Showing posts with label gaming. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gaming. Show all posts

Fatal Shooting at Video Game Competition in Florida

[Content Note: Gun violence; self-harm.]

At least nine people were injured by gunfire and three more are dead, including the shooter, following a shooting in Jacksonville, Florida, at a tournament for players of the football video game Madden.

Alan Blinder, Christopher Mele, and Patricia Mazzei at the New York Times report:

A gunman armed with a handgun killed two people at a video gaming tournament on Sunday, turning a football competition waged in a virtual domain into the chaotic scene of a double murder. The shooting suspect, a gamer attending the event, fatally shot himself, the authorities said.

Sheriff Mike Williams of Jacksonville identified the suspect as David Katz, 24, of Baltimore, but said it was too early to know his motive. The sheriff said the F.B.I. and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives were assisting in the investigation.

A live-stream of the tournament caught the chilling moment when the shooting began. A red laser dot appeared on the chest of one of the players, who was wearing white headphones and a red sweatshirt. The video of the players then disappeared. Twelve gunshots rang out.
The presumption is that Katz was angry about losing the competition.

Naturally, lots of "thoughts and prayers" were offered in the wake of this shooting, but the GOP's intransigent fealty to the NRA will ensure, as ever, that no meaningful action is taken to prevent gun violence.

And of course we will immediately continue failing to urgently address the crisis of toxic masculinity that underwrites acts of public violence like this one.
Speaking outside a Jacksonville hospital on Sunday night, Gov. Rick Scott mourned another mass shooting in his state.

"We have got to change, we've got to really stop and say to ourselves, 'There's something wrong,'" said Mr. Scott, who signed gun-control legislation into law after the Feb. 14 rampage at a high school in Parkland, Fla., that left 17 people dead. "Why are young men willing to give up their lives? Or why don't they value somebody else's life? We've got to figure this out. We don't ever want this to happen again."
Governor Rick Scott then resumed promoting the Republican Party agenda of misogyny, white supremacy, nativism, homophobia, transphobia, disablism, class warfare, and Christian Supremacy, as he wondered why it is that young white men don't value the lives of other people.

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OMG Trump Is So Ignorant

Earlier today, Donald Trump suggested yet another solution to gun violence that isn't reduced access to guns: Putting a rating system on violent movies.

No, I am not making that up.

We have to look at the internet, because a lot of bad things are happening to young kids and young minds, and their minds are being formed, and we have to do something about maybe what they're seeing and how they're seeing it, and also video games. I'm hearing more and more people say the level of violence on video games is really shaping young people's thoughts.

And then you go the further step and that's the movies. You see these movies, they're so violent, and yet a kid is able to see the movie if sex isn't involved, but killing is involved, and maybe they have to put a rating system for that.

And you get into a whole very complicated, very big deal, but the fact is that you are having movies come out that are so violent with the killing and everything else that maybe that's another thing we're going to have to discuss.
Either the President of the United States doesn't know that movies already have ratings, or doesn't know that those ratings already come with content indicators, but, either way, Jesus fucking Jones this guy.

And he's "hearing more and more people" talk about violence in video games, huh? Someone should tell him about how rock music is introducing children to Satan.

[Video via Gideon Resnick.]

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We Resist: Day 348

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: Welcome to 2018.

Karoun Demirjian at the Washington Post: Devin Nunes, Targeting Mueller and the FBI, Alarms Democrats and some Republicans with His Tactics.
Rep. Devin Nunes, once sidelined by an ethics inquiry from leading the House Intelligence Committee's Russia probe, is reasserting the full authority of his position as chairman just as the GOP appears poised to challenge special counsel Robert S. Mueller III's investigation of possible coordination between the Trump campaign and Russian officials.

The California Republican was cleared in December of allegations he improperly disclosed classified information while accusing the Obama administration of exposing the identities of Trump affiliates on surveillance reports. Since clearing his name, Nunes has stepped up his attacks on Mueller's team and the law enforcement agencies around it, including convening a group of Intelligence Committee Republicans to draft a likely report on "corruption" among the investigators working for the special counsel.

Although Nunes has not officially wrested his panel's Russia probe back from the Republicans he deputized to run it, the chairman's reemergence as a combative Trump loyalist has raised alarm among Democrats that the future of the investigation may be clipped short or otherwise undermined.

...For months, Democrats have kept an unofficial count of the ways they say Nunes worked behind the scenes during the time he was under ethics investigation to slow or stymie the Intelligence Committee's Russia probe. Nunes never relinquished his sole, unchecked authority to sign off on subpoenas even as he handed the day-to-day operations to Reps. K. Michael Conaway (R-Tex.), Trey Gowdy (R-S.C.), and Thomas J. Rooney (R-Fla.). People familiar with the committee's work estimated that Nunes's effective veto cost Democrats dozens of requests for interviews and documents that were never sent out, despite repeated entreaties from the minority side.

This includes requests for subpoenas to obtain additional testimony from key figures in the probe who Democrats say were not forthcoming enough in interviews — among them Attorney General Jeff Sessions and Trump's son Donald Trump Jr. Democrats surmise they might have compelled them to return if not for Nunes's resistance.
Nunes' obstructionism, which is certainly unethical and possibly illegal, is deeply troubling all on its own. Even more troubling is the fact that virtually the entire rest of his traitorous party is utterly silent on his despicable water-carrying on behalf of this illegitimate, intransigently corrupt administration.

On that note, Demirjian's colleague at the Post, Greg Sargent, observes: "As we head into 2018, one big, looming unknown is this: Just how far will congressional Republicans go to prevent a full accounting of Russia's interference in our election and any possible Trump campaign conspiracy with it?" He reports that Democrats may try to circumvent Republican obstructionism by issuing a Minority Report:
In an interview with me, Rep. Jim Himes of Connecticut — the No. 2 Democrat on the House intel committee — said that Democrats are seriously exploring the possibility of issuing a minority report that details (among other things) the degree to which Republicans tried to impede a full investigation, should that end up happening. In this scenario, the public would at least have a clear sense of just how far Republicans went to protect President Trump and his top officials from accountability.

"It's in both the Democrats' and the Republicans' interests to … write a report based on a common set of facts," Himes told me. "It would be a tragedy if the report has a minority section that says, 'Look, we wanted to talk to these two dozen witnesses and weren't able to do so.'"

...Himes confirmed to me that Democrats want to call Trump Jr. and Sessions back in to ask whether Papadoupoulos communicated to top campaign officials the existence of this Russian dirt on Clinton, and whether that is related to the June 2016 meeting to get said dirt from the Russian government. But it looks unlikely that Republicans will agree, and Himes said that if Republicans do end up frustrating a full inquiry more generally — and keep pushing the narrative of a deep-state coup against Trump — Democrats may issue a minority report detailing what Republicans really did here.

"If the investigation gets wound up too quickly, the minority report would be largely about outstanding questions that were never examined," Himes told me, though he stressed that he hopes this does not happen.
Ball's in your court, Republicans.

* * *

Theodoric Meyer at Politico: 'It's a Giant Present to the Tax Lobbying Community': K Street Lobbyists Are Banking on Years of Paydays from the Tax Overhaul. "Donald Trump just signed into law the biggest tax overhaul in a generation, but that means more work — not less — for Washington's tax lobbyists. Rather than streamlining the tax code, Republicans have made it more complicated by jamming through a new series of temporary tax breaks for everything from craft brewers to citrus growers. Lobbyists expect these breaks, known as tax extenders, to generate paydays for years. Adding to their workload: Republicans rammed their bill through Congress so quickly that it's almost certain to require follow-up legislation to fix the mistakes and miscalculations still being discovered, according to interviews with half a dozen tax lobbyists."

Oliver Milman at the Guardian: Trump Plan to Shrink Ocean Monuments Threatens Vital Ecosystems, Experts Warn. "The Trump administration's plan to shrink four land-based national monuments has provoked howls of anguish from environmental groups, Native American tribes, and some businesses, such as the outdoors company Patagonia. Accompanying changes to protected monuments in the oceans — vastly larger areas than their land-based counterparts — have received less attention, but could have major consequences for the livelihoods and ecosystems dependent upon the marine environment. Ryan Zinke, the secretary of the interior, has recommended to Donald Trump that three sprawling marine monuments, one in the Atlantic and two in the Pacific, be either opened up to the commercial fishing industry or reduced in size, or both."

Just to be clear, the argument that these ocean monuments must be opened up to protect jobs in commercial fishing is (I'm sure you're shocked to hear) total codswallop. As Jane Lubchenco, the administrator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration from 2009 to 2013, told the Guardian: "There are plenty of other places in the ocean to fish."

Meanwhile, at the EPA...


Snopes: Did Hurricane Maria Cause an IV Bag Shortage Across the United States? "TRUE. Hospitals in both Puerto Rico and the mainland United States have reported shortages of intravenous fluids and bags since Maria tore through the island — where several medical manufacturing plants are located — in September 2017. According to a Food and Drug Administration analysis released in November 2017, medical manufacturing is a significant part of the island's economy... On 28 December 2017, the FDA sent us the following statement: 'The FDA has been working very closely with industry and local and federal officials to help address the shortage situation for IV saline and other products as a result of Hurricane Maria. This remains a key area of focus for the agency and we expect that the shortage of IV fluids will improve in early 2018 based on the information we are receiving from the manufacturers. In the meantime, we are continuing all of our efforts to increase supplies while concerns remain.'"

Let's be clear: It's technically accurate to say that Hurricane Maria caused the shortage, but it's more accurate to say that the United States' federal government's continuing neglect of Puerto Rico has caused the shortage.

* * *

[Content Note: Shooting; death] Luke Barnes at ThinkProgress: Colorado Shooter Shared Far-Right Material Online Before Killing Sheriff's Deputy. "The man who opened fire on sheriff's deputies in Colorado on New Year's Eve, killing one and injuring four others, repeatedly shared far-right memes on his Facebook page and ranted on YouTube about local law enforcement officials. Matthew Riehl, a 37-year-old National Guard veteran, allegedly shot and killed 29-year-old deputy Zackari Parrish early Sunday morning, after officers responded to reports of a disturbance in suburban Denver. Riehl, who had barricaded himself in his bedroom, also shot and injured four other officers before a SWAT team eventually killed him. The shooting was described by Sheriff Tony Spurlock as an 'ambush-type attack.' Following the shooting, far-right extremism expert JJ MacNab discovered Riehl's since-deleted Facebook page, which was littered with Pepe the Frog memes, Islamophobic posts, and other phrases used by the far-right, including references to cuckoldry and rape culture."

Naturally, the fact that Riehl was a white man who subscribed to a radicalized patriarchal ideology is getting virtually no attention. Instead, as ever, he was a "lone actor" who was "clearly disturbed."

At ThinkProgress, Barnes also notes that Riehl "fired more than 100 rounds at police before being killed." But of course now is definitely not the time to have a conversation about gun reform. It never is.

* * *

[CN: Swatting; death] Nichole Manna at the Wichita Eagle: Family Says Son Killed by Police in 'Swatting' Was Unarmed, Didn't Play Video Games. "On Thursday, Deputy Wichita Police Chief Troy Livingston said a substation received a call that there was a hostage situation in a house in the 1000 block of West McCormick — and that someone had been shot in the head. 'That was the information we were working off of,' he said, explaining that officers went to the house ready for a hostage situation and they 'got into position.' 'A male came to the front door,' Livingston said Thursday night. 'As he came to the front door, one of our officers discharged his weapon.'"

That officer "discharged his weapon" at Andrew Finch, a 28-year-old father of two, who had answered the door unarmed. Now he is dead. And no one wants to take the blame for it.

The reason police ended up at his front door is because two Call of Duty players were having an online feud, and one threatened to "swat" the other, i.e. call in a fake emergency that gets a SWAT team sent to someone's door. The threatened player dared the other to do it, giving him a fake address.

It was Andy Finch's address. The call was placed, with the caller claiming he had witnessed an argument between his parents, had fatally shot his father, and was holding his mother and little brother hostage in a closet. That was a lie. Finch is dead because of that lie. And because of the lie that gave his address. And because of the police shooting without ascertaining that they had been lied to in the first place.

The police are blaming the asshole who made the fake 911 call: "Due to actions of a prankster, we have an innocent victim. If the false police call had not been made, we would not have been there," Livingston told reporters on Friday.

But he says it's not his fault: "I DIDNT GET ANYONE KILLED BECAUSE I DIDNT DISCHARGE A WEAPON AND BEING A SWAT MEMBER ISNT MY PROFESSION."

The police disagree, and he is now under arrest, according to a Los Angeles Police Department spokesperson. But the charges "could be complicated," because the defense will almost certainly "argue that the police's independent decision to shoot Finch was an intervening, 'superseding' event, breaking the chain of causation."

There's a whole lot of blame to go around, frankly. None of it belongs to Andy Finch, who did nothing but answer his door.

My condolences to his family and friends. I am so sorry.

* * *

[CN: Sexual harassment and assault] AP/Guardian: New York City Ballet Leader Retires Amid Sexual Misconduct Investigation. "The longtime leader of the New York City Ballet is retiring in the midst of an investigation into accusations of sexual misconduct by him. Peter Martins wrote a letter to the company's board of directors on Monday announcing his retirement, saying the scandal had 'exacted a painful toll on me and my family.' The 71-year-old Martins told board members he continues to deny sexually harassing or abusing members of the company, including dancers. ...He said that to 'bring an end to this disruption which has enveloped the Ballet and the School,' however, he had decided it was time for him to retire."

Sounds familiar! "I didn't do anything, but I'm hightailing it out of here because an investigation is a distraction, and it's so hard on my family" is becoming a tired refrain. If he'd added that his recollection of events was different, I'd have had creep bingo.

[CN: Rape apologia] Lindsey Kupfer at Page Six: Dave Chappelle Says Louis C.K. Allegations 'Made Me Laugh'.
"I shouldn’t say this, but f–k it, [C.K's] allegations were the only one that made me laugh," he said in his Dave Chappelle: The Bird Revelation special released on New Year's Eve. "It's terrible, I know it's terrible. I'm sorry, ladies. …At the same time, you know what I mean, Jesus Christ, I don't know, they took everything from Louis, it might be disproportionate, I can't tell, I can't tell, this is like where it's hard to be a man."

Chappelle, 44, went on to address C.K.'s incident with writer Abby Schachner, with whom he masturbated while on the phone. She told the New York Times that it was "one of the things that discouraged her from pursuing comedy."

"One lady said, 'Louis C.K. masturbated in front of me, ruined my comedy dreams,'" he said of Schachner. "Word? Well then I daresay, madam, you may have never had a dream. Come on, man, that's a brittle spirit. That is a brittle-ass spirit, that is too much, this grown-ass woman."

He continued, joking that Martin Luther King probably wouldn't have given up his "dream" if Louis C.K. masturbated in front of him.

"Show business is just harder than that," Chappelle said, bringing up Schachner again. "Them women sound … they sound weak. I know that sounds f–ked up, I'm not supposed to say that, but one of these ladies was like, 'Louis C.K. was masturbating while I was on the phone with him.' B-tch, you don't know how to hang up a phone? How the f–k are you going to survive in show business if this is an actual obstacle to your dreams?"
Kaiser at Celebitchy notes: "Yep, this is what we're up against. The Matt Damons and Dave Chappelles of the world want to create hierarchies of abuse and they want to tell victims of abuse and harassment that they — the victims — don't have any right to tell their stories, to feel victimized, to feel like they've had something taken away from them professionally or personally. Men truly don't understand how demoralizing it is to be harassed and abused. They think 'well why didn't she hang up the phone' or 'why didn't she say something' — and if those women had done those things, these men still would have found some way to impugn their stories. It's just awful."

[CN: Sexual harassment; misogyny; racism; anti-Blackness] Rebecca Carroll at Esquire: My Experience at Charlie Rose Went Beyond Sexism. "In the nearly two years I worked for the show, a mere fraction of the guests were black — more than one of whom told me in confidence after their appearance that they'd found Charlie's tone condescending and dismissive. This was the infrastructure of the show: All the valuable, sought-after guests were white — a common occurrence across media platforms. And while many of us on staff were subject to Charlie's unsolicited shoulder massages and physical intimidation, as he towered above us at a height over six feet tall, the women Charlie preferred and preyed upon — at least that I witnessed — were white. It was an environment that all but erased me, while simultaneously exploiting me as a black woman."

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

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History's Greatest Monster Strikes Again

[Content Note: Misogyny; disablism.]

So, as you may have heard BECAUSE IT'S VERY IMPORTANT, Hillary Clinton made a joke during a campaign event yesterday. I hope you are sitting down, because this is MORE PROOF that she is A DIABOLICAL FIEND.

—'cause we're gonna have a lot of jobs, jobs from building infrastructure to coding. Creating new apps. I don't know who created Pokémon Go [cheers] but I'm trying to figure out how we get them to have Pokémon Go to the Polls. [applause]
HOW DARE SHE.

Lest you think I'm being hyperbolic, Peter Daou collected some of the media responses to Clinton's goofy joke. A few of GERJILLIONS.

I bet you're unsurprised to hear that I had a few things to say about that!


And the result of my defending Clinton? If you guessed that I was harassed, give yourself a gold star.

What else is there to say?

Maybe this: I like you, Hillary Clinton. Authentically.

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In the News

Here is some stuff in the news today...

[Content Note: Police brutality; death; racism] And again: "Another black man was shot and killed by police in Texas early Saturday morning. Houston Police said Alva Braziel was waving a gun around and pointed it at them when they opened fire. But surveillance footage from a nearby gas station suggests otherwise. The video, which began circulating Saturday night on Twitter, shows Braziel walk out toward an intersection. When the squad car arrives, he appears to put his hands in the air and turn around, standing still for a few seconds before police shoot him. Both officers involved reportedly had body cameras on them, but the footage has not yet been released. ...It's not yet clear whether or not Braziel had a gun or if he threatened police. Police protocol in most U.S. cities encourages officers to use lethal force if they feel someone is threatening them, but there are often many other tools and opportunities to de-escalate a situation. For example, in a majority-white neighborhood of Houston this weekend, an armed suspect fired seven rounds at police officers. Yet police managed to end the standoff with gas and other non-lethal means without killing the man."

[CN: Police brutality; racism] A must-read from Imani Gandy: "The Department of Justice (DOJ) has already announced it will be investigating the death of Sterling. No word yet on whether or not a similar investigation will be forthcoming in Castile's case. ...Both shootings certainly seem unjustified. Extrajudicial. Unlawful. But as bad as they may sound, they are unlikely to be enough to trigger a federal grand jury indictment. Because the truth of the matter is—as my colleague Jessica Mason Pieklo pointed out in the wake of the Mike Brown and Eric Garner killings—the grand jury system, which was originally designed to protect British colonists who had emigrated to the United States from abuses by the Crown, has become a tool that protects officers from accountability rather than protecting citizens from police brutality. And federal law, due to the way the statutes and system operate, doesn't provide a lot of help when it comes to individual police brutality cases, although it has proven to be quite useful in reforming entire police departments and forcing municipalities to take measures to stop over-policing of communities of color."

[CN: Conservatism; class warfare; misogyny] So, Britain is going to get its second female Prime Minister, when David Cameron steps down and Theresa May takes over. Good news for women's visibility aaaaaaaand that's about it. Because she's a Tory. And thus promotes garbage policies that harm vulnerable people, including and especially women with complex marginalized identities, e.g. women of color and disabled women. So she'll be shit for women, and simultaneously, the misogyny against her has already begun: She's not likeable, don'tcha know.

[CN: Misogyny; racism; economic injustice] Welp: "During their working years, women tend to earn less than men, and when they retire, they're more likely to live in poverty. These are women who raised children and cared for sick and elderly family members, often taking what savings and income they do have and spending it on things besides their own retirement security. The National Institute on Retirement Security, a nonprofit research center, reports that women are 80 percent more likely than men to be impoverished at age 65 and older. Women age 75 to 79 are three times more likely. ...For minorities and women of color, the number is much higher. 'If we are talking about a 65-year-old black woman, she was born before desegregation,' says Karen Lincoln, a professor at the University of Southern California and director of a center for geriatric social work. 'This has a huge impact on things like the quality of education they receive, the employment opportunities available to them, and their ability to accumulate wealth,' Lincoln says. Lincoln points to additional census data showing African-American women are paid 64 percent that of white men, compared with 54 percent for Hispanic and Latina women."

[CN: Disablism] This article about public transport not being safe for disabled people is so enraging and so terrifying. (And although it's about the DC Metro, it could be about virtually any city public transport system in the country.) And I totally get it: Because of my fucked-up back, there were many days during the decade I was commuting on the train in Chicago that I had to pull myself up to the street slowly, stair by stair, using my arms to yank myself up by the rail, and people would be rushing by me, practically knocking me over, shouting at me to move, and that was scary enough; I always thought, if there were an emergency, I'd just get fucking trampled. Understatement of the year, I know, but THIS ISN'T RIGHT. There is so much goddamn money in this country. There is enough to build safe and accessible public transport. For fuck's sake. We just, as per usual, lack the priorities to do it.

Bernie Sanders will appear with Hillary Clinton tomorrow. Huzzah. "On Saturday, Mrs. Clinton also inched closer to Mr. Sanders on the issue of health care, encouraging Congress to add a 'public option' to the Affordable Care Act and calling for additional support for community health clinics. 'I congratulate Secretary Clinton for this extremely important initiative,' Mr. Sanders said in a statement, referring to her expanded health care outline." I MEAN.

Donald Trump is reportedly close to choosing Indiana Governor Mike Pence as his running mate. LOLOLOLOLOL I didn't think I could possibly hate the Trump ticket any more, but THAT'LL DO IT.

Heh: "Pokémon Go Users Took Control of the Westboro Baptist Church and They're Not Pleased."

[CN: Racism; violence] In other Pokémon Go news: "Warning: Pokémon Go Is a Death Sentence if You Are a Black Man."

[CN: Misogynoir; sizism] "A few weeks back, Leslie Jones went public with the clothing issue she was having. It seems that despite starring in one of the most anticipated movies of the summer, Leslie Jones could not find any designer willing to dress her. ...Thankfully, one designer stepped up to make a custom dress for Leslie: designer Christian Siriano. And Leslie wore the custom gown at Saturday night's premiere of Ghostbusters in LA." And looks stunning, obvs.

[CN: Moving GIFs] And finally! I did a little Tom Hardy tweeting over the weekend, for anyone who needed some Tom Hardy. The thread starts here and you can scroll down from there. (You'll probably have to click "Show More" to see them all.) Enjoy!

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In the News

Here is some stuff in the news today...

[Content Note: Police brutality; racism] Yesterday's primary saw two big wins for the Black Lives Matter movement in key prosecutor's races. In Chicago, Cook County State's Attorney Anita Alvarez "lost her bid for a third term to Kim Foxx, a former assistant state's attorney and a candidate backed by activists from the Black Lives Matter movement. Activists turned the local race into a crucial battle to unseat the controversial top prosecutor who has mishandled cases involving police brutality and allowed miscarriages of justice against men and women of color in Chicago." And in Cleveland, Cuyahoga County District Attorney Tim McGinty "lost his bid for re-election on Tuesday night, less than three months after Cleveland activists began calling for him to be voted out for his handling of the case of 12-year-old Tamir Rice's shooting death at the hands of police." Bye, Anita. Bye, Tim.

[CN: Video may autoplay at link] Donald Trump says he will skip the next Republican debate: "'I think we have had enough debates,' he said. 'We have had 11 or 12 debates. I did really well on the last one. I think I have done well in all the debates...But I think we've had enough. How many times can the same people ask you the same question? Nobody told me about it,' he added. 'And I won't be there, no.' Instead, Trump said, 'I'm making a very major speech in front of a very important group of people.' When pressed on what group he would be talking with, the billionaire confirmed that it was the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), which is holding its annual policy conference from Mar. 20-22 in Washington, D.C."

After first declining to rule out accepting his party's nomination at a possible brokered convention this summer, Speaker of the House Paul Ryan's spokesperson AshLee Strong now says he would not accept it: "The speaker is grateful for the support, but he is not interested. He will not accept a nomination and believes our nominee should be someone who ran this year."

[CN: Violence] Meanwhile, Trump says that if he doesn't win the nomination, "I think you would have riots." Another totally responsible bit of rhetoric from the worst candidate ever. RNC chief strategist and spokesperson Sean Spicer says: "I assume he's speaking figuratively." Why would anyone assume that, looking at what's happening at his rallies? Hope there's a great view under all that sand.

In other Trump news (I am so sorry to have to bring you so much Trump news!), Trump says he's his own number one foreign policy advisor, "because I have a very good brain and I've said a lot of things." I have a piece on this garbage at Blue Nation Review: "The office of the presidency confers too much power to be inhabited by a person who prefers to be his own advisor."

Neat! "Never one to skimp on what its audience wants, ModCloth's bridal collection has officially launched. In direct response to the community's appetite for ModCloth-brand wedding wear, the collection features ModCloth label dresses, as well as bridal shoes, accessories, decor, and bridesmaids dresses. ModCloth's Wedding includes 30 wedding dresses ranging in price from $175 to $450, and over 50 bridesmaids dresses between $70 to $175... In keeping with their goal to remain inclusive, the wedding collection comes in a range of sizes, from petites to plus (sizes 28-30, or 4X)."

[CN: Homophobia] Sally Field continues to be awesome: "What horrifies me is that there are parents who so disapprove, who are so brainwashed to think that [being gay or bi] is something out of the Bible or ungodly or against nature. ...Some people actually shut their children out of the house when they're young, they're teenagers—they're having a hard enough time trying to be teenagers and own any part of sexuality. I'm still trying to figure it out!"

"Indiana Jones is swinging back into theaters. Steven Spielberg will direct Harrison Ford in the untitled fifth installment in the action-adventure franchise, which will open July 19, 2019, Disney announced Tuesday." Okay.

Are you excited for the Oculus Rift? I am excited for the Oculus Rift! If you are also excited: "Here are the 30 VR games you can play on day one."

And finally! BABY MEERKATS. ♥

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Finish This Sentence

My favorite game to play on my mobile device is...

...Peggle. Still forever Peggle. But I am currently engaged in a torrid love affair with Panda Pop, which makes me so happy when I rescue the baby pandas and they all cheer and makes me SO SAD LOL when I fail to rescue them and they cry. Hahahaha this game!

Anyway. What's your current or forever favorite?

Acceptable answers include, but are not limited to: I don't own a mobile device; I hate mobile devices; I hate games; and please for the love of Maude stop sending me Candy Crush requests.

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In the News

Here is some stuff in the news today...

[Content Note: War] This is tentatively good news, provided the agreement lasts, which is no sure thing: "South Sudanese President Salva Kiir signed a peace deal to end a 20-month conflict with rebels on Wednesday after voicing reservations about the pact, according to a Reuters witness at the ceremony attended by African regional leaders. The presidents of Kenya and Uganda, and the prime minister of Ethiopia, who all helped mediate the negotiations, were at the signing event in the capital Juba. Rebel leader Riek Machar signed the accord in the Ethiopian capital last week." Also: Even a ceasefire does not guarantee safety for the people caught in the middle of this conflict.

[CN: Flooding; displacement; self-harm; racism; disablism] This is a powerful piece about one woman, Kathy Phipps, whose relocation story following Hurricane Katrina 10 years ago, became a media sensation, and what her life actually was like after the cameras left.

[CN: Clergy abuse] Stephen Pohl, a former priest at St. Margaret Mary Catholic Church in Louisville, Kentucky, has been arrested for taking "erotic" (that is the legal term, because the children were clothed) images of "dozens of local children." He was arrested on a Friday, and resigned the following Thursday (because why would be fired jesus christ). The school apparently had no idea Pohl was taking images of the students, despite the fact they were taken at an after-school club, and it was only when one of the students, a 10-year-old boy, told his parents and the parents personally confronted the priest and demanded to see his phone and found the images did this come to light. Great job as always, Catholic Church.

[CN: Transphobia] An update on ending the military ban on transgender servicemembers: "The Pentagon is scheduled to end its ban on open transgender service next May according to an internal memo circulated among top personnel at the Defense Department. ...The memo also spells out how the Pentagon would handle servicemembers who wish to transition as well as what, if anything, to do regarding trans servicemembers who have been dishonorably discharged for being trans." Good momentum.

Hillary Clinton makes her pitch to rural USians, announcing "a multi-step plan on Wednesday to grow the economy and local services in rural areas."

[CN: Child sex abuse; fat hatred] Audra Williams makes a terrific point about how former Subway spokesperson Jared Fogle's highly celebrated weight loss created a narrative around him that he was a moral paragon, because we attach so much moral judgment to weight and weight loss.

Neat! A "University of Washington research team has found an extremely rare nautilus, Allonautilus scrobiculatus, after a gap of more than three decades. Professor Peter Ward had first time seen the elusive nautilus species in 1984. The nautilus with distinctive spiral shell has been recently spotted by biologist Peter Ward in the South Pacific."

If you love video games AND you love YouTube, then maybe you will love this item, or maybe not! "YouTube is to launch its spin-off platform for video gamers at 18:00 GMT on Wednesday evening. YouTube Gaming is a dedicated app and website focusing exclusively on gaming content, with a greater emphasis on live steams. The video sharing giant told the BBC it wanted tackle a 'fragmented' experience for the gaming genre. One expert said YouTube was 'fighting back' against rivals such as Twitch and Daily Motion."

And finally! This is a great story about veteran Army Specialist Tyler Roberts and his search for—and eventual reunion with—the bomb-sniffing dog named Donna whom he trained and with whom he served in Afghanistan. Best friends forever!

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In the News

Here is some stuff in the news today...

[Content Note: Police killing; racism] As I mentioned earlier this week, black leaders in Cleveland had no faith that charges will be brought against the police officer who shot and killed 12-year-old Tamir Rice last year, so they invoked "a seldom-used Ohio law" to directly petition a judge to recommend murder charges. And their request was granted: "A Cleveland Municipal Court judge has found probable cause that police officer Timothy Loehmann should face murder and other charges in the slaying of 12-year-old Tamir Rice. ...[Judge Ronald B. Adrine] found probable cause for charges of murder, involuntary manslaughter, reckless homicide, negligent homicide and dereliction of duty against Loehmann. He also found probable cause for charges of negligent homicide and dereliction of duty against [Officer Frank] Garmback. ...Adrine forwarded his opinion to city prosecutors and Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Timothy J. McGinty." McGinty still has prosecutorial discretion over whether to move forward, but Adrine's opinion will surely weigh heavily in that decision.

[CN: Worker exploitation] This piece by William Finnegan for the New Yorker utterly reflects all my thoughts and questions about the Trans-Pacific Partnership and why President Obama is so intent on passing it, despite opposition from his own party and from organized labor. I don't get it. At all.

[CN: Misogyny] Hey, remember when Jamie Dimon was being a superfuck to Senator Elizabeth Warren? (Sure you do! I just reported it yesterday!) Well, Senator Warren offered a pretty excellent response to Dimon and his cronies: "The problem is not that I don't understand the global banking system. The problem for these guys is that I fully understand the system and I understand how they make their money. And that's what they don't like about me." BOOM.

[CN: Rape culture] Republican Representative from New York Peter King, commenting on the sexual abuse allegations against former Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert, says: "The only victim here is Denny Hastert." Wow. This entire party really just needs to fuck off, at this point.

[CN: Threatening vandalism] Speaking of how cool Republicans are: In Indiana, lots of people are putting up "Fire Mike Pence" signs, because our governor is a terrible garbage nightmare. And, in one neighborhood in Indianapolis, someone is burning the signs posted on people's lawns. So that's neat.

Awesome: "Three cheers for Samantha Cristoforetti, smasher of space records: Samantha Cristoforetti is back on Earth after a six-month stay on the International Space Station, and she carries a host of superlatives with her. At 11:04 a.m. ET on June 6, the 38-year-old Italian astronaut broke the record for the longest space mission ever completed by a woman."

Welp, this sounds perfect: "Paul Feig's all-female rehashing of Ghostbusters is still a work in progress, and newest to the cast is Chris Hemsworth, who will be playing the receptionist. This is a big change up from his usual roles, and keeps in step with Feig's gender reversed roles over the original film."

Melissa McCarthy talking about speaking to Sandra Bullock for the first time as they were preparing to make The Heat together is hilarious.

YES! Oculus finally revealed its consumer-end virtual reality Rift headset yesterday. TAKE MY MONEY!

And finally: "New Zealand and Quebec have both recently made huge leaps forward for animal welfare by determining that all animals—not just dolphins and chimpanzees—are sentient beings who feel emotions and pain. The new laws will be doling out much harsher punishments to abusers." Right on!

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In the News

Here is some stuff in the news today...

[Content Note: Police brutality; racism] Daniel Rivero: "Web series about Cleveland police lawsuits is a must-read for #BlackLivesMatter activism." Yep.

In related news: Baltimore Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake has requested "a federal civil rights investigation into the 'patterns and practice' of the city's police" following a meeting with US Attorney General Loretta Lynch, and the Chicago City Council has approved "a $5.5 million reparations package for the victims of the city's notorious police torture scandal that also includes a formal apology and a promise to teach schoolchildren about one of the darkest chapters in Chicago's history."

The New Democratic Party (NDP) has ended the Progressive Conservatives' (PC) "44-year rule" of Canada's Alberta province: "Political observers were stunned by the result, with one commentator saying: 'Pigs do fly.'"

[CN: Domestic abuse] A woman being held hostage with her children by her boyfriend cleverly used the Pizza Hut mobile app to signal for help: "Nickerson took away Treadway's phone, police said, but she was eventually able to persuade him to let her order a pizza using her Pizza Hut app" because the kids were hungry. "Along with her order of a small, classic pepperoni pizza, she wrote: 'Please help. Get 911 to me,' according to police. She also wrote: '911hostage help!'" And enormous credit to Pizza Hut Manager Candy Hamilton, who immediately took action: "I've been with the company for 28 years and I've never seen nothing like that ever. We didn't even question it, we immediately called 911."

[CN: Airline crash] An update on the Germanwings crash investigation: The German newspaper Bild, "citing sources close to France's BEA crash investigation agency, said an interim report that BEA was planning to publish on Wednesday would say that Lubitz had practiced reducing flight altitude on the outbound flight from Duesseldorf to Barcelona the same day as the crash. Bild cited the sources as saying the BEA report would talk about a 'controlled descent that lasted for minutes and for which there was no aeronautical justification.'"

Jem and the Holograms artist Sophie Campbell has disclosed she is trans. "It's time to stop hiding. I'm transgender and over the past year I've been transitioning and I'm sick of keeping it all a secret."

Astronomers have discovered the oldest and furthest galaxy from our own that has been identified. EGS-zs8-1 is 13 billion light years away from Earth and is 13.1 billion years old. Wow.

Did you miss Oprah's interview with Janet Mock? It's now available on her website!

"Rock Band 4 May Be the Last Music Game You'll Ever Need." YES! I CAN'T WAAAAAAAIT!!!

Daimler Trucks has introduced the first self-driving 18-wheeler. I have mixed feelings about this, because trucking is a huge source of jobs around here, but also a huge safety issue, because the highways are cluttered with trucks (and their shredded tire detritus) which are often being driven by people who are exhausted and racing to meet impossible deadlines set by exploitative employers. I don't want people to lose their jobs; I'd prefer to see tighter regulations on the industry. But I don't believe that's ever going to happen. It pains me to think that losing drivers altogether is the only thing that will make the roads safer, because their greedy employers won't prioritize human safety and decency.

And finally! This photo series documenting the friendship between the photographer's sons and their cats is lovely. ♥

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In the News

Here is some stuff in the news today...

[Content Note: Religious extremism; violence] The Islamic State terrorist group has claimed responsibility for the attack on "a Prophet Muhammad drawing contest" in Garland, Texas, over the weekend. "This is the first time IS has claimed responsibility for an attack in the U.S., according to AP, but U.S. officials have not confirmed whether or not the extremist group was behind Sunday's shooting."

[CN: Police brutality; racism; class warfare] The mother of Tamir Rice, the 12-year-old black boy who was shot and killed by Cleveland police outside a city rec center while playing with a toy gun, has been forced to move into a homeless shelter, and "the Rice family said they have yet to bury Tamir because it is unclear if there will be need for any additional medical examination." Tamir was killed last November, and the City of Cleveland claims to still be investigating the shooting. No charges have been filed. This family has been failed by their country in so many ways. Absolutely shameful.

[CN: Police brutality; racism] Sounds legit: "Baltimore police denied a media report on Monday they had shot a black man while trying to take him into custody, saying the man's firearm went off accidentally while officers were arresting him and that no one was injured."

I don't even know: "Defense officials Monday dismissed as 'wild speculation' an Internet-fueled claim that a massive summertime exercise called Jade Helm 15 for special operations commandos is a covert operation by President Barack Obama to take over Texas. That claim was given legitimacy by Texas Gov. Gregg Abbott's order last week for the Texas State Guard to monitor the exercises. 'Operation Jade Helm poses no threat to any American's civil liberties,' Army Col. Steve Warren, a Pentagon spokesman, said Monday." But Chuck Norris says you can't trust the government and "that he thinks concerns about a possible military takeover of Texas might well be justified," so.

[CN: Ovarian cancer] This is good news: "A new screening test that tracks changing levels of a protein in the blood can detect twice as many ovarian cancers as conventional methods, research has shown. ...In the world's largest ovarian cancer screening trial, the new method correctly diagnosed 86% of women with invasive epithelial ovarian cancer. The standard test would have been expected to identify fewer than half of these women, according to results from previous studies and clinical practice."

[CN: Drought; food safety] This is not good news: "As California farmers face a fourth year of the state's historic drought, they're finding water in unexpected places—like Chevron’s Kern River oil field, which has been selling recycled wastewater from oil production to farmers in California's Kern County. Each day, Chevron recycles and sells 21 million gallons of wastewater to farmers, which is then applied on about 10 percent of Kern County's farmland. And while some praise the program as a model for dealing with water shortages, environmental groups are raising concerns about the water's safety." Ya think?!

[CN: STD] Here is what substituting abstinence-centered sex ed for fact-based comprehensive sex ed has wrought, at one school: "A small Texas high school has notified parents that it was dealing with a chlamydia outbreak. Officials from the Crane Independent School District confirmed to KWES that the state health department was sending a letter to Crane High School parents informing that at least 20 cases had been reported. The school has an enrollment of about 300 students." I hope those students have access to the healthcare they need, and that all of them are safe following disclosure of sexual activity to their parents.

[CN: Homophobia; transphobia; eliminationism; homophobic slur] The online gaming site Steam has pulled a game following complaints about its reprehensible content: "'Kill The Faggot' [in which players earn points for killing gay and transgender characters and lose points for killing straight and cis characters] was created and uploaded by Skaldic Games to Steam's Steam Greenlight section which allows game developers to showcase their games and let the Steam user community decide which ones they want to be made commercially available through Steam. Steam does not actively vet games for offensive content but developers must pay $100 to get their game onto Steam Greenlight as a quality control barrier. ...Skaldic Games are claiming that the game was not intended to encourage hatred or violence towards LGBTI people but to protest political correctness in the gaming industry." Fuck off.

[CN: Misogyny] Joss Whedon has flounced off Twitter because of criticisms that maybe he's not actually the powerfeminist he fancies himself to be, or something. Listen, Twitter can be brutal and no one is obliged to inhabit that space. Do what's best for you, Whedon. But now of course the narrative is that all the meany unappreciative feminists have driven him off of Twitter. Because of course it is.

And finally! A kitten with markings that give him the appearance of permanently worried eyebrows is fixing to give Grumpy Cat a run for her money! Aww lol.

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In the News

Here is some stuff in the news today...

[Content Note: Terrorism; abduction; sexual abuse; misogyny] Marking a year since Boko Haram abducted more than 200 schoolgirls from the town of Chibok in northeast Nigeria, Amnesty International has released a comprehensive report detailing the breadth of the group's terror campaign in the region: "The human rights organization has issued a new report alleging that since January of last year, Boko Haram has abducted at least 2,000 women and girls, forcing them into slavery or the military, and has killed approximately 5,500 civilians. The grim accounting appear in the 90-page report, "'Our Job Is to Shoot, Slaughter and Kill': Boko Haram's Reign of Terror in Northeast Nigeria." It's based on 200 witness accounts, including interviews with nearly 30 women and girls who escaped from Boko Haram. 'The abduction of 276 girls from Chibok was just one case amongst many,' said Daniel Eyre, Amnesty International's Nigeria researcher. 'What our report shows is that many of these girls and women have been tortured. They've been raped. Forced into marriage with Boko Haram members. And some have even been trained as fighters by Boko Haram. Now these are war crimes and crimes against humanity and we're calling for them to be investigated.'"

[CN: Homophobia; war on agency; Christian Supremacy] Oh my god lolsob: "Today the Indiana Economic Development Corporation, IEDC, announced it hired a global PR firm, Porter Novelli, to help build a publicity plan that will reach people nationally and show that Indiana is a welcoming place to live, work, and visit. The IEDC is responsible for growing businesses in the state and attracting new ones to Indiana. After a recent PR nightmare in the state the IEDC accelerated plans to strengthen the Hoosier Hospitality image." Hey, here's an idea: How about the state legislature stop passing retrofuck legislation that attempts to turn Indiana into a Conservative Christian theocracy, stops restricting abortion rights, stops denying basic rights to queer people, stops attempting to destroy our public education system, and robustly funds the social safety net? You know, actually be a legislature of a state so welcoming that no PR campaign is required to convince anyone.

Good grief! "An Alaska Airlines plane declared an emergency and made a priority landing in Seattle after taking off with a worker trapped in the cargo hold. The pilot of flight 448, bound for Los Angeles, was alerted by the sound of banging 'from beneath the aircraft,' an Alaska Airlines statement said. Once back on the ground, the baggage handler emerged from the pressurised hold, saying he had fallen asleep. He 'appeared OK' but went to hospital as a precaution, the airline said." He's apparently fine, and has now gone home. Presumably to finish that nap.

Here's a cool update from our old pal Philae: "Scientists said Tuesday that measurements made by the European space probe Philae, which landed on comet 67P in November, show the comet's core isn't magnetized. The findings add to scientists' understanding of how comets and even planets formed, because some astrophysicists had theorized that magnetism might have been responsible for aligning and then binding together rocks into larger boulders. ...The findings are part of a wealth of scientific results obtained by scientists analyzing data collected by the Philae lander and its mother ship Rosetta, which is flying alongside the comet on its elliptical orbit around the sun."

Bill Kristol is a clown person: "Prompted by host [of ABC's This Week] George Stephanopoulous to name 'the most promising Republican candidate not in the race yet,'...frequent panelist and Weekly Standard editor Bill Kristol tossed out the name of former Vice President Dick Cheney. ...'If they get to nominate Hillary Clinton, why don't we get to nominate Dick Cheney? I mean, he has a much…he has a much better record,' Kristol said as the entire panel burst into laughter."

Speaking of cool Republican presidential candidates: Republican Ohio Governor John Kasich says he's "seriously considering" running for president. He's terrible, so that sounds about right.

Are you excited about Marvel's new superhero movie Ant-Man? If you don't even know, here is the trailer so you can figure out if you're excited! I am pretty pumped about a superhero whose superpower is crawling all up on that infinitesimal smudge of peanut butter you left on the counter, thus alerting you to its presence!

Guitar Hero is back with "a brand new controller with a refreshed interface, designed to more closely resemble real guitar playing. The game will ship with a wide array of licensed tracks, and will also allow players to access extra songs—and to indulge in online multiplayer competitions—through a new Guitar Hero TV service, billed by publisher Activision as 'the world's first playable live music video network.'" Sounds fun! I was more into Rock Band than Guitar Hero (and I was super into Rock Band), but I'm pretty excited to give this a try.

And finally! A tiny kitten conquers the stairs like a boss! Aww lol.

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"Hello." "Hello." "Follow Me." "Okay."

Oddworld: Abe's Oddysee is my favorite video game of all time, and Abe one of my favorite all-time characters, so when Iain forwarded me the news this morning that "a ground-up remake of the much-loved original Oddworld: Abe's Oddysee" will launch on Xbox One on March 27, I literally exclaimed aloud with overwhelming joy.

Marking the first outing of an Oddworld game on Xbox since Stranger's Wrath in 2005, New 'n' Tasty is a ground-up remake of the much-loved original Oddworld: Abe’s Oddysee, developed by Just Add Water (Development) Ltd.

A cinematic platform adventure, New 'n' Tasty tells the tale of Abe, a hapless Mudokon who learns that his fellow meat factory co-workers are to be the main ingredients in the company's next line of tasty treats.

Abe must escape RuptureFarms and beyond, liberating as many of his fellow workers as he can. Along the way, he'll learn the secrets of his civilization and journey across perilous lands filled with dangerous creatures and lethal traps before returning to the sinister meat factory to put right the injustices faced by his long suffering species.
I loooooove that this is a remake of the original, because one of the things I adored about the original was the theme of resistance and liberation. I am SO EXCITED to play this! Yayayayayay!

image of Abe from Oddworld: Abe's Oddysee giving two thumbs up
THUMBS UP!

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Finish This Sentence

My favorite game to play on my mobile device is...

...Peggle. Forever Peggle.

Acceptable answers include, but are not limited to: I don't own a mobile device; I hate mobile devices; I hate games; and please for the love of Maude stop sending me Candy Crush requests.

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Wil Wheaton Gets It Wrong on Harassment & Anonymity in Gaming

[Content Note: Misogynist terrorism; rape culture; harassment.]

Like Joss Whedon, Wil Wheaton is a straight, white, cis male celebrity and hero among geekdom who has a reputation for being a feminist ally, despite the fact he has written things like "Hillary Clinton: The Psycho Ex-Girlfriend of the Democratic Party," to critics of which he responded by saying, "Here, let me try this one more time for the humorless and professional victims out there, who seem to have shown up in a flood today: Gender, race, sexual orientation, things that make us different that we don't choose...they just don't matter to me. At all. People are people and identity politics is stupid."

I will also disclose, in the interest of honesty, that I had a personal interaction with Wheaton a long time ago which went much the same way. After reaching out to him in good faith and politely asking he not use a particular misogynist term in his writing, he responded with almost exactly the same misogynist tropes: I was humorless, oversensitive, hysterical, and a "bitch."

Whether you interpret that as evidence that I have a personal axe to grind, or as an example of a woman's lived experience with a man who is purported to be a great ally, is not something I can control. Interpret it as you will. But I will note that there is very little incentive for me to share something, especially under my real name, about a famous man with lots of fans who tend to intensely defend him, except that it matters how men who are positioned to speak on women's issues treat actual women.

Now, no one should be defined exclusively by their worst moment. Or two moments. That was a few years ago, and maybe he's changed. But maybe he's also nonetheless not exactly the perfect person to write something for the Washington Post on the subject of harassment in gaming.

His premise is that the anonymity of the internet empowers harassment, and begins by asserting: "More venom than ever before is flowing from behind the cloak of anonymity, where people remain entirely unaccountable for their words and deeds."

He then exclusively uses six women as examples of this phenomenon. And while certainly lots of the people harassing Zoë Quinn, Brianna Wu, Anita Sarkeesian et. al. do so from behind the cloak of anonymity, there are also a lot of people who aren't.

I wonder how many women whose professional lives are mostly or entirely online Wheaton has spoken to, because I'm guessing any one of us would tell him that we get plenty of harassment, threats, abuse from men who are utterly brazen—sending this stuff right under their real names, alongside their pictures, from work emails.

I once received a death threat from a man under his real name, from his work email, at a state government office.

As I've previously observed, the internet is not separate from culture, but a reflection of culture. The pretense that the anonymity of the internet creates the urges that underlie bullying is a way of distancing oneself from the real-life harm many marginalized people face, ignores that many people engaging in trolling come at us under their real names and even work emails, and elides that whatever anonymity and/or impunity the internet provides merely empowers bullies to be uglier, meaner, bolder than some of them would be face-to-face. It doesn't make them engage in behaviors that don't exist in the offline world.

I've said many times before: It's not like no random dude ever called me a fat cunt before I started a blog.

The point is that it isn't anonymity, at least not alone, that drives misogynist terrorism. It's a natural outgrowth of a patriarchal system in which women are treated as less than, in every conceivable way, our humanity diminished, our lived experiences questioned, our bodies treated as property of men and the state.

But if you're someone who doesn't give a fuck about "identity politics," then you're probably not interested in discussing that oppression is the real issue, and anonymity only one of many tools of the oppressors.

Wheaton goes on to make his case, however, citing his own experience:

When I started playing video games, we were in arcades, and we had to win and lose with grace, or we'd get our butts beaten (literally) by other players. Or, worse, we'd be kicked out! When we played games next to each other on the couch, we could trash talk and razz each other, but we were still in the same room together, and our behavior out of game was even more important than the way we behaved in the game. Playing games with real, live humans prevented any of the poisonous behavior proliferating online today.

That, ultimately, is the cure for what ails us. It's nearly impossible to enforce actual consequences in video games at the moment, but at a table, sitting face-to-face across a tabletop game, or even playing at a LAN party, sportsmanship matters. We can challenge ourselves and our opponents in nearly every world in nearly every type of game, and because we're literally inches from each other, the way we react to victory and defeat actually matters.

I've seen players fight for every point in tournaments, then graciously congratulate each other, regardless of who won. I've sat down with complete strangers — just like the random person I'd likely encounter online — and had an absolutely wonderful time being obliterated by them, because not only were they more skilled than I was, they were also nice and decent human beings. My TV show "Tabletop," which debuts its third season this week, is full of warm interactions like those.
This is his experience as white, straight, cis man. But of course there are women, myself among them, who can tell stories of being harassed during tabletop gaming. In arcades. While playing video games on a couch next to a man who we believed wouldn't harm us.

Misogyny, homophobia, racism, transphobia, disablism, sexual harassment and assault—these things happen to marginalized people in real life all the time while gaming. In person.

Virtually every woman and gay man I know who has been involved in local, face-to-face RPG groups has had to leave at least one group because of harassment or assault. I've gotten dozens of emails over the years soliciting advice for how to deal with a man in a gaming group who is harassing, or has assaulted, one or more of the players, and the other men in the group won't believe it. Or simply defend him.

The idea that lack of anonymity ensures safety for women is absurd, if you've really listened to women about their experiences with gaming, instead of just assuming that everyone has the same experiences as your own.

Wheaton probably hasn't considered that there exist men who would create a fun and safe gaming environment for him, but would be totally different with women.

Resistance to that idea—that lots of straight, white, cis men who are "cool" with other straight, white, cis men behave differently around women, genderqueer folks, and/or marginalized men—is what leads to the "small but vocal minority" argument. And that is, naturally, right where Wheaton goes:
The loudest, most obnoxious, most toxic voices are able to drown out the rest of us—a spectacle that has nearly pushed me to quit the video-game world entirely in recent months.
"The rest of us." #NotAllMen.

Wheaton concludes by acknowledging there are places where anonymity online in important, because of government and corporate info mining, and to support whistleblowers and investigative journalists.
In the age of total-information awareness, citizens need certain protections.

But in the gaming community, those protections aren't necessary, and they aren't helping.
Those protections aren't necessary, he argues, thinking only of male harassers who are making gaming look bad for guys like him. But there is, of course, another side to anonymity—which is that it protects women and others from the harassers who want to harm us.

Arguing for the end to anonymity in gaming is necessarily arguing for taking away a crucial tool from the very people who are most vulnerable to harassment.

That's the problem with calls for lack of anonymity rooted in the erroneous belief that harassment is facilitated exclusively or primarily by anonymity. It won't stop harassment. It will only more fully expose targets of harassment.

The result is that it won't drive the abusers out of gaming; it will drive the abused out of gaming.

And maybe that's the point. Not hearing anyone complain because we're all gone would probably look a lot like success to people who aren't really listening, anyway.

[H/T to Aphra_Behn.]

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Today in Proving the Point

[Content Note: Misogynist terrorism.]

Hey, do you think anyone has pointed out to the Gamergaters that trying to convince people you're not just a bunch of misogynist shitlords by being a bunch of misogynist shitlords isn't a very good idea? Someone should mention that to them.

(Everyone has mentioned that to them.)

Prove the point more, assholes.

Actually, don't.

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In the News

Here is some stuff in the news today...

[Content Note: Guns; death; terrorism] The Globe and Mail has a comprehensive compendium of information about the Ottawa attacks and immediate political responses to the attacks: "Ottawa aftermath: What we know so far."

[CN: Illness] Dallas nurse Nina Pham, who contracted Ebola after providing care for Thomas Eric Duncan, "is now virus-free and will be discharged on Friday, National Institutes of Health officials confirmed." Hooray!

[CN: Terrorism; misogyny; abduction] This is so fucking awful: "Despite Nigerian military officials announcement last week that they had negotiated with militant group Boko Haram for the release of more than 200 schoolgirls who were kidnapped in April, it appears the girls have not be brought home—and residents say more women and girls have been kidnapped since." According to residents of the Wagga community in northeast Nigeria, members of Boko Haram went "door-to-door looking for young women and girls and abducted 40 of them. Lazarus Baushe, an elder of the Wagga community, said: 'They left 1,500 naira (£5.67) and some kola nuts in each home where they seized a woman, apparently as a bride price.'" An additional 20 women and girls were abducted from Gwarta, according to witnesses.

[CN: Misogynist terrorism] Prove the point MORE: "Actress Felicia Day Opens Up about GamerGate Fears, Has Her Private Details Exposed Minutes Later."

[CN: Police brutality; racism] Levar Jones, the South Carolina man who was shot by a police officer during a traffic stop for a seatbelt violation, speaks out about the incident, saying of the officer: "I really feel he needs to be charged with something that holds felony status. That way he will have to sign the Gun [Control] Act, will no longer be able to carry a gun, will no longer be able to be a police officer." YES.

[CN: Misogyny; harassment] This report by Meagan Damore on Marvel Comics' annual "Women of Marvel" panel at New York Comic Con last weekend is amazing. Kelly Sue DeConnick, writer of Captain Marvel, asked all the women in the audience who currently or aspire to work in comics industry to stand, then told them: "Before you sit back down, take a moment and look around at each other. You need community to do this. You need the support of one another. Writers, find artists. Artists, find writers. People who do the whole ballgame yourself, you need to get out of your room every once in a while, find a friend. Making a living in any creative endeavor is difficult. The most important bit of advice that we can give you is: You need to start; you need to start now. I am 44 years old and I have two children and I don't sleep enough… So those of you who are young, especially, but those of you who are even older than me, it is not too late. But you haven't a moment to spare. You have to start making comics... Be brave. Do it. We believe in you and we are here for each other. Most importantly, we need your voices."

[CN: Fat hatred; food policing; classism; privilege] Former model Twiggy goes off on how obesity is "a tragedy," blames it on people eating fast food, and, incredibly, in the same interview, says: "Some models starve themselves but I was just a naturally skinny kid. I used to eat everything, even big bars of chocolate, but I could not put on weight." It never ceases to amaze me how someone who can't put on weight, no matter what, can't imagine that there are people who can't lose weight, no matter what. BODIES ARE DIFFERENT. This is not a difficult concept. For fuck's sake.

Madeleine Albright 2, Conan O'Brien 0.

Wow: "Science Graphic of the Week: Spectacular, Twisted Solar Eruption."

I mean: A dog who survived Hurricane Katrina is now working in the Arizona Humane Society's kitten room as a nanny dog, to help kittens become comfortable around dogs. ♥

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In the News

Here is some stuff in the news today...

At ProPublica, Theodoric Meyer compiles "The Best Investigative Reporting on Campaign Finance Since 2012," and solicits suggestions for other pieces you'd recommend to add to the list.

[Content Note: Illness; alarmism] Ebola debuts on Gallup's poll of "Americans' List of Top U.S. Problems." Terrific.

[CN: Illness; bigotry] Meanwhile, part of the reason people are freaking the fuck out is because they don't know a damn thing about Africa. I guess I shouldn't be, but I've been really shocked by how many people I've seen (including people who should definitely know better) who are surprised to find out both how large and how diverse the continent of Africa is.

[CN: Misogynist terrorism] Laura Hudson on GamerGate: "Although Gamergate has inspired countless think pieces and editorials about the 'end' of gamers, some of the ugliest and most persistent backlash has been reserved for Leigh Alexander, a female games journalist who wrote an essay titled 'Gamers' Don't Have to be Your Audience. 'Gamers' are Over... The vicious response to Alexander's article was rooted not in objective concerns, but in the deep, persistent fear that she was right: that they weren't the be-all and end-all of videogames anymore, that they might not always get to define what it means."

[CN: Disenfranchisement; racism; classism. Please note there are moving GIFs at the link.] Imani Gandy has your GIF-splanation of "What's Up with All These Voting Restrictions." This is a really terrific resource, with history and state-by-state breakdowns of voting laws.

[CN: Homophobia] This Republican bigot is really insistent on dehumanizing people in same-sex relationships and claiming they're going to "destroy our way of life." Dude, if your "way of life" includes vicious, dehumanizing, vile homophobia, then your way of life deserves to be destroyed.

"One of the fastest-growing cosmetic procedures in the UK is repairing stretched earlobes," because people with stretched lobes from large ear gauges are having trouble finding work. I've seen this article linked lots of places, and everyone is sort of laughing about how stupid people are who stretch their ears. But, I dunno, here's a radical idea: Maybe employers could simply ignore a fashion trend that literally has nothing to do with someone's ability to do their job. I know, I know—the customers! Well, I'm sure there were plenty of dudes who didn't like ladies wearing trousers once upon a time, too, and somehow we all managed to survive.

RIP Oscar De La Renta. The Guardian has a gallery of some of his work.

And finally! Here is a terrific video of a cat being fully cat.

Open Wide...

There Is No Neutral in a Culture of Abuse

[Content Note: Harassment; threats; abuse.]

For those who aren't on Twitter, and/or would like a discussion space for this idea, I had a few more things to say earlier about GamerGate, the threats against Anita Sarkeesian, and what it means to stand silent. So here they are:

screen cap of tweet authored by me reading: 'This is your regularly scheduled reminder that men who harass and abuse women count on 'good men' never showing up to stop them.'
screen cap of tweet authored by me reading: 'To the people who are simultaneously saying 'small but vocal minority' of gamers, and 'things have gotten out of control lately'...'
screen cap of tweet authored by me reading: '...let me propose this idea: You listen to the lived experiences of gamers from marginalized populations who say this isn't new...'
screen cap of tweet authored by me reading: 'To the gamers from marginalized populations whose lived experience is that, in fact, it is not a minority of people who harass us.'
screen cap of tweet authored by me reading: 'Who will tell you that the people who *don't* make problems for us, who defend us, are the rare exception.'
screen cap of tweet authored by me reading: 'And then consider, seriously, if that 'vocal minority' isn't actually as small as you'd like to think it is.'
screen cap of tweet authored by me reading: 'And if your instinct is to argue, 'The majority isn't actively harmful, just silent,' ask yourself why the fuck should we care.'
screen cap of tweet authored by me reading: 'And why we should be obliged to make distinctions between people who hurt us, and people who don't care that people hurt us.'
screen cap of tweet authored by @RedManatee reading: 'Silence supports the status quo, as you say so eloquently (and often!)' followed by a tweet authored by me responding: 'Yup. There's no neutral in a culture of abuse.'
screen cap of tweet authored by me reading: 'Let me say that again: There is no neutral in a culture of abuse. If you're silent, if there is no risk to speaking up, you're complicit.'
screen cap of tweet authored by me reading: 'There are people who cannot safely speak up. Self-care isn't complicity. But being called a 'white knight' or 'whipped' or wev isn't danger.'
screen cap of tweet authored by me reading: 'If you stay silent, because it makes you uncomfortable to be called [a girl], get it together. I get rape and death threats.'
screen cap of tweet authored by me reading: 'All the mirthless laughter in the multiverse that women are the Weaker Sex. I don't have the luxury of crumbling b/c I'm called [a girl].'

I also just quickly want to underline this point: Staying silent for self-protection and self-care is not complicity. It is also not cowardly. As I have said many times in this space, self-care—especially within a culture that discourages it—is always indicative of strength.

And it is not neutral. Someone who has to stay silent, who has effectively been silenced, because they cannot safely speak out is a victim of the culture of abuse.

Conversely, someone is silent simply because they can, because it's easier, is not a victim, but a co-conspirator of abusers.

Open Wide...