
Hosted by a VHS tape.

RNC Chair Michael Steele is still a complete dodo.
[The Afghanistan War] was a war of Obama's choosing. This is not something the United States had actively prosecuted or wanted to engage in. ... It was the president who was trying to be cute by half by flipping a script demonizing Iraq, while saying the battle really should be in Afghanistan. Well, if he's such a student of history, has he not understood that you know that's the one thing you don't do, is engage in a land war in Afghanistan? All right, because everyone who has tried, over a thousand years of history, has failed. And there are reasons for that. There are other ways to engage in Afghanistan.For the record, the war in Afghanistan started in 2001, when Barack Obama was a state senator in Illinois.

Ret. Army Capt. Flagg Youngblood (namesake of this guy?) was invited by Republicans on the Senate Judiciary Committee to testify at the confirmation hearing of Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan yesterday. He had a bitter tale to tell.
A tale of discrimination, of being treated as less than, of being deemed "not worthy to do so much as to gather up the crumbs under Harvard’s table", of being permitted to participate in the bounty that is this nation, or at least Harvard, only if he stayed in the kitchen, in his place by the back door — "by the garbage."
Who imposed this despicable treatment on Capt. Youngblood? Well, ok, not on him exactly. But though Youngblood was not himself the victim of the shameful treatment he described, as military outreach director for Young America's Foundation, he feels the pain of those who were: members of the U.S. military — in a time of war!
Who is the villain who wielded her power in this iron-fisted way to diminish, humiliate and lessen the opportunities of her fellow citizens? Elena Kagan, that's who. While Dean at Harvard Law School, Kagan denied military recruiters access to the school's career services office, for a time, in keeping with established University policy, while nevertheless permitting them complete freedom to recruit among the School's students.
The policy did not actually single out the military for discriminatory treatment. It prohibits only helping in their recruiting efforts any employer which discriminates on the basis of race, gender, sexual orientation, or other factors. The military is such an employer by virtue of the Don't Ask, Don't Tell law.
So — technically — Kagan was acting in support of non-discrimination. But that's no excuse, as far as Youngblood is concerned. Illustrating the hardship military recruiters had been put to in not having the use of the career services office as they freely went about their recruitment efforts on campus, Youngblood invoked the plight of African-Americans in the days of legal segregation.
"Imagine Dean Kagan on a lunch counter," he said. Oh, damn. Wait . . imagine what? Well, never mind that. The essential point, as Youngblood pointed out, is this:Separate but equal is, quite simply, not equal.
And when you deprive military recruiters of the fundamental human right to use the Harvard Law School's career services office, for no better reason than the fact that you "abhor the military's discriminatory recruitment policy" believing it to be "a profound wrong — a moral injustice of the first order", you violate that basic, well-established principle.
Why is that so hard for someone like Elena Kagan to understand?
Perhaps because some who don't respect members of the military as full members of society are willing to overlook her discriminatory ways. People like Capt. Kurt White, head of the Harvard Law Armed Forces Association, who was a veteran and a student at Harvard while Kagan was Dean. White testified Kagan had been supportive of student vets at the school, and in doing so had "made a big difference in the lives of the small group of us veterans."
White's appreciation of the importance of equality for all may be suspect in some quarters, however, as he was testifying at the invitation of Democratic members of the committee. Another such invitee was Lilly Ledbetter.
Said Ms. Ledbetter of her own struggle for equal treatment, "I learned who is on the Supreme Court makes all the difference."
...that bashing Indians is now not only acceptable but THE BEST! humor for mainstream publication (or broadcast).
Seriously, Time? This is pathetic. Everyone knows (or should know) by now that Joel Stein is a useless jerk whose useless jerkitude is evident in every syllable of the hackneyed humor that doesn't even begin to convincingly obscure his childish biases.
You know, I just love how the media is positively insistent on airing "both sides" of every issue when the issue is marginalized people asserting their rights or demanding their rightful equality.
But some dipshit with Z-list name recognition wants to write a "satirical" column that's nothing but a string of stereotypes and a lament about how [insert a group of marginalized people here] are ruining [the country, a cultural institution, some dying tradition that privileged white dudes hold dear, and/or the town in which some useless jerk grew up], and suddenly there's not a voice from "the other side" to be heard for a thousand miles.
In the interest of fairness and balance, I suggest Time contract Irrfan Khan to write a piece about why Joel Stein is a jerk.
[H/T to Shaker RedSonja.]

"Should BP Nuke Its Leaking Well?" Oh, why the hell not? How much worse could that make everything?
This blogaround brought to you by Shaxco, producers of the new Benjamin H. Grumbles hit single, "Unhand My Monocle, Man!"
Recommended Reading:
Marcella: Carnival Against Sexual Violence 96 [TW]
Andy: Ireland Passes Civil Partnership Bill
Resistance: Good News! The R-Word Has Lost Its Edge.
Echidne: Where the Republicans Are
Arturo: M. Night vs. The Internet: The Airbender Mash-Up
Angry Asian Man: Coming to a Theater Near You: Asians!
Bree: 80's Hair Band Rockers Pay Tribute to "Fat Chicks"
Leave your links in comments...
"I don't really understand it, but I like what they stand for. They just support everything I'm looking for—lower taxes, less government. All the good things, you know."—Terry Rushing, 63, of Greensburg, Louisiana, on why he considers himself a supporter of the Tea Party movement.
American Civil Liberties Union affiliates in at least 30 U.S. states are issuing 'travel alerts' for the 4th of July weekend, informing those who will be on the road in the Southwest of their legal rights if they are stopped in the state of Arizona.
A recently enacted law in that state, SB 1070, requires law enforcement agents to demand proof of being in the U.S. legally from anyone who they suspect may not be. What might cause an officer of the law to suspect that you are the sort of person they should demand papers of?
Well, we're all comfortable leaving that up to each officer's personal judgment, aren't we? But it is totes not going to be based on racial profiling. We've had Arizona governor Jan Brewer's word for that. Said Brewer:
It wouldn't matter if you are Latino or Hispanic or Norwegian. If you didn't have proof of citizenship and the police officer had reasonable suspicion, he would ask and verify your citizenship. I mean, that's the way that it is.Got that, Norwegians? You are not off the hook.
[Trigger warning for sexual assault.]
Yes, this is a brilliant tool and we should definitely use it to determine if someone is a rapist or not (that was sarcasm):
An acupuncturist who claims she can detect a man's virginity based on a small dot on the ear has become a minor celebrity in Vietnam, where she is credited with helping to free three convicted rapists from prison.Oh, well, as long as she's convinced, then that's all that matters.
Traditional medicine practitioner Pham Thi Hong started lobbying for the men's release, pleading their case all the way to the president, because she believes all three men are virgins and therefore could not be guilty of rape.
"They all had small red spots on the back of their ears," said Hong, 54. "The spots should have disappeared if they had had sex. My many years of experience told me that these men did not have sex before."
...She says she was first taught how to determine if a man has ever had sex by feeling their pulse. She later developed the ear-spot method on her own. She says the spot will only disappear after heterosexual intercourse and is not affected by gay sex or masturbation.
..."I have never heard of this method before," said Nguyen Van Hao, 60, an acupuncturist who has practiced for 14 years. "From the medical point of view, it's impossible to determine whether a man has had sex or not by feeling the pulse or examining the red spot on their ears."
Hong, however, said she's convinced her method works after years of testing it on her students.
Given the below post, I thought I'd recycle this one from 2008, along with my then-answer (which remains my now-answer)...
What actor makes you refuse to see a film?
I can think of a lot of celebrities cum pseudo-actors (a la Paris Hilton) whose personas, despite my best attempts to always try to separate the artist from hir work, I find so obnoxious I wouldn't want to see any film in which they'd been cast, but they tend to make the type of shit I wouldn't want to see, anyway.
Of serious actors, I can't really think of anyone so objectionable I'd flatly refuse to watch any film that included them in the cast, although it would have to be an incredibly compelling project for me to spend money or time on anything featuring Mel Gibson.
[Trigger warning for sexual violence and racism.]
Given that he's a conservative Catholic, I'm sure there are a lot of things on which Mel Gibson and I would disagree.
Among them is our disagreement that the best way to follow-up his 2006 scandal—in which he got pulled over for a DUI, went on an anti-Semitic rant, and yelled at a female sergeant, "What do you think you're looking at, sugar tits?"—was by imploding his marriage by having a baby with a woman other than his wife, and then reportedly physically abusing the mother of his new baby daughter and screaming at her delightful things like: "You look like a fucking pig in heat, and if you get raped by a pack of n****rs, it will be your fault."

[Trigger warning for violent imagery.]
A couple days ago FOX, that ever objective and factual news station, ran a story called:
"School Officials in Mass. Town Won't Let Students Recite Pledge of Allegiance"Guess what happened. I'll give you three but I'm sure you only need one:
Arlington police are investigating threatening messages sent to School Committee members yesterday in response to a controversy surrounding reciting the Pledge of Allegiance in school.Ah, yes. There's some patriotism for you. Or not.
Police Captain Robert Bongiorno would not specify which committee members received the messages, but he said some were anti-Semitic.
“The messages are offensive and hateful and potentially criminal,’’ Bongiorno said.
Police launched the investigation as school officials blasted what they said were incorrect reports by Fox News that the School Committee had banned the pledge in Arlington schools.
“It is unfortunate that the national media has chosen to distort this very serious debate in a manner which so badly misinforms the public,’’ committee chairman Joseph Curro said in a press release yesterday. “Recent reports have done little to present the facts . . . and have been seized upon by many people throughout the country to target our dedicated school leaders with unwarranted hate mail and threats.’’
As the Globe reported yesterday, controversy about reciting the pledge in Arlington schools began last week when Arlington High School senior Sean Harrington requested that the pledge be led each day at school. The Pledge of Allegiance has not been said at the high school for years, and the School Committee voted 3-to-3 on a motion that would have required a daily, but voluntary, recitation of the pledge to be led over the intercom. Because of the tie vote, the motion failed.
School Committee members said they would look into enacting a pledge policy this summer, and on Tuesday, Arlington High principal Charles Skidmore told the Globe he would lead the pledge in the school’s auditorium every morning for students who wished to say it. Harrington said he still wants the pledge broadcast into each classroom.
In a telephone interview yesterday, Curro said that since incorrect reports by Fox News that Arlington had banned the pledge, committee members have been receiving messages from “all over the country.’’
Curro said a couple of the messages sent to committee members included indirect threats and one said the members should go to North Korea, where their throats would be slit.
At a school committee meeting last week, Harrington delivered what a story in the Arlington Patch described as "an impassioned speech ... reminding the members that 'freedom is not free.'" The committee ultimately deadlocked, however, on a proposal for a voluntary recitation of the Pledge to be led each day over the intercom, with some members expressing concerns about infringing on the rights of students and teachers who did not wish to participate.Nice. I'm sure Mr. Harrington was duly upset about such actions from his supporters, right?
"The exchange that followed the vote became quite heated," the Patch reports, "with Harrington's supporters vocalizing their disapproval and shouting expletives at the Committee."
"They told us to go back to our own countries," Chairman Curro told the Globe.
"I was really heartbroken," Harrington said of the deadlocked vote. "It's hard to think that something so traditional in American society was turned down. ... It tells me that we've basically cast aside what our country is founded on."Well then. The tie vote on forcing people to listen to the pledge every day tells me that some people on the committee are reasonable. Harrington's statement, however, tells me that I'm right to be a bit concerned about his school's history program, though the drama program seems to have at least one star here.
Constance McMillen didn't want to become an activist. She just wanted to take her girlfriend to the prom.
We all know how that turned out. But something kind of cool happened along the way: In the months since McMillen was nudged into the spotlight, she has become a nationally recognized activist for LGBT causes. And the activism is something she's not only embraced, but has no plans on giving up:
I know I will continue to be an activist because through all of this, I have met a lot of people. I have heard a lot of horror stories so it's really made me realize how important it is to be an activist. Because, you hear some of these stories and you are like, 'how can you not be an activist?' You know, because some of them are really heartbreaking.
So this year the contestants are paired up (by hat draw) with "All Stars" from previous seasons. Alex drew Twitch and the show really played up and irritated the shit out of me with "Haw haw, two dudes together! The dude ballet dancer with the hip hop dancer! Haw!" (I'm especially looking at you, Nigel, you creepy lecherous jackass).
It was anything but "haw haw". It was FANTASTIC:
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