Saturday, the shutdown became the longest in U.S. history, currently stretching into its fourth week, at 26 days. ThinkProgress spoke with federal workers and contractors who are making tough choices about whether or not to look for other jobs, or stay in the federal government even if they are able to get back to work soon. The employees quoted in this story asked not to be identified by their actual names out of fear of retaliation."

[Content Note: Video may autoplay at link] Cheyenne Haslett at ABC News: Damage Inflicted by Shutdown Shaves Off Projected U.S. Economic Growth as of Day 26. "Unpaid federal workers and contractors have started selling personal property, creating small businesses, and spending more time with old friends. ...The Waterfords hoped to receive their normal three paychecks this week: one for Albert's retirement from the Coast Guard, one for his job as a civilian, and an additional check for his disability from the Veterans Affairs. But because of the shutdown, the couple has started a 'furlough sale' to supplement lost income — selling saddles, halters, bridles, and items on social media. 'I called it a furlough [sale] because it is more of an urgency now,' Kate Waterford said. 'It's really made us re-evaluate our whole lives.'"

Dell Cameron at Gizmodo: FCC Trying to Postpone Net Neutrality Lawsuit over Shutdown, But It Probably Won't Work. "In a motion before the District of Columbia appeals court, the FCC's counsel wrote that the shutdown would prevent the agency and relevant Justice Department employees from taking part in oral argument next month as scheduled, citing limitations on voluntary work by government employees during the lapse in appropriations. ...The odds aren't in the FCC's favor. In a 2-1 opinion issued last week, the D.C. Circuit denied a similar request while noting it's typical for the court to do so. The judges also mused that the government always shows up and argues its cases anyway."

Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, and Carrie Dann at NBC News: Shutdown, Brexit Wobble the West. "Vladimir Putin has to be smiling after the last 24 hours. In the United States, [Donald] Trump's push for a border wall has now partially shut down the federal government for 26 days and counting. And in Britain, Prime Minister Theresa May 'suffered the biggest parliamentary defeat of any British prime minister in history Tuesday as lawmakers of all stripes crushed her plan to leave the European Union,' per NBC News. ...And, oh by the way, guess which country meddled in the 2016 elections in Britain and the United States?"

* * *

Jonathan O'Connell and David A. Fahrenthold at the Washington Post: T-Mobile Announced a Merger Needing Trump Administration Approval; the Next Day, 9 Executives Had Reservations at Trump's Hotel.
Last April, telecom giant T-Mobile announced a megadeal: a $26 billion merger with rival Sprint, which would more than double T-Mobile's value and give it a huge new chunk of the cellphone market. But for T-Mobile, one hurdle remained: Its deal needed approval from the Trump administration.

The next day, in Washington, staffers at the Trump International Hotel were handed a list of incoming "VIP Arrivals." That day's list included nine of T-Mobile's top executives — including its chief operating officer, chief technology officer, chief strategy officer, chief financial officer, and its outspoken celebrity chief executive, John Legere.

They were scheduled to stay between one and three days. But it was not their last visit.

Instead, T-Mobile executives have returned to [Donald] Trump's hotel repeatedly since then, according to eyewitnesses and hotel documents obtained by The Washington Post.

By mid-June, seven weeks after the announcement of the merger, hotel records indicated that one T-Mobile executive was making his 10th visit to the hotel. Legere appears to have made at least four visits to the Trump hotel, walking the lobby in his T-Mobile gear.

These visits highlight a stark reality in Washington, unprecedented in modern American history. Trump the president works at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. Trump the businessman owns a hotel at 1100 Pennsylvania.

Countries, interest groups and companies like T-Mobile — whose future will be shaped by the administration's choices — are free to stop at both and pay the president's company while also meeting with officials in his government. Such visits raise questions about whether patronizing Trump's private business is viewed as a way to influence public policy, critics said.
This is a violation of the Emoluments Clause, which is why we have been in constitutional crisis since the day Trump took office.

[CN: Sexual assault]


Staff at the Daily Beast: Trump's Climate Plan Is Worse Than Doing Nothing, Says Study. "Donald Trump's climate-change plan will make matters worse than if he did nothing at all, according to new Harvard research. Greenhouse-gas emissions will 'rebound' under the Trump policy, researchers say, because the plan postpones the retirement of coal-fired power plants. Carbon-dioxide emissions will be 8.7 percent higher in some states by 2030 when compared to having no policy at all."

[CN: LGBTQ hatred] Rebecca Klein at the Huffington Post: Karen Pence Is Working at a School That Bans LGBTQ Employees and Kids.
Karen Pence, wife of Vice President Mike Pence, started at a job this week teaching art at Immanuel Christian School in Northern Virginia. It's not a school where everyone is welcome. In a "parent agreement" posted online, the school says it will refuse admission to students who participate in or condone homosexual activity. The 2018 employment application also makes candidates sign a pledge not to engage in homosexual activity or violate the "unique roles of male and female."

"Moral misconduct which violates the bona fide occupational qualifications for employees includes, but is not limited to, such behaviors as the following: heterosexual activity outside of marriage (e.g., premarital sex, cohabitation, extramarital sex), homosexual or lesbian sexual activity, polygamy, transgender identity, any other violation of the unique roles of male and female, sexual harassment, use or viewing of pornographic material or websites," says the application.

The application says that the school believes "marriage unites one man and one woman" and that "a wife is commanded to submit to her husband as the church submits to Christ." The application asks potential employees to explain their view of the "creation/evolution debate."

The "parent agreement" asks parents to cooperate in its "biblical morality" policy. Under this policy, parents are to acknowledge the sanctity of marriage as a strictly heterosexual practice. Families who condone, practice, or support "sexual immorality, homosexual activity, or bi-sexual activity" go against the principles of the school, per the document.
What a horrible family they are. By the way, this isn't the fist time Karen Pence has taught there: She also taught at the school while Mike Pence was serving in Congress. They also sent their daughter there.

[CN: White supremacy] Josh Israel at ThinkProgress: 'Find Another Line of Work': Republicans Finally Call for Steve King to Resign. "After years of racist comments and actions, it appears the walls are finally closing in around Rep. Steve King (R-IA). Following his most recent comments endorsing white nationalism, Iowa newspapers and his own Republican colleagues are calling for him to resign from the northwestern Iowa Congressional seat he has held since 2003." Another interesting bit of timing, giving that King has been openly racist for the entire time he's held his seat.

A few days ago, Kate O'Neill posted a cheeky but also gravely serious response to the "10-year challenge" on Twitter: "Me 10 years ago: probably would have played along with the profile picture aging meme going around on Facebook and Instagram. Me now: ponders how all this data could be mined to train facial recognition algorithms on age progression and age recognition." Since then, she's written a must-read piece for Wired on the challenge and what we might be doing by participating in it: Facebook's '10 Year Challenge' Is Just a Harmless Meme — Right?
Imagine that you wanted to train a facial recognition algorithm on age-related characteristics, and, more specifically, on age progression (e.g. how people are likely to look as they get older). Ideally, you'd want a broad and rigorous data set with lots of people's pictures. It would help if you knew they were taken a fixed number of years apart — say, 10 years.

Sure, you could mine Facebook for profile pictures and look at posting dates or EXIF data. But that whole set of profile pictures could end up generating a lot of useless noise. People don't reliably upload pictures in chronological order, and it's not uncommon for users to post pictures of something other than themselves as a profile picture. A quick glance through my Facebook friends' profile pictures shows a friend's dog who just died, several cartoons, word images, abstract patterns, and more.

In other words, it would help if you had a clean, simple, helpfully-labeled set of then-and-now photos.
Damn.

[CN: Addiction; exploitation] Joanna Walters at the Guardian: OxyContin Maker Expected 'a Blizzard of Prescriptions' Following Drug's Launch. "A member of the Sackler family, which owns OxyContin-maker Purdue Pharma, told people gathered at the prescription opioid painkiller's launch party that the event would be 'followed by a blizzard of prescriptions that will bury the competition.' Top Purdue figurehead Richard Sackler made the comments in the mid-1990s, according to court documents filed on Tuesday afternoon in a case brought by the Massachusetts attorney general, Maura Healey. The case accuses the company and its executives of 'deceiving' patients and doctors about the addictive and deadly risks of the groundbreaking narcotic pills." And of being sociopathic monsters, basically. JFC.

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

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Today in Rape Culture

[Content Note: Sexual assault; rape apologia.]


This is, of course, an observation I have made many, many times, regarding a number of prominent men who have somehow, cough, managed to "survive" allegations of sexual assault — or, in some cases, like Mike Tyson, returned to public acclaim even after rape convictions.

For as long as I have been writing about the rape culture, which is a very long time now, it has been frustratingly, exasperatingly, rage-makingly true that allegations of sexual assault do not ruin men's lives or careers.

Donald Trump was elected as President of the United States of America after being accused of sexual abuse and bragging about sexually assaulting women. That should have put paid the lie that sexual assault allegations negatively impact prominent men's employment prospects.

And yet still we hear the same tired case being made, every time a woman, or a man, makes allegations against a prominent man.

It is demonstrably false.

But its veracity is beside the point. The people making the argument don't care if it's true. Its purpose isn't to insert some searing bit of honesty into their rape apologia. The objective is merely to convey that they care more about sex abusers than they do their victims.

Mission accomplished, every time. What's true or right has nothing to do it.

As is so often (always) the case with the rape culture.

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In the News

Here is some stuff in the news today...

[Content Note: War; bombing] Fucking hell: "Airstrikes carried out late last night by the Saudi-led coalition in northern Yemen destroyed a hospital supported by the international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), MSF announced today. The small hospital, in the Haydan District in Saada Province, was hit by several airstrikes beginning at 10:30 p.m. last night. Hospital staff and two patients managed to escape before subsequent airstrikes occurred over a two-hour period. One staff member was slightly injured while escaping. With the hospital destroyed, at least 200,000 people now have no access to lifesaving medical care. 'This attack is another illustration of a complete disregard for civilians in Yemen, where bombings have become a daily routine,' said Hassan Boucenine, MSF head of mission in Yemen." If you can afford to and would like to donate to Doctors Without Borders, you can do so here.

[CN: Police brutality; misogynoir; video may autoplay at second link] Richland County Sheriff Leon Lott says that Senior Deputy Ben Fields, who was captured on video violently assaulting a black teenage girl at she sat at her desk, "bears some responsibility" for what happened. Some, he says. And you know with whom he rests the lion's share of the blame: "If she had not disrupted the school and disrupted that class, we would not be standing here today. So it started with her and it ended with my officer." The rankest fucking victim-blaming. Meanwhile, he also defended Fields on the basis that he's dating a black woman. I mean. I love (ahem) how we're not only supposed to understand that means he's not racist, but also ignore that lots of men hurt female partners.

[CN: Misogyny; classism] Ian Millhiser: "Justice Ginsburg's Warning to a Dysfunctional Nation." Just go read the whole thing.

Serena Williams is the guest editor and cover star of the latest issue of Wired, and writes about why she feels her participation is so important: "We need to see more women and people of different colors and nationalities in tech. That's the reason I wanted to do this issue with WIRED—I'm a black woman, and I am in a sport that wasn't really meant for black people. And while tennis isn't really about the future, Silicon Valley sure is. I want young people to look at the trailblazers we've assembled below and be inspired. I hope they eventually become trailblazers themselves. Together we can change the future." She also gives an amazing shout-out to my friend Adria Richards: "And when we're not talking, we can get coding. Adria Richards (see "Take Back the Net") has suggested solutions to online harassment, including my favorite, Send-a-Puppy, where you'd send a digital doggy to support someone who's being harassed." WOOT!

Nepal has elected its first female president: "Communist leader Vidya Devi Bhandari was today elected as Nepal's first woman President by the parliament, weeks after it adopted a new landmark Constitution that declared the country a secular state. ...'I announce that Vidya Devi Bhandari has been elected to the post of Nepal's president,' Speaker Onsari Gharti Magar said, to loud cheers from lawmakers." I honestly don't know enough about Nepalese politics to know if her platform is a good thing for the country politically, but what I do know is that visibility of female leaders matters, even when those female leaders are the worst (*cough* Thatcher *cough*) because their very existence communicates what is possible to girls with very few global female role models in politics.

[CN: Misogyny; video may autoplay at link] Meanwhile, in the US, Bernie Sanders' "brain trust," apparently comprised of three dudes, tell some haha jokes about how Hillary Clinton would make a swell vice-president. "Look, she'd make a great vice president. We're willing to give her more credit than Obama did. We're willing to consider her for vice president. We'll give her serious consideration. We'll even interview her." Fuck. Off.

In other presidential election news, Rand Paul is a lying liar who won't stop lying about fake quotes from the Founders. Sounds about right.

[CN: Rape; video may autoplay at link] And Mike Tyson has endorsed Donald Trump, because of course he has. They have lots in common.

[CN: Gendered slurs] Do you want to read an amazing interview with Adele? Here is an amazing interview with Adele.

And finally! "Jealous Pup Epically Photobombs Owner's Engagement Pics." LOLOLOL FOREVERRRRRR.

Open Wide...

This Is Rape Culture

[Content Note: Sexual violence; rape apologia.]

Yesterday, in many discussions of the allegations against Jian Ghomeshi, there was another round of "rape allegations ruin men's lives." Never mind that people weren't even waiting to find out what, exactly, the allegations were before unleashing this omnipresent bit of rape apologia. And certainly never mind that it isn't even true.

Last night, convicted rapist Mike Tyson was a guest on The Tonight Show. I watched it and tweeted about the segment.

Jimmy Fallon welcomed Tyson onto the show with a warm greeting, dancing with him. They yukked it up about Tyson's childhood Halloween costumes and other nonsense. During the segment, Tyson—against whom there were not merely allegations, but who was tried, convicted, and served time for raping Desiree Washington (among other violent acts)—promoted his book, his new animated series, his Hard Rock Cafe tour, and his video game.

Book. TV series. Tour. Video game.

That's a lot to promote. For someone whose life should be in ruins.

At the end of the segment, following a demonstration of Tyson's video game, Fallon and Tyson were laughing and hugging. Mike Tyson pretended to bite Jimmy Fallon's ear because ha ha that one time he assaulted Evander Holyfield is now just a punchline to him. Jimmy Fallon laughed and laughed.

image of Jimmy Fallon being hugged from behind by Mike Tyson; they are both smiling and laughing
(This bit has been edited out of The Tonight Show's online clip.)

Naturally, when I tweeted about this last night, I got pushback, largely along the lines of men telling me that Tyson isn't a good example of men whose lives are ruined by rape allegations (again: tried, convicted, served time) because he is famous.

But I could tell the same story, on a less visible level, about the man who raped me. (And at least one other girl.) His life is fine.

And I have multiple friends who could tell the same stories, on less visible levels, about the men who raped them. They're just fine, too.

And I'm betting that lots and lots of women (and men) could tell the exact same stories about their rapists' fine fucking lives.

Because, see, that's the thing: Mike Tyson isn't actually a bad or atypical example. The only thing that makes him an unusual example is that he was convicted—and he's still fine.

Book. TV series. Tour. Video game.

And here's the other thing: Many of the men who tell apocryphal tales of former brothers-in-law and distant cousins whose lives were "ruined" by rape allegations (which are always, always, presumed to be untrue) really mean that those men were inconvenienced for a little while. Embarrassed. Not that their entire lives were ruined. Or even meaningfully changed.

But there are a number of survivors who can tell real stories about how OUR lives were legit derailed by reporting.

The "Ruined Lives" canard is rape apologia. And it gets the truth precisely backwards.

[Related Reading: I Write Letters.]

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Today in Rape Culture

[Content Note: Sexual violence; rape apologia.]

One of the most pernicious lies people tell in asserting there is no such thing as "rape culture" is this: Everyone agrees that rape is terrible.

After RAINN made their absurd statement earlier this year undermining the notion of the rape culture, Caroline Kitchens wrote a piece for Time, titled "It's Time to End 'Rape Culture' Hysteria," which included a passage that is perfectly indicative of this lie:

In January, the White House asserted that we need to combat campus rape by "[changing] a culture of passivity and tolerance in this country, which too often allows this type of violence to persist."

Tolerance for rape? Rape is a horrific crime, and rapists are despised. We have strict laws that Americans want to see enforced. Though rape is certainly a serious problem, there's no evidence that it's considered a cultural norm. Twenty-first century America does not have a rape culture; what we have is an out-of-control lobby leading the public and our educational and political leaders down the wrong path. Rape-culture theory is doing little to help victims, but its power to poison the minds of young women and lead to hostile environments for innocent males is immense.
Rapists are despised.

Well, some rapists are. Especially the ones who hew closely to the Law & Order: SVU central casting description of a swarthy monster who jumps out the bushes to prey on innocent, beautiful strangers.

But rapists who look like—or literally are—the boy next door, rapists who are boyfriends and husbands and fathers, or girlfriends and wives and mothers, or bosses or classmates or free speech heroes or film stars or admired athletes, or even just good-looking, they're not as likely to be despised. Or even believed to be rapists at all.

Roman Polanski gets awards. Woody Allen has stars lining up to be in his pictures. And Mike Tyson, a man who was not merely accused of rape, but who was tried and convicted and served time for raping Desiree Washington, gets a biopic made of his life starring an Academy Award winner:
Having already played the corner man to one of the greatest boxers of all-time, Jamie Foxx looks ready to get back in the ring to portray one of the most recognizable boxers and sports figures of this generation.

Sources tell Variety that Foxx is attached to play Mike Tyson in an untitled biopic that Terence Winter is set to pen. Rick Yorn, who is Foxx's manager, is shepherding the project and will produce.

The package is still coming together and is currently without a studio, but once the final details are ironed out and it is presented to the market, it shouldn't be hard to interest a distributor.
Of course it shouldn't.

The piece goes on to call Tyson "one of the most polarizing figures in sports" with "a rough around-the-edges personality," before briefly mentioning that, in the 1990s, his "life began to spin out of control, including a six-year stint in prison after being found guilty of rape."

He also "made headlines" when he "bit off part of [Evander] Holyfield's ear." His history of domestic violence, and subsequent rape charges, are not mentioned.

"In recent years," we are told, "he has kept out of trouble."

Some rapists are despised. And some rapists are rehabilitated. By which I mean: Their crimes both forgiven and all but forgotten, in order that they may be adored once again.

Mike Tyson will forever be an interesting figure in terms of the rape culture, and the narrative that we all condemn rape and despise rapists, because he is notable for having been convicted of the crime. There's no wiggle room for rape apologists to say, "He hasn't been convicted of anything." He has. Yet despite the conceit that convictions will silence apologists, Tyson's conviction hasn't.

To the contrary, he's still not even regarded as "a rapist," but a man whose life spun out of control, including having to serve time for being found guilty of rape. Just one of many reckless mistakes he made. Oopsy.

We need to get honest about this. Not all rapists are despised. And that is, from where I'm sitting, pretty damning evidence of a culture that tolerates rape, just as long as it's committed by someone we want to like.

Open Wide...

In the News

Here is some stuff in the news today!

Congratulations to Meryl Davis and Charlie White, who won the first ever Olympic gold for the US in ice dance. You can see their winning performance here.

Federal Judge Arenda L. Wright Allen has declared Virginia's same-sex marriage ban unconstitutional, writing: "The plaintiffs [two same-sex couples] ask for nothing more than to exercise a right that is enjoyed by the vast majority of Virginia's adult citizens. They seek simply the same right that is currently enjoyed by heterosexual individuals: the right to make a public commitment to form an exclusive relationship and create a family with a partner with whom the person shares an intimate and sustaining emotional bond." Judge Wright Allen's decision is stayed pending appeal, so same-sex couples won't be able to legally wed until the case is resolved in the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit.

[Content Note: Violence; guns] Adrian Broadway, a 15-year-old Arkansas teenager, is dead after the father of a classmate on whom she and friends were playing a prank shot and killed her. "The teenagers told police they had thrown toilet paper, eggs and mayonnaise on a car parked there. As they were leaving, a man came out of the house and opened fire. Broadway was struck in the head and died." Broadway is black, as is the man who shot her, Willie Noble. Noble has been charged with "one count of first-degree murder, one count of a terroristic act, and five counts of aggravated assault." Which, you know, probably would not have been the case if Noble were white. That's not an argument against charging Noble; it's an argument for charging white men who kill black teenagers.

[CN: Gun violence; racism] George Zimmerman, citing an ongoing Department of Justice civil rights investigation, refuses to say whether he regrets killing Trayvon Martin. "Certainly, I think about that night and I think my life would be tremendously easier if I stayed home." Fuck. You.

[CN: Food insecurity; class warfare] Food stamp use among military families is again on the rise. This is not what "support the troops" is supposed to mean. I'd love to hear conservatives who incessantly wail about the moochers and takers on SNAP practice some ideological consistency and argue that the people serving the nation are also just lazy and need to work harder. (No, I wouldn't. I'd love for them to abandon that bootstrap bullshit altogether.)

Actress Ellen Page publicly discloses that she is a lesbian in a moving speech about the harm being obliged to remain publicly closeted does: "I suffered for years because I was scared to be out. My spirit suffered, my mental health suffered and my relationship suffered. ...We deserve to experience love fully equally without shame and without compromise."

[CN: Rape; domestic violence] Last night was the premiere of The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, which I was really enjoying until Mike Tyson appeared as part of a comedy bit. It was really jarring to see Fallon, who spoke lovingly about his baby daughter in his opening monologue, yuk it up with a man who has raped and beaten other people's daughters. Boo.

Open Wide...

This is rape culture.

[Content Note: Rape; rape apologia.]

In 1992, Mike Tyson was convicted of raping Desiree Washington. He faced as many as 60 years in prison, was sentenced to 10, and served 3. Tyson still claims that he did not rape Washington: While he was in prison, he wrote a letter to sportscaster Jim Gray, saying in part (as recalled by Gray), "Mr. Gray, I will never admit to raping this woman, even if it lessens my time, because I just didn't do it, and I'm not going to say I did. However, there have been five to seven other things throughout the course of my life that I have done which are far worse than that of which I've been accused, so I feel I'm in the right place."

Tyson may say he did not rape Washington, but Washington, Tyson's limo driver, and a medical examiner testified otherwise. And a jury convicted him. And a judge sentenced him.

Along the way, he has been accused of (and confessed to) domestic abuse, settled a lawsuit with two women who alleged he physically assaulted them after they rejected his sexual advances, was sued by an exotic dancer who alleged Tyson punched her while she was working, and has been again accused of sexual assault. These are only the reports of sexual violence. He has also bitten a boxing competitor, knocked down a boxing ref, thrown glass ornaments at a journalist, assaulted people during various confrontations.

Tyson is a violent, dangerous man. That is the undisputed truth.

Tyson's Undisputed Truth, the title of his memoir to be published in November, tells a slightly different tale, it seems:

Description: A bare-knuckled, tell-all memoir from Mike Tyson, the onetime heavyweight champion of the world—and a legend both in and out of the ring.

Philosopher, Broadway headliner, fighter, felon—Mike Tyson has defied stereotypes, expectations, and a lot of conventional wisdom during his three decades in the public eye. Bullied as a boy in the toughest, poorest neighborhood in Brooklyn, Tyson grew up to become one of the most thrilling and ferocious boxers of all time—and the youngest heavyweight champion ever. But his brilliance in the ring was often compromised by reckless behavior. Years of hard partying, violent fights, and criminal proceedings took their toll: by 2003, Tyson had hit rock bottom, a convicted felon, completely broke, the punch line to a thousand bad late-night jokes. Yet he fought his way back; the man who once admitted being addicted “to everything regained his success, his dignity, and the love of his family. With a triumphant one-man stage show, his unforgettable performances in the Hangover films, and his newfound happiness and stability as a father and husband, Tyson's story is an inspiring American original.

Brutally honest, raw, and often hilarious, Tyson chronicles his tumultuous highs and lows in the same sincere, straightforward manner we have come to expect from this legendary athlete. A singular journey from Brooklyn's ghettos to worldwide fame to notoriety, and, finally, to a tranquil wisdom, Undisputed Truth is not only a great sports memoir but an autobiography for the ages.
"Criminal proceedings." Well, that's certainly a neat euphemism for having been tried, convicted, and sentenced for rape.

"Tyson's story," and it is indeed quite a story, is hardly an "American original." The powerful man who spends his life harming women, only to be publicly rehabilitated again and again, is about as routine as American stories come.

This is rape culture: A space in which a survivor of rape will never be remembered as anything else, and in which a violent rapist will be remembered as a happy, stable, tranquil, wisdom-dispensing legend.

[H/T to Jess.]

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Jess and Liss Talk About Mike Tyson

[Content Note: Rape culture; domestic abuse; assault.]

Jessica Luther, aka scATX, aka my friend Jess, does a weekly podcast for her sports blog, Power Forward. This week, she interviewed me for a conversation about The Redemption of Mike Tyson, following his appearance at the Tonys and a new profile at ESPN.

We talk about a whole bunch of stuff: Mike Tyson, redemption narratives, white savior tropes, rape culture narratives, the dehumanization of all-sinner and all-saint stories, media responsibility, cultural priorities, and pigeons.

It's a really great conversation, and I hope you'll listen to it.

Also! Subscribe to Jess' podcast generally, because it's superb. You don't have to be a sports fan. Just a fan of interesting conversations.

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Photo of the Day

[Content Note: Rape culture.]

image of actor Neil Patrick Harris and former boxer Mike Tyson dancing onstage with a bunch of back-up dancers during The Tonys opening number

Above: Host Neil Patrick Harris dances alongside convicted rapist Mike Tyson during the opening number of The Tonys last night. Apparently, Tyson had a one-man-show on Broadway last year. And the rehabilitation of Mike Tyson continues unabated.

I sure hope Charlie Sheen has a guest spot for Tyson on his terrific sitcom. That would be so great. A real meeting of the minds nightmares.

Open Wide...

Gross

[Content Note: Rape culture; violence.]

1. I fucking hate Law & Order: SVU. I hate the way it purports to be a show that condemns sexual violence, yet continually reinforces rape culture tropes with dramatic reversals that contradict everything we know to be true about sexual violence. If everything you knew about rape had been learned by watching L&O:SVU, you'd believe that women and girls lie about sexual violence at an alarming rate, that most rapes are committed by strangers, and that about half of all sex crimes are committed by women.

2. I fucking hate the entertainment industry's rehabilitation of Mike Tyson. (By which I mean the rehabilitation of his reputation, because HA HA let us never even mention the crime of which he was convicted or ask him to reflect upon it in any way.) Tyson is a convicted rapist, an abuser of at least one spouse, and a person who seriously assaulted a man in a professional setting, when he bit off part of Evander Holyfield's ear during a boxing match. But, like fellow violent misogynist Charlie Sheen, there are seemingly unlimited opportunities for Tyson to maintain his wealth and fame.

So you can imagine how thrilled, ahem, I was to hear that Mike Tyson has been cast in an upcoming episode of L&O:SVU:

In his TV acting debut, former boxer Mike Tyson is going for some dark, dramatic stuff with a guest starring role on NBC's Law & Order: SVU. He will play Reggie Rhodes, a murderer on death row whose violent actions may in part be the byproduct of a horrible childhood.
HA HA I hope this puts paid the execrable lie that L&O:SVU is not, in fact, remotely concerned with anti-rape advocacy. You don't get to claim to be anti-rape when you're giving a fat paycheck to a convicted rapist to be a guest star. Sorry.

I will never get over this idea that a creep who is rich and famous deserves to be rich and famous once again, once zie's "paid hir dues," and that taking issue with idolizing people convicted of violent abuse is tantamount to saying they don't deserve a second chance at life.

Sure, Mike Tyson deserves the opportunity to make a life for himself. I'm just not convinced it has to be a life in which he regains his fame and fortune.

If you're rich and famous, it appears you can be wicked enough to be sent to prison, but not so wicked as to be sent to the working class. I have a problem with that.

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Twitter Recommends...

a screen capture of the 'Who to Follow' section on my Twitter page, in which convicted rapist Mike Tyson is being recommended as someone I might like to follow

Whoooooooooooooooooops!

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Convicted Rapist Shocks World by Being a Jerk

[Trigger warning for misogyny, racism, and rape culture.]

What I Don't Find Remarkable: That convicted rapist, spousal abuser, ear mangler, and beloved film and TV star Mike Tyson gave a disgusting interview riddled with misogyny, racism, and violent sexual imagery, in which he says, among other things, that he would have liked to see Dennis Rodman have sex with Sarah Palin because he would "push her guts up in the back of her head."

What I Do Find Remarkable (if Depressingly Unsurprising): That virtually none of the articles I've read about this story even make passing mention that Tyson has a history of violence against women, including a rape conviction, but do express surprise that Tyson would say such awful things.

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Using the Rape Culture to Defend a Rapist

[Trigger warning for sexual violence, rape apologia, victim-blaming.]

In what might be the most perfect, clear, hideous example of how rape culture interacts with actual acts of rape, an appellant brief (pdf) was filed last March in the Montana Supreme Court on behalf of Duane R. Belanus, who had been convicted (pdf) of "of sexual intercourse without consent involving the infliction of bodily injury, aggravated kidnapping, burglary, tampering with or fabricating physical evidence, and misdemeanor theft" after beating and anally raping his then-girlfriend. The brief, which bases its appeal almost entirely on the premise that Belanus was drunk and therefore should not be held responsible for his actions, begins thus:


Yes, you're reading that right. A legal brief in defense of a convicted rapist was submitted quoting real-life convicted rapist Mike Tyson's character in a movie in order to argue that if real-life convicted rapist Mike Tyson's character in a movie can forgive a bunch of drunk characters in a movie for stealing his pet tiger, then a real jury in the real world should be able to consider, and forgive, a real-life convicted rapist who really raped someone in the real world.

Can you not see the perfect logic?

In the rape culture, this all makes sense. As does the fact, as the brief goes on to mention, that the victim was drinking and taking drugs, too, which is presented as though to create reasonable doubt about whether she could have consented and forgotten, as opposed to treating it like the damning evidence Belanus raped someone who could not possibly have given informed and enthusiastic consent that it actually is.

And it gets even more absurd.

Or possibly just stays exactly as absurd as it began, depending on your feelings about quoting a fictional Mike Tyson character vs. quoting Mel Gibson in defense of a convicted rapist. Yes, for real, this is how the brief concludes:


Classic. Dancing on a table with a lampshade on one's head is exactly the same as shouting anti-Semitic rants, which itself is exactly the same as beating and raping someone.

It is, of course, true that alcohol lowers inhibitions, but that doesn't translate into "making people do something for which they can't be held responsible." What it means is that alcohol removes the self-censoring or self-containing mechanisms that keep people who hold racist thoughts (for instance) or have violent desires (for instance) from shouting epithets or punching someone in the face.

Alcohol lowers inhibitions; it doesn't remove accountability.

Fortunately, the Montana Supreme Court agrees, and was unconvinced by the poignant arguments of Messrs. Tyson and Gibson. They upheld Belanus' conviction.

[H/T to Shaker Erin W, who found it at Lowering the Bar.]

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Oh, Ellen

[Trigger warning for rape culture; fat hatred.]

This video is posted on Ellen DeGeneres Show's official video channel: It's a clip from DeGeneres' interview with Mike Tyson earlier this week—and it's really disappointing. Not only is DeGeneres participating in the rehabilitation of the career of a convicted rapist, but she yuks it up with him while engaging in some awesome fat hatred.


[Transcript below.]

At the end of the clip, Tyson says, to laughter and applause, "There's nothing worse than a fat cokehead." Oh, really? I can think of something worse than that.

Asshole.
DeGeneres: …and the fact that you have really transformed yourself, uh, what made you— First of all, you look great—

Tyson: Thank you very much.

DeGeneres: —and what made you do that and how did you do it?

Tyson: Well, um, you see, I had a four-year-old daughter, um, unfortunately, um, had an accident and died, and, um, I don't know, right?—I'm just pretty, um, I'm pretty enraged, just torn apart, and I happened, um, when I went to the hospital, um, when she's on the machine, I went to the hospital, and I'm anticipating, 'cause I'm probably coming down from a hangover, but I'm anticipating to go the hospital and raise hell. But once I got there and I saw the, uh, I saw other people there with either children that had already died or they were dying, and they were handling it with dignity, and I, and I wanted to be, I didn't want to be the psycho parent up there—I wanted to handle it with dignity, as well. And, um, their kids were dying, too, so I didn't have any right to be a psycho up there, and I guess, um, I just had to handle it like everyone else and be humble and be on your knees.

DeGeneres: Mm-hmm. And so, and since then, you have been sober for how long?

Tyson: Two years.

DeGeneres: Two years sober. [audience applauds and cheers] That's right.

Tyson: I'm just—I'm just very fortunate that I had a lotta, um, I had a great support system. You know, I had great mentors, and, um, I'm just very fortunate. I'm no better than anyone else that was successful, and there's probably ODs or just committed suicide, but I'm no different than them. The only difference—I had a good support system.

DeGeneres: Yeah, well that does help, uh, for sure, but, but it has to come from you. You have to want to do it, to stick to it.

Tyson: I wanted, I wanted to change.

DeGeneres: Yeah.

Tyson: I wanted to change, but I couldn't do it without, um, the support.

DeGeneres: And so, and, and, like I am vegan as well; I heard that you're vegan.

Tyson: Two years, yeah.

DeGeneres: Two years vegan. Two years for me vegan.

Tyson: It's an awesome feeling, yeah.

DeGeneres: It's amazing, right?! Look at the difference between— [gestures at monitor behind her] This is before you decided to—

Tyson: Oh, you gotta check this out! [picture of Tyson weighing more comes onscreen; audience laughs] The Michelin Man! Look at the Michelin Man! [I think he actually says "Michigan Man," but clearly means Michelin Man.]

DeGeneres: So this is what you looked like before— [a second image of Tyson weighing more comes up; the audience laughs] Yeah.

Tyson: Oh, no! Not this guy! Ohhhhh.

DeGeneres: Yeah. [before and after images pop up of Tyson weighing more and at his current, lesser weight] And now look at you, because two years— [audience applauds and cheers] That's amazing.

Tyson: Hey, um, listen, right, um, it's just amazing 'cause you never in life, you never, you never, really hear or see [gestures at picture of "before" self]—but that's, um, that's a fat cokehead, right there, you know what I mean? [laughs] You never hear about a fat coke head.

DeGeneres: [smiling] You don't see, you don't see fat cokeheads.

Tyson: No you don't see fat cokeheads! [audience laughs] But as you know, there's nothing worse than a fat cokehead! [delivers this line with a muggy grin, like he's auditioning for "Our Gang"] There's nothing worse!

DeGeneres: I know. Don't tell me! [audience roars] Yeah.

Tyson: Nothing worse!

[DeGeneres laughs and Tyson laughs and claps his hands together; audience laughs.]

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Quote of the Day

[Trigger warning for violence, abuse, harassment, misogyny, and racism.]

"None of these incidents [of violence against women] got Mr. Sheen fired from his lucrative day job as a sitcom star, not even suspended. What did? He insulted his boss. ... So the message from CBS and Warner Brothers seems clear: abuse yourself and the women around you to your heart's content, but do not attack the golden goose."David Carr, in the New York Times.

Sheen did more than merely insult his boss; he unleashed an anti-Semitic tirade against him. Which actually only underlines Carr's point about Who's Important: Even using racist epithets wasn't a fireable offense, until they were directed at a man who makes lots of money for CBS and Warner Brothers.

Carr's piece only addresses the incidents of violence against women during the run of Two and a Half Men, but Sheen's history of abuse extends back decades:

[Sheen's third wife, Brooke Mueller, who called 911 on Christmas morning to report Sheen having threatened her with a knife] claimed he told her, "You better be in fear. If you tell anybody, I'll kill you. I have ex-police I can hire who know how to get the job done, and they won't leave any trace." Police also noted the appearance of red marks on her neck, which she said occurred while Sheen was holding her down with the knife to her throat.

Mueller's statements are remarkably consistent with Sheen's ex-wife Denise Richards' accounts of the actor's behavior, including an incident where he told her "I hope you fucking die, bitch. You are fucking with the wrong guy," and threatened to have her killed. Sheen also served two years' probation for a 1996 assault on then-girlfriend Brittany Ashland. In 1995, he settled a case out of court with a woman who claimed he'd hit her when she refused to have sex with him. And in 1990, in an incident deemed an accident, he shot his fiance Kelly Preston in the arm.
Now that Sheen's been sidelined, I guess fans of men who abuse women will have to get their fix by watching Mike Tyson's new show on Animal Planet.

[Commenting Guidelines: This thread is not an invitation to wax diagnostic about Sheen's mental health or addiction. That is off-topic. That there may be a link between his mental health and/or addiction and his expressions of violence is understood, but, aside from the fact that there is no drug nor mental illness that makes all of its addicts/patients hurt women, the topic of this post is not even really Charlie Sheen, but the entertainment industry's priorities.]

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Um

[Trigger warning for mention of sexual violence.]

Bill Clinton Joins Cast of The Hangover 2:

First Mike Tyson and now … Bill Clinton?

Sure enough, that will be the former president sharing screen-time with the fun-loving guys in The Hangover 2, now filming in Thailand, a Clinton source confirms to PEOPLE.

Clinton, who'll play himself in the comedy, shot his brief appearance on Saturday in Bangkok, where part of the production takes place. He was in the capital city to deliver a speech on clean energy.

Fans of the first Hangover will remember Mike Tyson's memorable performance in that movie last year, while this sequel recently made news for the coming and going of Mel Gibson, whose cameo role will now be filled by Liam Neeson.
Apart from the fact that the Hangover franchise is deeply misogynistic and thinks rape jokes are hilarious, the first film was also racist, homophobic, fat-hating, and classist. (Maude knows it was probably objectionable in other ways, too, but I've not seen the whole thing.) That the former president believes this is a project with which he wants to be affiliated is enormously disappointing (if not terribly surprising).

And given the location of the sequel, the tone of the first film, and Todd Phillips' general oeuvre, there are almost certainly going to be jokes about the sex trade and sex workers from marginalized populations.

You know, a primary concern of Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

Something tells me that someone didn't quite think this through. Then again, Bill ain't exactly known for not impulsively doing stupid things to amuse himself without much thought for how it might affect his wife.

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OMGWTFLOL WHUT?!

The Hangover 2 cameo fuckery gets even fuckier:

Mike Tyson is one 'Hangover 2' cast member who wouldn't have had any problem acting alongside Mel Gibson, according to Page Six.

"I'm not going to ever in my life point my finger at anyone. I don't live in a glass house. None of us do. I work with anybody, as long as they're respectful," Tyson said, adding he would "100 percent" have worked with Gibson. The former heavyweight champion will fly to Thailand next month to reprise his role in the comedy sequel.
LOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOL!!! Literally, all I can do is laugh uncontrollably at this point.

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So Much For Principles

Guess who's back for a cameo in The Hangover 2? No, not Mel Gibon. Mike Tyson will be returning, according to the film's director Todd Phillips.

Way to go, Zach Galifianakis, your integrity remains intact!

[H/t to Shaker scatx.]

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Mel Gibson "Furious"

[Trigger warning for references to sexual assault and domestic violence.]

After getting, and then losing, a cameo in The Hangover 2, Mel Gibson is reportedly "furious" (how uncharacteristic of him, ahem) that he was given the boot (and replaced by Liam Neeson, sigh). As has been widely reported, some members of the cast were apparently unhappy at the prospect of working with Mel, for various reasons. Mel doesn't get it.

"He doesn't understand why Mike Tyson, a drug user who turned his life around, was given a chance while Mel was kicked to the curb. Everybody deserves a second chance," an insider told the New York Post.
Gibson has a point, even though Tyson was hardly just "a drug user who turned his life around." Tyson is a convicted rapist who has also assaulted former partners and bit the ear of a competitor.

I am incredibly curious why the cast members (*cough* Zach Galifianakis *cough*) who objected so bitterly to Gibson's cameo had no problem with Tyson's. Perhaps it is, as I suggested in comments, that it's possible Galifianakis objected to Mike Tyson, too, but, it wasn't, ironically, until the wild success of The Hangover that he had the leverage to object in a way that made a difference. (Although one notes if he did object, his paycheck was more important than appearing in a vehicle helping to rehabilitate a violent and dangerous man.)

Or perhaps it is, as I have noted before, the widespread belief that Tyson was unfairly convicted, because, in the rape culture, there are no guilty famous men. The "innocence" of famous men who are accused of rape is typically established by their almost universal acquittal, a form of "proof" rooted in the premise that men who are convicted will be presumed guilty. But they are not, of which Tyson is a prime example. Despite having been convicted and serving prison time, he's still not regarded as a rapist: He was railroaded.

Whatever the reason, it does indeed seem like a double-standard that Tyson was welcomed with open arms and Gibson was not.

Although, unlike Mel Gibson, I don't believe that hypocrisy earns him his cameo. I believe it further indicts the decision to have given one to Tyson.

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Perfect

For a week or so, there have been rumors that The Hangover 2, sequel to the blockbuster dudebro comedy that helped rehabilitate Mike Tyson's career with a HIGHLARIOUS cameo, was going to be featuring another HIGHLIARIOUS cameo that would be SHOCKING and TOTALLY HIGHLARIOUS.

Who would it be? Given that the audience for The Hangover was meant to find this person HIGHLARIOUS, I was guessing Brett Favre, who, of course, already had the opportunity to show off his fine acting chops in There's Something About Mary and additionally has the highly-desirable quality of treating women like garbage.

I was close!

Today, the New York Post reports that the mystery cameo-man is Mel Gibson.

A source told Page Six, "It's a done deal. Mel will make a cameo as a tattoo artist. Filming is taking place on the Warner Bros. lot, where a Bangkok set has been built, and Mel is expected to film his role in two weeks. Then the production moves to Thailand at the end of October."
Of course. Why wouldn't it be Mel Gibson?

I just hope they can persuade Roman Polanski to direct the inevitable third entry in this estimable franchise.

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