Nobody puts Baby in a corner.



Yessir, That's My Baby.

A Chinese woman says her pet dog has taken to peeing upside down.

Mrs Chen, of Changchun city, says 18-month-old 'Baby' began peeing in the new position just three months ago.

“He used to pee as other dogs do. But one day I found him putting both hind legs up onto the tree to pee," she told East Asia Business News.

"I thought maybe that was only for the one day. But from then on, unexpectedly, he would pee in that acrobatic position."

Chen says Baby's other unusual trait is that he is a vegetarian.

"He can’t eat meat because it makes him throw up. So I only feed him egg yolk and corn pancakes, and that’s been his main food," she said.
I know. But it's Friday. And that picture rocks out loud.

Open Wide...

Your Moment of Zen

karatechicken

I'm still lovin' that shit.

Open Wide...

Quote of the Day

"It's ironic. After years of wanting to change what I perceived as the hardened hearts of homosexuals, God changed my heart instead." — Brent Childers, of Faith in America, in a letter about his journey from bigotry toward LGBT people to an open heart. Read the whole thing at the Blend.

Open Wide...

Hey You!

Billy Zane Thinks You're Gross.



And, yeah, Larry King still hates your stinking guts, too.

Open Wide...

My Life as a Rightwing Target

I've got a new piece at The Guardian's Comment is Free here.

Predictably, the early comments appear to be of the "you can take it, but you can't dish it out" variety, in spite of the fact that I haven't, actually, ever dished out a death threat, or the "you caved" variety.

And, though I left it in comments, I'd like to repost a thought here, too: What those who believe I (or Amanda) 'caved' don't seem to understand is that from Day One, this situation just kept escalating. When Donohue went after me, I didn't quit. When Malkin went after me, I didn't quit. When the rightwing blogosphere went after me, I didn't quit. When the mainstream media went after me, I didn't quit. When someone from another Democratic campaign went after me, I didn't quit. When Bill O'Reilly went after me, I didn't quit. And after all that hadn't made me quit, the threats poured in.

No one can seriously believe it would have just ended there. This was not a game I ever could have won. Amanda said, sadly, she quit with the hope that with her "scalp tacked to his wall," Donohue would leave me alone. He didn't. Neither did O'Reilly, nor Malkin.

And the more attention the story got, the fuller my inbox became with contemptible, threatening shit.

If you think I 'caved,' you just don't get it. They weren't going to quit until I did—and the next step was my address getting published. It's happened before, and I've no reason to believe it wouldn't have happened to me.

Open Wide...

Friday Cat Blogging

Staring into space edition.



Matilda.



Olivia.

They see dead people. Or something.

Open Wide...

Hi, I'm Earth.

Have we met?

It may seem perverse to suggest that, at the very moment the House of Representatives is repudiating his policy in Iraq, President Bush is poised for a political comeback. But don't be astonished if that is the case.
I'd love to do a fisking of David Broder's entire column-from-another-dimension, but my brain keeps shorting out every time I try. Plus, Steven D's already done a damn fine job.

You know the proverbial adage about 1,000 monkeys typing? Although it would be interesting if, given eternity, one would come up with an exact replica of a David Broder column, I say instead of wasting so much time, just give a single monkey a typewriter and control of the column from here on out. I'm quite certain it will be an improvement on Broder.

This has nothing to do with anything, really, but start at minute 10 and have a vaguely related laugh anyway.

Open Wide...

Uh. Muh. Guh.


The pain. It is too great. I must leave.

Please, please, please tell me that this didn't really happen. Please. Please tell me that a hacky comedian's catch phrase, a guy that isn't even from the South, wasn't just quoted as a "wonderful Southern saying" during the fucking Iraq escalation debates.

Can someone do me a favor? Kill me. Just put a bullet in my skull.

Open Wide...

Meanwhile...

...the WaPo features a huge piece by Howard Kurtz on Michelle Malkin and how unfair it is that she's subjected to attacks from lefties.

Obviously, I absolutely 100% believe that anyone who does things like send threats or publish addresses is a scumbag, no matter to whom they're doing it. But considering Malkin herself has published people's addresses, and considering she was just part of the rightwing smear machine that accused me of anti-Catholic bigotry with no bloody evidence, not just on her blog but on The O'Reilly Factor, you'll have to forgive my incredulity at the tone and timing of this story.

Open Wide...

Head into the Salon

And Amanda will tell you why she had to quit the John Edwards campaign.

Open Wide...

Two-Minute Nostalgia Sublime

Bewitched



First season opening.

Open Wide...

Question of the Day

This is one we've done before, but not for a long time now, and it's always so much fun... What's your favorite opening line of a novel?

My favorite is Dickens' opening of A Tale of Two Cities: "It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity, it was the season of Light, it was the season of Darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair, we had everything before us, we had nothing before us, we were all going direct to Heaven, we were all going direct the other way—in short, the period was so." I'll never, ever get over reading that for the first time.

Mr. Shakes' favorite opening line is from Tolstoy's Anna Karenina: "Happy families are all alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way." Love that one, too.

Open Wide...

We've Got Your "The Democrat Party has no ideas" Right Here

Go on with your bad self, Reidmeister:

Harry Reid has called a Saturday Senate vote to condemn the escalation:

"Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) this afternoon announced that the Senate would take a rare Saturday vote on whether to consider the House resolution, which is expected to pass that chamber Friday, with some Republican support.

If the Saturday vote succeeds, Reid said he may cancel the upcoming week-long recess, scrambling campaign plans for at least six presidential candidates."
D'oh! Meanwhile, Murtha busts a move: "Murtha hopes to choke off the 4-year-old war in Iraq by placing four conditions on combat funds through Sept. 30: The Pentagon would have to certify that troops being sent to Iraq are 'fully combat ready' with training and equipment; troops must have at least one year at home between combat deployments; combat assignments could not be extended beyond one year; a 'stop-loss' program forcing soldiers to extend their enlistment periods would be prohibited."

Open Wide...

quote of the day

From the What Kind of Answer Is That Department:

"No, absolutely, although I'm a Christian, and I believe in creation," He said. "You ought to teach creation as well as the fact of evolution," Mr.Chisolm said, though he said "all of those kinds of sciences have holes in them. ... But I'm not about teaching religion in schools."
That completely sensible answer comes from Warren Chisum, legislator in Texas (R-Pampa) who is also the House Appropriations Committee Chairman there. He is responding to being asked if he agrees with a memo he was circulating in the legislature that states: teaching evolution is teaching religion in schools because evolution amounts to indoctrinating students in an ancient Jewish sect's beliefs, Carl Sagan and Albert Einstein were kabbalists, and that Hollywood has an "unrelenting role in flooding the movie theaters with explicit or implicit endorsement of evolutionism." This memo was authored by a Georgia lesgislator named Ben Bridges.

Open Wide...

And if a double-decker bus crashes into us…

…to die by your side is such a heavenly way to die.

Open Wide...

FYI

In 10 minutes or so, I'm going to be on the Michelangelo Signorile Show, on Sirius Satellite Radio's channel 109, OutQ.

Open Wide...

Excuse me, I gotta see a urinal cake about a horse

When the deodorizer cake in the urinal starts talking to you, you know you're either:

1: drunk out of your freakin' gourd, or

2. in New Mexico.

New Mexico is hoping to keep drunks off the road by lecturing them at the last place they usually stop before getting behind the wheel: the urinal.

The state recently paid $21 each for about 500 talking urinal-deodorizer cakes and has put them in men's rooms in bars and restaurants across the state.

When a man steps up, the motion-sensitive plastic device says, in a woman's voice that is flirty, then stern: "Hey, big guy. Having a few drinks? Think you had one too many? Then it's time to call a cab or call a sober friend for a ride home."

The recorded message ends: "Remember, your future is in your hand."

Actually, at the time the listener is supposed to hear this message, he's got something smaller than his future in his hand. Of course, guys do tend to exaggerate a bit.

Good thing the flirty voice is female, otherwise Tim "I hate teh ghey" Hardaway might develop a complex.

(Cross-posted.)

Open Wide...

Money Well Spent

Read this.

Then, read this.

WASHINGTON - The U.S. government is at risk of squandering significantly more money in an Iraq war and reconstruction effort that has already wasted, overcharged or poorly tracked $10 billion in taxpayer money, federal investigators said Thursday.

The three top auditors overseeing contract work in Iraq told a House committee that Defense and State department officials condoned or otherwise allowed poor accounting, repeated work delays, bloated expenses and payments for work shoddily or never done by U.S. contractors.

That problem could worsen, the Government Accountability Office said, given limited improvement so far by the Department of Defense even as the Bush administration prepares to boost the U.S. presence in Iraq.

David M. Walker, comptroller general of the GAO, Congress' auditing arm, said his agency has been pointing out problems for years, only to be largely ignored or given lip service with little result.

"There is no accountability," Walker said. "Organizations charged with overseeing contracts are not held accountable. Contractors are not held accountable. The individuals responsible are not held accountable."
Well, isn't it about time that someone is held accountable? How long will the people responsible for, and profiting from this complete trainwreck be allowed to brush this off?
Senate Democrats, calling recently cited cases of waste "outrageous rip-offs of the American taxpayer," quickly moved to introduce legislation Thursday to stiffen punishment for war profiteers and cut down on cronyism in contracting.

The bill, sponsored by Sen. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., and 22 other senators, would impose penalties of up to 20 years in prison and fines of up to $1 million for war profiteering and restore a rule that prohibits awarding federal contracts to companies exhibiting a pattern of breaking the law in performance of government contracts.

That rule, put in place by President Clinton, was dropped by the Bush administration upon taking office, Dorgan said.
Ahem.

Open Wide...

Intolerant Me

And Atrios:

I find it really puzzling when people accuse me of being hostile to religion. I'm hostile to the notion that religion should occupy such a privileged place in our discourse. I'm hostile to plenty of beliefs which are associated with religion in this country, and I'm certainly hostile to plenty of self-styled religious leaders. But religious belief and practice doesn't bother me at all.
(I recommend heading over and reading the post in full, along with this one.)

The reason I pulled out that quote is because I could have written it word for word–and yet Atrios and I came to our shared conclusions in vastly different ways. Atrios explains that he "grew up in a household with basically zero discussion of religion and no exposure to organized religion," whereas I grew up in a household that was very and actively religious. I was baptized, attended church every Sunday—rain or shine, hail or snow—going back to my earliest memories, seasonally went to Lenten and Advent services, sang in the children's choir and later the adult choir, performed in Christmas cantatas, served as altar girl, attended and later taught Sunday School and Vacation Bible School, went through confirmation classes, was confirmed, had my first communion, was a member of the Youth Group, attended countless potluck dinners in the church fellowship hall, said bedtime prayers on my knees after night-time Bible stories, and have read the entire Bible (more than once). At the other end of it all, I came out a non-believer.

That doesn’t mean I am de facto hostile to religion and/or religious people.* My parents are still religious—probably even more so than when I was a child. (They also, for the record, share my views on some things and not on others, some of which are religious differences and some of which aren't.) One of the most fun people I've met in quite some time is their new minister, with whom Mr. Shakes and I have had dinner; he's a former head-banging rocker who sported a Bon Jovi glam-fro (it's true; I've seen the pictures) and then felt called to the ministry, and who finds the Jiz-E Pimpskweez story one of the most hilarious things evah. I like him, and I think the feeling's mutual, in spite of their being no doubt or confusion about the vast divide between our beliefs.

He, like my parents, is a Lutheran. And if I resent and criticize the Lutheran Church's recent decision to force out a gay pastor, that doesn't mean I hate all Lutherans. It means the church supports a policy with which I passionately disagree—and irrespective of the vehemence of my disagreement, short of calling for the decimation of the Lutheran Church and the criminalization of the practice of Lutheranism, it's frankly mendacious and hyperbolic to accuse me of intolerance. Last I checked, Lutherans believed my arse will end up in a lake of fire for all eternity, but unless and until they make it an official church policy to send me there prematurely, I'll be chalking that belief up to a personal disagreement, not intolerance.

In addition to making the point that agnostics and atheists can reach their beliefs through vastly different paths, there was another reason I started this post by quoting Atrios. Every prominent denomination in America has very little to say about Atrios in the abstract, because he is a straight and a man. None of them would deny him employment, and none of them would refuse to minister to him, solely on the basis of what's between his legs or whom he loves. On the other hand, the church in which I was raised told me, in overt and covert ways throughout my eighteen years within its fold, that I was not equal to men. It told me my gay best friend was not equal to me. There are many denominations in this country which still practice sex-, gender-, or sexuality-based discrimination.

That, as a private belief, is something I reject—and so I don't, you know, go to church and give them money and all the stuff that I fully support other people's right to do. But as soon as the church decides it should be a public belief as well, as soon as there are people who seek to impose their beliefs about my equality and the equality of others onto us all, we here in the land of the free where there's meant to be justice for all, then I have not just a right but an obligation to respond to that belief. That's not intolerance; that's self-preservation.

-----------------

* But, btw, here's how the game was played to make it look like I am: Donohue considered it an offense so grave I deserved to be fired because I said: "…it's difficult to imagine a time in which Christianity wholly submits to the prevailing view of science and ends its reign of persecution against the LGBT community. This time, they are not going after one man, but millions of people, and some of Christianity's most prominent leaders—including the Pope—regularly speak out against gay tolerance. In America, many Christian leaders actively pursue discriminatory legislation, seeking to limit the rights of the LGBT community throughout society. Should they eventually embrace the scientific view this time, they will have a lot more for which to answer—which certainly means their reluctance to admit their error is much greater."

I'm not even sure how that's "offensive," per se, since it's just stating easily provable facts, but wev. Now consider the shocking dishonesty of what he omitted with that quote-leading ellipses: "Although there are certainly small pockets within Christianity (and Orthodox Judaism and Islam, which Thomas also rightfully charges with intolerance) who are ahead of the curve, and either simply don't discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation or do fully regard homosexuality as a legitimate and intractable part of the spectrum of human sexuality…" I guess it didn't fit the storyline to let people know I recognize that Christianity isn't monolithic. Perhaps I wouldn't have seemed quite as "offensive" then.

I'd also like to note that this quote, which at least mentions the Pope, was not part of the original press release—to which quotes of mine keep getting added as they are found, even now that I have already quit the position.

Open Wide...

We're Number One!

USA! USA! With the UK, we top the list of the worst industrialized nations in which to be a kid. Go America! We're number one!

A new report from the U.N. Children's Fund says the United States and Britain are the worst countries in the industrialized world in which to be a child. UNICEF says an examination of 40 factors, such as poverty, deprivation, happiness, relationships, and risky or bad behavior puts the United States and Britain at the bottom of a list of 21 economically developed nations.
It seems that we "fared worst of all 21 countries in health and safety," after infant mortality rates and childhood accidents and injuries were measured. And the US and UK were "lowest overall in the category of behavior and risks," with Yankee and Brit kids more likely to "use drugs, drink alcohol, and be sexually active than children elsewhere." Now, Britain, I understand. Mr. Shakes has told me devastating tales about how horrible childhood is in Britain—he was made to live in a workhouse with other deprived, half-starved, sooty-faced children, where they were forced to sing for their gruel and if anyone asked for more, they were sold for a pittance to a creepy undertaker who would lock them in coffins if they misbehaved. That's how life is for most kids in Britain, so it's no wonder they turn to drug and drink at an early age. And what with the emergence of bank cards, there's no luck in pick-pocketing anymore, so most British children have to become prostitutes when they inevitably flee to work the streets of London. It's a terrible tragedy, really—and the godless British adults don't care, what with being busy drinking their Limey selves into a stupor every night while entranced by the devilry that is soccer anyhow.

But America? In America, we do everything for Teh Children! It's the total opposite of British apathy, where children are hardly ever thought about unless some rich bloke has a dirty chimney in need of sweeping. Here, we invoke Teh Children all the time—no boobies on telly because of Teh Children, no bad words on telly because of Teh Children, no pictures of war dead on telly because of Teh Children. Teh Children are almost all our politicians ever talk about, and how much we don't want to leave any of them behind, roofs in NOLA notwithstanding, so how can we not be putting food on our children and making sure they is learning and having doctors show their love on them with all this talking about Teh Children that we do?

It's not that developed welfare states necessarily have happier children, says David Parker of UNICEF.

"I think what we know from history in the U.S.," Parker says, "is that it's not necessarily how the welfare is provided but the nature of the support. One of the key things is that the role of government is important, but the entire society must have at its heart the idea of improving child well-being."
Oh. Does that mean we should, like, pay attention to things like how abstinence-only sex education doesn't actually work? I mean, I know comprehensive sex education genuinely improves children's well-being and stuff, but it doesn't sound as good as a commitment to teaching kids they should never have sex. Darn it.

And moving back to less facetious shores… The first clue that repression might have something to do with these results is that the Netherlands—you know, the first country in the world to grant same-sex marriage equality, where soft drugs like shrooms and pot are sold at "coffee shops," and prostitution and euthanasia are legal—is the best country in the industrialized world for children, "followed closely by the Scandinavian countries." These countries all have "highly developed welfare systems," which means—gasp!—socialized programs, to which Americans have an evident fatal allergy. But beyond that, they also have a mature attitude toward drugs, alcohol, and sex, namely that most people are going to have a passing familiarity with at least one and usually all three, and pretending that isn't so doesn't make it not so. And trying to make it not so with criminalization or taboo just makes them more attractive to the very people least prepared to engage with them—kids.

And, you know, anyone with two brain cells knocking together can probably do the basic math required to calculate how different the American landscape might look if we had used all the money allocated for investigating and impeding the cultivation, processing, trafficking, and sale of marijuana for the past four decades to build state-of-the-art childcare facilities and train people to staff them instead. I know that makes me sound like a pinko commie, but if the government's going to use my tax dollars for something for which I'll never have any use, I'd rather see working parents have a place to take their kids that they can trust than see some fast food parking lot pot dealer thrown in the clink to be raped within an inch of his life. I'm just saying.

The other interesting thing about the Netherlands and Scandinavia is that they are notably more egalitarian with regard to sex, gender, and sexuality than the US and the UK. One might reasonably suggest that girls growing up in cultures where they feel equal to their male counterparts, and LGBTQ youth growing up in cultures where they are regarded as equals by their parents, peers, and government, creates less depression and less need to find acceptance—two things intimately associated with substance abuse and early sexual activity.

One might also reasonably suggest that a nation with an official policy endorsing torture shouldn't be surprised its children suffer greater incidents of bullying, and a nation whose national policy is driven by fear shouldn't be surprised its children suffer greater levels of anxiety and stress, and a nation that routinely espouses gluttonous consumerism shouldn't be surprised its children always seem to feel like there's something they need, and thusly something missing.

But then again, reason doesn't seem to enter into these conversations very often, does it?

Never mind all that.

USA! USA!

Open Wide...