Banned Books Week 2010

Saturday marked the start of Banned Books Week this year, as celebrated by the American Library Association. About Banned Books Week:

Banned Books Week (BBW) is an annual event celebrating the freedom to read and the importance of the First Amendment. Held during the last week of September, Banned Books Week highlights the benefits of free and open access to information while drawing attention to the harms of censorship by spotlighting actual or attempted bannings of books across the United States.

Intellectual freedom—the freedom to access information and express ideas, even if the information and ideas might be considered unorthodox or unpopular—provides the foundation for Banned Books Week. BBW stresses the importance of ensuring the availability of unorthodox or unpopular viewpoints for all who wish to read and access them.
Most recently, on September 8th, a Stockton Missouri school board voted 7 - 0 to uphold the ban on Sherman Alexie's The Absolutely True Diary of a Part Time Indian:
Alexie’s novel about a teenage boy growing up on an Indian reservation who decides to attend an all-white high school was already banned from a Crook County High School classroom in Prineville, Ore., in 2008 after one parent complained that the protagonist’s discussion of masturbation was “offensive.” The book was challenged again in Illinois in 2009 by a group of Antioch High School parents who objected to its vulgar and racist language, but was ultimately retained on the school’s summer reading list.
For the year 2009, the Top 10 Challenged Books were:

1. ttyl; ttfn; l8r, g8r (series), by Lauren Myracle
Reasons: drugs, nudity, offensive language, sexually explicit, unsuited to age group

2. And Tango Makes Three, by Peter Parnell and Justin Richardson
Reasons: homosexuality

3. The Perks of Being A Wallflower, by Stephen Chbosky
Reasons: anti-family, drugs, homosexuality, offensive language, religious viewpoint, sexually explicit, suicide, unsuited to age group

4. To Kill A Mockingbird, by Harper Lee
Reasons: offensive language, racism, unsuited to age group

5. Twilight (series) by Stephenie Meyer
Reasons: religious viewpoint, sexually explicit, unsuited to age group

6. Catcher in the Rye, by J.D. Salinger
Reasons: offensive language, sexually explicit, unsuited to age group

7. My Sister’s Keeper, by Jodi Picoult
Reasons: homosexuality, offensive language, religious viewpoint, sexism, sexually explicit, unsuited to age group, violence

8. The Earth, My Butt, and Other Big, Round Things, by Carolyn Mackler
Reasons: offensive language, sexually explicit, unsuited to age group

9. The Color Purple, by Alice Walker
Reasons: offensive language, sexually explicit, unsuited to age group

10. The Chocolate War, by Robert Cormier
Reasons: nudity, offensive language, sexually explicit, unsuited to age group

Here is a list of the Top 100 Banned/Challenged Books for 2000 - 2009. Google Books is also celebrating Banned Books Week.


Related: Banned Books Week 2006, "No, God hates morons!"*, Harry Potter and the Half-Brained Dumbass, But What About My Needs?, A Novel Approach, and march of the dumbasses.

Open Wide...

This Just In: The Wage Gap Is Good for Marriages (Sure It Is)

By Shaker ExMo, who describes herself on Facebook as, "Full time sociologist, part time yoga tyro, all around awesome."

Look here, angry feminists. That wage gap you keep complaining about? The one that means that if you have a vagina (or look like you might have one), you will earn 75% of what someone with a penis (or who looks like they might have one) does? Even if you have comparable education and experience? Yeah, as it turns out, sociologists* have found that the gap is actually good for your relationship. At least according to the New York Times.

Men who were completely dependent on their female partner's income — the vaunted Stay at Home Dad, for example, and his less appreciated cohort, Laid-Off Dad — were five times more likely to cheat than men who contributed an equal amount of money to the relationship. And, in a cruel twist for women, men who earn significantly more than their female partners are also more likely to cheat. The safety zone, apparently, is when women make 75 percent of what men earn, which sounds suspiciously like the national average of women's salaries relative to men's.
It does seem suspicious, doesn't it. There are a few reasons why this "suspicious" finding may have come about. First of all, the data used in this study is a nationally-representative study called the National Longitudinal Study of Youth, which is based on yearly interviews with young people who were between 12 and 16 in 1997, when the study began. Mansch's analysis focuses on respondents between the ages of 18 and 28 who were in long-term (more than a year long) committed (married or cohabitating) heterosexual relationships. Theoretically, then, a male respondent could be 19 and be in his first long-term co-habiting relationship and could also be in a situation where he was making less money than his female partner. The flaw in this is that the Mansch seems to argue that a 19-year-old and a 27-year-old have similar maturity patterns, and tend to have the same types (re: trust, intimacy, goals, commitment) of relationships, which I'm sure we can agree is not necessarily the case.

My first "serious" boyfriend, whom I lived with from age 18-20, cheated on me and while he was from a more affluent background than I, I always worked and he never did. Now, at the age of 29, I am in a 10-year relationship with a man who has been "unemployed"** for at least half of that time. He is not cheating on me. Do my personal experiences negate this finding? No. Methodology Lesson #1: Exceptions Do Not Prove the Rule. However, equating 18 year old and 28 year olds is problematic.

The second reason for this "suspicious" finding is our dear old friend Correlation Does Not Equal Causation (Coming next week in Methodology Lesson #2). Yes, it is interesting that men who earn less than their female partners are more likely to be unfaithful. It is also interesting that murder rates and ice cream sales both see higher rates in the summer months. And that people who wear larger shoes score higher on math competency tests. And that when more fire trucks respond to a fire call, there is more damage to the structure.

That does not mean that there is something about ice cream that makes people murderous, just as that does not mean that there is something about the size of one's feet that makes one good at math, or that fire trucks cause damage to burning homes. What it means is that there may be something about financial inequity in relationships, particularly inequity that results from the female partner out-earning the male partner, that increases the likelihood of infidelity. But we don't know that from this study. To her credit, Cristin Munsch, the original author of the study, points this out:
But even Ms. Munsch cautions couples not to take the data too much to heart. Tempering the findings is the overall low percentage of people who admitted to cheating — 3.8 percent of male partners and 1.4 percent of female partners annually, roughly in line with the national average, which runs from 3 to 4 percent of married spouses in a given year.
Additionally, when what she calls "institutional and individual mechanisms" are controlled for, the relationship all but disappears. In simple terms, when the statistical relationship becomes more complex, the single variable of income inequality loses its significance. Taking into account things like relationship satisfaction, age, and level of education erases the effect of income inequality alone.

Of course, The New York Times does mention that, briefly. However, their screaming headline "By Her Support, Does She Earn His Infidelity?" (incidentally, in the Fashion section) puts the responsibility right where it belongs. On women. And, presumably, on uppity women who insist on earning their rightful wage for the work they do. And who have the gall to chose a partner not based on his earning potential, but on how he treats her and how their partnership works.

And what is the lesson here? If you are like most women and earn less than your male counterparts, see the silver lining: At least now your husband won't cheat on you. And if you are a shrew who has no time for relationships but somehow manage to wrangle a man who, let's face it, isn't earning more money than he is because of bitches like you, if he cheats on you it is all your fault.

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

*Not all sociologists. Just one. Who hasn't published her article yet. Or probably even finished writing it. Who, if she is anything like me, presented a half-finished piece of work at a professional conference so she could get some feedback on it while she enjoyed herself in Atlanta at a fancy hotel on her department's nickel.

**Of course, we are assuming here that all "employment" must be work done for wages. Interesting how this paradigm assumes that any work done in the home is work that has no value. Where have I heard this kind of thing before? Oh right.

Open Wide...

Blog Note

Shakesville now has a Twitter account: @shakestweetz.

Or you can find the page here. There's also a Twitter feed in the righthand column, which shows my latest tweets and also includes a subscriber link.

I'll update with posts from Shakesville, but also links to other good stuff I'm reading and/or that people send me, about which I don't have time to write. There will almost certainly be some random bullshit observations, too.

I am, as anyone who knows me can attest, an irrepressible Luddite who says things like, "I like this mobile phone because it has a typewriter" (an actual quote), so forgive the inevitable awkwardness as I try to learn the lingo and culture of Twitter.

(This should be fun.)

Open Wide...

Impossibly Beautiful

[Trigger warning for fat hatred and body policing.]


This is a picture of Christina Aguilera—who is, IMO, extremely talented and pretty damn cool—which the Daily Fail used as a launching pad to write this heap of fat-hating and body-policing horseshit.

Aguilera is said to have "piled on the pounds" and "ballooned" in size. She "was in great shape," but is now "curvier than ever," as if being a woman with curves is a bad thing. They guess at the exact amount of weight she's gained, and declare her "to be the heaviest she's ever been, barring her pregnancy in 2008."

All of this, as if it fucking matters. As if it's anyone's business. And as if Aguilera, despite being maybe 10 pounds heavier than she was earlier in the year, doesn't hew more closely to the Western Beauty Standard than the vast majority of women on the planet.

Which is kind of why this article is particularly heinous: It's about a classically beautiful woman with a face and body most people will find ridiculously attractive, being picked apart in a public way for a perceived flaw, thus implicitly communicating to all the women who read this article that even Christina Aguilera isn't beautiful enough.

Now buy these expensive beauty products and diet pills and exercise equipment and vitamins and liquid diet mixes and make-up and lunchtime cosmetic surgery procedures and skin firming potions and tooth veneers and hair extensions and girdles and spray tans and eyelashes and depilatories and everything else we can make to fix you up, you ugly bitches. Because you're sure as shit not as good-looking at Christina Aguilera—and even she's garbage.

This shit is despicable.

And Christina Aguilera rules.

[Commenting Guidelines: Please note that saying, "She looks better now!" or "Real women have curves!" (nope), or some variation thereof is just the flipside of the same type of body policing being criticized. This post isn't about creating a space to do more of the same.]

Open Wide...

Today in Critiquing the Rape Culture

[Trigger warning for discussion of the rape culture.]

Shaker Greg emailed the link to Cracked's "Six Romantic Movie Gestures That Can Get You Prison Time," which, though not explicitly addressing the rape culture, nonetheless examines some common romantic comedy tropes that, in the real world, are criminal acts.

Meanwhile, Toronto Star columnist Antonia Zerbisias has written a great piece about the media's facilitation of the rape culture. I am always thrilled to be able to recommend an article that questions the rape culture, anyway, but this following so closely after Kira Cochrane's piece is awesome.

(Less awesome: That both of them were in foreign-to-the-US press, and I can't remember the last time I've read something like this in a major US paper. Hell, it's rare enough I read anything written by a feminist in a major US paper on any subject.)

Open Wide...

Loathsome

Following up on the Quote of the Day...

Ann Coulter addressed Homocon, a gay conservative organization, this past weekend on the topic of marriage equality. You may remember that she got in trouble with her right-wing friends at World Net Daily for accepting the invitation, but based on what she said, WND will probably welcome her back.

First, she ran down the stereotypical stand-up comedian's list of reasons, including that lacking the legal right to marriage allows the less-committed partner to weasel out of it. But in a more serious note, she parroted the losing arguments of the lawyers supporting California's Prop 8 and told the crowd that the reason she opposes (and they should oppose) same sex marriage is that it is strictly for procreation.

In one of a series of racially insensitive remarks that pervaded her speech, Coulter added, "Marriage is not a civil right. You're not black." It was part of a larger argument on which she later elaborated, telling the crowd that the 14th Amendment only applies to African-Americans and that it does not, in fact, apply to women, LGBT people or other minorities.

[...]

Several attendees, who requested anonymity, were also startled by her racially-tinged humor: in addition to her comments about civil rights, she also accused single parents of breeding muggers and blamed the decline in marriage in the African-American community on welfare, "the subsidization of single parenting" and overly liberal child support laws. Coulter's comments about civil rights being "only for the blacks" rubbed many people the wrong way as well, though her joke about oppression and the amount of money in the gay community compared to other minority communities ("Blacks must be looking at the gays saying, 'Why can't we be oppressed like that?'") garnered plenty of laughs from the well-heeled crowd.

GOProud's executive director, Jimmy LaSalvia, told TPM after the speech, "I don't agree with Ann Coulter about gay marriage, but there was a real conversation here. That's what we're trying to start."
I used to think that Ann Coulter was some kind of an act; that her shtick was to be the Andrew Dice Clay of right-wing punditry. Or maybe that her nastiness was shaped by pain, and she was to be pitied. But she's an adult; she's capable of being responsible for what comes out of her mouth in public, and looking for some way to excuse her behavior is pointless. Some people are just assholes, and she's one of them.

Open Wide...

Um

Obama looks to reenergize youth vote, get late Democratic surge for midterms:

President Obama will swoop into the heartland this week in a high-stakes bid to boost enthusiasm for Democrats by reigniting the coalition of young and minority voters who were critical to his success two years ago.

With polls showing independent voters swinging toward Republicans in Wisconsin and the nation's other battlegrounds, Democrats are turning elsewhere to make up ground. So on Tuesday in Madison, Obama will stage the first in a series of rallies on college campuses designed to persuade what some call his "surge" voters - the roughly 15 million Americans who voted for the first time in 2008 - to return to the polls this fall.
I'm just wondering what issues Obama thinks young progressive people are most passionate about. Because I'm pretty sure it's not bipartisanship and half-assed legislation that tries to look progressive while pandering to corporations. I'm under the impression that most young progressives are passionate about social justice and ending our two wars of choice and having healthcare and jobs.

But then again, I'm older than dinosaurs, so maybe I'm wrong and this whole idealism-crushing, warmongering, conservative-coddling, hippie-punching, totes fauxgressive shtick is what the kids are fist-pumping about these days.

(I'm not wrong.)

Meanwhile: Obama argues his assassination program is a "state secret". Sure. Great Democratic president. Very cool.

[Previously in Third Term of Bush: One, Two, Three, Four, Five, Six, Seven, Eight, Nine, Ten, Eleven, Twelve, Thirteen, Fourteen, Fifteen, and there are about a zillion more, but you get the drift.]

Open Wide...

Quote of the Day

"Marriage is not a civil right – you're not black."Ann Coulter, speaking this weekend at Homocon, a meeting of gay conservatives. Whoops! I guess your heroes still despise you, GOProud.

See also.

Open Wide...

Open Thread

Photobucket

Hosted by The Fly.

Open Wide...

Open Thread

Photobucket

For Shaker SugarLeigh, hosted by the Yo Yo.

This week's open threads have been brought to you by carnival attractions.

Open Wide...

Open Thread

Photobucket

Hosted by clown food.

Open Wide...

The Virtual Pub Is Open


[Explanations: lol your fat. pathetic anger bread. hey your gay.]

Thanks to Shaker lulubells for tonight's pub name.

TFIF, Shakers!

Belly up to the bar,
and name your poison!

Open Wide...

Daily Dose o' Cute

Can this elegant hound...



...be the same comical pooch as this?



Yup.


Where's Waldo Sophie?

More outrageous cuteness below the fold...


Matilda.


Olivia.


Sophie.


Dudley.

Open Wide...

Today's Edition of "Conniving and Sinister"



Blank

See Deeky's archive of all previous Conniving & Sinister strips here.

[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 (Liss) and a biracial queerbait (Deeky) telling it like it actually is from their perspectives. Hilarity ensues.]

Open Wide...

What do CBS and FAIL! have in common?

[Trigger warning for dehumanization.]

Shaker Andrea emails (which I am posting with her permission):

I think Shakesville would be the perfect blog to discuss the horrifying and hilarious slideshow displayed on cbsnews.com today. "Vaginas: 14 Amazing Facts You Won't Believe," subtitled "What do sharks and vaginas have in common? Find out," contains lots of pictures of mostly white women [frequently just disembodied parts, and one woman with her mouth taped shut], green buttons, pink water guns, neon capital letters, and, er, sharks.

These pictures are captioned by dubious sex ed (apparently the vagina comes with a pleasure button called the clitoris? uh, really?), and generally objectify women's bodies. CBS News. Gah, CBS News.

I saw the first frame of the slideshow (thin white woman's naked thighs, question mark in pink square covering the place where the thighs meet) in the corner of a page containing an interview with Sarah Shourd, the hiker just released from Iran. I had to look twice to make sure I wasn't reading the Onion, and then I had to click to see whether the slideshow was as awful as it looked. It is. This is a real thing in the world.
Zoinks.

Open Wide...

The Lube Thread

Or, if you prefer, the LOOOBE thread!

Some comments in the ongoing Let's Talk About Sex Threads (1) physical questions; 2) communication issues) indicate that a separate thread on lube information and preferences could be useful.

There are lots of potential issues to consider when choosing a lubricant--is silicone OK for my needs? Oil-based? (NOT for latex condom-use!) What about glycerine? This is actually a complicated topic, all tittering aside.

What's your favorite lube and why, Shakers? Some folks need lubricant on a daily basis just to be comfortable; others use it for sex, solo or otherwise. Some may simply have never thought of adding it to their routines.

Discuss.

Open Wide...

What Rome Would Have Looked Like With TeeVees

Surely I am not the only non-conservative person who thinks Stephen Colbert testifying before Congress in character is totally fucking ridiculous...?

I know I'm the Most Humorless Feminist in all of Nofunnington, but, even as HILARIOUS as the idea of recording fat jokes into the Congressional record for all posterity is, I don't really want my elected representatives turning Congressional hearings into govertainment.

Democrats, you might have noticed that the infotainmenting of the news didn't exactly work in your favor. It's hard to see how turning C-SPAN into an adjunct of Comedy Central is a wise strategy.

A partial transcript is here, with a full transcript to be posted when available.

Open Wide...

Friday Blogaround

This blogaround brought to you by Shaxco, proud publishers of the upcoming memoir Thank Maude I Never Played Atari at Deeky's House or Drums at Liss' House, by Everyone.

Recommended Reading:

Paradox: Fun Times, Eh, David?

Cara: San Antonio Woman Assaulted; Police and Media Respond With Transphobic Excuses [TW for violence and transphobia]

Himanshu: "You Know That's Saag Paneer, Dude": A Review of Outsourced [TW for racism]

Resistance: The Privilege of Words [TW for violent imagery and racism]

Eric: Breitbart's Selective Reporting [TW for violence]

Andrew: Ingraham, Perkins Balk at GOP 'Pledge' for Lack of 'Family' Angle

Leave your links in comments...

Open Wide...

Update On Predatory D.A.

(Trigger warning for discussion of domestic violence, prosecutorial misconduct in domestic violence cases, attempts to coerce sex from a position of authority, and lawyerly attempts to impugn the motives of victims)

Action is being taken by the state of Wisconsin which may remove D.A. Kenneth Kratz, the subject of my previous post It's Hard Out There For A D.A., from his position as District Attorney of Calumet County, WI.

As detailed in this story at JSOnline, Wisconsin Governor Jim Doyle Wednesday received several formal complaints about Kratz from residents of Calumet Co. regarding his treatment of crime victim Stephanie Van Groll, in response to which Doyle has appointed a state lawyer and former D.A. of a different county, Bob Jambois, to be the commissioner of a public hearing into whether there is cause to remove Kratz from office.

Jambois will then report back to the governor, who will make the determination as to whether to remove Kratz. Grounds for removal include “inefficiency, neglect of duty, official misconduct or malfeasance in office.”

The state Department of Justice will prosecute the case against Kratz at the hearing. This is the same state DOJ which previously found that Kratz had "not acted illegally" in bombarding Van Groll with personal and sexually suggestive text messages for several days after interviewing her about the criminal case against her ex-boyfriend, who had attempted to strangle her.

The texts stopped only when the victim reported them to the police, out of fear that if she did not accede to the D.A.'s suggestion of a sexual relationship between them, he might not pursue the case against the man who tried to kill her.

It may be, however, that public outrage since the D.A.'s behavior became known may cause the state DOJ to take a more rigorous look at that behavior, and view the situation more as one of an officer of the court preying on crime victims, rather than, say, a fellow attorney and public official trying to have a little fun on the side. Pure speculation on my part, of course.

It's also worth noting that "illegal conduct" and "official misconduct" measure different standards of conduct.

Several people suggested, in the comment thread to my previous post on this, that this was likely not Kratz' first attempt to coerce sex from someone he dealt with in a professional capacity. Way to recognize a practiced predator, commenters! Since the story of Kratz' behavior toward this victim became public, at least three other women have come forward to say that Kratz behaved inappropriately toward them.

One woman whom Kratz had met through an online dating service said that (.pdf), while she was having dinner with him, he had taken several calls regarding the case of a missing woman, who police suspected had been killed by her boyfriend. This woman says that Kratz inappropriately shared information about the case with her, and subsequently invited her to attend the victim's autopsy with him, with the condition that she "would be his girlfriend and would wear high heels and a skirt."

Another young woman, a law student, has reported that, when she sought D.A. Kratz' support in securing a pardon for an earlier drug conviction, to enable her to join the bar on completion of her studies, he agreed to assist her, and then pressured her for sex. The governor, who did grant that woman the pardon she had applied for, says he is "particularly troubled" by these allegations.

There was an (alleged) attempt to use my power as governor — my pardon power — to somehow have a relationship with a woman. That is something I take very seriously. Subverting the pardon power of the governor — that’s a very serious allegation.
Well, yes, governor, yes it is. But then preying on crime victims from the position of District Attorney strikes me as "particularly troubling" and "a very serious allegation" also. I don't see the problem of a predatory District Attorney rising to the point of being "particularly troubling" and "very serious" only when it impacts the governor's office.

Kratz' attorney, Robert Craanen, you will sadly not be surprised to learn, has said, "There are no depths to which I will not sink in attempting to defend the indefensible."* Oh, wait, no — he didn't say that, exactly. What he said was that he questions the motives of the women who have come forward since the story of Kratz' behavior with Van Groll became public.
“It really is an economic opportunity for these individuals. I look at their stories in that light. There’s something to be gained by these people, other than to correct a wrongdoing.
Craanen hasn't actually talked to his client about any of these additional accusations, as it happens, leaving him free to speculate out his ass about the motives of the victims.

D.A. Kratz, it seems, is "receiving inpatient therapy" and had, at the time his attorney threw these completely baseless accusations against his client's accusers into the mix, conveniently not been available to discuss with his attorney his actual behavior toward them.

The governor has also questioned why the Office of Lawyer Regulation, operated by the state Supreme Court, found Kratz guilty of no misconduct after he had taken it upon himself to report to them last year the allegations made by Van Groll. An OLR intake investigator subsequently sent Van Groll a letter saying that the messages Kratz had texted to her were "inappropriate", but “did not appear to involve possible professional misconduct.”

State Representative Terese Berceau is also questioning the actions of the OLR in that case, and has written to the legislature's audit committee requesting an audit of the OLR, although the article does not give any information about what is involved in such an audit.

(*For the record, I understand, and believe, that everyone accused of a crime or of other misconduct which may carry substantial penalty, is entitled to present a defense, and that the duty of an attorney is to make the most persuasive case possible for the innocence of hir client. I do not, however, believe that that includes an entitlement to publicly cast aspersions which have no basis on the character of victims, nor do I believe that relying on and attempting to encourage public misogyny, racism, homophobia, etc. to create a general fog behind which a client can hide, constitutes proper defense.)

H/T to Shaker Rina

Open Wide...

Ridiculous

WaPo: "The Obama administration objected Thursday to immediately ending the military's ban on openly gay service members, saying that an injunction to stop the 'don't ask, don't tell' policy might harm military readiness at a time of war."

Truly, deeply absurd. Nearly 80% of the US population supports a repeal of DADT. The administration is literally pandering to the most despicable, backwards, retrofuck homophobes in the country.

Cowards. Liars. Unprincipled assholes.

No one, but no one, honestly believes that repealing DADT "might harm military readiness." That's a rank bit of mendacity used to disguise ignorant bigotry and religious hooey.

The gay, lesbian, and bisexual soldiers who are willing to die for this country, in spite of its stubborn insistence on treating them as second-class citizens, are patriots of such profound resolve that denying them their chance to serve honestly and openly is a rather more spectacular moral failing than two boys kissing could ever hope to be.

Open Wide...