BushQuotes!

image of the GWB action figure

Chapter 4, page 51: "I had never flown an airplane but decided I wanted to become a pilot."

That is definitely a real quote from page 51 of Privilege, Balls, and Aeroplanes.

[From George Bush's A Charge to Keep, gifted to me by Deeky, because he hates me. In the US, all people who plan to run for president write a shitty book. (Some are less shitty than others, by which I mean the Democrats' books.) A Charge to Keep was George W. Bush's shitty I-wanna-be-president book, published in 1999. I am blogging one random quote per page every day until I have either made my way through the book or lost it behind a couch.]

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Daily Dose of Cute

The Adventures of Watch Dog and Not-Watch Dog, Part 7:


Video Description: Zelda the Black-and-Tan Mutt stands in the middle of the garden, looking into the thicket. Her head swivels and her ears twitch. Suddenly, something catches her eye, and she trots off to the back of the yard to investigate. As she goes, she passes Dudley the Greyhound, who is lying in the grass and blinks disinterestedly as she cruises by.

image of Zelda lying in the grass, looking alert
Watch Dog

image of Dudley lying on his side along the fence, next to two giant holes he's dug
Not-Watch Dog

As you can see by the the latter picture, Dudley has plenty of energy for things like digging holes, when he wants to, lol.

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Wednesday Blogaround

This blogaround brought to you by cameras.

Recommended Reading:

Pam: Ninth Circuit Denies Request to Re-Hear Prop 8 Case; Clears Path to Appeal to US Supreme Court

Samhita: The Morning-After Pill Is Not an Abortion Pill

Rachael: The Revolution Will Not Be Polite: The Issue of Nice versus Good [Content Note: This post contains discussion of oppression and includes some slurs among its examples.]

Ellen: Why The Pretty White Girl YA Book Cover Trend Needs to End [Content Note: The post at this link contains a specific and potentially triggering incident of racism related to diversity in eye-shapes.]

Jessie: Ending the Institutional Racism of NYC's Marijuana Arrests

Andy: CNN Poll Shows Massive Shift in Acceptance, Understanding of Gay People

Melissa: The Awesomeness That Is Shonda Rhimes

AP: Janet Jackson to Produce Global Documentary about Trans People

Leave your links and recommendations in comments...

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"There Are Other Ways to Deal with Situations."

[Content Note: Violence; racism; eliminationism.]

So far this year, 30 black people have been killed in the US by police, security, or "neighborhood watch" vigilantes. And that doesn't even include cases like the murder of 13-year-old Darius Simmons, who was shot in the chest by his white, 75-year-old neighbor John Henry Spooner, who believed Simmons to be a thief who'd stolen weapons from him.

Not that it would in any way justify the shooting if he had, but Simmons was in school on the day of the theft and a police search of Simmons' family home turned up nothing. So, on what basis Spooner suspected Simmons is a total fucking mystery. (Sure.)

John Henry Spooner was charged with one count of first-degree intentional homicide, use of a dangerous weapon. Spooner was arrested Thursday after waiting for police at the crime scene on Milwaukee's south side.

...According to the complaint, Spooner approached Simmons as the boy retrieved a garbage cart from in front of a house Thursday morning. The boy's mother, Patricia Larry, who saw the shooting, said Spooner told her son he "wanted his stuff back and that he wanted his shotguns back," the complaint said.

Simmons and his mother told Spooner they did not have his property. Spooner then pulled a gun, pointed it at Simmons and fired one shot from about five feet away, the complaint said.

Spooner fired a second shot at Simmons as the boy was running away, according to the complaint. An autopsy found the boy suffered a gunshot wound to his chest, and the bullet damaged the ventricles of his heart before exiting his back. Police recovered a weapon as well as two spent casings.
One might be left with the impression that Spooner was simply a confused elderly man who didn't know or understand what he was doing, except for this:
Alderman Bob Donovan had breakfast with Spooner earlier in the day at a George Webb restaurant. Donovan said the man told him he had lost $3,000 worth of shotguns in a burglary this week, was frustrated with police and was dying of lung cancer.

"He seemed burdened, truly burdened," Donovan said. Spooner also said something about "there are other ways to deal with situations" the police couldn't resolve, Donovan added.
Apparently, no call to police was placed to warn them of this potential threat of violent vigilantism—something that may or may not have been taken seriously, even though Spooner had "called 911 at least 15 times in five years."

Does that sound familiar? George Zimmerman also had a habit of calling 911 to report "suspicious activity" in his neighborhood before shooting Trayvon Martin, who, like, Darius Simmons, was unarmed and minding his own business.

I note that even if the Alderman had made a call to police, it might not have been taken seriously, because, even after admittedly killing Simmons in cold blood, Spooner was reportedly treated like the victim and Simmons' family like criminals by investigators:
After police arrived, Darius's body remained on the sidewalk, while police questioned his mother, Patricia Larry, in a squad car for approximately two hours.

During the police investigation of the shooting, they searched Ms. Larry's home again. Finding nothing, they then proceeded to arrest his older brother for having truancy tickets.

In contrast, Spooner's family was allowed to go into the home and remove "items" despite it being [part of] the crime scene.

John Spooner was given a $300,000 bail, (only $30,000 would have to be posted for him to be free). This is uncommon when the charge is murder in the first degree.
At least it didn't take a national fucking referendum to get Spooner arrested. That's not exactly meaningful progress, though. Meaningful progress will be when paranoid white racists with arsenals of loaded weaponry stop killing black people. Fuck.

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Two-Minute Nostalgia Sublime



Scott Walker: "Jackie"

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RIP Ray Bradbury

image of Ray Bradbury

Author Ray Bradbury has died at age 91. Fuuuuuuck. He was not a perfect man, nor a perfect author, and we sure wouldn't have agreed on a lot of things, but there are few books I've revisited like I have Fahrenheit 451.

There are maybe only two books I've read more often. It is a deep part of me, and I never fail to be amazed how often I think about it, in relation to everything from censorship to the increasing enormity of flatscreen TVs. It has even featured centrally in several key moments in my life, because of shared appreciation.

Three days after we met online, Iain fatefully asked me, "Fancy a game of Fahrenheit 451? Which book would you memorize for posterity, and which would you throw onto the pyre?"

I didn't answer the former with Fahrenheit 451, but it wouldn't have been a bad alternative.

* * *

Bradbury was famously an irascible critic of "political correctness," so perhaps he would have found it ironic that it was Captain Beatty's treatise on "political correctness" in Fahrenheit 451 which really started my thinking on the difference between "political correctness" and meaningful sensitivity to marginalized people:
Now let's take up the minorities in our civilization, shall we? Bigger the population, the more minorities. Don't step on the toes of the dog lovers, the cat lovers, doctors, lawyers, merchants, chiefs, Mormons, Baptists, Unitarians, second-generation Chinese, Swedes, Italians, Germans, Texans, Brooklynites, Irishmen, people from Oregon or Mexico. The people in this book, this play, this TV serial are not meant to represent any actual painters, cartographers, mechanics anywhere. The bigger your market, Montag, the less you handle controversy, remember that! All the minor minor minorities with their navels to be kept clean. Authors, full of evil thoughts, lock up your typewriters. They did.

...Colored people don't like Little Black Sambo. Burn it. White people don't feel good about Uncle Tom's Cabin. Burn it. Someone's written a book on tobacco and cancer of the lungs? The cigarette people are weeping? Burn the book. Serenity, Montag. Peace, Montag. Take your fight outside. Better yet, into the incinerator.
This, I knew from the first time I read it, was wrong—though I wasn't certain precisely why yet. What I knew, viscerally, but could not articulate as a teenager, was that disappearing materials that reflect institutional harm, without or instead of any examination of systemic bias, is a solution to legitimate criticism of privilege, not a solution to harm. And trying to find a solution to legitimate criticism of privilege is the real partner to the anti-intellectualism also at the root of the tyranny in Fahrenheit 451, not the imagined (even by its author) solution to harm.

Bradbury got that wrong. But its wrongness worked on me, and challenged me to figure out why it was wrong. It made me more sensitive. It helped me build my argument against careless rants about "political correctness" delivered by people of privilege who specialize in willful ignorance. It informed the charter for this space.

That would probably make Mr. Bradbury very grumpy indeed. Which makes me grin.

My condolences to his family, friends, and colleagues.

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Random Nerd Nostalgia: #GothamProblems

Photobucket

[Description: Square-jawed, square-haired 1950s Bruce Wayne looks at pearl-wearing 1950s Kathy Kane, who is looking out at the viewer with a finger to her lips and clenched teeth. Bruce thinks: "So she admires Batman! If only I could tell her I'm Batman -- BUT I CAN'T!" Kathy thinks: "Bruce is so good-looking-- and he admires Batwoman! If -- sigh-- he only knew I'M BATWOMAN!"]

Oh my gosh, kids. IT'S A BAT-DILEMMA!

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Seen

[Content Note: Body policing.]

On the cover of the always-reputable Globe tabloid, by Shaker Carleigh, who sent me this photo:

image of Hillary Clinton wearing glasses next to text reading: 'Hillary Clinton DIVORCE MELTDOWN!' followed by two bulletpoints: '*No makeup *Refuses to shave her legs'.
[Full cover of issue can be viewed here.]

I'm not sure if this cover is trying to imply that Clinton has stopped wearing make-up and shaving her legs because she's "melting down" from an impending divorce, or that there is an impending divorce because Clinton is "melting down" and has stopped wearing make-up and shaving her legs. I really wish the Globe would be more clear in the absurd fantasy headlines its editors pull out of their asses!

It's interesting (no it's not) how Hillary Clinton is routinely attacked for being a feminist, and then simultaneously attacked for (allegedly) failing to conform to the Beauty Standard, as well as routinely attacked for having stayed with her husband after an infidelity, and then simultaneously attacked on the basis that they're getting divorced.

You know, if I didn't know better BECAUSE POST-FEMINIST AMERICA FOR REALZ, I would think that women who live public lives can't fucking win.

And one again, I wish I could meet Hillary Clinton just to say thank you for existing.

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Today in Mitt Romney Stands in Front of Something

image of Mitt Romney at a podium, standing in front of a huge sign reading A Chance for Every Child, to which I have added a dialogue bubble reading: 'Today, I am here to talk to you about providing in this great country a change for every chili. Wait—that doesn't sound right...'

In news that isn't really news but I'm sure glad that people with big platforms are pointing this out in such a concise and straightforward way: Mitt Romney is really just a shameless liar about President Obama's jobs record.

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Walker Survives Recall Vote

And he is just as enormous a d-bag as ever:

Gov. Scott Walker, fresh from becoming the nation's first governor to survive a recall election, wants to go about mending Wisconsin's political divide in an egalitarian way: over brats and beer.

...Now the rising Republican star is focusing his message on what lies ahead. His term runs through 2014 in a state that is still bitterly divided over his move to end collective bargaining rights for most public employees.

"It's time to put our differences aside and find ways to work together to move Wisconsin forward," Walker said in an interview minutes after his victory. "I think it's important to fix things, but it's also important to make sure we talk about it and involve people in the process."

Walker planned to invite all members of the Legislature to meet as soon as next week over burgers, brats and "maybe a little bit of good Wisconsin beer."

"The first step is just bringing people together and figuring out some way if we can thaw the ice," he said.
Oh! I have an idea! How about restoring collective bargaining rights for your state's public employees? I mean, not that everyone doesn't love brats and beer (not everyone loves brats and beer), but collective bargaining rights are pretty awesome, too.

The biggest loser in this election is worker rights. "Union" is a dirtier word than ever in the United States, even as US workers (quite rightly) complain bitterly about the lack of employment opportunities offering a livable wage and healthcare benefits, the lack of job security, the lack of pensions, the lack of paid sick leave, the lack of paid maternity leave, the lack of paid vacation time, the lack of meaningful amounts of paid vacation time, the lack of equal pay, the lack of effective workplace protections against harassment, the lack of effective workplace protections against exploitation of salaried employees, the lack of effectively policed workplace safety regulations, and on and on and on, all of which are the sorts of things that unions used to work to provide for US workers.

Which is not to say there weren't abuses in some unions, especially in certain industries, but the solution to a lack of perfection among unions has been to buy wholesale into the corporate demonization of unions and virtually eradicate them, rather than to reform them and make them work for their members again.

Now we're in a situation where workers are on their own, trying to navigate individual solutions to systemic abuses in which exploitation of labor is so routine that companies openly discuss without any fear of consequence how to reclassify workers so as to avoid paying overtime or providing benefits.

We have sold away our right to not be exploited, and, instead of reclaiming that right last night, in Wisconsin, our foolish decision was celebrated and the architects of the US workforce's destruction richly rewarded.

What a truly terrible thing.

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Open Thread

A toadfish.
Hosted by a Toadfish.

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Question of the Day

Suggested by my friend Ms. A: If you could change one thing about your home, what would it be?

For the purposes of this question, it doesn't matter whether you're technically allowed to make this change. Just pretend you are for this one.

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Quote of the Day

"It is a very sad day here in the United States Senate, but it's a sadder day every day when paycheck day comes and women continue to make less than men. We're sorry that this vote occurred strictly on party lines."—Senator Barbara Mikulski (D-MD), after the Paycheck Fairness Act failed in the Senate today on a procedural vote.

In a 52 to 47 tally the Senate defeated the Paycheck Fairness Act. The legislation aimed to increase protections for women filing gender-discrimination lawsuits, as well as create a federal grant program to improve women's salary negotiating skills.

The vote came down strictly along party lines, with the two independent senators voting with Democrats and Sen. Mark Kirk (R-Ill.) not voting.

...The bill's defeat came after Democrats made a tightly coordinated media blitz to call for the bill's passage. President Obama, Sens. Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) and Barbara Mikulski (D-M.d.) and Reps. Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.) and Rosa Delauro (D-Conn.) all held conference calls expressing strong support for the legislation. But Republicans strongly opposed the bill, leaving Democrats short of the seven votes needed to overcome a filibuster. Democrats said the paycheck bill's defeat is the latest example of a Republican "war on women."

...President Obama accused Republicans of putting "partisan politics ahead of women and their families."

"It is incredibly disappointing that in this make-or-break moment for the middle class, Senate Republicans put partisan politics ahead of American women and their families," Obama said in a statement.
Sigh, etc.

I love, ahem, how Obama "accused" Republicans of prioritizing ideology over women, their families, and fairness. No, I'm pretty sure he just stated the manifestly fucking obvious.

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Photo of the Day

image of Hillary Clinton on the left of the frame and a man's arm coming in from the right of the screen
Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili (R) and U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton hold a news conference at the Public Service Hall in Batumi June 5, 2012. [Reuters Pictures]
I didn't crop this image; this is the original wire photo.

All right then!

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BushQuotes!

Chapter 4, page 50: "My inclination was to support the government and the war until proven wrong, and that only came later, as I realized we could not explain the mission, had no exit strategy, and did not seem to be fighting to win."

He's talking about Vietnam, by the way.

[From George Bush's A Charge to Keep, gifted to me by Deeky, because he hates me. In the US, all people who plan to run for president write a shitty book. (Some are less shitty than others, by which I mean the Democrats' books.) A Charge to Keep was George W. Bush's shitty I-wanna-be-president book, published in 1999. I am blogging one random quote per page every day until I have either made my way through the book or lost it behind a couch.]

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Rational Empathy

In 2009, a Wall Street Journal editorial headlined "The 'Empathy' Nominee: Is Sonia Sotomayor judically [sic] superior to 'a white male'?" included the following passage (background):

In the President's now-famous word, judging should be shaped by "empathy" as much or more than by reason.
Here, then, was the conservative view laid bare: Empathy and reason are mutually exclusive concepts.

This dichotomy is once again at play during this election, as President Obama is cast as a socialist (if only!), a bleeding heart wealth-redistributor who wants to uplift the downtrodden at the expense of hard-working job creators. He doesn't understand the cold, hard realities of the world, Republicans are fond of saying. He is out of depth. He ignores facts. He is not reasonable. He, instead, has empathy. Which is even worse than cooties.

In the conservative frame, it is never reasonable to be empathetic.

And, truly, if one's worldview is structured principally of self-interest, empathy isn't reasonable, but is, in fact, a catastrophic risk to the privileged beneficiaries of an ideology built upon their informed lack of compassion and their rank-and-file's ignorant lack of compassion.

Empathy is what happens when racist white parents discover their child's best friend at school is black, and they begin to revisit their prejudices. Empathy is what happens when a homophobic woman finds out that male coworker she really likes is gay, and she begins to reconsider all those biases she's held for so long. Empathy is what happens when real life, real people, prove obviously, demonstrably wrong all those conservative bedtime stories about gays and immigrants and castrating feminazis that go bump in the night.

Empathy is what happens when good conservatives, who have long mistaken patronizing pity for compassion, suddenly realize that being white, or male, or straight, or cisgender, or Christian, or rich, or thin, or able-bodied, or USian, or educated, or in any other way not Other, doesn't make them better people; it merely makes them privileged people.

Empathy is what turns people into progressives.

Lest one imagine I am positing that progressives are somehow selfless martyrs with nary a shred of self-interest, I assure you I am not. To care passionately and wholly about others does not require an abdication of ambition nor a subjugation of agency; it requires, rather, a determination to achieve and succeed and have and be without exploiting or marginalizing others in the process. That is no small thing, but it is not the stuff of saints, either.

Progressives, at our best, merely recognize that we're all in this together—even the people who won't get our backs, the bullies who attack us just to feel less put upon themselves, the self-loathing enablers who harbor foolish dreams of being invited to the table of privilege one day, the barrel-chested barons of a new Gilded Age who stand astride the bodies of those condemned to less fortunate fates, singing the praises of social Darwinism, bellowing about the superfluity of a social safety net, and declaring "The government never gave me anything!" as they deposit seven-figure bonuses made possible by a taxpayer-funded bailout.

Progressives know we are all in the same leaky, creaky, unreliable boat. And knowing that means understanding even the most voracious self-interest is best served by egalitarianism: A fortune is worth nothing at the bottom of the ocean, less than a single penny carried safely to shore.

Empathy is what happens when people turn away from the gossamer promise of a treasure that never materializes, and turn to their neighbors and say, "I don't care about our differences; I'll help you carry the penny."

It's a totally rational decision to make—really, the only rational decision for most people. And once they come upon it, a space in which empathy and reason are regarded as an either-or proposition is no space in which they can comfortably exist. One mustn't be a raging altruist to appreciate both the decency and pragmatism of empathy in a diverse culture.

But one must be a conservative to fail to see either.

[Originally published in similar form in May 2009.]

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Zelda the Black-and-Tan Mutt curled up on the couch between a bunch of pillows, with her head raised, looking at me
Zelda, the picture of quiet, graceful dignity.

image of Dudley the Greyhound lying on his back on the couch, his legs in the air, his head flopped to one side, and his butt aimed at me
Dudley.

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Two-Minute Nostalgia Sublime



Lisa Loeb: "Stay (I Missed You)"

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Random Nerd Nostalgia: Lube Your Cube!

cubelubeww292june82nerdz001

[Description: Cartoon of hands rotating a Rubik's Cube. " Even if you've got all the right moves, sometimes your cube can be tough to move. And that's why there's new CUBE LUBE--an incredible lubricant specially formulated for the cube and other mind-boggling puzzles that move. With CUBELUBE, your cube twists more freely, turns more easily, changes faces with the kind of lightning-fast speed that can really reduce your time. And CUBELUBE's great for all kinds of toys and puzzles with moving parts.Even bikes and cycles roll faster and coast longer with CUBELUBE.Send for some today.Because until you try it, you just don't know how fast you can go." There is also a coupon for ordering.]

Scanned from Wonder Woman # 292, June 1982.

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Zimmerman Lied Because We Made Him

[Content Note: Violence; racism.]

As I mentioned last Friday, George Zimmerman's bond was revoked after it was discovered he had lied about having a second passport and failed to disclose the $200,000 raised via his website.

Yesterday, his legal team was back in court, arguing "that Zimmerman should be allowed to post a new bond because 'in all other regards, Mr. Zimmerman has been forthright and cooperative.' The statement also suggests that part of the blame for Zimmerman's misstatements rests on the many activists who worked to ensure that Zimmerman's guilt or innocence would be evaluated by a court of law."

The audio recordings of Mr. Zimmerman's phone conversations while in jail make it clear that Mr. Zimmerman knew a significant sum had been raised by his original fundraising website. We feel the failure to disclose these funds was caused by fear, mistrust, and confusion. The gravity of this mistake has been distinctly illustrated, and Mr. Zimmerman understands that this mistake has undermined his credibility, which he will have to work to repair.

At the point of the bond hearing, Mr. Zimmerman had been driven from his home and neighborhood, could not go to work, his wife could not go back to a finish her nursing degree, his mother and father had been driven from their home, and he had been thrust into the national spotlight as a racist murderer by factions acting with their own agendas. None of those allegations have been supported by the discovery released to date, yet the hatred continues.
Protip: If you don't want to be "thrust into the national spotlight as a racist murderer" by people who have the agenda of seeking justice for victims of racist murderers, then don't murder black teenagers in cold fucking blood.

Ugh, this guy. Ugh.

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