The Fat Body (In)Visible

[I'm moving this post back to the top for a bit, since Shaker katebears graciously provided a transcript.]


A documentary on being a fat woman, and the moments in which you feel visible and invisible, moments in which you can just be and moments in which you are obliged to be hyper-aware of your fat body. By Margitte Kristjansson. Featuring Jessica and Keena, as well as photos from The Adipositivity Project (some of which may be NSFW).

Via Frances.

[My apologies that the length of the documentary prohibits me from providing a transcript. If someone has the time and can volunteer to provide a transcript, I would very appreciatively post it.]

Shaker katebears has done a transcript for the whole documentary, which is now below the fold (on most browsers). Thanks so much, katebears!
Song: Breathe by Telepopmusik

Jessica: The way people view fat today is… I want to right away say disgusting. We are told we can’t even love each other in public because it’s so revolting.

Keena: I just feel like it is a love/hate. I think people are scared to show their appreciation of some big women and some people don’t care after a while. I feel like it is an indifference.

Jessica: While I have all the confidence in the world, I am being told every day that my body is revolting.

Keena: I look at it like this. You know, there are so many beautiful natural wonders in this world. And all these natural wonders they’re huge right? You know? The Taj Mahal, the Grand Canyon, all these things are big and people come from all around the world to see it. So it just lets me know with me being a larger women, I’m like an attraction. You know? You can’t miss me and I’m a good thing to look at too.

J: And they see a fat body it is very challenging to their politics. It is very challenging to what they view as their moral code, is challenged by a fat body, especially a confident fat body. I think I have always felt moderately at peace with my body, my issues have always been with everyone else. I first realized I was fat when my mom stopped introducing me as her daughter and starting introducing me as her fat daughter, her fluffy daughter, my chubby Jessica. I stopped being a human and started being a body.

K: For me, I am at my heaviest, and ironically, or maybe not ironically but at my heaviest I’m the happiest. I first realized I was fat at a young age. I was an 11 pound baby, so I never had a skinny phase and my family, they accepted me.

J: Dieting for me started really young, it started off as restricting. And by 10, I was in Jenny Craig and then weight watchers and pills and special physicians.

K: When I look at the word diet, I see the word die. Die-it. I have never dieted. The only time I can think of dieting, I was young, probably like 7. When a doctor said you should cut back on x,y,z. And I did it, but afterwards, I was like this ain’t for me. You know what I mean?

J: In high school, I had a personal trainer, I got my calories down to what almost killed me and still couldn’t lose any weight. When I moved out of my mother’s house, I gave up dieting for good.

Song: Dimestore Diamond by The Gossip. Jessica is fixing her hair, applying make-up, appears to be getting ready.

J: Fat acceptance is just the radical idea that every body is a good body and that regardless of your shape or your size that you deserve just as much respect as the next person.

K: Fat acceptance is just accepting your body where it is at. Whether you’re bigger or you’re smaller. Just accepting what it is, your arms, your double chin, your thighs and just not worrying about how other people may view you.

Song plays while Keena is getting ready, putting on jewelry, getting dressed.

Footage of Keena and Jessica shopping together, talking about clothing.

K: Growing up I compared myself to images I saw on T.V. As a young black girl, it wasn’t so much the size, it was the skin color. You know, watching T.V., you don’t see really a lot of young black girls on T.V. And it wasn’t until probably in my later teens, that I felt more conscious about my body because that is when I saw the music videos. My ah-ha moment was through the fat community through the fat acceptance group. That really started when I was in high school when I saw it was a celebration of plus size women. And that has been going on for about ten years now, since the early 2000s. From there, the light bulb went off. I love myself more. I didn’t want to wear the baggy clothes to hide myself. My mother told me to cover my arms, I didn’t want to cover it. You know? I felt more comfortable in my body cause I saw other women who looked like me doing the same thing, so I was like why can’t I?

J: I think high school is a struggle to feel visible for anybody. As a fat person, I think I took on the role as the class clown, because I wasn’t allowed to be an object of desire by my classmates. I think once I started finding that people were attracted to me and that men and women found me desirable as I was, I felt it was an invitation and permission to start loving myself as well and as much as they did.

Footage of friends at a bar, Keena and Jessica present.

J: I get negative feedback quite a bit on the street. Recently, I was walking home and I live in my own world and I know that a lot of negativity happens around me so I just try to phase it out. But I was walking home and a woman called me a fat piggy bitch for no reason, she just yelled it And in my head, I heard Ms. Piggy Bitch and so I looked at her and said thank you. And I kept walking and I was feeling great about myself. And a man said did you hear what she said to you? She called you a fat piggy bitch. Which just seemed like ludicrous to me because I didn’t even irritate her in anyway but just by existing she felt it was necessary to take me down.

K: I hate to say it, as ironic as this may sound, I still feel invisible today. Like I would probably say most of my life. As big and as colorful as I am I still feel invisible in a sense.

J: The way I make myself present and visible is I really allowed myself to give in to everything I have ever wanted to wear and a lot of times that means I look like a cartoon character. In allowing myself to dress in the ways I have always wanted to. In allowing myself to dress the way I have always wanted to I make myself very present for other people. Recently I met a woman online maybe two years ago that was involved with an online community called Fatshionista which is a fat fashionista on livejournal which just brought me into this myriad of blogs and books and people that were involved in this movement that gave a me sort of a more substantial argument when people would initially say, “Fat is Bad” I could only say “No it’s not”. I was then introduced to this community that gave me substantial reasons why fat was okay and why my body was beautiful and why I deserved more than society was ready to give me.

K: I discovered Fatshionista. I was just always inspired by the outfit posts. Since I got inspired, I posted my own and from there, it was just a wealth of information.

J: With the fatosphere, there is a lot of fat fashion blogging. There is always what fat girls wear, what fat girls wear. There is not a lot about what fat girls think in relation to what they wear. Fat touches everything I do.

Jessica and Keena shopping. Footage of them talking about clothing.

K: I really don’t see a lot of art out there that reflects me. You know, I am a plus size woman. I love afro-centric things. You know, why I don’t I try to play around with it? I don’t feel like I am the best artist, but it is my work. I have always wanted to see the few black artists out there to show images of bigger women. When it comes to crocheting, the challenge is sometimes that there are not that many patterns with plus sizes. The beauty is just winging it, just adding more stitches. The same thing is with constructing clothes. You know, clothes are nothing but shapes. I made a skirt in 45 minutes. I was just draping the fabric on me, two squares put together. Bam, you’ve got a skirt.

J: Fat style is one of the biggest ways that I believe you can be political as a fat body. It is very subversive because we as fat people are given limited choices. When you are thin, you have the entire mall at your beck and call. When you are fat, you have one store that has matronly, shaming clothes.


Video of Jessica and Keena shopping together. Jessica is trying on a shirt and it not fitting. Keena is laughing in the background.

K: When you look good, you feel good. And people feel good around you as well. People don’t expect for larger women to wear bright colors, or god forbid a mini skirt or god forbid, stripes. So it feels good to step outside the box and wear things that are not the norm as a larger woman. And you get compliments because you rock it a certain way.

Fashion show footage; murmuring, talking in the background, music playing.

J: Recently, I went to an indie fashion event at a plus size thrift store called Re/Dress and it was just really inspiring to see all these fat bodies, all these loving fat bodies in one space. Most, if not all the people present, were part of my online community, my fat acceptance activists, my Fatshionists. It was just really inspiring to see people doing what they love, promoting a positive self-accepting environment. We’ve noticed that it is really powerful to see more than one fat body enjoying each other’s company in public. And I think that initially people are too intimidated to say anything. Occasionally you will have people who make comments. I just think it is really intimidating for people to see fat bodies together. It is really powerful.

Footage of Keena, Jessica, and some friends in a bar. It seems that they are flirting with someone off camera.

J: I think because I make such a point of making myself visible on my own terms there is very little places where I feel invisible. I feel hyper visible when I am in restaurants eating. I feel like the spotlight is always on me. When I am at the doctor’s, it’s a weird mix of hyper visible and invisibility. I feel so detached from my body and not a human. But I also feel under the microscope and sort of like a mutant as well. So going to the doctor’s is challenging.

K: A couple of months ago, back in June, I bought an airplane ticket through Southwest Airlines to Las Vegas for my aunt’s weeding. I got to the airport early and thought, maybe I should get my return boarding pass printed. That day I wore a miniskirt and a sleeveless top. Didn’t think nothing of it, didn’t think people were watching me or scrutinizing me. Went to the counter, asked the lady about it, and she was like I think you could use another seat. I was like so what are you implying? Well, me and a few people have been observing you and we feel that you could use another seat and so that will be $179. I was like, excuse me? How are you just going to assume that I will need another seat? Well, you know, the seat you are sitting in over there is smaller than an airline seat. So long story short, it just took me by surprise that people were watching me that they were visualizing me fitting in a seat. Maybe that was a time that I felt kinda hyper visible. Like unbeknownst to me someone watching me, judging my body frame that I need to pay another $200 for another seat on an already crowded aircraft. And so we worked it out, I talked to the supervisor. Another thing: I really wanted to lash out, but I couldn’t. It’s one of those things where you don’t want to be the angry black women, let alone at the airport. I was looking around seeing if anyone was observing me, but it didn’t look like it. I talked to the supervisor uh, went on the airplane while they were boarding the handicapped I sat in the seat, put down the armrest and the supervisor said “Well, you are borderline on safety, we’ll let you pass this time”. It is just like, I never thought that I would be picked out like that. And it’s just before I got on the plane, I was thinking I should change my body to please others. Maybe if I weren’t so big, maybe I wouldn’t be a hazard to someone. But it went well, but it just left a bad taste in my mouth because I want to travel more. And with the whole airlines charging more for luggage, it’s just southwest is the only place that has an inexpensive airline ticket. I just feel like when I travel or when I got out, I have to be conscious of the space I take. No, I can’t fit in every chair but I still like being a plus size woman. I don’t want to change myself to make others feel comfortable.

J: I just sort of go day to day and talk to people when they approach me. I am confronted a lot about my body on the street by strangers. It gives me a chance to open up a dialogue about fat acceptance and get other people involved in this community.

K: The Adipositivity project is a project that a woman made to photograph plus size women in the nude. So I contacted her earlier this year when I had a trip to New York and I just had to be a part of it. It was a very, very liberating experience and I would love to do it again and I encourage other women to do it. Especially women of color to do it.

J: I make myself present on line. I am just fully exploiting every outlet for myself. I have a tumblr which has really helped promote my blog. I’m on twitter. I try to read other blogs, comment, and create a community with other FA bloggers and just really inundate everyone with my image, my thoughts.

K: I’m on tumblr. I mostly post pictures and words of things that inspire me. What made me create an account is I wanted to show a person who is fat and Black, Afro-Centric and is unashamed of who she is post there. Right now, I have over 500 followers. I would have never thunk it.

J: I hope that my activism and my blogging and the work I do online helps to give people of all shapes a safe place to feel good about their bodies to talk honestly about what they are feeling and why they are feeling it and just in hopes that someday we will just feel very neutral about our bodies and fat people won’t feel so isolated.

K: My message to young girls who are plus size in this day and age is to just live life and enjoy yourself. Don’t let nothing stop you. If you want to take a plus size or pole dancing. Take it. I’ve done it. If you want to be a dancer, do it. If you want to go to the beach in a bikini, do it. I‘ve done it. Don’t let nothing stop you. Don’t let the naysayers get to your head. Just live life. Because at the end of the day, you want to die knowing that you’ve done everything that you wanted to do. Even my experience with Southwest Airlines at the end of the day won’t stop me from traveling. I just have to do it other ways. I want to die knowing that I did everything I loved and wanted to do. So I hope that other women, young or old, big or small, Black or White, in between, they do that as well.

J: If I could say one thing to young, fat people dealing with bullying and their body image. I don’t really think there is anything you can say to young teens because we all struggle with how we feel about ourselves. But it’s not about you. It’s about the bully and their own issues. It is about what people are telling them they should feel and you just don’t let anyone police your body.

Song: Breathe by Telepopmusik

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Glenn Beck Tacitly Endorses Violent Revolution

Again.

I'd just like to take a moment to note that progressives who had the unmitigated temerity to question the veracity of the Bush administration's case for the Iraq War (which actually turned out to be garbage) were deemed traitors by the mainstream media, while Glenn Beck exhorts the military to choose sides in the revolution against progressives and is considered, at worst, a harmless "nut."

(No, that is not an invitation to comment on Beck's psychological status. It's just an observation about how he is regarded by the media. The usual rules apply.}

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Daily Dose o' Cute

How Dudley deals with the snow:



Hibernation.

Video Description: The camera pans from falling snow outside the window to Dudley snoring away on the couch.

As always, snaps of all the behbehs below the fold (on most browsers)...


OMG MUST SNORGLE CUTE FLUFFY FINGLE!


im in ur box, sleepin.


Large and in charge.


When I roll right off, I will have MEANT to do that.

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On the Media and Marginalization of Liberals

Rachel Maddow lays it out (as always with Maddow, unfortunately, warning for ableist language):


The transcript for last night's show is not yet available, but will be found here when it is. If you click through to the site and hover over the video, you will find a link that accesses the transcript for this clip (but is not copy-and-pasteable, grumble). has been provided by Shaker boldmatter, in comments. Thank you!

Related (and Recommended) Reading: Eric Boehlert's Memo to the Media.

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Photo of the Day


A photo of part of New Zealand, taken from the Space Station. Click to embiggen. [Via Barbara.]

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Yikes

[Trigger warning for sexual assault.]

So Michael Moore bailed out WikiLeaks' founder Julian Assange, and in his explanation about why he posted bail, with most of which I am in total agreement, he inserted this note:

For those of you who think it's wrong to support Julian Assange because of the sexual assault allegations he's being held for, all I ask is that you not be naive about how the government works when it decides to go after its prey. Please -- never, ever believe the "official story." And regardless of Assange's guilt or innocence (see the strange nature of the allegations here), this man has the right to have bail posted and to defend himself. I have joined with filmmakers Ken Loach and John Pilger and writer Jemima Khan in putting up the bail money -- and we hope the judge will accept this and grant his release today.
Oof. Would that he had left it at the right to bail and defense and skipped the rape apologia.

It's eminently possible to not "be naive about how the government works," to acknowledge that the US and other governments use shady methods in pursuit of whistle-blowers, and even to observe that these allegations would almost certainly have been ignored had they been made against someone whom it was not politically expedient to give them attention, and not engage in apologia like "never believe the official story," which second-guesses victims' statements, and dismissing the allegations as strange, as if there is some "right" way for assault allegations to look.

An ally to survivors recognizes that the problem is not investigating Assange in this case; it's the failure to investigate people alleged to have done the same in virtually every other case.

I already recommended this in Friday's blogaround, but I'm going to recommend again reading Jaclyn's piece on this subject here.

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Seen


In the UCC church hallway of the church that houses our youngest kiddo's (non-church affiliated) preschool. The sign has been there for months but I just got around to taking a picture yesterday. It makes me smile every time I see it.

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Discussion Thread: Fat Stereotypes

What has someone wrongly assumed about you because you are fat? (Or because you are an in-betweenie, or on an occasion when you were deemed to be "too big" or "insufficiently thin" or some variation thereof.)

All those old chestnuts re: assumptions about how much/what you eat, your health, your intelligence, your physical abilities, your sex life, etc. are welcome contributions to this thread, but I'd also like to get at the less obvious or less discussed wrongful assumptions that are frequently made about fat people, the things that really stunned you.

I will never forget, for example, an episode of Oprah that I saw when I was in high school which featured a thin woman who hated fat people because she presumed them to have terrible hygiene, and one of the manifestations of her bigotry was refusing to use a public toilet stall after a fat person, because it was her fervent assumption, from which she could not be persuaded, that fat women are not able to wipe themselves.

(And though there are people whose size and/or disability does create that difficulty, she was making the assumption about any woman over about a US size 18, and further speaking of women with that difficulty as if they were diabolical harridans who remorselessly schemed to ruin the world with their dirty fat.)

I've also had someone assume I couldn't drive (!) because I'm fat.

[This thread is for both fat people and not-fat people; the latter are invited to participate by listening with the open-mindedness and open-heartedness that is key to dismantling unearned privilege.]

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Two-Minute Nostalgia Sublime



Labelle: "Lady Marmalade"

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Senate Advances Tax Package

With huge majority:

President Obama's $858 billion tax package won a huge bipartisan majority in the Senate on Monday evening, setting it up for a contentious debate in the House.

On an 83-15 vote, the Senate quashed a filibuster by Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.).

Fifteen lawmakers voted against it, including five Republicans: Sens. Tom Coburn (Okla.), Jim DeMint (S.C.), Jeff Sessions (Ala.), John Ensign (Nev.) and George Voinovich (Ohio).

Nine Democrats and one Independent voted against the bill: Sens. Jeff Bingaman (N.M.), Sherrod Brown (Ohio), Russ Feingold (Wis.), Kirsten Gillibrand (N.Y.), Kay Hagan (N.C.), Frank Lautenberg (N.J.), Patrick Leahy (Vt.), Carl Levin (Mich.), Mark Udall (Colo.) and Sanders.

"It makes no sense to me to provide huge tax breaks for millionaires and billionaires while we drive up the national debt that our children and grandchildren will have to pay," Sanders said in a statement after the vote.
Oh, Bernie Sanders. I love ya.

The Senate will now move forward with debate on the legislation before a final up or down vote. The legislation seems likely to pass the Senate, but House Dems are still barfing about it. (Good.) Now they've got to figure out a way to tank it, because "House Dem leaders have sent very clear signs that despite their own unhappiness with the deal, they believe it would be irresponsible to sink the compromise and have no intention of thwarting the President's will" and will be pushing for passage of the craptacular bill.

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Quote of the Day

"You've got to stop this war in Afghanistan."—US Special Representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan and well-respected diplomat Ambassador Richard Holbrooke, uttering his last words before he was taken into emergency surgery for a torn aorta, during which he died.

Holbrooke spent his entire adult life serving this country, starting with a tour in Vietnam, a war he later helped end. In a long career of public service, his tenure was marked with precious few controversies, and I always found him an interesting character, given his work in high finance and his humanitarian endeavors, a combination that always strikes me as somehow incompatible.

The thing I always thought about Richard Holbrooke was that he seemed wickedly smart, the kind of smart you want on your side.

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton says of her "friend, colleague, and confidant":

America has lost one of its fiercest champions and most dedicated public servants. Richard Holbrooke served the country he loved for nearly half a century, representing the United States in far-flung war-zones and high-level peace talks, always with distinctive brilliance and unmatched determination. He was one of a kind -- a true statesman -- and that makes his passing all the more painful.

From his early days in Vietnam to his historic role bringing peace to the Balkans to his last mission in Afghanistan and Pakistan, Richard helped shape our history, manage our perilous present, and secure our future. He was the consummate diplomat, able to stare down dictators and stand up for America's interests and values even under the most difficult circumstances. He served at every level of the Foreign Service and beyond, helping mentor generations of talented officers and future ambassadors. Few people have ever left a larger mark on the State Department or our country. From Southeast Asia to post-Cold War Europe and around the globe, people have a better chance of a peaceful future because of Richard’s lifetime of service.

I had the privilege to know Richard for many years and to call him a friend, colleague and confidante. As Secretary of State, I have counted on his advice and relied on his leadership. This is a sad day for me, for the State Department and for the United States of America.
My sincerest condolences to his family, friends, and colleagues.

[Note: If there are less flattering things to be said about Holbrooke, they have been excluded because I am unaware of them, not as the result of any deliberate intent to whitewash his life. Please feel welcome to comment on the entirety of his work and life in this thread.]

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Open Thread

Photobucket

Hosted by a baguette.

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Question of the Day

Does it seem like there's a dearth of big end-of-year movies this year? Maybe it's just me, but I'm not even sure what the Oscar contenders are supposed to be, even despite the studios' habit of packing in all the "good stuff" at the end of the year.

Usually at this time of year, there are about 10 different movies on my list that I want to see, but right now I'm basically just looking forward to Tron. (I'd also like to see 127 Hours, if it ever plays closer to us than a 45-minute drive into the city.)

What end-of-year films do you want to see, if any?

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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.]

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

[Trigger warning for fat hatred and patient abuse.]

This is a letter-to-the-editor about "the true nightmare of people who are obese and smoke." It is written by an asshole.

The asshole, Phillip Jones of Birmingham, Alabama, is no ordinary asshole, though. He begins his letter with an establishment of his unassailable expertise by informing us that he is "a medical sales representative who attends many spine surgeries."

*insert sound of record scratching here*


I'm sorry—why, exactly, is a medical sales representative attending surgeries? Oh, right. So he can attain Super Special Medical Wisdom, which he can then impart to us, like: "Adopt a sensible diet now and give up the cigarettes." Thanks for the lecture, Dr. Genius.

Here's some mind-blowing info for you, sir, in return for your kindness: Not all fat bodies are the same.

Insert here every post I've ever written about how being fat is not always a choice, about the intersection of fat and disability, about how some people are fat because they have back problems rather than the other way 'round, about the intersection of fat and surviving sexual assault, about the intersection of fat and poverty, about access to fresh foods, about how there exist plenty of healthful fat people, about the changing parameters of obesity, about the correlation between HFCS subsidies and obesity, etc. etc. etc., none of which ultimately matters when it comes down to the basic fucking decency of treating fat people with dignity, irrespective of their particular reasons for being fat, and honoring their individual agency.

Now that that's out of the way, can we get back to WHAT THE FUCK THAT DUDE IS DOING ATTENDING SURGERIES?!

[H/T to Shaker Kathy. Commenting Guidelines: This is not a thread to debate individual choices about eating or smoking. In fact, this is a thread about how that's nobody else's fucking business.]

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Quote of the Day

"I made it clear I am not going to compromise on my principles, nor am I going to compromise the will of the American people."Rep. John Boeher, on bipartisanship.

Btw, I really love how "the American people" are constantly said to have a singular will. You'd think if anyone would appreciate the inanity of that assertion, it would be the jackasses whose livelihoods are made by being elected to a perpetually and disagreeably fractured legislative body as part of a representative democracy.

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Ann Coulter Plumbs New Depths

by Shaker BrianWS

[Trigger warning for homophobia, rape culture narratives.]

I know I shouldn't expect much from Ann Coulter, and in all honesty, I don't. But I read anyway, because obsessively reading the garbage heaps that regularly get published by conservative commentators is what I do.

Usually I get through an Ann Coulter opinion piece with something close to the following formula – laugh once from either an inoffensive joke or some clever wordplay, agree with her once (usually on a matter of indisputable fact that cannot be poisoned even by her dishonesty or bullshit worldview), and then spend the rest of the piece holding my hands tightly around the top of my head to make sure that just in case my eyeballs pop out of my face from rolling them too much, I'll be able to catch them and they won't dirty my couch.

But this one – this one seems low, even for her. She managed to avoid the single laugh and the single point of agreement that she and I usually share once a week over coffee.

I've just been doing this the entire time I've been reading this pile of trash.


Coulter's argument can be boiled down to this: Marines don't want to fight with gays, and who gives a shit about what anyone else wants?

From there on out, the piece devolves into nothing but a long string of homophobic "jokes" that aren't even clever to begin with. Let's check out a "Greatest Hits" of sorts.
The rest of us shouldn't get to vote on gays in the military any more than we get to vote on the choreography of "Chicago."
Get it? The military is full of straight dudez, so who cares what the gays want! Hey queers – leave our straight men to do the manly shit like fighting, and we'll leave you to do the gay shit like dancing and choreography. Know your place!
Military combat is a very specialized field comparable to nothing in civilian life. There has to be a special bond among warriors -- and only one kind of bond.
Ha! LOL! "And only one kind of bond." This one is pretty tired, and I'm a little disappointed in Coulter for taking such an easy way out, because we all know that if we let predatory gays (who, as an aside, we know only care about having lots and LOTS of sex and that every gay man thinks every straight man is HOT and loses all control around them! You should see me out at a bar on a Friday night, she's totes right!) into the military, then all of the sudden everyone will just be fucking in the barracks instead of fighting wars for us. (As another aside, I think this might actually be good military policy – less war, more gay fucking in the barracks. Pretty much eliminates civilian casualties in wars of choice, eh?) But back to the point – they'll be "bonding" with their raging, uncontrollable hard-ons! Too easy, Ann. Oh, and still wrong.
Racial prejudice is not the same thing as sexual attraction, so please stop telling us this is just like integrating blacks in the military.
Well, Coulter is right about one thing there: Racial prejudice is not the same thing as sexual attraction – mostly because they're two totally different things. One demerit point for not even making sense. Hating baseball is not the same thing as liking ballpark hot dogs. There, I've found new logic, thanks to this new example. But then again, I'm not even sure that I made a point about the merits of either baseball or ballpark hot dogs, but I suppose I made as much sense as she did, so wevs, I won't waste any more time on this one. I think we all know what the point she was TRYING to make was – and that's still wrong anyway.
A Military Times survey in 2005 found that nearly half of all women in the military claim to have been the victim of sexual harassment -- ludicrously more than women in civilian life.
Not sure where this point really comes in or what purpose it is supposed to serve in her argument, but she gets to call women liars, and I believe that it is in the Handbook on Conservative Opinion Pieces that you must call women liars, power-hungry harpies, or sluts at least once or it won't get published – but is it really that "ludicrous" to believe that an institution that values macho attitudes, hyper-masculinity, and male bravado would produce such results? Color me less than shocked.
Only 15 percent of gays currently serving said they would want their units to know they're gay.
Gee, I wonder why? See the commentary directly above this.
Also, 2 percent of gays currently serving giggled when asked about their "unit," which is down from 5 percent from last year.
Oh my aching sides! Gay men only think about their dicks, amirite?!

After talking about the number of discharges for "homosexuality," Coulter concocts a wonderful storyline about how it is likely happening…
So gays and girls can join the military, get taxpayers to foot the bill for their education and then, when it comes time to serve, announce that they're gay or pregnant and receive an honorable discharge. Indeed, there's no proof that all the discharges for homosexuality involve actual homosexuals.
Yep, spot-on again. All of these folks getting discharged like Lt. Dan Choi, Lt. Col. Victor Fehrenbach, and Sgt. Jene Newsome, among countless others, could really possibly be just heterosexual people gaming the system.

Which leads me to…
Maybe we could have an all-gay service! They'd be allowed to wear camouflage neckerchiefs (a la Paul Lynde) and camo capri pants. To avoid any sexual harassment claims, they'd have to have their own barrack, which we could outfit with a dance club, a cosmo bar and a counseling center called "The Awkward Place." Their band would mostly play show tunes, and soldiers captured by the enemy would be taught to reveal only their name, rank and seasonal color analysis ("I am Private First Class Jeffrey Smith and I'm a 'winter.'")
There are too many bullshit stereotypes to even begin to break down, but I'm sure they don't all need to be pointed out to Shakers.

What angers me the most about her essentially wrapping up this entire column with this heap of garbage is that it's clear that this is all one big joke to her. The idea that there is an epidemic of straight people playing gay so they can lose their jobs and go to college is absurd, as are all of her other ideas.

The reality is that this incredibly discriminatory policy affects real people with real lives doing their real jobs. There's no excuse for this policy still being in place, and to treat it as an opportunity to trot out stereotypes about gays is as offensive as it is a waste of written words.

These are real people who are being affected by this – people who are willing to die for their country, and she's reduced their bravery and the discrimination they face to "jokes" about dance clubs, cosmo bars, and show tunes. If I were going to build a scale of bravery, honor, and integrity, I would have to think that being willing to die for your country as a job must rate at least one rung higher than getting paid to make gay bar jokes, right? And it's low, even for Coulter, to treat every brave LGBT person who has been discharged, and those willing to join and fight for their country, as little more than something comparable to the punchline of a Will & Grace episode.

[Commenting Guidelines: If you can't comment without invoking Coulter's appearance, questioning her gender, or centering her womanhood, don't bother commenting. Comments which fail to adhere to these guidelines will be deleted.]

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Photo of the Day

Speaking of Liss' pro-life/toilet thread, I just happened to snap this pic in Saint Paul a couple of weeks back:


[A picture of a billboard that reads (in an adorable faux Comic Sans): "Dad says I'm the CEO of the House. A New Human Life Begins At Conception." It features a baby wearing a tie and sitting in what is undoubtedly a super-serious business chair.]

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I'll Clean Your Toilets...IF I'M BORN!

Via Copyranter, a series of posters that are part of a truly creeptacular anti-abortion campaign in Russia:


They read, from left to right: "I will make you happy. If I'm born." / "I will amaze you. If I'm born." / "I will help you. If I'm born."

Well, no one ever told me I could have a MAGIC baby! This changes EVERYTHING.

Naturally, I particularly love how all three of the featured babies read as female, which makes their promises to serve and delight fucked-up on an even grander level.

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Daily Dose o' Cute



Potter surveys the city below.

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