Today in Indiana: HJR-3

[Content Note: Homophobia.]

At 10am EST this morning, the Indiana House Judiciary Committee will vote on HJR-3, a proposed amendment to the state constitution which reads: "Only a marriage between one man and one woman shall be valid or recognized as a marriage in Indiana. A legal status identical or substantially similar to that of marriage for unmarried individuals shall not be valid or recognized."

This amendment has been proposed despite the fact that Indiana already has a state law restricting same-sex marriage, and despite the fact that legislators are acting in flagrant disregard of the will of the people, who by a clear majority do not want such an amendment added to their state constitution. In fact, a majority of Hoosiers want the existing ban repealed.

People are showing up at the state house this morning to protest, and Freedom Indiana has provided an easy to way to urge lawmakers to reject HJR-3.

This proposed amendment is bad for business in our already economically depressed state: Major employers who are already headquartered in the state oppose the amendment, and companies looking to move or grow are increasingly passing by states with codified discrimination. So, there's that.

And there's the fact that most Hoosiers don't support this retrofuck garbage piece of legislation passed, and our legislature is ignoring us and literally doubling-down on hatred in direct contravention of the people they are meant to represent.

But the most important reason that HJR-3 needs to be thrown into a dumpster is that it's cruel. It's cruel and dehumanizing and unfair and profoundly hostile to the idea that every US citizen is guaranteed the rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, as long as that happiness doesn't cause harm to anyone else. The Indiana legislature should not assert the right to tell the people of this state that they don't have a right to pursue happiness however they ever want to define it for themselves.

The Indiana legislature has no fucking business policing the relationships of consenting adults the end.

Anyway. Here's what's going down:

A panel of 13 lawmakers on the House Judiciary Committee is expected to take about two-and-a-half hours of testimony before taking a vote. If approved, the amendment would move to the full House for a vote, perhaps as early as this week.

The committee also will be considering a companion bill intended to clarify the amendment's intent. That measure states that the amendment is not intended to deny employer health benefits to same-sex couples or to circumvent local ordinances that forbid discrimination.

Supporters are hoping the companion bill will help reassure lawmakers who are concerned about the amendment's second sentence, which also bans civil unions or other arrangements "substantially similar" to marriage.

The committee's four Democrats are expected to vote against the amendment, but three Republicans would have to join them to defeat it. Most observers say that's unlikely.

Still, three GOP lawmakers – Reps. Daniel Leonard of Huntington, Wendy McNamara of Mount Vernon, and Rep. Jerry Torr of Carmel – have said they're undecided.
It's a nailbiter.

If the amendment is approved by both the state senate and state house, it will be put on November's ballot. And I think I've mentioned once or twice or eleventy million times my feelings about letting marginalized people's civil rights be determined by mob rule. The rights of marginalized people shouldn't be dependent on whether privileged people choose decency over the maintenance of undeserved privilege.

And, yes, in clearly worded surveys, the majority of Hoosier voters oppose legislation to deny equality. But I am not confident that a ballot measure, following the typical conservative obfuscation campaign, would accurately reflect that will. It should never go to the ballot in the first place.

Anyway. Again. Leah's got info here on how to raise your voice today and how best to get news about what's happening today at the state capitol.

I'll just wrap it up with this thought for our legislators down in Indy: Indiana's state motto is "Crossroads of America." And America is at a crossroads on marriage equality. The momentum is surely on the side of progress, but this fight isn't yet won. Most Hoosiers are imploring you to choose progress, to vote for equality. You're at a crossroads. I implore you to take the decent path.

* * *

UPDATE: After several hours of arguments, the House Committee has adjourned and has delayed the vote. The Judiciary Chairman won't say when the committee will reconvene, although I'm guessing it will be at some time when there isn't visible evidence that a majority of Hoosiers don't support this garbage. Check in with Freedom Indiana and follow the #HJR3 hashtag for updates.

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Open Thread

image of a Star Wars lunchbox

Hosted by a Star Wars lunchbox.

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Sunday Shuffle

Zedd ft. Hayley Williams of Paramore, Stay the Night

And you?

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Open Thread

image of actor Matthew Lillard in a newsboy cap

Hosted by Matthew Lillard.

Today's Lillard Fact: "Mad Lethal Twirl" is an anagram for Matthew Lillard.

This week's open threads have been hosted by pictures of Matthew Lillard wearing a hat.

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Open Thread

image of Matthew Lillard wearing a jaunty cap

Hosted by Matthew Lillard.

Today's Lillard Fact: Matthew Lillard, who famously played Shaggy in two Scooby-Doo films, once said of the role: "I was like, what the hell is my life coming to? I'm a trained actor! I've done Shakespeare and here I am having farting contests with an imaginary dog!"

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The Virtual Pub Is Open

image of a pub Photoshopped to be named 'The Shakesville Arms'
[Explanations: lol your fat. pathetic anger bread. hey your gay.]

TFIF, Shakers!

Belly up to the bar,
and name your poison!

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And Then This Happened

[Content Note: Privilege; harassment.]

So, a straight white male Christian minister decides to "try" atheism for a year by pretending god doesn't exist (ha ha that is not atheism!), and in a single day, movement atheists raise $19,000 for him.

I love that the justification is "people appreciate that this guy is giving atheism a shot." Sure. Terrific. Give him all the cookies. Meanwhile, definitely continue being hostile to marginalized people who are living their lives every day as atheists, and, if they deign to challenge privilege in movement atheism, harass the fuck out of them.

PERFECT.

"He learned what it's like to be an atheist real fast," said Hemant Mehta, a prominent atheist blogger and schoolteacher in Illinois.

...Mehta said he admired Bell's pluck and sympathized with his plight. Though he had never spoken with the pastor, Mehta set up an online fundraiser for Bell on Tuesday. In just one day, nearly 900 people donated more than $19,000 to help "the pastor giving atheism a try."

"I think more than anything else, people appreciate that this guy is giving atheism a shot," Mehta said. "I mean, he lost three jobs in the span of a week just for saying he was exploring it."
Not for nothing, but some of us who are actually atheists have lost jobs over it. It's sure neat to see Christian privilege even within movement atheism, though.

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UPDATE: Mehta has a post about this fundraiser here, in which he responds to Heina Dadabhoy at Skepchick having asked "why so many atheists have been eager to donate to the fundraiser about Ryan Bell, the pastor giving atheism a try, yet not nearly as enthusiastic to donate to the Women's Leadership Project (WLP), a 'feminist humanist mentoring and civic engagement program in South L.A. serving young women of color.'"

Mehta says: "[W]hy would people give money to Bell—a stranger they don't know—and not, say, a project run by a well-known atheist author that advances Humanism and helps young women? I wish I knew."

Yes, it's a real mystery.

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Utah Marriage News

Although the state government of Utah will not recognize the marriages performed for the short period that same-sex marriage was legal in the state, the Obama administration announced today that the federal government will recognize them. Good.

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Fatsronauts 101

Fatsronauts 101 is a series in which I address assumptions and stereotypes about fat people that treat us as a monolith and are used to dehumanize and marginalize us. If there is a stereotype you'd like me to address, email me.

[Content Note: Fat bias; disablism.]

#22: All fat people are lazy and/or weak.

This topic was requested by Shaker CeltGurl60, and it's another one of those Fat 101 topics on which I could write an entire book, but it's really as simple as this: No, not all fat people are lazy and/or weak.

As with virtually all stereotypes about fat people, laziness and weakness are qualities that some humans have, irrespective of their size. There are people of all sizes who are lazy and/or weak—and there are lots of people who are regarded as "lazy" or "weak" who are really people with disabilities that might not be visible.

Some fat people might be fat at least in part because they are sedentary, which is not actually the same thing as laziness or weakness, which may be wholly a choice, or may be due to illness or injury, or any one of a number of other reasons.

And there are a whole lot of fat people who will say, "Yes, I'm fat because I don't get enough exercise," or even, "because I am lazy," because it's easier to say that, to confess to the assumptions made about them all the time, to repeat internalized hatred of self, a hatred for which fat people are frequently commended, than it is to reveal a painful vulnerability by admitting that they don't move more than they do because they have been shamed and humiliated into non-movement by fat-hating bullies.

It isn't when I'm sitting on my couch watching TV that I'm yelled at by some rando about how fat I am. It's when I'm outside, walking the dogs or riding a bike or just strolling down the sidewalk. It's when I'm doing the things that fat haters ostensibly want my fat ass to do that I am subjected to the most humiliating discouragements of being fat in public.

Which is to say nothing of the shaming and bullying of fat people that goes on at many gyms and other activity centers.

It is incredibly easy for lots of fat people to feel that they are emotionally weak, that there's something wrong with them, for not being able to muster the strength to be visibly active when being visibly active risks being targeted by heaploads of nasty abuse, from which you will have few defenders.

And that in turn makes it easier to acquiesce, "Yes, I'm lazy," than it is to say, "I'm not lazy; I'm just tired of being abused."

An awful lot of fat people are asked to make the choice between their physical health and their emotional health. That isn't about being lazy. And it isn't about being weak.

"Weakness" is an accusation routinely lobbed at both our emotional constitutions and our actual bodies. There is no universal truth about fat people's strength, except for the fact that is is wrong to suggest that none of us are strong.

I can only speak for myself, but I am strong in both body and mind. I navigate a colossal amount of fat hatred every day of my life, and I still walk into the world with my head held high, and that is an act of both will and bravery.

I walk into the world on strong legs, thinking sometimes about the irony that it is the "calories in, calories out!" crowd of genius troll scientists screaming at me about "basic math!" who are most likely to fail to understand that carrying around my fat body for decades has made me physically strong.

That is not every fat person's experience; it is mine. But I am not exceptional. I am just inclined to speak.

-------------------------

Previously:

#21: Fat bodies have no feeling.
#20: Fat people aren't that bright.
#19: All fat people hate/want to change their bodies.
#18: You can diagnose fat people's health issues by looking at them.
#17: Fat people's choices are always dictated by their fat.
#16: You are helping fat people by shaming them.
#15: Fat people hate having their pictures taken.
#14: All fat people are unhealthy.
#13: Fat people looooooooooove Twinkies!
#12: Fat people don't like/want to see media representations of themselves.
#11: No one wants to be fat.
#10: Fat people need you to intervene in their lives.
#9: Fat people don't know how they look.
#8: Fat people don't deserve anything nice.
#7: Fat people are permission slips for thin people to eat what they want.
#6: Any fat person eating a salad or exercising is trying to lose weight.
#5: Fat is axiomatically ugly.
#4: Fat people eat enormous amounts of food.
#3: Fat people are jolly/mean, and fat people are shy/loud.
#2: I can tell how someone eats all the time, because of how they eat around me.
#1: Everyone who is fat is fat for the same reason.

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Olivia the White Farm Cat sitting on my lap, yawning

Oh, pardon me. Am I boring you?

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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The Friday Blogaround

This blogaround brought to you by pink shoes.

Recommended Reading:

Cristy: [Content Note: Stalking] The Basics: Unconsented Contact, or Stalking is a Synonym for Hunting

Rachel: [CN: Breast cancer] False Alarms Remain a Huge Problem with Mammograms Used for Breast Cancer Screening

Andy: Maryland Lawmakers to Introduce Trans Rights Bill, 'Ex-Gay' Therapy Ban

Jamilah: No Black Artists Had Number One Singles in 2013

Trudy: Janelle Monáe Is Flawless and Beyoncé Is an Electric Lady

BYP: African Americans Rank #1 for Social Media Site Use

Mannion: Christie

Nick: Imagine your life if you hadn't seen this.

Leave your links and recommendations in comments...

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Two-Minute Nostalgia Sublime



Tripod: "True Geek Love"

This week's TMNS have been brought to you by geeky songs.

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In the News

Here is some stuff in the news today!

[Content Note: War; displacement] Government forces in South Sudan have launched an offensive against rebels, causing thousands of people to flee from Bentiu. "As peace talks in neighbouring Ethiopia continue to falter, at least 201,000 people are now displaced across the country, 60,000 of whom are receiving UN support. An estimated 32,000 have fled to neighbouring Uganda, which has called for financial support."

The massive credit/debit breach at Target reported last month was actually "nearly twice as large as previously revealed, with the retailer saying 70 million customers were hit—making it one of the largest security breaches of its kind. ...The stolen information includes names, mailing addresses, phone numbers or email addresses for up to 70 million individuals." Fuhhhhhhhhh.

Yesterday, the Obama administration announced "that women at risk for breast cancer will be able to get preventive cancer drugs, like tamoxifen and raloxifene, at no additional cost to them under the Affordable Care Act," clearing up ambiguity about whether "chemoprevention drugs" qualify as a preventative service.

[CN: Transphobia] 16-year-old Jewelyes Gutierrez is a trans student who was bullied by her classmates at school, where the administration did not respond to her request for intervention. So when she fought back as her only recourse, she was charged with a misdemeanor count of battery. Meanwhile, her harassers got a temporary suspension. Her sister has started a petition asking the District Attorney to drop the charges against Jewelyes, which you can sign here.

[CN: Environmental harm] A chemical spill along the Elk river in Charleston, West Virginia, "has resulted in a tap water ban for as many as 300,000 people, shutting down schools, bars and restaurants and forcing residents to queue at stores for bottled water. Governor Earl Ray Tomblin declared a state of emergency for nine counties as a result of Thursday's spill of 4-Methylcyclohexane Methanol, a chemical used in the coal industry. ...Health officials were advising residents to use the water only for flushing toilets and fighting fires."

[CN: Medical malpractice] ProPublica, in its continuing investigation into patient safety in the US, shares reader stories about failing to find representation for malpractice cases, because they or their lost family members didn't earn enough or weren't young enough to make the cases financially viable. Accountability is for the rich.

Neat: "Astronomers have found a new class of 'hypervelocity stars'—lone stars traveling fast enough to break away from the gravitational pull of the Milky Way galaxy. ...Experts believe that a star must get a million-plus mile-per-hour boost relative to the motion of the galaxy to achieve escape velocity. They also approximate that the Milky Way's central black hole has a mass equivalent to four millions suns, big enough to generate a gravitational force powerful enough to speed up stars to hyper velocities. When a binary pair of stars becomes caught in the black hole's grip, this is what happens: As one of the stars spiral in toward the black hole, its companion is heaved outward at an incredible velocity. So far, 18 giant blue hypervelocity stars have been discovered than could have been generated by such a mechanism."

Blub: 78-year-old Joseph Cox slipped and fell outside his home in the cold and couldn't get up, but his neighbor's dog Angus made sure he was rescued.

And finally: CSIRO builds Sophie a dragon! [Background story. Note: Video begins playing automatically at link.]

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Quote of the Day

[Content Note: Misogyny; anti-choice rhetoric; racism.]

"Speaking of Wendy Davis, I personally am concerned about the 'super women' ticket of Abortion Barbie with Hispanic Sen Leticia Van De Putte as her running mate."—Denton County Republican Party Chair Dianne Edmondson, in her Jan. 7 newsletter, in which she announced she was resolved "to do everything we can right here at home in Denton country to KEEP TEXAS RED!"

The Republican outreach plan to female and Latin@ voters looks like it's going splendidly!

[H/T to Pam.]

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Here Are Two Stories I Just Read Back-to-Back

[Content Note: Class warfare.]

1. Economic Policy Institute: Unemployment Rate Drops as Workers Flee Weak Labor Market.

The jobs report released this morning marks six years since the official start of the Great Recession in December 2007 and four-and-a-half years since its official end in June 2009. Today's report shows a very weak labor market, and the continued fleeing of workers from the labor force because job opportunities are weak.

The unemployment rate dropped from 7.0 percent to 6.7 percent in December, but as has been a constant refrain throughout this recovery, the improvement was not for "good" reasons. The share of the working-age population with a job did not increase in December, and the labor force participation rate dropped back down to its lowest point in 35 years. The number of "missing workers" increased from 5.6 million to 6.0 million. (Missing workers are jobless workers who are not actively seeking work but who would be either employed or looking for work if job opportunities were stronger, after taking into account long-run demographic trends.) If these workers were in the labor force looking for work, the unemployment rate would be 10.2% instead of 6.7%.

...With job opportunities so weak for so long, workers have gotten stuck in unemployment for record lengths of time. Last month, the extensions of unemployment insurance benefits were allowed to expire—an unprecedented move given the weak state of the labor market. The share of the workforce that is long-term unemployed (i.e., jobless for more than six months) is nearly twice as high today as it was in any other period when we allowed an extended benefits program to expire following earlier recessions. This is no time for Congress to turn its back on the long-term unemployed.
Emphasis mine.

2. OpenSecrets: Millionaires' Club: For First Time, Most Lawmakers are Worth $1 Million-Plus.
For the first time in history, most members of Congress are millionaires, according to a new analysis of personal financial disclosure data by the Center for Responsive Politics.

Of 534 current members of Congress, at least 268 had an average net worth of $1 million or more in 2012, according to disclosures filed last year by all members of Congress and candidates. The median net worth for the 530 current lawmakers who were in Congress as of the May filing deadline was $1,008,767—an increase from last year when it was $966,000. In addition, at least one of the members elected since then, Rep. Katherine Clark (D-Mass.), is a millionaire, according to forms she filed as a candidate. (There is currently one vacancy in Congress.)

Last year only 257 members, or about 48 percent of lawmakers, had a median net worth of at least $1 million.

Members of Congress have long been far wealthier than the typical American, but the fact that now a majority of members—albeit just a hair over 50 percent—are millionaires represents a watershed moment at a time when lawmakers are debating issues like unemployment benefits, food stamps and the minimum wage, which affect people with far fewer resources, as well as considering an overhaul of the tax code.
Emphasis mine.

The ruling elite has never been so elite! Wheeeeeeeeeeeeee!

Meanwhile, thanks to a slew of garbage decisions by the US Supreme Court, like the democracy-obliterating Citizens United, he (used advisedly) who has the most money wins. It's virtually impossible for a candidate with fewer resources to win a congressional campaign now. So we are looking forward to a whole lot more of privileged millionaires making decisions about a social safety net they will never need.

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Rachel Maddow: An Alternate Theory of the Christie Scandal

Yesterday at his press conference, Republican New Jersey Governor Chris Christie shot down the theory that the George Washington Bridge lane closures were political retribution for Democratic Fort Lee Mayor Mark Sokolich's failure to endorse Christie in his reelection bid. That was the only proffered theory for why Christie's now-fired deputy chief of staff Bridget Anne Kelly had sent an email last August to the Port Authority reading, "Time for some traffic problems in Fort Lee." Even given Christie's proclivities toward bullying, it was a pretty weak explanation for a decision to majorly fuck the people of Fort Lee. So, maybe it was something else?

On her show last night, Rachel Maddow put forth an alternative theory of what motivated the Washington Bridge lane closures, and it's very compelling stuff.


The full transcript will be here, when it's made available. In the meantime, it would take me all day to transcribe 17 minutes, so, care of Steve Benen, here is a summary of the details of the alternate theory, which is laid out in the last six minutes of the above video segment:
In New Jersey, state Supreme Court justices serve an initial term of seven years, at which point the sitting governor decides whether or not to reappoint them. Since the New Jersey constitution was revised and adopted in 1947, every governor has reappointed every state Supreme Court justice without exception.

That is, until Christie took office. In 2010, soon after Christie's inauguration, he did something unprecedented: he declined to reappoint one of the justices: New Jersey Supreme Court Justice John Wallace, the court's only African-American member. Wallace was not burdened by scandal or allegations of wrongdoing; Christie simply didn't want him on the high court anymore.

Democrats in the state Senate were livid. Rachel described the political firestorm that soon erupted in Trenton:
Senate Democrats made Chris Christie's first nominee to replace Justice Wallace, they made her wait until somebody else's seat came up on the court then they would consider her for that one, but not Justice Wallace's.

Then, Chris Christie nominated a man named Phil [Kwon] for the state Supreme Court, Senate Democrats said no. Then, Chris Christie nominated a man named Bruce Harris for the court, Senate Democrats said no.

Senate Democrats were so mad about what Christie did to take John Harris off the Supreme Court when he was up for re-nomination that they would not let anyone through. It's been a big political crisis in New Jersey. Senate Democrats rejected every one of those Christie nominees, one after the other.

And then when another of the justices on the Supreme Court, a Republican, came up for re-nomination just like John Harris had, and the Senate Democrats signaled that they were going to give her a whale of a time at her re-nomination hearing, Chris Christie just flipped out. He had enough. He pulled that justice off the Supreme Court rather than submit her to re-nomination before the Senate Democrats.
No governor had ever failed to reappoint a sitting state Supreme Court justice, but Christie had suddenly done it twice – once for the court's only African-American jurist, infuriating Democrats, and then again for a justice he actually liked. The governor, enraged, held a press conference to tell reporters, "I was not going to let her loose to the animals."

The "animals," in this case, were the Democrats in the state Senate.

Christie said that on the afternoon of Aug. 12, 2013.

On the morning of Aug. 13, 2013, Christie's deputy chief of staff told the governor's guy at the Port Authority, "Time for some traffic problems in Fort Lee."

The leader of the Senate Democrats at the time was a senator from … Fort Lee.
The Republican judge who came up for renomination was just not any judge. She was married to a key member of Christie's administration. It wasn't just political; it was personal.

I hope some enterprising journalists in New Jersey will ask the governor about this today.

[H/T to Alison.]

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Open Thread

image of actor Matthew Lillard wearing a ski cap

Hosted by Matthew Lillard.

Today's Lillard Fact: Matthew Lillard has appeared in five films with fellow thespian Freddie Prinze, Jr.: Wing Commander (1999), Summer Catch (2001), She's All That (1999), Scooby-Doo (2002) and Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed (2004).

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Question of the Day

Suggested by Shaker masculine_lady: "What has surprised you recently?"

That at age 39 I've suddenly developed a taste for coffee. Recently, my palate has changed in a way that makes bitter more pleasant than it used to be—I never used to like tea or wine or Scotch, either (or, as Iain likes to say, "You didn't drink any adult beverages!" lol). I always loved the smell of coffee, but could never tolerate the taste. Then, suddenly, I did!

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Photo of the Day

image of partially frozen Niagara Falls
From the Telegraph's Pictures of the Day for 9 January 2014: "The U.S. side of the Niagara Falls, also known as the American Falls, is encrusted with icicles. The Canadian side is still flowing." [REUTERS]
Wow.

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Her

In which @DeekyMD, @SoDevolved, and I talk about the movie Her, but not really, because, as always, it immediately degenerates into silly bullshit. Enjoy.

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