[Trigger warning.]
Despite feminists' reputation, and contra my own individual reputation cultivated over five years of public opinion-making, I am not a man-hater.
If I played by misogynists' rules, specifically the one that dictates it only takes one woman doing one Mean or Duplicitous or Disrespectful or Unlawful or otherwise Bad Thing to justify hatred of all women, I would have plenty of justification for hating men, if I were inclined to do that sort of thing.
Most of my threatening hate mail comes from men. The most unrelentingly trouble-making trolls have always been men. I've been cat-called and cow-called from moving vehicles countless times, and subjected to other forms of street harassment, and sexually harassed at work, always by men. I have been sexually assaulted—if one includes rape, attempted rape, unsolicited touching of breasts, buttocks, and/or genitals, nonconsensual frottage on public transportation, and flashing—by dozens of people during my lifetime, some known to me, some strangers, all men.
But I don't hate men, because I play by different rules. In fact, there are men in this world whom I love quite a lot.
There are also individual men in this world I would say I probably hate, or something close, men who I hold in unfathomable contempt, but it is not because they are men.
No, I don't hate men.
It would, however, be fair to say that I don't easily trust them.
My mistrust is not, as one might expect, primarily a result of the violent acts done on my body, nor the vicious humiliations done to my dignity. It is, instead, born of the multitude of mundane betrayals that mark my every relationship with a man—the casual rape joke, the use of a female slur, the careless demonization of the feminine in everyday conversation, the accusations of overreaction, the eyerolling and exasperated sighs in response to polite requests to please not use misogynist epithets in my presence or to please use non-gendered language ("humankind").
There are the insidious assumptions guiding our interactions—the supposition that I will regard being exceptionalized as a compliment ("you're not like those other women"), and the presumption that I am an ally against certain kinds of women. Surely, we're all in agreement that Britney Spears is a dirty slut who deserves nothing but a steady stream of misogynist vitriol whenever her name is mentioned, right? Always the subtle pressure to abandon my principles to trash this woman or that woman, as if I'll never twig to the reality that there's always a justification for unleashing the misogyny, for hating a woman in ways reserved only for women. I am exhorted to join in the cruel revelry, and when I refuse, suddenly the target is on my back. And so it goes.
There are the jokes about women, about wives, about mothers, about raising daughters, about female bosses. They are told in my presence by men who are meant to care about me, just to get a rise out of me, as though I am meant to find funny a reminder of my second-class status. I am meant to ignore that this is a bullying tactic, that the men telling these jokes derive their amusement specifically from knowing they upset me, piss me off, hurt me. They tell them and I can laugh, and they can thus feel superior, or I can not laugh, and they can thus feel superior. Heads they win, tails I lose. I am used as a prop in an ongoing game of patriarchal posturing, and then I am meant to believe it is true when some of the men who enjoy this sport, in which I am their pawn, tell me, "I love you." I love you, my daughter. I love you, my niece. I love you, my friend. I am meant to trust these words.
There are the occasions that men—intellectual men, clever men, engaged men—insist on playing devil's advocate, desirous of a debate on some aspect of feminist theory or reproductive rights or some other subject generally filed under the heading: Women's Issues. These intellectual, clever, engaged men want to endlessly probe my argument for weaknesses, want to wrestle over details, want to argue just for fun—and they wonder, these intellectual, clever, engaged men, why my voice keeps raising and why my face is flushed and why, after an hour of fighting my corner, hot tears burn the corners of my eyes. Why do you have to take this stuff so personally? ask the intellectual, clever, and engaged men, who have never considered that the content of the abstract exercise that's so much fun for them is the stuff of my life.
There is the perplexity at my fury that my life experience is not considered more relevant than the opinionated pronouncements of men who make a pastime of informal observation, like womanhood is an exotic locale which provides magnificent fodder for the amateur ethnographer. And there is the haughty dismissal of my assertion that being on the outside looking in doesn't make one more objective; it merely provides a different perspective.
There are the persistent, tiresome pronouncements of similitude between men's and women's experiences, the belligerent insistence that handsome men are objectified by women, too! that women pinch men's butts sometimes, too! that men are expected to look a certain way at work, too! that women rape, too! and other equivalencies that conveniently and stupidly ignore institutional inequities that mean X rarely equals Y. And there are the long-suffering groans that meet any attempt to contextualize sexism and refute the idea that such indignities, though grim they all may be, are not necessarily equally oppressive.
There are the stereotypes—oh, the abundant stereotypes!—about women, not me, of course, but other women, those women with their bad driving and their relentless shopping habits and their PMS and their disgusting vanity and their inability to stop talking and their disinterest in Important Things and their trying to trap men and their getting pregnant on purpose and their false rape accusations and their being bitches sluts whores cunts… And I am expected to nod in agreement, and I am nudged and admonished to agree. I am expected to say these things are not true of me, but are true of women (am I seceding from the union?); I am expected to put my stamp of token approval on the stereotypes. Yes, it's true. Between you and me, it's all true. That's what is wanted from me. Abdication of my principles and pride, in service to a patriarchal system that will only use my collusion to further subjugate me. This is a thing that is asked of me by men who purport to care for me.
There is the unwillingness to listen, a ferociously stubborn not getting it on so many things, so many important things. And the obdurate refusal to believe, to internalize, that my outrage is not manufactured and my injure not make-believe—an inflexible rejection of the possibility that my pain is authentic, in favor of the consolatory belief that I am angry because I'm a feminist (rather than the truth: that I'm a feminist because I'm angry).
And there is the denial about engaging in misogyny, even when it's evident, even when it's pointed out gently, softly, indulgently, carefully, with goodwill and the presumption that it was not intentional. There is the firm, fixed, unyielding denial—because it is better and easier to imply that I'm stupid or crazy, that I have imagined being insulted by someone about whom I care (just for the fun of it!), than it is to just admit a bloody mistake. Rather I am implied to be a hysteric than to say, simply, I'm sorry.
Not every man does all of these things, or even most of them, and certainly not all the time. But it only takes one, randomly and occasionally, exploding in a shower of cartoon stars like an unexpected punch in the nose, to send me staggering sideways, wondering what just happened.
Well. I certainly didn't see that coming…
These things, they are not the habits of deliberately, connivingly cruel men. They are, in fact, the habits of the men in this world I love quite a lot.
All of whom have given me reason to mistrust them, to use my distrust as a self-protection mechanism, as an essential tool to get through every day, because I never know when I might next get knocked off-kilter with something that puts me in the position, once again, of choosing between my dignity and the serenity of our relationship.
Swallow shit, or ruin the entire afternoon?
It can come out of nowhere, and usually does. Which leaves me mistrustful by both necessity and design. Not fearful; just resigned—and on my guard. More vulnerability than that allows for the possibility of wounds that do not heal. Wounds to our relationship, the sort of irreparable damage that leaves one unable to look in the eye someone that you loved once upon a time.
This, then, is the terrible bargain we have regretfully struck: Men are allowed the easy comfort of their unexamined privilege, but my regard will always be shot through with a steely, anxious bolt of caution.
A shitty bargain all around, really. But there it is.
There are men who will read this post and think, huffily, dismissively, that a person of color could write a post very much like this one about white people, about me. That's absolutely right. So could a lesbian, a gay man, a bisexual, an asexual. So could a trans or intersex person (which hardly makes a comprehensive list). I'm okay with that. I don't feel hated. I feel mistrusted—and I understand it; I respect it. It means, for me, I must be vigilant, must make myself trustworthy. Every day.
I hope those men will hear me when I say, again, I do not hate you. I mistrust you. You can tell yourselves that's a problem with me, some inherent flaw, some evidence that I am fucked up and broken and weird; you can choose to believe that the women in your lives are nothing like me.
Or you can be vigilant, can make yourselves trustworthy. Every day.
Just in case they're more like me than you think.
The Terrible Bargain We Have Regretfully Struck
Now Taking Requests
Just a reminder, I am still looking for requests for Radio Shakesville. Call in, let me know what you'd like to hear. Maybe you can take inspiration from this post and introduce other Shakers to something new. Or, just call in, like everyone else does, and call me names. Whatever.
Personally, I'm of the opinion the show is better when you are all involved, and this is one of the easiest and best ways to do that. So, if you've a free moment this weekend, gimme a ring.
You can reach my voicemail by calling (641) 715-3900, extension: 44515.
Almost-Random YouTubery: Sugar Beet
"Sug-ah, sugar beet, sug-ah, sha-beet beet!" Sesame Street Season 9, Episode 279
Just because it's beet season.
What The Hell?

Deeky
What the hell is with that blazer? What the hell is with that shaggy haircut?? What the hell is that in your hand, the script for Tuff Turf 2??? What the hell????
(If you've a ridiculous and/or embarrassing photo of yourself from your youth, please send it to shakerwhatthehell_at_yahoo_dot_com. I'll post them up as part of our series called What The Hell? so everyone can laugh
[See also: Deeky, Liss, evilsciencechick, katecontinued, ClumsyKisses, Mistress Sparkletoes, Liiiz, Reedme, Mama Shakes, Mustang Bobby, RedSonja, MomTFH, Portly Dyke, SteffaB, Icca, Christina, Orangelion03, Car, Siobhan, InfamousQBert, Maud, Rikibeth, MishaRN, CLD, Cheezwiz, MamaCarrie, Temeraire, somebodyoranother, goldengirl, Liss (again), summerwing, yeomanpip, Susan811, and bbl.]
Stamford Marriott Blames Victim for Her Own Rape
by Anonymous Shaker
[Trigger warning; action item below.]
The Stamford Marriott Hotel & Spa is claiming that a woman who was raped in their parking garage on October 10, 2006 "failed to exercise due care for her own safety and the safety of her children and proper use of her senses and facilities."
This is in response to the lawsuit brought against the Stamford Marriott Hotel & Spa by the woman who says that the hotel should have prevented the attack.
Her attacker, Gary Fricker, was sentenced to 20 years in prison after a plea deal. He confessed to the crime of holding the woman at gunpoint, robbing her, then sexually assaulting her in front of her two children. He also threatened to sexually assault one of her children as well.
It is unclear when during this attack that the woman and her children, who were age 3 and 5 at the time, should have tried to "mitigate their damages." (Perhaps the 3-year-old should have grabbed for the gun while the 5-year-old subdued the attacker.) It is also unclear what the woman's tennis partners, Pilates instructor or the children's baby sitter have to offer on the topic, but the hotel subpoenaed them all the same, thus effectively outing the woman who had otherwise been identified as Jane Doe to help preserve her privacy.
Whether or not the hotel bears any responsibility for the attack may be up for debate, but it should be obvious that the woman herself does not. Sadly, the Stamford Marriott Hotel & Spa does not seem to agree.
To speak up about the Stamford Marriott Hotel & Spa and its victim-blaming, here are the people and places to contact:
For the hotel:
Stamford Marriott Hotel & Spa
243 Tresser Blvd
Stamford, CT, 06901
(203) 357-9555 (phone)
(203) 324-6897 (fax)
www.stamfordmarriott.com
Twitter: http://twitter.com/StamfordMarriot
General Manager: Joe Kelly
jkelly@stamfordmarriott.com
For the hotel's owners:
Meyer Jabara Hotels
7 Kenosia Avenue
Danbury, CT 06810
(203) 798-1099 (phone)
(203) 798-2620 (fax)
http://www.meyerjabarahotels.com/contact_us/contact_us.asp
CEO: Richard Jabara
For Marriott International:
Corporate Headquarters
Marriott International
10400 Fernwood Road
Bethesda, Md. 20817
(301) 380-3000 (phone)
https://www.marriott.com/suggest/suggest.mi
CEO: Bill Marriott
Bill's Blog: http://www.blogs.marriott.com/
Today's Edition of "Conniving and Sinister"

Strip One, Strip Two, Strip Three, Strip Four, Strip Five, Strip Six, Strip Seven. In which Liss reimagines the long-running comic "Frank & Ernest," about two old straight white guys "telling it like it is," as a fat feminist white woman and a biracial queerbait telling it like it actually is from their perspective. Hilarity ensues.
Question of the Day
Suggested by Shaker KarateMonkey: "Let's play I never: What's something you've never done that most people around you have, or what common experience have you missed out on? For example to the best of my recollection I've never had a peanut butter and jelly sandwich. My wife [RedSonja] thinks that's very weird. My parents didn't really like them so we never had them growing up, and by the time I was old enough to realize that was kind of rare I already had a good streak going, and didn't see any reason to break it."
I've never seen The Sound of Music.
One SyStep Forward, Two SySteps Back
by Shaker Socchan, who expects more from the speculative fiction industry.
For those not following its most recent developments, the Sci-Fi Siffy Syfy channel has announced that it's planning to include more openly LGBT characters in its lineup. Unfortunately, as with many decisions made by this channel, it's one step forward, two steps back. The following casting call went out on Wednesday for a guest slot on the upcoming Stargate: Universe:
[ELEANOR PERRY] (35-40) and quite attractive. A brilliant scientist who happens to be a quadriplegic. Affected since childhood, her disability has rendered her body physically useless. However, after being brought on board the Destiny as the only person who may be able to save the ship and her crew from certain annihilation, she is given temporary powers that enable her to walk again and to finally experience intimacy.sptv050769..Strong guest lead. NAMES PREFERRED. ACTRESS MUST BE PHYSICALLY THIN. (THINK CALISTA FLOCKHART).I can think of half-a-dozen problems with this in one minute alone (attractive means thin, having a disability means you aren't a full person, the idea that intimacy automatically involves sex, et cetera), and I'm sure my fellow Shakers can go on for pages with more. It gets worse when taken into consideration that body-switching is to be a major gimmick in the new series.
The audition sides confirm collective worst fears: Elanor will be switching bodies with an out, married lesbian, and, while switched, she will be using the body that is not hers to pursue straight sexual encounters. She will "switch back" after a week.
There's a post on LiveJournal by a third party here with more details, a link to a list of places to contact about this, and the option to get the audition sides via e-mail. There's already a post up at Media Dis 'n' Dat.
Given that they're already at casting calls, I'm not sure how much can be done to change the episode/script itself; if nothing else, though, it might be possible to convince them (via outrage) to pull the episode entirely.
Teaspoons up, Shakers o.oP
Put This in Your "Keep For Later" File
Last night, Rachel Maddow did a great round-up of the progressively violent speech and actions that have been building up in the "grass-roots" protests of Health Care Reform.
I'm putting this into my "prescient progressions that I hope don't actually evolve" file.
Unfortunately, today's story about the man who held a "Death To Obama" sign and was, thankfully, detained by the Secret Service would lead me to believe that Maddow is pointing us to the logical conclusion.
I'm actually glad that someone in the MSM is compiling this stuff now, before "something happens" -- because I'm sick of the 20-20 hindsight narrative when history provide us ample opportunity for 20-20 foresight.
(Transcript Below the Fold)
TRANSCRIPT:
On July 27th, two and a half weeks ago, Democratic Congressman Frank Kratovil was hanged in effigy outside his congressional office in Maryland. The staged lynching, the really well-tied noose and all was gleefully staged by an anti-health care reform protestor.
Later that week, on August 1st, Democratic Congressman Lloyd Doggett of Texas held a town hall event at a grocery store in Austin to talk about health care reform. An anti-health reform protestor there greeted him with a mock marble tombstone engraved with the congressman's name on it.
Two days after that, on August 3rd, Democratic Congressman Brad Miller of North Carolina reported to the Capitol Hill police that he had received death threats over his support for health care reform. One anti-health care reform protestor called his D.C. office and told a staffer, quote, "Miller could lose his life over this."
The very next day, on August 4th, the idea of a Democratic congressman being killed because he supported health care reform became a punch line for Republican Congressman Todd Akin of Missouri.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
REP. TODD AKIN ®, MISSOURI: Different people from Washington, D.C have come back to their districts and had town hall meetings and they almost got lynched and so.
(APPLAUSE)
(END VIDEO CLIP)
MADDOW: That same day, Democratic Senator Chris Dodd, who had just announced days earlier that he has prostate cancer, had this screamed at him by an anti-health care reform protestor outside one of his town hall events.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Barack Obama clearly said, all you should do is take a painkiller. How come we don't just give Chris Dodd painkillers? Like a handful of them at a time? He can wash it down with Ted Kennedy's whiskey.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
MADDOW: Two days later, on August 6th, the FOX News anchor Glenn Beck, on national television, turns the threat of a political assassination into the acting out of a political assassination, when he and one of his staffers wearing a Nancy Pelosi mask role-played what it would be like for Glenn Beck to poison the speaker of the House of Representatives.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
GLENN BECK, FOX NEWS HOST: I just wanted to-are you going to drink your wine? Are you blind? Do those eyes not work? There you go.
I want you to drink it now. Drink it. Drink it. Drink it.
I really just wanted to thank you for having me over to wine country. You know, to be invited I thought I had to be a major Democratic donor, long-time friend of yours, which I'm not. By the way, I put poison in your-no.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
MADDOW: The day after that, on August 7th, there were more death threats. Congressman Brian Baird of Washington reports that his office received this fax with an image of President Obama with a communist hammer and sickle symbol paint owned his forehead and the message, "Death to all Marxists, foreign and domestic" written underneath.
The day after that, on August 8th, anti-health reform protestors started turning up to Democratic town hall events while armed. In Arizona, a gun is dropped during a meet and greet with Democratic Congressman Gabrielle Giffords. The same day, a man with a concealed gun is escorted out of an event held by Democratic Congressman Steve Cohen of Tennessee.
Yesterday, the staff of Democratic Congressman David Scott arrived at their Georgia office to find a four-foot swastika painted across the sign for their office. Congressman Scott says he was also sent an Obama death threat fax similar to the one sent to Brian Baird's office, only this one also addresses Congressman Scott himself and it uses the "N" word.
Also yesterday, Democratic Congressman Dennis Moore of Kansas reports that he's received two death threats over the last 10 days. One he describes as a phone call into one of his congressional offices. The other is a threat he says he does not feel comfortable discussing with the media.
Yesterday also brought us a health care town hall event featuring President Obama himself in Portsmouth, New Hampshire. Among the anti-health reform protestors outside the event was a man named William Kostric, who stood outside with a loaded handgun strapped to his leg. He was holding a sign at the time that read, quote, "It's a time to water-it is time-excuse me-to water the tree of liberty." A reference to Thomas Jefferson's famous words, "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants."
As we noted last night, just for context, when Timothy McVeigh was arrested after the Oklahoma City bombing in 1995, he was wearing a t-shirt that had on the front of it a picture of assassinated President Abraham Lincoln, along with the words "Sic Semper Tyrannis." Those are the words shouted by Lincoln's assassin right after he shot him.
On the back of McVeigh's t-shirt was the same slogan that William Kostric paired with his loaded gun at the Obama event yesterday. There you can see both the sign and what Tim McVeigh picked out special to be wearing when he got his mug shot taken for having blown up a federal building and killed 168 Americans.
At the same event for President Obama in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, yesterday, a 62-year-old man named Richard Terry Young was arrested after sneaking past security officials and into Portsmouth high school just a few hours before President Obama was due to arrive. Mr. Young was allegedly carrying a knife when security officers found him. And when they got a warrant and searched his pickup truck, they found a .38 caliber KelTec semi-automatic pistol hidden inside a bag in his truck with a round in the chamber.
Today, at a town hall event for Democratic Senator Ben Cardin of Maryland, "The Hill" newspaper reports that one anti-health reform protestor stood outside the town hall, quote, "with a small, handwritten sign-cardboard sign that read, quote, 'Death to Obama.'"
The forces against health care reform are the same forces that have always been against health care reform-corporate interests that profit from the way things are now and the politicians who support those corporate interests. Health care is a multi-trillion dollar industry and special interests want to protect what they've got. That is common knowledge. That is politics as usual.
What is not politics as usual is that opponents of health care reform have chosen to fight at this time with force and with threats of force. Not just fringe talk show hosts, but members of Congress telling their constituents that Barack Obama is like Hitler; members of the United States senate telling their constituents that they are right to be afraid, that health care reform really is a plot to kill the elderly. Corporate funded conservative P.R. operations promoting those lines of attack and then telling their activists to go put the fear of God into members of Congress.
Are we now operating in a political environment which is not just politics as usual, which is not just a rowdy debate? Has enough kerosene been poured on the flames that the possibility of violence-even assassination-is being posited as a real political tactic in the United States?
It's not a rhetorical question. It's not even a question about rhetoric. Because there are people in this country-people in the health care field, in fact-who have faced the actual threat of assassination as a political tactic.
Two and a half months ago, Kansas abortion provider Dr. George Tiller was assassinated and the man who's charged in the case purportedly believe that assassinations were justified because of his own beliefs about abortion. That belief in justified political violence was cultivated by the extreme anti-abortion movement that Scott Roeder is known to have extensive contact with before Dr. Tiller's death.
As the anti-health reform protestors flirt with the same exultation of violence, that same excuses and purported justifications of violence, that echo in the extreme anti-abortion movement in this country, it is worth remembering that the possibility of American politics turning to violence and terrorism-at the fringe-is not all theoretical.
Joining us now is Dr. Warren Hern. He is director of the Boulder Abortion Clinic in Colorado. He is one of the few remaining doctors in this country who perform late abortions and he has lived for decades now under the threat of assassination.
Dr. Hern, thanks very much for joining us tonight.
DR. WARREN HERN, BOULDER ABORTION CLINIC: Thank you for inviting me, Rachel.
MADDOW: Doctors who perform abortions have faced the real threat of violence and assassination for many years now. Do you see any parallels between the sort of rhetoric and threat that we're seeing now against health care reform and the character of the threats that you have faced for years now?
HERN: Yes, I do. I think that this is very frightening development. I'm alarmed by the kind of treatment that these mobs are giving to members of Congress and the encouragement they're getting from important political leaders like Sarah Palin and others.
The-we began seeing aggressive rhetoric and very violent rhetoric coming from the anti-abortion people even in the '60s and the early '70s that had to do with even things like birth control and family planning. I received some of these threats in 1970-1971 when I was working with the family planning program in Washington, D.C. The-in 1973, when I helped start the first nonprofit abortion clinic in Colorado, I started getting obscene death threats in the middle of the night.
The anti-abortion violence began in the '70s and picked up a lot of steam. There was a time when people could debate this subject, which is obviously very controversial, and people have different opinions, and the debates were usually rather civil. But the anti-abortion people began to be more aggressive, more harsh in their rhetoric, and more aggressive in their tactics, and began using violence against property, against doctors' offices and clinics. And it was obviously a trend in the wrong direction.
And in the '80s, we saw the increasing threats on people, among women who were seeking services and upon doctors. All of my colleagues who provide abortion services have received countless death threats over the decades.
And the assassination of Dr. Gunn in 1993, the attempted assassination of Dr. Tiller in 1993, and the other doctors, illustrate that the antiabortion movement is the shock troops for the radical right, on the radical political right, of radical religious right in this country, and I think that we can look at what the anti-abortion movement has done and turned to and see that this is the trend that we are in.
They have-the anti-abortion movement decided, more than 15 years ago, to use political assassination as a tactic, as a method of not only political expression but a way of organizing their followers and getting support and that's what they've been doing. They've been assassinating doctors. And the question I have pointed out when they get through assassinating abortion doctors: who's next?
MADDOW: Dr. Hern, in both the anti-health reform movement that we see now and in the extreme anti-abortion movement or in the anti-abortion movement even more broadly, of course, the large majority of protestors and even people who feel strongly about the issue are peaceful. But there is a very important part of the anti-abortion movement that is not peaceful and I wonder if you see violent rhetoric especially the use of Nazi imagery-the allegation that people are Nazis or like Hitler-is that an important bridge from protest into actual danger, into actual violence?
HERN: Well, it even starts before that. The use of the term "abortionist" for example to stigmatize doctors, the use of the term "pro-life" by people who are killing doctors, the-all the other rhetoric associated with the anti-abortion movement is prelude to the violent actions people feel justified in taking and feel empowered by this rhetoric.
And the-it's very clear that there's been a progression of violence increasingly toward individuals. And this is one of the frightening trends. And so, we have to be very concerned because the violent and the aggressive rhetoric and action or statements lead to more violent action and to assassination.
The anti-abortion movement and the rest of the radical political and religious right is fundamentally opposed to the basic premises of American society. They don't accept the rule of law. They don't want debate. They don't want discussion. They don't want reason. They don't want moderate discussion.
They want totalitarian, theocratic society and they are willing to use violence to get it. And that's one of the things we're seeing. The mob rule that's going on in some of the Congress-members of Congress town meetings is a-is a prelude to that kind of violence and disruption and it's the antithesis of the democratic process.
MADDOW: We don't have to imagine that we have-we have seen how it worked out in the anti-abortion movement.
Dr. Warren Hern, director of the Boulder Abortion Clinic, a man appearing on television with us with-in a way that takes considerable bravery given the threats to you. Thank you very much for your time tonight, sir. Good luck to you.
HERN: Thank you, Rachel.
MADDOW: Coming up: A Republican U.S. senator who got a shout out from the president just yesterday about how reasonable he's being in the whole health care debate, this morning told his own constituents that they ought to be afraid, that health care reform really is a secret plot to kill old people. This is why the word "bipartisan" is now spelled M-Y-T-H.
Stay with us.
Just Below My Skin, I'm Screaming
by Shaker The White Lady
"They look like me, but none of them are me…."—Sonny, I, Robot
Problematic as the movie 'I, Robot' was, what Sonny says here resonates with me. For me, at least, it is true: I may look like you, but I am nothing like you. I have a mental disability, and as the categorization it has been given suggests, it can be very difficult to tell whether I am anything other than able-bodied.
I will never forget the time when the bus driver refused to move his packed-full-at-rush-hour bus until someone stood up and gave me his seat, but by the same token, I will always remember the day that two of my classmates attempted to burst my eardrums. For every person who has helped me across the road or asked if I needed help getting off the bus, there has been someone who has deliberately tripped me up, or thrown stones at me. Each and every one of those experiences has affected me, one way or another. If that was all I had to deal with, then I would be happy indeed, but, as we all know by now, life is rarely so simple.
How do I explain to someone that while I am partially sighted, I also have near-perfect vision? How do I explain that while I don't have a learning disability, my disability does affect the way I learn? You can lead a horse to water, but you cannot make it drink. I can tell (and have told) people until I'm blue in the face that I have certain non-negotiable limitations, but I can't force them to respect those limitations.
I know that a lot of people would call me very lucky. Sometimes they mean that I have privileges that are not enjoyed by people with physical/visible disabilities. Sometimes they are trying to guilt trip me by comparing me with other people who are 'worse off' disability-wise. It should be obvious which group of people I find more offensive, but both versions of the 'you are lucky' trope have problems for me.
When I'm waiting in line at the supermarket checkout, and I'm trying to juggle a shopping bag and my everyday bag and my purse, and I'm trying to do everything quickly because the next person in line is getting impatient and moving forward and getting their purchases put through the checkout, and I keep dropping things and I can't get a grip on the zip of my bag and I need to move and hold everything and make sure I don't walk into anyone all at the same time, I don't feel lucky.
When I'm talking to a member of staff at a facility which exists specifically to help disabled students and someone interrupts our conversation and de-rails my train of thought and I forget the question that I wanted to ask, when I know that I can't be the only disabled student who needs a quiet, uninterrupted environment to function properly, when I know that having a conversation without being interrupted is something other people enjoy without even thinking about it, yet I lack the presence of mind to call her out on her arrogance, I don't feel lucky.
When I'm sitting trying to do my work but my head is about to split open because I haven't eaten for six hours and I haven't slept properly for a week and all people would (or could) do if I told them about my headache is offer me painkillers and I can't concentrate and I'm nearly collapsing from the pain in my head but I need to keep going because if I don't finish my work my teacher will make me feel like a worm, I don't feel lucky.
When I'm told by my own mother that she is embarrassed to be seen with me because I'm crying because the noise level is so high I feel like I've been hit a train, I don't feel lucky.
Going to the supermarket; trying to do my work for university; trying to have a conversation, for crying out loud. These things should not be difficult, and yet they are, sometimes amazingly so. I'm not asking for a complete reform of the social system by any means. All I'm asking for is a little compassion, a little understanding that maybe all is not well.
Just because something can't be seen doesn't mean it isn't there. Too often people forget that.
Dark Magic
[Trigger warning.]
Unfortunately, not all practitioners of the magical arts are as dedicated to using their powers for good as is our resident magician, Kenny Blogginz.
Shaker QW sent me this link to a product for sale at the Penguin Magic site, with the explanation that it purports to "teach insecure manboy magicians to use magic tricks to trick women into sleeping with them." Which is no exaggeration.
So what do you get when you mix hypnosis, magic sociology and psychology in the context of interactions?...This!The listing assures potential buyers that "Spidey's method and interactive techniques have helped men all over the world improve the quality of their interactions with women, for years," and the testimonials sure seem to back that up.
…In the First disc, Spidey (Sociology major and social magician) is joined by Human relations expert, Yasmine B, to go over the entire social interactive part of The Art of Attraction. … You will learn everything you need to know from starting a conversation, to creating rapport, to increasing connection and everything else needed for successful interaction with women.
…[On disk two], you will learn 10 magic/mentalism tricks specially designed for specific moments in the interaction that well help you accelerate the attraction process. These tricks use language patterns and emotionally compelling presentation designed to appeal to women on a very subconscious level.
"The tricks in this DVD are absolutely AMAZING, but just like the girls; Spidey will teach you how to pick them up really fast!"Well. Who can argue with that?
- Pierre-Luc Bergeron, professional magician
I don't imagine I need to explain in detail why I find this problematic. Suffice it to say, I don't believe this shit works; I do, however, believe there are lots of men who believe it does, or hope it does, and find nothing disturbing about the possibility of "tricking" women into sleeping with them, or, worse yet, hypnotizing them—literally circumventing their conscious ability to consent and then "sleeping with them," what we around these parts call raping them.
So whether this shit works or not is quite beside the point. It fuels a very dark part of the rape culture that says making women vulnerable in order to take advantage of them is a legitimate seduction technique—and if hypnotizing a gal to "fuck" her is okay, then slipping her a drug in her drink should be okay, too, right? Right?
Photo of the Day

[The Brandtses] had set the timer on their camera while posing at [Lake Minnewanka in Banff National Park in Canada].
Just as they were about to be captured on camera the cheeky squirrel popped up in the foreground and stole the show.
...Mrs. Brandts said: "We had our camera set up on some rocks and were getting ready to take the picture when this curious little ground squirrel appeared, became intrigued with the sound of the focusing camera and popped right into our shot."
The picture was submitted to the website of America's National Geographic magazine.
"It was a once in a lifetime moment - we were laughing about this little guy for days!" said Mrs Brandts. (link)
Women: Still Less Important Than Chickens
Shaker Neintales emailed me about the newest pro-vegetarian campaign from the Animal Rights Group That Shall Not Be Named, in which the old conservationist "Save the Whales" slogan has been reappropriated for a little fat-hatred.

If you can't view the image, it's a picture of a fat woman's bikini-clad torso from behind, next to the verbiage: "Save the Whales. Lose the blubber: Go vegetarian." With the ARGTSNBN's logo. This billboard is reportedly being run in Jacksonville, Florida, and it seems to be legit, based on a post at the ARGTSNBN's blog, to which I won't link, but it ain't hard to find, or you can view a screenshot here.
Apart from anything else, the ad is just factually wrong. There are lots of people who will lose weight by switching to a vegetarian diet, but there are also lots of people who won't—including the many people who are already vegetarians and are also fat.
Meanwhile, a bunch of different people have sent me the link to this Onion piece, and about half the senders think the Onion is making fun of the feminist protestors, and the other half thinks the Onion is on their side and making fun of the ARGTSNBN. I tend to agree with the latter, especially within the context of the "comment" from the ARGTSNBN's spokesperson, but YMMV.
[Trigger warning for actual ARGTSNBN footage.]
Cash Won Out
Focus on the Family is dumping its Love Won Out program for curing teh gay, citing a budgetary shortfall. Focus on the Family will turn over operations to Exodus International this fall and refocus the ministry on their more profitable gay-hating programs.
Quote of the Day
"As she circles the globe in coming years, making the case for women's empowerment, starting with their basic right to be taken seriously, [Secretary of State Hillary Clinton] really has her work cut out for her. And it isn't just because the situation of women around the world is so dire, and the ocean of problems confronting them—maternal mortality, sex trafficking, domestic abuse, malnourishment, lack of education, lack of adequate medical care, just for starters—is so wide and so deep. And it isn't just that her historic mandate—to equally empower the other half of the world's population, to chip away at the forces 'devaluing women,' in the words of Melanne Verveer, the State Department's new ambassador at large for global women's issues—is so huge and vague and seemingly overwhelming. It's also because the tide of trivialization that washes over all things 'Hillary' is just so powerful. That tide threatens to drown out anything of substance Clinton might attempt for a population whose problems have long been obscured in the androcentric world of diplomacy. And that's a huge pity."—Judith Warner, in the New York Times. It's a brilliant piece, and I encourage you to read the whole thing. [Trigger warning for descriptions of sexual assault.]
Vloggin' with Blogginz, Episode 1
So, last night, while Iain (who generously donates his time to tech-inept friends and family as hardware guru) was trying to download the drivers for Kenny Blogginz's wireless internet stick for use on his new netbook, KBlogz and I decided to do a video blog—or, in the modern parlance, a vlog.
I edited together the footage this morning, and the result looks remarkably like every Wednesday night at Shakes Manor: Three nerds hanging out and being totes dumbasses. I suppose it goes without saying this was neither scripted nor rehearsed. Enjoy.
[Full transcript below.]
Title Card: Vloggin' with Blogginz
Liss [behind camera]: Kenny Blogginz Vlog, take one.
KBlogz: Hi, everyone. I'm internet personality Kenny Blogginz. And I'm here to talk to you about a subject that's very near and dear to my heart—and that's wolves.
[Liss starts to laugh; edit]
Liss: Okay, it's rolling.
KBlogz: Would you rather just take videos of me farting?
[Liss laughs; edit]
Liss: Kenny Blogginz Vlog, take two.
KBlogz: Hi, everybody. This is Kenny Blogginz, and I'm here to talk to you about a serious issue—and that's wolves. Now, there's many different types of wolves in the world: There are anthro-furry wolves, um, muscle wolves, there are gray wolf spirits, and red, white, and blue wolves in the forests.
Liss: They sound patriotic.
KBlogz: Thank you. Um, the main point is that you are enthusiastic about the general spirit of wolves, and their—I mean, they can exist both in pack and as lone wolves howling at the moon! So…
Liss: I notice there are some wolves howling at the moon on your shirt.
KBlogz: Oh, well, that's very kind of you to notice. Um, this is actually the classic three wolf moon shirt available at Wal-Mart, and, um, you know, it's just a trio of wolves, howlin' at the moon! [shrugs]
Liss: It's beautiful.
KBlogz: Thank you.
Liss: It's very inspiring.
KBlogz: I'm glad you're inspired by it.
[ KBlogz gives Liss meaningful look; edit]
KBlogz: Fire in the hole.
[cheeky look; edit]
Liss: Hey, Iain—do you have anything that you'd like to say about wolves?
Iain [off-camera; refusing to be filmed]: Only that I was raised by wolves, very similar to how the founders of Rome were raised by wolves—
Liss: Are you referring to Romulus and Remus?
KBlogz: Romulus and Remus!
Iain: I am, and I feel that at some point I, too, will rule an empire.
[KBlogz nods sagely.]
Liss: Interesting.
KBlogz: That's awesome.
Liss: Well, you're the wolf expert. Do you think that Iain will rule an empire at some point?
KBlogz: Yes.
[laughter; edit]
Liss: Would you like to expound on that?
KBlogz: No.
[edit]
KBlogz: What the fudge?
Liss: [laughs] Is that what you say around your grandma?
KBlogz: Uh-huh. She's devout.
[edit; KBlogz is trying out a sexy new position of repose]
Liss: [laughing] You're lookin' kinda sassy.
KBlogz: Thank you.
[edit]
Liss: So what is your new series going to be now that you can't do Teenz Korner anymore, since you're an old man of twenty?
KBlogz: Well, as I said in some comments thread, it's gonna be about a year of just limbo, just writing weird, scary things, and then we're gonna graduate into 21, and then it's gonna morph and it's gonna sort of evolve into Alcoholicz Korner—
Liss: Alcoholiczzz. With a z.
KBlogz: Right, right. And I'm just gonna get liver poisoning. Alcohol poisoning.
Liss: That would be sad. We'd have to have an intervention for you. And you'd be all, "My name is Kenny. K-E-N-N-Y. Blogginz. B-L-O-G-G—
KBlogz: B-L-A-U-G-E-N-Z.
Liss: [laughs] You're gonna change the spelling so that people can't look you up in the phone book?
KBlogz: Yeah.
Liss: They can't find you under the Blogginz residence.
KBlogz: Mm-hmm. Right.
Liss: In Blogginz, Indiana.
KBlogz: [laughs] Grandma Blogginz doesn't approve.
Liss: I'm just joking. He lives in Blartville.
[edit; KBlogz is intently staring at his wireless internet stick; Iain is looking up drivers]
KBlogz: Maybe. Are you getting choices over there?
Iain: Yeah.
KBlogz: Well, what the heck are they?
Iain: There's lots.
KBlogz: Choose one of 'em. [turns stick over in hands like it's the biggest mystery evah] I don't know. Shit. Is there one that starts with, like, a U?
[edit]
Iain: Let me see this thing.
KBlogz: [laughs; hands Iain the stick] Okay.
Liss: [laughs] You're like a tech whiz.
KBlogz: Thank you.
Liss: You're like, you're supposed to be, you know—the young demographic is really technologically hip and that—
KBlogz: Mm-hmm.
Liss: But you don't know shit about shit. You're even worse than me.
KBlogz: [laughs] Well, haven't you ever seen Harry Potter? I mean, they're all wizards, so they don't really need technology.
Liss: That's a good point.
KBlogz: It's like a hobby for me.
[edit]
Iain: You got the box or anything that this came in with you?
KBlogz: I didn't bring it with. [looks at camera and grins, then shakes head at himself]
Iain: 'Cuz I'm not sure which version we need to download. Your CD probably has all of them on it, but—
Liss: Sounds like your IT department is pretty unhappy.
KBlogz: I know. [rolls eyes]
Liss: [laughs] Iain, you're fired!
KBlogz: I know, totally.
[edit; background: Liss totes figured it out]
Liss: I found every piece of information necessary [holds stick in front of camera] right on here.
[KBlogz responds by magically appearing silver coin out of nowhere, prompting Liss to burst out laughing and KBlogz follows; edit]
KBlogz: I told you I don't need technology.
Liss: You were right. [passes stick in front of camera; whispers] Magic.
KBlogz: [whispers] Magic.
[edit]
Liss: Fire in the hole.
KBlogz: Fire in the hole.
[edit]
Liss: I think actually maybe I should have just recorded you farting. [KBlogz laughs] Or blarting! [KBlogz fake laughs] I think your next vlog should be on "Blarts and Sciences."
KBlogz: [laughs] God, I wish—if only they offered that degree at my community college…
Liss: You'd have a PhD in Blarts and Sciences in no time?
KBlogz: Totally. Instantly.
Liss: With a minor in Wolvery.
KBlogz: Wolvery! [laughs]
[edit]
KBlogz: So, like, remember that part where I did magic on camera?
Liss: How could I forget?
KBlogz: Um, can you just go ahead and add "The Final Countdown" in there for the soundtrack?
Liss: [laughs] You want "The Final Countdown," like, as the soundtrack to this video?
KBlogz: [nods] That's magic music.
Liss: Okay.
[KBlogz hums "The Final Countdown"]
Liss: That's beautiful.
KBlogz: Thank you.
[edit]
Liss: Would you like some Michael Bay special effects added to this video? This vlog?
KBlogz: Absolutely. Mm-hmm.
Liss: Some sparks and explosions?
KBlogz: Some very inappropriate robots.
Liss: Some very—
KBlogz: Or VIRs.
Liss: Um, why does he like sparks so much? Do you have a theory?
KBlogz: I don't know.
Liss: Are sparks patriotic?
KBlogz: I don't know. I don't think the founding fathers even knew about sparks.
Title Card: The End!!!
USA: Beacon of Stupid - It's All Happening at the Zoo

Let's start with the very beginning of this article:
Republican mayoral candidate Anna Falling said Tuesday that putting a Christian creationism display in the Tulsa Zoo is No. 1 in importance among city issues that also include violent crime, budget woes and bumpy streets.While God might be able to lend a helping hand with Tulsa's crime and budget problems, I think it's a bit of a stretch to ask for assistance on the bumpy streets. That's going too far. Still, I'm glad to see that some of Tulsa's citizens think that everything else can wait until creationism makes its mark at the Tulsa Zoo. That's what I call priority.
"It's first," she said to calls of "hallelujah" at a rally outside the zoo. "If we can't come to the foundation of faith in this community, those other answers will never come. We need to first of all recognize the fact that God needs to be honored in this city."
But it's not just about the zoo. It's about filling the ranks with good Christian foot soldiers:
Falling, who has founded several Christian nonprofit groups and is a former city councilor, also said the next mayor needs to appoint people to boards, authorities and commissions who will "honor God." [...]I would like to think that the majority of Tulsans will not fall for the blatantly played Christ Card. But then again, I doubt Falling would've gone with this strategy had she not thought she could rope everyone into a Tulsan theocracy with one fell swoop.
When asked whether she meant that she would recruit Christians to serve the city, Falling said she was talking about "people committed to their churches." When asked whether she meant Christian churches, she said, "churches, yes."





