
Hosted by Volkswagen Bug.
What popular band do/did you just never understand the appeal of?
I never really got 'N Sync, and I'm saying that as someone who saw NKOTB in concert not once, not twice, but five times. And, I kinda like some of Justin Timberlake's solo stuff. The whole 'N Sync thing just baffled me, though.

[Trigger warning for sexual violence, rape apologia, hostility to survivors.]
The United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit has ruled on the case of the cheerleader who was kicked off the squad for refusing to cheer for her rapist, and naturally they have ruled that she is required to cheer for the man who sexually assaulted her. The court additionally ordered her family "to pay the school district's legal fees on the grounds their suit was far-fetched and frivolous." Of course. The family is appealing the ruling. [Via.]
Meanwhile, in Britain, a woman who accused her husband of rape (to which he later pleaded guilty), but retracted the charges after her husband and his relatives convinced her to say they were untrue, has been sentenced to eight months in prison for a "false retraction." [H/T to Shaker gegi.]
Rage. Seethe. Boil.
[Trigger warning for sexual violence against children.]
So, there was a huge FBI sting called Operation Cross Country V this weekend, a product of ongoing investigations into the sexual exploitation of children, which resulted in more than five dozen (!) children being rescued from sexual slavery and nearly 900 arrests of adults suspected of involvement with adolescent sex slaves.
FBI spokesman Jason Pack said 69 children were removed from prostitution and 99 suspected pimps were arrested in 40 cities across 30 states and the District of Columbia. Authorities arrested 785 other adults on a variety state and local charges, Pack said.Prostitution connotes at least the possibility of consent. These children were not prostitutes.
[FBI executive assistant director Shawn Henry] said child prostitutes are often recruited by loose knit groups that seek out kids who may be involved in drugs or runaways looking for a "responsible adult" to help them.And, ya know, out of trust and ignorance. Because they're children. I mean, any child who isn't naive to "the way of the world" when it comes to sexual exploitation is a kid who's probably already been victimized by sexual violence.
"There are groups of people out there preying on naive kids who don't have a good sense of the way of the world," Henry said. "Sometimes there's a threat of force, threats of violence. A lot these kids operate out of a sense of fear."
Don't have much time for comment, but had to post this:
GOP Candidate States Black Men Prefer Drugs to EducationReynolds lost, but I just don't know what to say about Republicans anymore. Many of them become angry when you point out that racism and protecting privilege seem to be HUGE parts of the party platform, but what do they do to counter stuff like this?
At a recent political debate in Champaign, Illinois, sponsored by the NAACP and the League of Women Voters, candidates for the state Senate were asked for their ideas on how to increase black enrollments at the University of Illinois. GOP candidate Al Reynolds of Danville stated, "Minority women are motivated more so than the minority men. The minority men find it more lucrative to be able to do drugs than to do education. It's easier."
Texas Considers Medicaid WithdrawalAnd these are the people who imagine themselves at the forefront of "protecting life."
Some Republican lawmakers — still reveling in Tuesday’s statewide election sweep — are proposing an unprecedented solution to the state’s estimated $25 billion budget shortfall: dropping out of the federal Medicaid program.





This blogaround brought to you by Shaxco, publishers of Dudley's Guide to Looking Cute for Treats, by Dudley Q. McEwan.
Recommended Reading:
[Trigger warning for suicide, bullying, homophobia] Andy: Anti-Gay Bullying Blamed in Suicide of Pennsylvania Teen
Peter: On 60 Minutes, President Obama apologizes to America for being a Democrat.
Mannion: What have you done for us lately, Mr President?
Fannie: I Eat [Trigger warning for disordered eating and fatphobia.]
Erin: I Am Your Mother [Trigger warning for fat hatred, disordered eating, sexual violence.]
Shoshannah: I Am An Actor. I Am Also Deaf.
BAC: In Memoriam - Jill Clayburgh
Blue Girl: Reduced and Owned
Leave your links in comments...
[Trigger Warning: War/Violence]
Following assistance from the State Department and Senator Chuck Schumer, a Afghanistan resident who was permanently disabled during the war has been flown to the United States, where he will receive free medical treatment in a residential setting.
He will also presumably receive free rodents for life. This is because Mitch, as he goes by (or so I'm told) is a bird, a steppe eagle to be precise.
Sure. This is a great thing. United Statesians deserve a pat on the back. Yay us! Yay U.S.!
However.
I can't say that the offer of free lifetime healthcare extends to, say, wounded Afghani people. There are good reasons for this. We can't afford it (although in fairness, we're having a hell of a time coming up with the money to maim them in the first place). And in theory, US (and allied) troops are doing what they can to improve the healthcare infrastructure of Southwest Asia.
A cheaper alternative would have been to not invade Afghanistan in a war of choice. Then there'd be fewer injured birds. And people. And hospitals. Not choosing to go to war would have been, as the kids say these days, a more sustainable solution.
Thus, this is really a post about things that aren't injured birds. I have a sneaking suspicion that our eagerness to care for wildlife (and children, which oddly enough seem to fall into the same category), stems from the values we map (or don't) on to them. Wildlife is pure. Children are innocent. We have a sacred responsibility to care for them/not shoot them in the wing. Call me a socialist, but I actually agree with that. However, what is it about the adults in Afghanistan that frequently doesn't get them the same care and attention?
[Trigger warning for police brutality, violence, murder.]
Nearly two years ago, a young man named Oscar Grant was executed by former police officer Johannes Mehserle, who shot Grant at point-blank range unprovoked and unnecessarily. Mehserle was arrested on suspicion of murder, which was a reasonable charge to anyone with an internet access and a functional sense of decency. (Kevin retains video of the incident here. A trigger warning applies. It is very upsetting to watch.)
In the subsequent trial, the jury could have found Mehserle guilty of second-degree murder, voluntary manslaughter, or involuntary manslaughter. After six and a half hours of deliberation, they convicted him of the least serious charge, on the basis of Mehserle's absurd contention that he had accidentally pulled out his gun (located on his right hip) instead of his taser (located on his left hip) and fired a round into Oscar Grant before realizing he'd "grabbed the wrong weapon."
Mehserle faced up to 14 years in prison. He was sentenced by Judge Robert Perry to two, with 292 days as time served and credits for good behavior. Mehserle will be free in 72 days.
Quite reasonably, citizens of the area who don't like the idea that a cop could kill them for the cost of 72 days of prison time protested the sentence.
And the same (and/or neighboring) police force whose member effectively got away with cold-blooded murder caught on camera then did this. (The author of that piece is Shaker Westa.)
Welcome to America 2.0.
I think we all agreed that chapter fifteen was the creepiest, right? You remember the whole "don't tease the panther" incident, I hope. (And if you're fortunate enough to have scrubbed that from your brainpan, go here and re-read it.) I only bring this up because, somehow, Beck et al have produced a chapter even more unsettling. And there is no sex in it at all.
The taxi takes Molly and Noah to Molly's ... ummm ... safehouse? Hideout? Crash pad, like maybe the teabaggers are going to the matresses? "Come on up. See how the other half lives" is her invite. And the author spends the next page describing how run down and ramshackle the building is. I suppose this is to contrast with opulence of Noah's condo.
Inside, however, the place is quite nice:
Great effort had obviously been taken to transform this space into a sort of self-contained hideaway, far removed from the city outside. What had probably once been a huge, cold industrial floor had been renovated and brought alive with simple ingenuity and hard work.
"How many people live here?" Noah asked.
"I don't know, eight or ten, so don't be surprised if you see someone. They come and go; none of us lives here permanently. We have places like this all around the country so we can have somewhere safe to stay when we have to travel."
He walked about midway into the front room and found a slightly elevated platform enclosed in Japanese screens of thin dark wood and rice paper panels. There were a lot of bookshelves, a dresser, a rolltop desk, and a vanity. But the space was dominated by a large rope hammock, its webbing covered by a nest of comfy blankets and pillows, suspended waist-high between the red shutoff wheels of two heavy metal pipes that extended up from the floor through the ceiling. This room within a room was lit softly by small lamps and pastel paper lanterns. The total effect of the enclosure was that of a mellow, relaxing Zen paradise.
A glance through the nearest bookcase revealed a strange assortment of reading material. Some old and modern classics were segregated on a shelf by themselves, but the collection consisted mostly of works that leaned toward the eccentric, maybe even the forbidden. There didn't seem to be a clear ideological thread to connect them; Alinsky's Rules for Radicals was right next to None Dare Call It Conspiracy. Down the way The Blue Book of the John Birch Society was sandwiched between Abbie Hoffman's Steal This Book, Orson Scott Card's Empire, and a translated copy of The Coming Insurrection. Below was an entire section devoted to a series of books from a specialty publisher, all by a single author named Ragnar Benson. Noah touched the weathered spines and read the titles of these, one by one:
The Modern Survival Retreat
Guerrilla Gunsmithing
Homemade Grenade Launchers: Constructing the Ultimate Hobby Weapon
Ragnar's Homemade Detonators
Survivalist's Medicine Chest
Live Off the Land in the City and Country
And a last worn hardcover, titled simply Mantrapping.
"Those are some pretty good books she's got there, huh?"
It was only the tranquil atmosphere and a slight familiarity to the odd voice from close behind that kept him from jumping right out of his skin. He turned, and there was Molly’s large friend from the bar, nearly at eye level because of the elevated platform on which Noah was standing.
"Hollis," Noah said, stepping down to the main floor, "how is it that I never hear you coming?"
The big man gave him a warm guy-hug with an extra pat on the shoulder at the end. "I guess I tend to move about kinda quiet."
In the room that Hollis identified as his own there was a low army cot, several neatly organized project tables, and a large red cabinet on wheels, presumably full of tools. All these things were arranged as though bed rest wasn't even in the top ten of this man's nighttime priorities.
"What is all this stuff?" Noah asked. One table was covered with parts and test equipment for working on small electronics, another was a mass of disassembled communications equipment, and a third was devoted to cleaning supplies and the neatly disassembled pieces of a scary-looking black rifle and a handgun. More weapons were visible in an open gun safe to the side, but his focus had settled on the nearest of the workbenches. "Are you making bullets there?"
"Noah, do you like cookies? And which do you like better? Do you prefer those dry, dusty little nuggets you get in a box from one of them drive-through restaurants? Or would you rather have a nice, warm cookie fresh out of the oven, that your sweetheart cooked up just for you?"
At the end of this hall they came to a large room with a diverse group of men and women sitting around a long conference table. On a second look Noah saw that this furniture consisted of a mismatched set of folding chairs and four card tables butted end to end.
The people inside had been listening to a speaker at the head of the table but the room became quiet when they saw the newcomers.
"Everybody," Molly said, "this is Noah Gardner. And Noah, these are some of the regional leaders of the Founders' Keepers.
"So what's the meaning of all this?" The book was clearly hand-bound and not mass-manufactured. It looked old but well cared for, and there was a number on the inside front cover, suggesting that this one and the others were part of a large series.
"It's one of the things the Founders' Keepers do," Molly said. "We remember."
"You remember speeches and letters and things?"
"We remember how the country was founded. You never know, we might have to do it again someday."
"So you keep it in your heads? Why, in case all the history books get burned?"
"It's already happening, Noah, if you haven't noticed. Not burning, but changing. Ask an elementary school kid what they know about George Washington and it's more likely you'll hear the lies about him, like the cherry-tree story or that he had wooden dentures, than about anything that really made him the father of our country. Ask a kid in high school about Ronald Reagan and they'll probably tell you that he was a B-list-actor-turned-politician, or that he was the guy who happened to be in office when Gorbachev ended the Cold War. Ask a college kid about Social Security and they'll probably tell you that it was intended to provide guaranteed retirement income for all Americans. Ask a thirty-year-old about World War II and they'll recite what they remember from Saving Private Ryan. Do you see? No one really needs to rewrite history; they just have to make sure that no one remembers it."
"That looked like a small arsenal Hollis had back there," Noah said. "Are all those guns legal?"
"Two of them are registered. The rest are just passing through. He's on his way to a gun show upstate."
"So the answer's no, they're not legal."
"Do you know what it took to make those two guns legal in this city?"
"I can imagine."
"It took over a year, and the guy who owns them had to get fingerprinted, interviewed, and charged about a thousand dollars to exercise a constitutional right."
"I was noticing some of the titles. That's quite a subversive library."
"People use some of those books to smear us, and some of them were written by our enemies. I read everything so I'll know what I'm up against, and how to talk about them. You don't see any harm in that, do you?"
"Who's this Ragnar Benson lunatic?"
She smiled. "He's not a lunatic. That's a pen name, by the way; hardly anyone knows who he really is. He writes about a lot of useful things, though."
"Like how to make a grenade launcher in your rumpus room?"
"That one was from his mercenary days. He's mellowed out some since then. Now he's more about independence, and readiness, and self-sufficiency, you know? The joys of living off the grid."
"I guess I don't really understand," Noah said. "I mean, I understand those words, but that's not really a battle plan, is it? Do you know what you're up against?"
"Yes," Molly said. "But I doubt that our enemies do."
"So tell me."
As the cloudy room began to swim and fade he saw that three strangers were standing nearby, young men dressed in business suits and ties.
"It's time to go, Molly," one of them said, the voice far away and unreal.
"You'll stay with him, Hollis, won't you?"
"I'll stay just as long as I can."
He felt her arms around him tight, her tears on his cheek, her lips near his ear as the blackness finally, fully descended. Almost gone, but the three simple words she'd whispered to him then would stay clear in his mind even after everything else had faded away into the dark.
"I'm so sorry."
I hope he's learned his lesson!
Keith Olbermann will be allowed to resume his nightly program on MSNBC on Tuesday, the channel's president said Sunday night, after he was suspended for donating money to three Democratic candidates.Funny how that went from an "indefinite" suspension to a four-day weekend as soon as the network's hypocrisy and its corporate master's own political donations became a matter of public interest.
The policy at MSNBC's parent, NBC News, says journalists cannot make political contributions without permission from the head of the news division. "After several days of deliberation and discussion, I have determined that suspending Keith through and including Monday night's program is an appropriate punishment for his violation of our policy," the MSNBC president, Phil Griffin, said in a statement. "We look forward to having him back on the air Tuesday night."
Despite Defense Secretary Robert Gates' exhortation to Congress to "act quickly, before new members take their seats, to repeal the military's ban on gays serving openly in the military," the chances of Don't Ask Don't Tell actually being repealed appear to be vanishingly slim for the near future. Again.
The attachment to the Defense Bill which would pass the repeal is currently a political football being tossed around in Senate Armed Services Committee negotiations between the Committee's top Democrat and Republican, Senators Carl Levin and John McCain, who are "in talks on stripping the proposed repeal and other controversial provisions from a broader defense bill, leaving the repeal with no legislative vehicle to carry it."
And the Obama administration, in a move that will surprise absolutely fucking no one, has failed to identify the repeal as a priority for the final session of the outgoing Democratic House majority.
Asked what the White House priorities are for the coming congressional session, press secretary Robert Gibbs named four issues—tax cuts, a nuclear-arms treaty with Russia, a child nutrition bill and confirmation of Jack Lew as White House budget director. Asked why he wouldn't put gays in the military on the list, Mr. Gibbs said it looked like Republicans would block action.So, ya know, why even try?
The issue isn't high on the to-do list of Rep. John Boehner (R., Ohio), the likely next House speaker. "In the midst of two wars, even with one winding down, I certainly don't think this will be a priority," said Michael Steel, spokesman for Mr. Boehner. When the House voted to repeal don't ask earlier this year, five Republicans voted yes and 168 voted no.That a Democratic executive branch and Democratically-controlled Congress, with the help of the judiciary, could not get DADT overturned, despite the President's claim to want to put an end to the profoundly discriminatory policy, is indicting evidence of the Democratic Party's institutional fecklessness on social justice issues.

Copyright 2009 Shakesville. Powered by Blogger. Blogger Showcase
Blogger Templates created by Deluxe Templates. Wordpress by K2