Interest in Obamacare Increases

Despite the many glitches with the launch of the Affordable Care Act's open enrollment, the newest Reuters/Ipsos poll finds that uninsured people are "showing more interest in the coverage offered under President Barack Obama's healthcare law."

The uninsured view the 2010 Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, commonly known as Obamacare, more favorably since online marketplaces opened - 44 percent compared with 37 percent in September, according to the Reuters/Ipsos poll. It found that 56 percent oppose the program compared with 63 percent in September.

A higher proportion of the uninsured also said they are interested in buying insurance on the exchanges, with 42 percent in October, saying they were likely to enroll compared with 37 percent in September.
At Think Progress, Tara Culp-Ressler has a great piece on "Why Obamacare Isn't Losing Popularity Even after a Month of Really Bad Press." She notes, in part:
One of the Ipsos pollsters, Chris Jackson, offered up a plausible theory: Americans are finally having a personal experience with health reform. "The launch of the exchanges, that's the first real world event for a lot of people," he told Reuters. "There's been this sense that once people got familiar with it, public opinion would start to move in its direction."

...People with employer-sponsored health insurance have already interacted with some of the benefits put in place by Obamacare, like no-cost preventative services and increased consumer protections. But the beginning of the exchanges' open enrollment period was a massive expansion of the pool of people who stand to directly benefit from health reform, which has allowed even more Americans to have that "personal experience" that Jackson referenced. It makes sense that's preventing Obamacare's approval from plummeting, despite a roll-out that's been widely panned.
All true. Additionally, I think there's something even simpler than that at play: The reason Obamacare continues to pique people's interest is because lots of people still don't have access to affordable (or any) healthcare, and, for millions of them, Obamacare represents their best option for establishing that access.

As I've said previously, it isn't relevant, on an individual interest level, how flawed the Affordable Care Act is (and, in my opinion, it's deeply flawed), because uninsured people's choice isn't between the more desirable universal socialized healthcare and the less desirable Affordable Healthcare Act. Their choice is between the Affordable Healthcare Act and no health coverage at all.

That makes it a pretty damn attractive option, given the actual, practical, immediate options.

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Open Thread


Hosted by Mister Morton.

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Question of the Day

By far the most requested repeat QotD (even though it originally ran as a Top Five) and first suggested by Shaker yes: What is your favorite life hack, i.e. a little tip or trick used to simplify everyday tasks or make things a little easier?

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Pass

screen cap of two tweets authored by me reading: 1. I keep getting super weird invitations to try out for reality shows. No thank you! 2. Yes, I am indeed a fat woman in a loving relationship. No, I do not want to be on your reality show.

On Twitter, @tiarala asked (rhetorically): "WHY IS THAT REALITY SHOW MATERIAL?!" To which I replied: "Because we are like UNICORNS! Fat, fat unicorns."

I have also gotten asked if I want to audition for a reality show about women who are the black sheep in their families, and whether I know anyone who might be interested in trying out for a drag queen competition reality show. There was another one, Danish IIRC, inviting me to be on a show about what it's like to be a fat American. Among others.

I eagerly await my invitation to be a display from the San Diego Zoo.

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Liss and Ana Talk About Elementary

[Content Note: Feminist slur; disablism; misogyny. Spoilers for the most recent episode of Elementary.]

image of Joan Watson (Lucy Liu) and Sherlock Holmes (Jonny Lee Miller); Holmes is scowling
So many good scowls this week! Here is one of them!

Ana: So… this week's Elementary wasn't 100% terrible. There was a lot I didn't like about it, but in some ways it felt most like last season to me.

Liss: To me, too. Also: A Zelly dog! But did Sherlock seriously call that dog a "feminazi"? OMG.

Ana: Christ-on-a-stick but Sherlock actually called her adorbs dog a "feminazi". THANKS, ELEMENTARY.

Liss: I just don't even. Anyway.

Ana: I continue to be really irritated that we can't have characters other than Joan and Sherlock. I like J&S, but the longer they continue in total seclusion with each other (minus Joan's Terrible Girlfriends who pop up for plot points), the more it feels like this is really unhealthy and also the more concerned I am that the writers want to set up sexual tension. And to clarify: I don't mean that it's necessarily unhealthy to be reclusive, but this is WAY more reclusive than Joan was before she became a detective (when she had friends and dates and ex-boyfriends who were now friends-friends), and she's expressed dissatisfaction about this lifestyle in previous episodes.

Liss: Mm-hmm. I actually felt sad when Joan said (approximately) "there are only so many Friday nights, and we're spending one of them like this." It just felt like her life has gotten really small. Which I realize, ha ha boy do I realize, how a peculiar professional life in particular, no less any professional life, can become consuming in a way that risks diminishing your personal life, and sometimes that is an acceptable and even worthwhile exchange, but still. Joan seems unsettled with it, and that makes it feel weird. I guess it's also because she doesn't seem to be meeting a whole lot of new people in this work.

Ana: Yet we're just not going to do anything about that, apparently because writing in new characters is hard. Speaking of, I thought: Hey It's That Guy New-Detective would be a new character, but I guess they're slow-rolling that. Also I'm so thrilled that if he is the new character, we have another white guy in the cast. Phew.

Liss: Ha ha phew!

Ana: But! That leads me to the J&S Plotline, which was him snagging her case. I kinda thought that was well-done; it was plausible that Sherlock would solve it as a "palate cleanser" and not to steal her thunder. And it was plausible that she'd be annoyed about it, even though justice was served, etc. And I blubbed a little when he gave her the trunk of Cold Cases, because that was sweet and he understood that she needed a boundary like that, and also it seemed entirely clear that he thought she might be CAPABLE of solving things he couldn't. I liked that. (I liked less him hovering in the background watching her, but that's largely because I'm terrified that the writers are trying to make this a romance.)

Liss: Yes, I really loved the cold case scene. A LOT. That was really well done. I always love when Sherlock makes himself vulnerable in a way that real growth as a person necessitates, and I love the way Lucy Liu plays those scenes, with a quiet but meaningful "thank you," in a tone that conveys so beautifully, and without any condescension or obligation, that she acknowledges the profundity of his gesture. She gives him all the space to be vulnerable, and it's really terrific.

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What is Glenn Beck even talking about?

Via Kyle at Right Wing Watch:

Glenn Beck, Professional Expert on Everything and Genius: I mean, this whole organic thing is bullcrap. Because there's no—you can slap "organic" on anything. It doesn't mean anything. So, there—so the, the, um, progressives will say, "I know! That's why we need regulation!" NOOOO. NOOOO. That's why we need to be honorable people. That's why, if you really want that, you go and you find somebody that you trust. You got to people, and, even if it's Whole Foods, and you have to trust that they're being honorable and they're looking, you know, for the right foods and they'll tell you what it is. Let them, let the market sort it out. Let the market say, "This is our standard for organic; this is what we mean by organic." You do your own homework!
LOL WHUT.

I know even Glenn Beck isn't daft enough that he meant let the literal market, i.e. the grocery store, sort it out, but it is amusing me to no end that it appears that's what he was saying.

Not that what he was actually saying is actually any smarter.

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The Other Thing About Parental Pranks

[Content Note: Pranks; hostility to consent.]

Parents—or other older family members, guardians, adult friends of the family—playing pranks on kids is not merely a grave breach of trust. It is also a dangerous communication—even if an unintentional one—that consent doesn't matter.

Kids who are taught by the adults they are meant to trust that consent doesn't matter are more likely to themselves be hostile to other people's consent. It's tough to, for example, convincingly teach your kid not to bully other kids while simultaneously teaching your kid that whether someone wants something done to them doesn't matter, as long as it's "funny."

And kids who are taught that consent doesn't matter are also more likely to have difficulty drawing boundaries for themselves, because they haven't learned they're even allowed to have inviolable boundaries. Particularly if a child's protests to pranking have been met with shaming that implies they're humorless or oversensitive or unfun, a child will also learn that speaking up on one's own behalf, in one's own defense, will yield more harm, rather than less.

Certainly, there are people who were pranked by their parents as kids who feel quite strongly they enjoyed the familial pranks and have no lasting effects from it. And maybe that is absolutely true for every one of those people, and maybe some of those people are less respectful of others' boundaries than they have really investigated. Either way, it's irrelevant.

The point is that parental pranking stands to communicate to a child that consent doesn't matter. And that is a very dangerous message to convey to anyone. Ever.

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SCOTUS Considering Public Prayer Case

[Content Note: Religious supremacy.]

Linda Stephens, who is atheist, and Susan Galloway, who is Jewish, sued their town of Greece, New York, over the "inclusive" public prayers that open local town board meetings, virtually all of which have been led by Christians.

Today, the US Supreme Court heard oral arguments in the case: "The conservative majority appeared to have to votes to allowed the policy to continue in some form. But both sides expressed concerns about the level of judicial and government oversight over the content of prayers presented by members of a particular faith."

"We are a very religiously diverse country," said Justice Samuel Alito, worried about the town officials articulating binding guidelines on what can be said. "All should be treated equally. So I can't see how you can compose a prayer that is acceptable to all these" religions.

But Justice Sonia Sotomayor worried about the effect on local citizens who choose not to stand and bow their heads when asked during a public prayer.

"Why wouldn't they feel coerced in some way?"

The high court began its public session Wednesday as it has for decades, with the marshal invoking a traditional statement that ends, "God save the United States and this honorable Court."
Ha ha welp.

The thing about these debates, such as they are, is that "inclusive" or nondenominational prayers don't exactly address the existence of atheists, who don't generally pray. Which is to say nothing of the minority of religious people whose practiced doctrine explicitly discourages public worship. There's no prayer that can be "inclusive" of people who do not pray and/or publicly worship.

Now, admittedly, I am a dirty heathen, but I really fail to see why it is necessary to incorporate prayer into public proceedings. (Aside from, you know, the obvious objective of publicly parading one's claims to virtue.) If there are indeed public officials who feel they are obliged by their god(s) to pray in a public building immediately before preceding with public business, then institute a moment of silence before any session begins, so they might quietly do whatever they need to do, and the rest of us can spend the time praying, making a mental grocery list, or begging our lord and savior Jesus Jones to give us the patience to get through another council meeting with Councilman Jeremy Jamm.

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The Wednesday Blogaround

This blogaround brought to you by leaves.

Recommended Reading:

Jamilah: WNBA Star Britney Griner Does Not Need Your Make-Up

Digby: [Content Note: Rape; police brutality; torture] Rape by Instrumentality

BYP: [CN: Guns; violence; racism] Woman Shot to Death after Seeking Help after Car Accident; Family Demands Answers

Alexandra: [CN: Rape culture] Twelve Questions about AR Wear's "Anti-Rape Underwear"

Fannie: Richard Dawkins Bemoans Loss of "Little Jar of Honey" at Airport!

Jacob: [CN: Biphobia] Study: Straight Men Less Likely to See Bisexuality as 'Legitimate Sexual Orientation'

Finally: I love this post by Trudy (@thetrudz) about meeting Lutze (@FeministGriote) in person SO MUCH. Meeting friends/colleagues in person after knowing each other online has been one of my favorite parts of this work, and every time I read someone I admire gushing about meeting someone else I admire overwhelms me with incandescent joy!

Leave your links and recommendations in comments...

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Olivia the White Farm Cat with her head turned upside-down, cuddling against my arm, which shows part of my tattoo of a Scottish thistle

Livsy, cuddling against my inked arm.

As always, please feel welcome and encouraged to share pix of the fuzzy, feathered, or scaled members of your family in comments.

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Two-Minute Nostalgia Sublime



Weird Al Yankovic: "I Lost on Jeopardy"

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In the News

Here is some stuff in the news today!

[Content Note: Hostility to agency; misogyny. NB: Not only women need access to abortion.] Just go read this immediately: "Anatomy of the War on [Agency]: How the Koch Brothers Are Funding the Anti-Choice Agenda."

[CN: Drones] Six months after President Obama promised greater transparency on the US drones program, we still don't know an awful lot about the program or the policies governing it.

Hahahahahaha: Republican Indiana Governor Mike Pence's inaugural Indiana Governor's Conference for Women sounds like it was terrific! "If you're going to have a conference for Hoosier women and by Hoosier women, maybe you should cover some things that really matter to Hoosier women." — Harmony Glenn, on the "Conference for Women" which failed to address the wage gap, reproductive rights, and healthcare.

Sad trombone: The conservative garbage paper The Washington Times has "mutually agreed" with Senator Rand Paul to end his column after multiple charges of plagiarism.

[CN: Bullying] Whoa: Richie Incognito, the NFL player about whom I wrote yesterday, who viciously bullied teammate Jonathan Martin, was reportedly asked "to toughen up" Martin by the Miami Dolphins' coaches.

Some Swedish cinemas are instituting a new ratings system that requires films to pass the Bechdel Test to receive an A rating.

OMG every single postmortem report on the 2012 Romney campaign is priceless, and this is no exception: "Clint Eastwood's Republican National Convention Debacle Was So Bad, Mitt Romney's Senior Strategist Threw Up."

I hope you're reclining on your fainting couch, because it turns out that Marvel's Thor is not a totally accurate representation of Norse mythology. My world is shattered. As if with a giant hammer.

Speaking of Marvel, they will be introducing Ms. Marvel, aka Kamala Khan, a teenage Muslim girl superhero, early next year.

Attention, Scandal-heads! The amazing Khandi Alexander has been cast [spoilers at link] as Olivia Pope's mum. PERFECT.

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Hawaii House Committee Advances Same-Sex Marriage Bill

Let's get it done, Hawaii!

After five grueling days of testimony from thousands of individuals, the Hawaii House Judicial and Finance Committees — meeting jointly — advanced marriage equality legislation to the full chamber.

...The bill now advances to the House, where it is expected to pass, at least according to a whip count from two weeks ago.
Woot!

[See also: Illinois.]

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Election Nooz

So, there were elections yesterday in some parts of the US, and here are results from some of the races of particular national interest:

Republican Governor Chris Christie handily won reelection in New Jersey. I am sorry, New Jersey progressives! And I am also sorry for the rest of us that a majority of New Jersey voters handed a reelection to the only Republican with any mojo heading into the 2016 presidential elections. It would have been helpful if he'd been thrown out on his ear right now. Whoops for America!

Democrat Terry McAuliffe was elected governor of Virginia in a squeaker. Welp, Virginia progressives, at least you aren't stuck with Ken Cuccinelli! Which is about the nicest thing I can say about Terry McAuliffe!

Democrat Bill De Blasio was elected Mayor of New York City in a landslide. Woot! I guess his diabolical plan to appear in public with his family worked! (Seriously, how cute are they?! See also!)

Democrat Ed Murray was elected Mayor of Seattle, making him Seattle's first publicly out gay mayor.

In Colorado, six of 11 counties "voted by strong margins Tuesday in favor of seceding from the state." Neat!

And in Iowa, the Democratic mayor-elect of Coralville, John Lundell, got a congratulations call from Vice President Joe Biden after his win despite the Koch brothers' attempt to buy the election.

Please feel welcome and encouraged to share election news from your neck of the woods!

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Happy Birthday, Iain!

image of Iain as a baby

It's my burfday!

Happy Birthday, Iain. You are my favorite person in the multiverse. Even though I haven't met every person in the multiverse, I am totally confident that, even if I had, I would still say the same.

I love you more than this husky loves playing in a pile of leaves:


[Video Description: A husky joyfully plays in a pile of leaves.]

THAT IS HOW YOU MAKE ME FEEL IN MY HEART!

I love you, babe.

♥ ♥ ♥

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Open Thread


Hosted by Naughty Number Nine.

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Question of the Day

Suggested by Shaker Nice_Shirt: "On nights when you have very little time, energy, and/or spoons to get dinner on the table for yourself, partner, family, etc., what are your 'go to' recipes/meal ideas to get everyone eating something good, fast?"

One of my favorite things in the world is my little $30 Hamilton Beach steamer, which makes dinner so easy. A piece of fish or chicken breasts in the bottom, and some veggies up top, and we've got a beautiful dinner in 30 minutes or less.

Typically, I'll make a quick little shallot and white wine sauce to go with it, or, if not, just a little salt and pepper will do. Also: When I have the time and energy, I make compound herb or avocado butters (example recipe) and freeze them, so when I do something in the steamer, I can just cut a thin slice off the frozen roll for flavor, which melts on top after I plate everything from the steamer. Easy and delicious!

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Everything About This Makes Me Happy


21 Times Ian McKellen and Patrick Stewart Were the Cutest Work BFFs.

moving image of Sir Patrick Stewart saying 'We do well, don't we?' while looking at Sir Ian McKellen

moving image of the two men holding hands, and McKellen saying, 'We do.'

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Illinois House Passes Same-Sex Marriage Bill

YAYAYAYAYAYAYAYAYAYAYAYAY legal same-sex marriage is about to become fact in Illinois!

The House today narrowly approved a gay marriage bill, clearing the way for Illinois to become the 15th state to legalize same-sex unions.

The bill got 61 votes, one more than the bare minimum needed to send the measure back to the Senate for final approval that's expected later today. Democratic Gov. Pat Quinn has said he would sign the bill into law should it reach his desk.

...Under the measure, the definition of marriage in Illinois would change from an act between a man and a woman to one between two people. Civil unions could be converted to marriages within a year of the law going on the books.

...Rep. Kelly Cassidy, an openly gay North Side lawmaker, begged lawmakers to consider what they will tell people in the future about the vote.

"What did you do when faced with this historic moment?" Cassidy asked.

She recounted how she had to rush from Springfield to Chicago to be with partner who was hospitalized while being in excruciating pain. But Cassidy said she had to weigh whether she could go "straight to her side" or spend an extra hour picking up paperwork that showed she had the legal right to be with her.

"Please, vote 'yes' and join us on the right side of history," Cassidy said.
And they did! Or at least enough of them to pass the legislation! All the blubs forever! *rainbow confetti*

[H/T to Jordan.]

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Pranks Are the Worst, Part Eleventy-Seven

[Content Note: Pranks; bullying; hostility to consent; child abuse.]

Pranks are inherently predatory. The entire intent of pranking is to get one up on someone who is vulnerable, by virtue of their trusting the prankster because of an existing relationship or by virtue of being deliberately denied relevant information or by virtue of having an expectation of safety or security or normalcy. Pranks are also, by their very nature, hostile to consent, because most pranks don't work if the person being pranked is able to give enthusiastic consent to whatever is about to be done to and/or around them.

Taking advantage of someone for a laugh, betraying their trust for one's own amusement, is a shitty, bullying thing to do.

And when a parent does it to a child, it's abusive.

So it is that every year I rage*seethe*boil when Jimmy Kimmel's "parents prank their kids by telling them they ate all their Halloween candy" video goes viral. (You may recall my previously writing about his equally stellar Garbage Christmas Present prank.) Here is a typical write-up of this year's video, in which one inevitably finds lines like, as here: "Keep your eyes out for the girl at 2:30, who is truly heartbreaking."

Heartbreaking is an appropriate word for what happens, which I will not post or transcribe. Suffice it to say that many of these kids—including the girl at 2:30 and the boy who admonishes his mom after she reveals she was just kidding, "Well, that's not very kind!"—are more decent human beings than their parents.

Kimmel says his show received "an avalanche" of submissions from parents willing to play this dirty trick on their kids.

The thing about parents pranking their kids—and I cannot believe I need to write this—is that it fundamentally shatters children's security and trust in the idea that their parents will not harm them. (Which, in some of these families, may never have existed in the first place.) The takeaway for a child whose parents like to prank them is that their parent(s) might harm them, and no amount of "JUST KIDDING!" can fully repair the crack in the edifice of what should be an inviolable trust.

Parents who prank, tease, and ridicule their own kids, even if they're "just kidding," do so at the risk of their kids' ability to feel safe even in their own homes. That is not a risk any parent should be willing to take with a child.

And somehow, I don't imagine that "but I only did it so people could laugh at your despair on NATIONAL TELEVISION!" would bring a whole lot of comfort.

Stop it, parents. Just stop.

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