This is so the worst thing you're going to read all day.

Because it's almost really good. And then you get to this part [trigger warning for fat hatred and body/food policing]:

Kiki McLean pointedly tells me that one of the things that she most admires about [Senator Kirsten Gillibrand] is "the way she balances being a senator with her husband and her little boys." As much as I hate to make too much of it, I said, I can't help being impressed by somebody who lost 40 pounds while doing this job. "OK," says McLean, "this is a killer because I have fought weight my entire life, and she is completely disciplined about this. She was at my home for dinner recently, and she focused on the salad and the fruit. We can laugh about it and I can be jealous of her, but I think it's a tremendous demonstration of discipline and the fact that she knows she has to be in the best health, so that she can be the best mom and the best senator."

And no doubt remain attractive to her husband of nine years, who is two years younger than she is.
Wow.

Considering all the references to how very much like Hillary Clinton, the senator whose vacated seat Gillibrand now fills, Gillibrand is—starting with the headline "In Hillary's Footsteps"—I'm really amazed that Jonathan Van Meter left me hanging about whether Gillibrand is similarly "cursed with cankles." Come on, Vogue—this is important stuff!

[Via Irin.]

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WHUT.

Sure. Why not.

If you share a name with someone famous — like, say, 35-year-old pinball geek Justin Bieber of Jacksonville, Fla., or one of the five Betty Whites in Boston, MA — you might soon be getting a call from somebody at CBS. The network has teamed with 51 Minds (the company behind such critically beloved VH1 fare as I Love New York and Rock of Love) for a new reality project dubbed The Same Name. The basic premise of the show revolves around finding regular folks whose names happen to be the same as celebs, and then having the two temporarily trade lives.
Now if you'll excuse me, I've got to go legally change my name to Barack Obama, so I can apply for the show. Get ready for THE DAY OF A THOUSAND WACKY EXECUTIVE ORDERS!!!

Where "wacky" = "progressive."

(TW for sexual violence: I'm also totes going to submit Iain's name (close enough!) so that he can spend a day working on a novel about a privileged man whose life is thrown into upheaval because a woman he fancies has been raped, threatened with rape, or is already dead. Perhaps he can rewrite whatever his famous name-sharer has been working on to include a female protagonist who has motivations other than trauma, and then there might exist an Ian McEwan novel I actually enjoy reading!)

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Monday Blogaround

This blogaround brought to you by Shaxco, publishers of the upcoming Deeky W. Gashlycrumb confessional, I Was a Teenage Wizard.

Recommended Reading:

[TW for racism, misogyny, and bullying] Anonymous at the University of Venus: An Unspoken Threat

[TW for discussion of bullying] rboylorn: "Words Hurt": A (Personal) Reflection on Bullying as Verbal Violence

[TW for misogyny] Historiann: Poor Ken: Only Girls Will Play With Him!

[TW for homophobia] Steve: Reinstated Oregon Teacher Seth Stambaugh Talks to Towleroad

[TW for homophobia] LeMew: This Is What Support of DADT Amounts To

[TW for transphobia and homophobia] Autumn: More "Truth" On "Sex Change Operations"?

[TW for sexual violence] There is a new blog project, SoulSpeakOut, collecting the stories of survivors, who are invited to share their stories via prose, poetry, artwork, or other creative expression, either by name, pseudonymously, or anonymously. Visit SoulSpeakOut here.

Leave your links in comments...

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How's the view from the sideline?

There's currently a four-way gubernatorial race in Rhode Island, featuring Obama bipartipal Lincoln Chafee, a(nother) Republican, some guy, and Rhode Island General Treasurer Frank Caprio, a Democrat. Caprio, the Democrat indicated that he wouldn't mind if Obama endorsed him. Instead, the Obama administration announced it wouldn't be endorsing anyone.

Caprio, being a man after my own heart, told Obama to "shove it", and also:

"accused the president of 'treating [Rhode Island progressives] like an ATM machine,' and ignoring Rhode Island during springtime flooding that swept through the state."

It is unclear whether or not Caprio reminded Obama that "it is inexcusable for any Democrat or progressive right now to stand on the sidelines in this midterm election", but that strikes me as a logical next step.

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Two-Minute Nostalgia Sublime



Diamond Rings: "Wait & See"

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Actual Headline

Gay voters angry at Democrats could sway election. Let the scapegoating begin!

Two things:

1. I definitely love how this is just about "gay voters," casually ignoring the fact that a huge majority of Americans support the repeal of DADT and there are literally MILLIONS of reliable Democratic not-gay (straight, bi, asexual) voters who are pissed about this, too. Admittedly, that fact does undermine the "special rights" and "hysterical minority who don't understand how politics work" narratives that are the key to diminishing any civil rights movement and establishing scapegoats.

2. Supposing for a moment that it's true that gay voters (and their allies) are so angry at Democrats that they alone (without the help of alienated female voters and/or trans voters and/or poor voters and/or other underserved constituencies) could sway the election, the headline is still misleading: It's ultimately the Democrats who failed to deliver on promises made to a sizable and politically active constituency who will sway the election, if gay voters (and their allies) don't show up on Election Day.

To revisit a familiar post from the last election season: When someone engages in divisive behavior, any resulting division is their responsibility.

It is, simply, not the duty of any person who is repeatedly subjected to alienating language, images, behaviors, and/or legislation to nonetheless never complain and pledge fealty from the margins. If voters from marginalized populations are valued, then they should not be demeaned-and if they are demeaned, they should not be expected to pretend it does not matter.

The fucking end.

[Commenting Guidelines: This is a post about politicking and narratives, not about voting. If you are going to respond to this post by talking about voting, please familiarize yourself with Shakesville's policy about voting discussions, and utilize "I" language. By way of reminder, "I think you should vote this way" does not count.]

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More Evidence of Abusive Priest Shuffling Emerges

[Trigger warning for sexual violence and clergy abuse.]

Just like Jesus would do:

Nearly 10,000 pages of previously sealed Catholic church documents have been made public and showed that the Diocese of San Diego long knew about abusive priests, some of whom were shuffled from parish to parish despite credible complaints against them.

...The records are from the personnel files of 48 priests who were either credibly accused or convicted of sexual abuse or were named in a civil lawsuit. They include a decades-old case in which a priest under police investigation was allowed to leave the U.S. after the diocese intervened.

...The files show what the diocese knew about abusive priests, starting decades before any allegations became public, and that some church leaders moved priests around or overseas despite credible complaints against them.
In addition to the priest who was helped out of the country by the Catholic Church, there are other deeply troubling cases:
Another case outlined in the files involves the Rev. Robert Nikliborc, who was sent to a psychiatric treatment facility in the 1950s after the diocese received complaints, then became director of a Roman Catholic residential facility for troubled boys called Boystown of the Desert in Banning, Calif.

...The papers also contain documents from the files of Rev. Anthony Rodrigue. In 1976, a group of parents at Rodrigue's parish in Heber, Calif., complained he had molested their children, according to court documents.

The priest was sent to a psychiatric facility in Massachusetts for treatment but was put back in ministry despite the recommendations of those who treated him.

Rodrigue later admitted he had molested between four to five children a year over a span of 22 years, said Irwin Zalkin, an attorney for the plaintiffs. About 30 people filed lawsuits against the diocese alleging sexual abuse against the priest, who died within the last year, he said.

"He was probably one of the most prolific abusers in this diocese. ... And they knew about this guy from his days in the seminary but kept him in ministry," Zalkin said.
At a news conference, one of the attorneys for the plaintiffs, Anthony DeMarco, urged "all Catholics" to look at the released documents: "These documents demonstrate years and years and decades of concerted action that has allowed this community's children to be victimized, and it is not until the community looks at these documents that this cycle is ever going to be ended."

I get what he's saying, but still: No. The cycle will be ended when the Catholic Church stops being a sanctuary for pedophiles. The cycle will be ended when the Catholic Church stops prioritizing its reputation over the sexual assault of children. The cycle must be ended by the victimizers, not the victims.

[H/T to Shaker Lena.]

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Mel Gibson "Furious"

[Trigger warning for references to sexual assault and domestic violence.]

After getting, and then losing, a cameo in The Hangover 2, Mel Gibson is reportedly "furious" (how uncharacteristic of him, ahem) that he was given the boot (and replaced by Liam Neeson, sigh). As has been widely reported, some members of the cast were apparently unhappy at the prospect of working with Mel, for various reasons. Mel doesn't get it.

"He doesn't understand why Mike Tyson, a drug user who turned his life around, was given a chance while Mel was kicked to the curb. Everybody deserves a second chance," an insider told the New York Post.
Gibson has a point, even though Tyson was hardly just "a drug user who turned his life around." Tyson is a convicted rapist who has also assaulted former partners and bit the ear of a competitor.

I am incredibly curious why the cast members (*cough* Zach Galifianakis *cough*) who objected so bitterly to Gibson's cameo had no problem with Tyson's. Perhaps it is, as I suggested in comments, that it's possible Galifianakis objected to Mike Tyson, too, but, it wasn't, ironically, until the wild success of The Hangover that he had the leverage to object in a way that made a difference. (Although one notes if he did object, his paycheck was more important than appearing in a vehicle helping to rehabilitate a violent and dangerous man.)

Or perhaps it is, as I have noted before, the widespread belief that Tyson was unfairly convicted, because, in the rape culture, there are no guilty famous men. The "innocence" of famous men who are accused of rape is typically established by their almost universal acquittal, a form of "proof" rooted in the premise that men who are convicted will be presumed guilty. But they are not, of which Tyson is a prime example. Despite having been convicted and serving prison time, he's still not regarded as a rapist: He was railroaded.

Whatever the reason, it does indeed seem like a double-standard that Tyson was welcomed with open arms and Gibson was not.

Although, unlike Mel Gibson, I don't believe that hypocrisy earns him his cameo. I believe it further indicts the decision to have given one to Tyson.

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Open Thread

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Hosted by a ghost. WhooooOOoooooOOOOOO....

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Open Thread

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Hosted by a glass armonica.

This week's open threads have been brought to you by unusual musical instruments.

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Open Thread

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Hosted by the serpent horn.

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The Virtual Pub Is Open


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

TFIF, Shakers!

Belly up to the bar,
and name your poison!

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This is so the worst thing you're going to read all day.

Inside His Head: What Your Drink Says About You.

Important information for ALL THE LADIES before the Virtual Pub opens.

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Quote of the Day

[Trigger warning for violence.]

"If the government is not producing the results or has become destructive to the ends of our liberties, we have a right to get rid of that government and to get rid of it by any means necessary. [Violent overthrow] is on the table. I don't think that we should remove anything from the table as it relates to our liberties and our freedoms. However, it is not the first option."—Republican congressional candidate and South Dallas pastor Stephen Broden, during a TV interview yesterday.

His comment "drew a quick denunciation from the head of the Dallas County GOP, who called the remarks 'inappropriate'."

Hey, he did say it isn't the first option! Geez.

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Hip and Edgy and Shit

[Trigger warning for disablism and rape culture.]

"I Have PSD."

Photoshop dexterity (PSD) is a skillset acquired by proficient users of Adobe Photoshop, the world's most ubiquitous digital tool for creating visual ideas. Qualities of PSD include supernatural powers of imagination and an overwhelming desire to constantly make the world more beautiful. PSD affects people from different walks of life. In fact, there is a high probability that you have PSD.
Ha ha, hilarious marketing campaign, Hyperakt Design Group. A fake disease. The acronym for which sounds almost exactly like the one that affects trauma victims, like soldiers and rape survivors. I'm sure that's just a coincidence, though, and no one will make the connection.

Whoooooooops.
I must confess. I have PSD. I got it one crazy night. She was beautiful. We were drunk. She looked deep into my eyes and, without even thinking, I was over all her buttons and she was making me swoon.

She was a PowerMac 8100, the first computer with a PowerPC RISC processor.
Ha ha, see it's funny, because he's a dude and she's a computer, and PSD isn't a real disease.

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Today's Edition of "Conniving and Sinister"



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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.]

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Every Other Thing

**Trigger warning for violence**

I've been working on this thing--not quite a poem--for several months now. It's a piece, not exactly autobiographical, but rooted in the experiences of violence that I and way too many women I know have had. It is a story that I've heard and seen so many times through my and my friends' tears as we wonder how and why. It's a story also rooted in my sadness, an emotion created by my absolute certainty that I will again sit in a hospital, or a bedroom, or a police station with a woman I know and struggle to find something to say to encourage or help her.

I hadn't shown it to anyone until I recently shared it with Liss. By coincidence, I received an e-mail that day from our Women's Studies Department asking for faculty and students to participate in a Domestic Violence Awareness Poetry Reading. I decided that I was going to participate. I also decided to share it here, but I'm putting it below the fold and want to reiterate the trigger warning for references to/images of battering and sexual violence.

Every Other Thing

I almost said to her,
almost looked deeply into her eyes—
as deeply as I could with the swelling and all—
and said
“Love shouldn’t hurt.”

(Good catchphrase, isn’t it?
Serious and trendy, all at once.)

But, anyway, she was wrapped up in her bed,
right below the picture of her savior,
“No greater love,” read the caption.
an image of him on the cross
giving his life,
shedding his blood,
proving his love.

Still,
I almost uttered it,
because I could say it in a quick breath,
in the little bit of time I’d have,
before I’d suddenly have to leave
and she’d be grilled about what she told me

But in the background,
her music was playing,
(that blues shit I hate)
assuring her that without pain, there was no gain.
Telling her don’t blame Mr. Charlie for his transgressions.
He’s just a man
and He-e-e-e’s doing the best he can.
And didn’t she know,
having a piece of man
was better than no man at all?

Good music, she said.
She don't know how the hell
these young girls
(with they silly selves)
listen to men talking bout
breaking their backs
beatin it out the frame
knocking them down
Ooh!
Just too violent!

I still wanted to say it,
even as I looked at her shelves of books.
Nasty novels, my grandma had called them.
(I liked them, too)
I knew what she read inside.
About the women who were always so small, pale, fragile…
Breakable…
About the men so well-endowed that they had to
“Force themselves in”
or
“Work against her natural resistance”
or
“Make sure she was ready”
for the hard fucking that was coming,
for the pain that magically turned into pleasure
because she wanted him soooo much.
And because he was skilled—
knew how to use his dick/weapon, hmm!
He didn’t tear her asunder.

“Just say it,” I thought,
even as images flashed on the screen of her T.V.
No sound, but hey, I’d seen this!
I remember he slapped her!
But only this one time
cuz he was really angry.
After all she’d liedcheatedbeendemandingactedlikeabitch.
Or something that made it understandable.
Just this one time, just to get her attention,
make her realize how much he cared!

I wanted to tell her
“Love shouldn’t hurt. It’s not about suffering,”
while I looked in her eyes and patted her hands.
(I’d paid attention when they were telling me that at that women’s center.
I had this down!)

That’s what I’d heard, anyway.

But I/she hadn’t seen that
or been taught that
hell, we hadn’t lived that.

And you know what else I'd heard?
(Lord, so long ago)
From every older woman I knew?
Right after they'd looked at me sympathetically
(they patted my hands, too)
when I told them I was in love
and I was happy?
"Just wait, baby," they said,
shaking their heads because poor baby me
didn't know what was to come,
"You don't know nothing til you been through something."
(No pain, no gain! Damn those blues!)

So, I didn’t have examples
or assurances.
(In fact,
knowing what I’d seen…
what she’d seen…
I wasn’t sure…
Maybe love is this.
I mean, it was for so many
and you’d think
by now
someone could’ve figured out
a better way to love.
Someone besides the women at the center
who’d patted my hands in their certainty.
(I felt like a puppy))

I did have the words,
but suddenly, they seemed,
in that room,
in our lives,
not enough to counter
every other thing.

I patted her hands, though.

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Friday Blogaround

This blogaround brought to you by Shaxco, publishers of the award-winning memoir Things I Find Funny by Melissa L. McEwan, now in paperback with an additional chapter on farts.

Recommended Reading:

[TW for dehumanization] Cara: Report Shows HIV-Positive Women in Chile Forcibly Sterilized, Denied Medical Treatment

[TW for homophobia] Andy: Marriage Equality Under Attack in Iowa on Eve of Bus Tour Targeting Pro-Equality Supreme Court Judges

Shark-fu: What did the Moon ever do to deserve us?

LeMew: I Am Outraged That NPR Would Fire This Towering Intellect

Terrance: Evolving the Perfect Mouse

Melissa: Spark Summit – Speaking out against the Sexualization of Girls

Leave your links in comments...

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Daily Dose o' Cute



Baby bunny! (Hand model: mistress sparkletoes.)

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Actual Headline

GOP says compromise not on the agenda if they retake the House.

I'm shocked. Shocked, I tell you.

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