PWNED!

Oh, that George Bush—I'd just love to have a beer with him. He's such a good man, and he's so honest, and he shares all my Christian beliefs, like torturin' A-rabs, hatin' gays, and evolution being the devil's dong.

Oopsy!

Bush admits something that would have been political suicide four years ago:
WASHINGTON -- President George W. Bush said his belief that God created the world is not incompatible with the scientific theory of evolution.

In an interview with ABC's "Nightline" on Monday, the president also said he probably is not a literalist when reading the Bible although an individual can learn a great deal from it, including the New Testament teaching that God sent his only son.

Asked about creation and evolution, Bush said: "I think you can have both. I think evolution can -- you're getting me way out of my lane here. I'm just a simple president. But it's, I think that God created the earth, created the world; I think the creation of the world is so mysterious it requires something as large as an almighty and I don't think it's incompatible with the scientific proof that there is evolution."

He added, "I happen to believe that evolution doesn't fully explain the mystery of life."

Interviewer Cynthia McFadden asked Bush if the Bible was literally true.

"You know. Probably not. ... No, I'm not a literalist, but I think you can learn a lot from it, but I do think that the New Testament for example is ... has got ... You know, the important lesson is 'God sent a son,"' Bush said.
"It's kinda like how I'm the son of a president, heh heh. That Jesus fella and I got a lot in common. I hear he didn't go to church, either. Sure wish I could turn water into wine, heh heh!"



[If anyone can find a transcript, please leave a link in comments.]

For eight years—eight fooking years—every time Bush detractors said that he was an enormous phony, from his Potemkin ranch* in Crawford to his devout counterfeit Christianity, we got accused of "Bush Derangement Syndrome." Our hatred left us blind to reality, so goes the claim.

Ahem.

Maybe it's time to consider, at long last, that it was not us but his most ardent supporters who were blind.

Blindly allegiant. Blind defenders. Deliberately, selectively blind.

We didn't subscribe to the propaganda; we saw through it and found the truth that their rose-white-and-blue-colored glasses obscured.

There's no joy in having been right about Bush's many failures, not when so many lives have been lost, so many people been hurt, at the business end of his visions of empire. But, by Maude, we were right.

And the Bush-lovers got pwned.

Which is a mere fragment of what they deserve, for everything they've enabled.

Idiots.

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

* Credit Oddjob.

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Call me Candidate 7

I just got an email from Mama Shakes thanking me for helping her with a tech glitch, which ended with the following:

Just for that, I might try to buy you that senate seat in Illinois for Christmas.
Rock!

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Two-Minute Nostalgia Sublime

Yogi Bear

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Top Chef Open Thread



Chef Tom Colicchio will drink. your. milkshake!!!

He also kindly requests that you gently squeeze these grapes in his pocket and make some majestic whine with him.

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Question of the Day

In honor of Mike Huckabee's obsession with selling his dumbass book protecting America from the "gay lifestyle," and inspired by Shaker CopperCat's comment imagining just what the "gay lifestyle" entails ("I'll take two dozen of those lovely gay canapés, please. Oh, and some of the bisexual sandwiches, too. No, that's all. Oh, wait ... I'll take a bag of lesbian licorice, too, while I'm here."), today's QotD is: What product is integral to your gay lifestyle?

At Shakes Manor, we can't live our gay lifestyle to the fullest unless we've got a wine rack full of Man-on-Manischewitz, the gayest wine there is.

And kosher, too!

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Senate Dems to Blago: Bugger Off

They write letters, too.

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I Write Letters


Dear Carla from Top Chef 5:

I love you.

You are clever, witty, hilarious, equal parts grounded and woo-woo, and everything you make looks delicious. Also, on a completely superficial note, you are utterly gorgeous while also clearly resembling a Muppet.

Please be my friend immediately.

If it is any incentive, I clearly resemble a Campbell's Soup Kid.

See you tonight at 9pm CST!

Love,
Liss

P.S. Iain and Space Cowboy totally love you, too.

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Obama To Appoint Lesbian To Senior Role In Administration

Speaking on the condition of anonymity two transition team officials leaked President-elect Obama's pick for White House Council on Environmental Quality: Nancy Sutley, Deputy Mayor of L.A. and "prominent member of the gay and lesbian community."

[Sutley] previously served on the California State Water Resources Control Board, which is responsible for protecting water quality and resources throughout the state, and was the energy adviser to former Gov. Gray Davis. During President Bill Clinton's administration, Sutley was an EPA official, including being a special assistant to the EPA administrator in Washington.
Also worth noting: "Steven Chu, a Nobel Prize winning physicist, appears to be increasingly on track to become energy secretary."

This just keeps getting better and better.

(Via Towleroad.)

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Daily Kitteh



Olivia Twist: Maxin' and Relaxin'

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Blago Update: Jesse Jackson, Jr. is Candidate 5

The Sun-Times reports:

U.S. Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. is "Senate Candidate 5," whom Gov. Blagojevich was considering appointing as Barack Obama's replacement in the U.S. Senate under the belief the governor would get at least $1 million in campaign contributions, his attorney said Wednesday.

But Jackson never offered, nor authorized anyone to offer, money or favors in exchange for the seat, said his attorney James Montgomery. Jackson doesn't know the identity of "Individual D," the person purported to make the pay-to-play deal on Jackson's behalf, he said.

"Congressman Jackson has never authorized anyone to seek the governor's support in return of money, fund-raising or other things of value," Montgomery said at the press conference. "Secondly, the congressman is not aware of any alleged associate having made such a proposal."

He later added that "politicians and fund-raisers do some very strange things" and that he wouldn't "put it past someone" to represent Jackson in shady dealings with Blagojevich without Jackson's knowledge.
I'm guessing that sounds like total bullshit to anyone outside the region, but I actually wouldn't be surprised if were true that someone was acting on Jackson's behalf without his knowledge. It's certainly happened before that some small-time politico in Illinois has gotten involved in a pay-for-play deal with the hope of ingratiating himself to a big-time politico after the fact. And, if they don't get caught, sometimes it even works. People have made their names for less, especially in Chicago.

Bear in mind, I really don't like Jesse Jackson, Jr., so I've no inclination to spin this in his favor. I wouldn't even if I did like him; not my style. But the point is, despite how ludicrous it may sound, it is eminently possible that someone was making promises to Blago on his behalf without his knowledge.

It's also eminently possible he's lying through his teeth lawyer, but, such a scenario being tough neither to imagine nor believe, I didn't think it warranted my opinion of its possible veracity.

Update: Video, care of Petulant, below.

Jesse Jackson Jr.'s Press Conference:



His Attorney's Press Conference:


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I'm Late To The Party…Can Anyone Play?

by Shaker NYC WeboyA mixed race feminist gay man. Trust me…I've got issues. And a teaspoon.

I've been feeling kind of blocked, these days.

We all get those moments—I just never expected to get one so soon after Melissa—where politics is too much and not enough all at once. Where the things I care about just don't seem to merit a full-on essay. And maybe it's time I got up from the pooter, took a shower, and made my bed. :-)

A friend and co-blogger at my space suggested that I try breaking my writer's block by talking about Jon Favreau, the Obama speechwriter who got caught in this picture at some freewheeling party during the primary season:


I told my friend that Favreau really wasn't my issue—or at least an issue where my passion moved me to write; frankly, these are the moments when I count on my feminist friends to make the case. I just assumed that the sexism of the photo would be so obvious, and the outrage so clear, that the net effect would be as well: Favreau, like Samantha Power might be something of a neophyte, but there are just some things that can't be explained away. Or excused.

Which just shows how naive I am.

Nothing has happened to Favreau—aside from a mild rebuke and an apparent apologetic call to Clinton, Favreau's misbehavior has largely been swept away. Thankfully, Dee Dee Myers wouldn't let it drop:
What's bugging me is his intention. He isn't putting his hand on her "chest," as most of the articles and conversations about the picture have euphemistically referred to it. Rather, his hand—cupped just so—is clearly intended to signal that he's groping her breast. And why? Surely, not to signal he finds her attractive. Au contraire. It's an act of deliberate humiliation. Of disempowerment. Of denigration.

And it disgusts me.

Oh, I know: If Hillary can get over it, why can't I? Her spokesman, Phillipe Reinnes, tried to make light of the incident. "Senator Clinton is pleased to learn of Jon's obvious interest in the State Department, and is currently reviewing his application," he told the Washington Post in an E-mail. Obviously, she has no interest in making a federal case out of this particular incident, particularly as both the Clinton and Obama camps work on letting bygones be bygones. She has to pick her battles, and for her this ain't a hill worth dying on.

But there is a larger issue at stake. At what point does sexist behavior get taken seriously? At what point do people get punished in ways that suggest this kind of behavior, this kind of thinking, is unacceptable? At what point do we insist there will be consequences? Clearly, that didn't happen during the recent presidential campaign, when Hillary was—as I guess she is now—fair game. The press, the pundits, and the public could say things about her ("She's a shrew!") and to her ("Iron my shirt!") that were over-the-top sexist—yet got almost no reaction.
And so, of course, Adam Serwer over at TAPPED calls Myers "riding the victim train":
But say that Favreau had been caught in a picture making a racist joke about Obama rather than a sexist joke about Hillary Clinton. In all likelihood, Obama would have either got angry, or laughed it off, but I doubt Favreau would have been fired, because Obama really hasn't shown a tendency to react particularly emotionally to racial slights. If he had, he wouldn't be where he is.
Never mind the horrendous parallel example, the usual "let's compare oppressions" logic...it's the overall dismissing of sexism as a problem that gets me, the kind which leads one commenter to say "And he wasn't harassing an actual woman, he was goofing around with a cardboard cutout."

To which I replied:
I mean, really...what can you say? "Gee, it's totally better that he was disrespectful to the image of a woman than an actual woman?" In college I had neighbors in my dorm take all of Vanessa Williams second layout in Penthouse and paste it up all over their room. Women in the dorm were outraged. It's totally different, like, when it's just images of women on paper, right?

Adam, I like your blogging and I appreciate your insights...but really—could you be more dismissive of the idea of sexism? I'm guessing no.
Just to expand on it, the college story actually happened—my freshman dorm neighbors pasted Williams' notorious "second" photoshoot (which depicted her fully exposed in various bondage images) on their dorm room walls. Along with others, I was treated to a tour. Including some freshman women. In short order, the pair were reported to the Dean, and eventually subjected to disciplinary action. It was the talk of my hall. It was, for me, an early lesson in both the power of feminism and the power of speaking up.

So yes, my friends, I get it. Sorry I didn't speak up sooner...but Favreau has got to go.

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Oh, Oprah

by Shaker TWoP Fan

AP: Oprah Winfrey says she weighs 200 pounds.

Oh, Oprah. So many of us have been there. Some of us live there.

"I'm embarrassed," she writes. "I can't believe that after all these years, all the things I know how to do, I'm still talking about my weight. I look at my thinner self and think, `How did I let this happen again?'"
I can't believe we're still talking about it either. You've done so much with your life, you give back to your community, and you seem to appreciate what you have.

Except for your body.

Even with scores of personal trainers, chefs, and nutritionists, you can't get and stay at your self-and-media mandated perfect weight? Well, maybe it's because you're already there. It's not a failure; it's facts.
When it comes to her weight, Oprah Winfrey has always been straightforward.

The talk show queen continues the honesty, saying in the January issue of "O" magazine out Tuesday that she now weighs 200 pounds and has "fallen off the wagon" when it comes to healthy living.

"I'm mad at myself," Winfrey writes in an article provided early to The Associated Press by Harpo Productions…"I was so frustrated I started eating whatever I wanted -- and that's never good."
Healthy and weight have little to do with one another. And eating whatever you want is good, if you practice intuitive eating, because it gives you the chance to see what your body needs, not what your 'diet' says you should need. Maybe not having what your body wants isn't sustainable. Or, you know, satisfying.

And if you spend your entire life failing to achieve something that's simply not achievable for you, that's a lot of time to be angry at yourself.

(Also see Kate.)

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Something Rotten in Springfield

I've got a new piece up at The Guardian's Comment is free America about Blago's pay-for-play scandal, which gives a modern history of gubernatorial corruption in Illinois and talks about the passive role Obama had in bringing down the governor of his home state:

And that brings us to Blago, who appears to have been brazen in his disregard of the law even by Illinois' standards.

Or maybe it's just that the standards in the Land of Obama, nee Lincoln, are not what they used to be.

In a twist of political irony that could only really be at home in a Shakespeare play or Illinois, Blago's downfall may have been indirectly orchestrated by his two-time supporter, President-elect Barack Obama. The New York Times reports today that a phone call placed by Obama three months ago to urge passage of an Illinois state ethics bill convinced the state senate to override Blago's veto 55-0, sending Blago scrambling to "press state contractors for campaign contributions before the law's restrictions could take effect on January 1," which eventually led to the wiretapping that resulted in his arrest.

Well, well. Obama did promise to be an agent of change.
The whole thing is here. And while you're there, check on Tomasky on "Candidate 5."

Also: Obama tells Illinois governor to quit over Senate scandal.

Meanwhile, Mannion on Blago's dishonest hair.

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Wednesday Blogaround

What's the frequency, Shakers?

Recommended Reading:

Elle: How the Economic Crisis Affects Two Families

Brave Sir Robin: Laugh, Think, Cry

Diane: The Most Important News You Haven't Seen

Matttbastard: Of Fools and Folly

Faith: Urban Outfitters/Anthropologie Suck Redux

Melissa: Review: Wendy and Lucy

Leave your links in comments...

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A Kiss is a Kiss

Interesting article in yesterday's WaPo about how movie kisses between two men are treated very differently than kisses between two women, even and sometimes especially by the people whose lips are on either side of the kiss.

Something I've always found rather interesting is how few self-identified straight men, who are not remotely uncomfortable with seeing two men in a sexual situation, are turned on by it. This is something that's been studied (self-identified straight men who are admittedly homophobic are more likely to be measurably turned on by images of gay male sexuality than self-identified men who are admittedly gay-positive), and I've found it to be anecdotally true as well; I personally know extremely few gay-positive straight men who say watching two men make out or have sex gets them revved up, even if watching two women does.

What makes this interesting to me is that the same does not hold for self-identified straight women, who are more likely to be measurably turned on watching any combination of sexes—a man and a woman, two women, two men.

Surely part of it is the cultural gaze that socializes all of us, irrespective of our sex or sexual orientation, to sexually objectify women. But there's something else at play here, too—because lesbians tend to be as sexually amiable as their straight sisters, and gay men tend to be as sexually selective as their straight brothers.

This is something we all sort of know intuitively, which is why there's a cultural narrative about women generally being more flexible and fluid in their sexuality than men.

But, if I had to guess, I'd say there's no biological prescription for that (especially since there's not even any convincing theory why there would be one). I suspect instead that in obvious and less obvious ways, women are socialized to be more broadly receptive to sexual stimulus, while men are socialized to reject any sexual stimulus that does not serve their individual needs.

Which, if accurate, makes me sad for men, in the way that limiting humans' capacity to enjoy anything makes me sad.

I really wish we wouldn't do that to ourselves and each other. Of course, if wishes were horses, beggars would ride.

[H/T to Shaker Angelos.]

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Fuck Huckabee

I am so bloody furious after watching this clip from The Daily Show, in which Jon Stewart discusses with Governor Mike Huckabee his opposition to same-sex marriage, that I am literally shaking with rage. There's almost nothing I can tolerate less than someone hiding their bigotry between some affected gee-whiz-aw-shucks shtick, and whining about the people who have the temerity to call them out as the retrofuck, hatemongering defenders of undeserved privilege that they really are behind the gormless façade.

By the time Huck got to the part where he was blathering on about the "entire purpose of a marriage" being to "create the next generation" and "train our replacements," effectively redefining marriage himself to exclude even straight couples who cannot or do not want to have kids, and doing all this without a trace of everloving irony after whinging about the meanie gays who want to redefine marriage, I was ready to put my fist through the wall.

Instead, I spent the last hour or so doing a transcript, so everyone who can't view the video can read the interview, and we can all talk about it together and discuss in infinitesimal detail all that is wrong with everything that comes out of Huck's filthy fucking mouth.


Stewart: We're talking with Governor Mike Huckabee, whose book is "Do the Right Thing." We talked a little bit about fiscal conservatism in the first one; I want to talk to you about social conservatism, because this is really about you wanting the Republican Party to get back to its basics, and, respectfully speaking, one thing I guess I don't understand about social conservatives— I get pro-life, and that's probably their number one issue, and it's very easy for me to understand it; it's easy for me to understand that we all should work to reduce the number of [abortions] with the goal of ending that, uh— The gay marriage issue, and why conservatives are against it—you write that marriage is the bedrock of our society: Why would you not want more couples to buy into the stability of marriage; why would you want that precluded for an entire group of individuals?

Huckabee: Marriage still means one man, one woman, life relationship. I think people have a right to live any way they want to, but, even anatomically, let's face it, the only way that we can create the next generation is through a male-female relationship. For 5,000 years of recorded human history, that's what marriage has meant. Thirty states have had it on the ballot, and in all 30 states it's passed—even in states like California that— Nobody would suggest are social conservatives leading the state of California.

Stewart: Well, thirty states had Mike Huckabee on the ballot and they went with McCain. Listen, you can't trust the voters! The voters don't know!

Huckabee: The point being, in those states, Jon, an average of 68% of the voters across America have affirmed as traditional marriage— It's not that they have tried to say they're going to ban something as much as they're going to affirm what has always been.

Stewart: California did ban it. In essence, they said, you could get married; they got married—

Huckabee: Absolutely, but they affirmed what they had done before—

Stewart: But people got married in the interim, and then they went back and said, you're not— I guess my question is— You said, reaffirming the tradition of marriage over 5,000 years, which takes it back to the Old Testament, where polygamy was the norm, not a heterosexual marriage between two couples [sic] that choose each other. Marriage has evolved greatly over those 5,000 years, from a property arrangement, polygamy— We've redefined it constantly. It used to be that people of different races could not marry. It strikes me as very convenient to go back to the Bible and say, "Hey, man, we gotta look at the way they define marriage." What about the way they did slavery in the Bible?

Huckabee: But if we change the definition, then we really do have to change it to accommodate all lifestyles. I mean, we would have to say to the guy in West Texas who had 27 wives, it's okay. And I'm not sure that I hear a lot of people arguing that's a great idea—

Stewart: I'm not sure why polygamy is the issue here. It seems like a fundamental human right. You write in your book that all people are created equal—

Huckabee: Yeah.

Stewart: —and yet, for gay people, you believe that it is corrosive in society to allow them to have the privileges that all humans enjoy.

Huckabee: Well, but, there's a difference between the equality of each individual and the equality of what we do, and the sameness of what we do. I mean, the fact is, marriage is, under our law, a privilege. It's not an absolute divine right.

Stewart: So what if we make it that Hispanics can't vote?

Huckabee: [pause] Well, I don't think that's a really good idea. I'm not sure that we should do that.

Stewart: So why can't gay people get married?

Huckabee: Well, because marriage still means a male and a female relationship, and until the laws are changed, it still means that.

Stewart: But aren't you, aren't you giving up a— I disagree. I think, you know, segregation used to be the law until the courts intervened.

Huckabee: But there's a big difference between a person being black and a person practicing a lifestyle and engaging in a marital relationship.

Stewart: Okay, actually this is helpful because this gets to the crux of it. I think it's the difference between what you believe gay people are and what I do. And I live in New York City, so I'm just going to make a supposition that I have more experience being around them.

Huckabee: [laughs]

Stewart: And I'll tell you this: Religion is far more of a choice than homosexuality. And people choose— The protections that we have for religion— We protect religion. And talk about a lifestyle choice—that is absolutely a choice. Gay people don't choose to be gay. At what age did you choose to not be gay?

Huckabee: But, Jon, religious people don't have the right to burn others at the stake; they don't have the right to do anything they wish to do. It still comes down to—

Stewart: You're not being asked to marry a guy; they're asking to marry the person they love.

Huckabee: Well, they're asking to redefine the word, and, frankly, we're probably not going to come to terms— If the American people are not convinced that we should overturn the definition of marriage, then I would say that those who support the idea of same-sex marriage have a lot of work to do to convince the rest of us. And as I said, 68% of the American population have made that decision.

Stewart: Here's what I think: I think it's one of— You know, you talk about the pro-life movement [abortion] being one of the great shames of our nation. I think if you want number two, I think it's that: I think it's an absolute—I think it's a travesty that people have forced someone who is gay to have to make their case that they deserve the same basic rights as someone else.

Huckabee: I respect that you and I disagree with that.

Stewart: Oh, okay.

Huckabee: I really do. And one of the things that I want to make sure that people understand, that if a person does not necessarily support the idea of changing the definition of marriage, it does not mean that they're a homophobe. It does not mean that they're filled with hate and animosity and anger—

Stewart: I was in no way suggesting that—

Huckabee: No, you were not saying that, but I think that some people would like to throw the epithets at people whether they're like me or someone else—

Stewart: But it does beg the question, I have to say, and, again, it's in—it's why. You keep talking about, "Geez, it would be redefining a word." And it feels like semantics is cold comfort when it comes to humanity. And especially someone such as yourself who is, I think, an empathetic person, who is someone who seeks to get to the heart of problems, this idea that, "Geez, I don't know, Jon, definitions and society…" [makes a face] I mean, marriage was not even a sacrament until the 1200s.

Huckabee: Well, words do matter. Definitions matter. And I think that we have to be very thoughtful and careful before we say that we're going to undo an entire social structure. I mean, let's face it, the entire purpose of a marriage is not just to create the next generation, but it's to train our replacements. And it is in the context of 23 male and 23 female chromosomes coming together at the point of conception to create the next human life.

Stewart: I think you're looking at sexuality and not attributes. And it's odd, because I think the conservative mantra is a meritocracy, and I think what you're suggesting is the fact of being gay parents makes you not as good as others, and I would suggest that a loving gay family with a financially secure background beats the hell out of Britney Spears and Kevin Federline any day of the week.

Huckabee: I'm not going to defend Britney and Kevin for sure!

Stewart: But I appreciate you for having the conversation, and, I just—it's just— It's wild.

Huckabee: Well, Jon, I just want you to know I'm not going to marry you. I'm just not.

Stewart: I appreciate that.

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Shaker Gourmet: Root Vegetable Soup

From Shaker Oddjob, who found the recipe in the November issue of Fine Cooking magazine and says that it is "easy and delicious":

1 oz. dried porcini mushrooms
4 slices bacon cut in half crosswise
2 med. red onions (peeled & chopped)
2 cloves garlic (peeled & mashed into paste - adding a little salt while mashing speeds the process)
1 tsp. caraway seed (I hate caraway, so I substituted cumin seed)
1 tsp. dried thyme leaves
2 quarts homemade or (if store bought) lower-sodium chicken broth
2 dried bay leaves
5 med. carrots (peeled and small/medium diced)
2 med. purple-top turnips (peeled and small/medium diced)
2 med. Yukon Gold potatoes (peeled and small/medium diced)
3/4 cup pearl barley (picked over to remove any stray pebbles)
4 tbsp. lemon juice

Put dried porcini mushrooms in a small bowl. Heat some water on the stove to near boiling (or boiling, doesn't matter) and pour over porcini until covered. Let sit for 10-15 minutes (prep. other ingredients as needed/possible while waiting). Remove reconstituted mushrooms from water, chop and set aside. Take the water and pour it through a fine sieve (or wet paper towel/coffee filter) to remove grit and set aside the filtered "liquor".

In a six quart Dutch oven (or larger) brown bacon over medium/medium-high heat. When cooked remove bacon & set aside on a paper towel-lined dish to cool.

Add chopped onions and 1 tsp. salt to the rendered bacon fat in the bottom of the Dutch oven and cook (stirring occasionally) until softened (about 6-8 mins.)

Add garlic paste, caraway, and thyme. Cook (stirring constantly) until fragrant (about 30 secs.)

Add chicken broth, chopped porcini mushrooms, mushroom liquor, bay leaves, carrots, turnips, potatoes, and barley.

Stir, and heat on medium-high until the soup begins to boil (skimming foam as needed). Turn down heat so the soup simmers, cover, and simmer until barley has softened and cooked through (about 20-40 mins.) (Salt and pepper to taste while soup is simmering.)

Remove & discard bay leaves. Add & stir in the lemon juice. Ladle soup into bowls. Garnish with the cooked bacon crumbled over the soup.
Oddjob added: "PS: I am no fan of "boiled turnips"! The turnips are not objectionable at all.

PPS: As with many soups containing barley this soup (after refrigeration) is thicker and even better tasting a day or two later.

PPPS: Despite the bacon fat this is a very low fat soup (less than 20% of the calories come from fat)."


If you'd like to participate in Shaker Gourmet, email me at: shakergourmet (at) gmail.com

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Two-Minute Nostalgia Sublime

Clueless



So not as good as the film.

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Joined Together

Friends and family have been sending me the link to this week's cover story in Newsweek on the religious case for gay marriage. It is nice to see an article in a mainstream newsweekly take on such a topic, but frankly it is a restatement of many of the arguments I've made before on defining just what "traditional" marriage is -- a business deal between two landowners, a political peace offering between two warring European dynasties, one man and as many women as he can buy, or a convenient way of keeping the tabloids out of the bedroom of a Hollywood heartthrob who prefers his life partner in a tuxedo rather than a Dior gown. And since we as a nation have taken the word "marriage" and codified a religious sacrament into common law, it becomes problematic for both the sacred and the secular to define the union of two people for the purpose of sharing rights and responsibilities of a life together by that word. Tradition, it seems, has joined together the civil and the religious meaning of marriage.

Personally I don't care whether or not the case can be made that the bible supports the concept of same-sex marriage. I have been a member of a religious society, the Quakers, for nearly forty years and we have been supportive of equal rights, including marriage, for all people, since our founding in the 17th century. I have been at meetings for worship for marriage of same-sex partners long before it was on the national agenda. So it doesn't matter to me whether or not the Mormons, the Roman Catholics, the Baptists, the Jews, or any other community of faith approves of it or not. I am not seeking to impose my beliefs on them, and as far as I'm concerned, if they don't want to perform same-sex marriage ceremonies, they don't have to. It does matter to me, however, that some organized religions would use their considerable media and financial power to impose their religious beliefs on others regardless of their faith or lack thereof. I have no problem with the churches speaking out. They have the same rights we all share as citizens. But if they are going to make the case to change the law to restrict the rights of a particular group of people, they had better make it based on the due process of law, not on the fear of a mythical supernatural power.

As the editors of Newsweek will undoubtedly discover, for every argument that can be made for same-sex marriage by theologians and biblical scholars, there will be those who can find passages and interpretations in the scripture that inveigh just as strongly against it. That is the danger in trying to find practical legal meaning in a collection of poetry, fables and parables written in a cobbled-together translation in a form of English that is over four hundred years old. Either way, I don't care whether or not the prophets of the Old Testament or Jesus Christ approved of homosexuality any more than I care about the approval of any other character in a work of fiction, be it him or Gandalf or Albus Dumbledore. The only written word that has any bearing on me is this passage:

Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.
and this one:
All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside. No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.
It is our peculiarly human nature that has joined together the religious and the civil definition that has made this debate what it is today. But what seems to be lost, ironically, is the point of joining together two people in the eyes of the society. They have found happiness together and they wish to be seen as a couple and share the benefits that we as a society have deemed important for them to have as one, be it the tax code or merely the acceptance in social circles or booking a vacation at a couples-only resort in Scottsdale. Families are defined not by the production of children but by common bonds of love and companionship. And while the focus of many advocates who oppose same-sex marriage focus on the issue of children and their upbringing, they're ignoring the facts that not all marriages produce children, and not all children are raised in happy homes, regardless of whether or not their parents are married or living under one roof. There's also the simple fact that many same-sex couples have children and provide wholesome and loving homes for them. Many same-sex couples want kids, and it seems both cruel and sadly ironic that certain states, including Florida, would single out gay people as the only citizens who are precluded from adoption.

It comes down to this: it doesn't matter what the bible says about same-sex marriage. Regardless of the gender, the union of two people who love each other and want to make a life together only strengthens our society and liberates us from the artificial limits imposed on us by absolute strangers wielding unintelligible and contradictory passages of poetic fiction from a time and a place far removed from our own. Granted, there is wisdom and insight into the human condition in the bible, just as there is in any work of literature that speculates on our relationship with ourselves and tries to find the cosmic truths of why we are here and where we are going. But to make it the basis of the rights and responsibilities of citizenship and preclude the Constitutional guarantees that specifically prohibit the imposition of religious doctrine as the rule of law is a far greater perversion than anything the homophobes can imagine goes on in the lives of people whose very happiness they wish to control.

Bonus Feature: Jon Stewart discusses the issue with Mike Huckabee and pretty much nails him on it.

Cross-posted.

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Blog Note: Clarification on Recent Disqus Change

Based on some recent emails, there seems to be a little confusion about the feature that Disqus has implemented for us, so I'll explain a little more.

Originally, we allowed anonymous commenting so that anyone and everyone, including trolls, could comment away on any post. Even though you would have to sign up to Disqus using an email address, that address was never verified, which means that bogus addresses could be used without any fear of consequence. I think most, if not all, of you have seen what could happen when threads start to spiral out of control.

Now, we're requiring two things:

1. All readers who comment on posts must have a registered Disqus account.

2. Each Disqus account needs to be verified via a valid email address.

These two steps are hardly different from most message boards that send you an email to activate the account. Nothing new there. As for the email addresses themselves, we do not collect them or use them in any way. They're stored at Disqus along with your account there.

Readers who are still unable to comment should definitely not feel that they have been specifically banned from commenting (unless of course they're trolls, in which case we don't care :) ). If you're having trouble with the verification step, or have gone through it and are still unable to post comments, then email me or Liss so we can forward the issue on to Disqus. In the email, please be as detailed as possible about the problem you're having so that it will be easier for Disqus to identify and resolve the issue.

Again, the whole reason for this step is to help keep the threads under control and make life easier for everyone who is moderating them.

Carry on.

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