Pentagon Omits Trans* People from "Human Goals Charter"

[Content Note: Transphobia.]

Welp:

The Pentagon issued Monday a new declaration of its goals for human rights, and although the document affirms for the first time inclusion of gay, lesbian and bisexual service members, it omits any reference of either transgender troops or civilian workers.

The document, known as the Department of Defense Human Goals Charter, sets forth principles for the Pentagon to "create a culture of inclusion" in the U.S. armed forces — both on the military and the civilian side. Although the document sets goals for the department, it doesn't necessarily reflect a change in policy or law.

..."The defense of the nation requires a well-trained volunteer force comprised of active and reserve military members and civilian personnel," the document says. "We gain a strategic advantage through the diversity of our total force and create a culture of inclusion where individuals are drawn to serve, are valued, and actively contribute to the overall mission success."

...The charter includes sexual orientation as a category in which the military will strive to be a "model of equal opportunity." The term "sexual orientation" is also included in a section that describes ways "to provide equity in civilian employment."

But there is no reference to gender identity. Transgender people are barred from service in the military because of medical regulations, despite growing efforts among LGBT advocates to push for openly transgender service.

..."The Department considers that service members must serve in austere environments, many of which make necessary and ongoing treatments related to sex reassignment and many other conditions untenable," [Lt. Cmdr. Nathan Christensen, a Pentagon spokesperson] said. "Policies on military personnel and health care regarding transgender members are intended to meet the needs of the services, which include the ability to deploy to and serve in austere environments with limited (and perhaps no) access to medical care for prolonged periods on little or no notice."
My first thought about this was to research what the rules are regarding pregnant servicemembers, whose healthcare needs presumably make "untenable" serving in "austere environments" without easy access to routine medical care. And the policies on pregnant servicemembers aren't especially clear, though pregnancy is no longer an automatic discharge, and it seems like, generally, accommodations are made for pregnant servicemembers.

(I hope those with more knowledge of current military practices can weigh in here regarding pregnancy policies.)

In any case, I strongly suspect that it would be easier than Lt. Cmdr. Christensen suggests to make reasonable accommodations for trans* servicemembers.

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Seen

At the grocery store this weekend:

image of a sticker dispensing machine for children full of Duck Dynasty stickers, with a handwritten 'Out of Order' sign stuck to it

"Out of order" is right. You're out of order! You're out of order! This whole machine is out of order! They're out of order!

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On Game of Thrones

[Content Note: Descriptions of sexual violence and torture. Discussion of Game of Thrones which includes spoilers. Please Note: We all like problematic shows, and we all draw our lines about what is overwhelmingly problematic in different places. This piece is about my line, which doesn't mean it has to be yours.]

I have always had a complicated relationship with Game of Thrones, the TV series. From the start, I had criticisms of its use of exploitation of women and use of sexual violence. I didn't watch the show for a long time after being alienated by the pilot, but Iain, who's read the books, kept watching the series, and I was slowly drawn in as I'd catch scenes of complex female characters who I really liked.

(Plus: Peter Dinklage.)

So, I eventually became a fan of the show, even if a fan with reservations and criticisms.

One of the most jarring and frustrating things about the show is that it is one of the few shows on television with female characters who are truly well-drawn, who are genuinely imbued with their full humanity—but that's only if a female character is fortunate enough to be one of the primary characters, rather than one of the many actresses used as naked props in the series which spawned the portmanteau "sexposition," which describes, to put it bluntly, the habit of making expository scenes more "fun" with a screen full of boobs.

Lady T once wrote a terrific piece, which has really hung with me, about the juxtaposition of naked ladies and props and the fully human female characters in Game of Thrones:

I think our culture has become so accustomed to seeing naked women used as props in advertising, film, television, and in other forms of media, that we don't always notice objectification anymore. Those of us who are actively feminist will notice unnecessary boobage in a show, but more casual consumers of media and popular culture might not pick up on the objectification in such displays of nudity, because the objectification is everywhere.

Game of Thrones, however, gives us scenes with characters like Cersei and Catelyn and Arya and Brienne and Daenerys, shows them as complex and complicated and morally gray as any male character on the show–and two minutes later, gives us a scene where a male character talks to a woman who exists as nothing more than a naked giggling prop.

The shift is jarring, as if the show is saying, "Women are complex, just like men–now here are some more boobs in soft glowy lighting, brought to you by The Male GazeTM." It's jarring enough that even a casual viewer is more likely to notice. You can't be oblivious to the naked giggling props when there are so many fully-clothed, complex human beings around, reminding us that women are people.
It is something for which the two male showrunners, David Benioff and D.B. Weiss, have never had anything satisfying to say, so I knew that the exploitation of naked female bodies (and the exploitation of the actresses in those scenes) was always going to be the cost of accessing stories about the female characters I loved.

That itself was a steep cost.

Increasingly, the show relied on the torture of women to create characterization for male characters. Minor female characters, like lowborn sex worker Roz, were tortured to death to convey that male characters were particularly terrible. (In contract, The Hound was shown to have a glimmer of goodness by rescuing a major female character, the highborn lady Sansa, from a gang-rape.) It is a violent show altogether, but the way that sexual violence was used took on a particular tone that suggested sexual violence is uniquely despicable, but also fair game for casual use as shorthand for character development.

This was not reserved exclusively for sexual violence against women: One of the cruelest characters in the show, Ramsay Snow, cuts off the genitals of Theon Greyjoy in order to "break" him. And references to that heinous act of sexual violence are often followed in the show by edits to jump to other male characters cutting into a sausage at a meal. A serious act of torture turned into a punchline.

A steeper cost as the price of entry. And, over the past two episodes, the cost has become even steeper.

In last week's episode, Jamie Lannister raped Cercei, his sister—and longtime lover and mother of his children. The scene in the book is problematic, in that Cercei protests but eventually consents (despite the fact that Jamie doesn't seem to care whether she consents), but it is not a violent rape. In the show, it is a violent revenge rape, in which Jamie wonders why he has been fated to love such a "hateful woman" after Cercei resists his advances, then punishes her with what is clearly depicted as rape.

In the days following the airing of the episode, over which there was much outcry from fans, the male writers of the show weighed in, the male writer of the original material (George R.R. Martin) weighed in, the male director of the episode weighed in, and the male actor in the scene weighed in, all in defense of the scene being consensual. The closest any of them came to acknowledging it was a scene of rape was actor Nikolaj Coster-Waldau, who, when asked if it was rape, said: "Yes, and no. There are moments where she gives in, and moments where she pushes him away. But it's not pretty."

Yes and no. There is no "yes and no" in consent.

The director's take was even more discouraging:
Well, it becomes consensual by the end, because anything for them ultimately results in a turn-on, especially a power struggle. Nobody really wanted to talk about what was going on between the two characters, so we had a rehearsal that was a blocking rehearsal. And it was very much about the earlier part with Charles (Dance) and the gentle verbal kidnapping of Cersei's last living son. Nikolaj came in and we just went through one physical progression and digression of what they went through, but also how to do it with only one hand, because it was Nikolaj. By the time you do that and you walk through it, the actors feel comfortable going home to think about it. The only other thing I did was that ordinarily, you rehearse the night before, and I wanted to rehearse that scene four days before, so that we could think about everything. And it worked out really well. That's one of my favorite scenes I've ever done.
Note, here, that the director refers to the two men in in the scene by the actors' first names, but the woman in the scene, the woman who is raped, by her character's name. And Lena Headey, who plays Cercei, is the one person (and only woman) involved with the scene whose opinion about whether it was rape we never heard.

At least none that I've been able to find. (And I'm not suggesting she is obliged to do so. I'm more interested in the fact that, in the dozens of articles I've read about this scene, nary a single writer seeking responses from the writers, director, and actors has penned even one line wondering what she thinks of the scene.) If Headey has responded, it's sure not getting as much attention as every man involved with the creation of the scene. Which is a dynamic that seems to replicate real rape cases, mimicking whose voices are privileged to define what constitutes consent. Like in many real rape cases, we're content to let all the men involved define "whether" it's rape and have no interest in what the woman who played the victim has to say.

Funny that, how the public discussion of a rape scene that is supposedly not a rape scene looks so very much like rape culture.

All of which speaks to how much I, and other viewers, can trust the people who make this show regarding sexual violence—and how it's used and depicted.

Which brings me to last night's episode, featuring a scene that opened to the sound of a woman weeping while being raped and showing multiple women being raped as background, while a male character directed his men to "fuck them 'til they're dead."

This scene was invented for the show.

The women being raped are not major characters; they were props being used to establish that this new male character is not a nice guy. And the scene was shot in a way to give maximum titillation to anyone who gets off on watching women being raped, or anyone who can overlook that it's a rape scene, as long as there are boobs at which to gaze.

Obliging me to view the graphic torture and rape of women as entry for stories about female characters I like is too steep a cost. And fuck the stewards of this show for making that the cost of access to rare stories about complex women.

Having tweeted about this a bit already, I'm already getting the usual pushback. I'm oversensitive. (Yawn.) I'm trying to ruin everyone's fun. (Do what you want; I'm speaking for myself.) I should worry about more important things. (Do you know how many people watch this show?) This is just "the way it was back then." (Don't argue realism with me in defense of rape scenes in a show with fucking dragons.) The show has always been violent. (Yes, and I am objecting to how certain types of violence are used.) What do I expect? (More.)

I especially expect more from a show that simultaneously demonstrates a capability for writing complex female characters.

Like a man who exceptionalizes the women in his life only to monolithize all other women, the stewards of this show treat the major female characters as humans, but the women in the background as "women." Whoops.

Thus we get a scene in which naked women, marked with cuts and bruises, are raped by men who are told to "fuck them 'til they're dead" in a throwaway bit of lazy and unnecessary male character development—in the very same episode that Brienne, a female knight of singular extraordinariness, sets off to save Sansa, armed with a sword of Valyrian steel and a custom-made suit of armor.

George R.R. Martin, who wrote the series on which the show is based, identifies as a feminist. At this point, if he has any decency and integrity, he needs to speak out firmly against that scene, which was invented for the show and is incredibly hostile to women. Including the actresses exploited for such garbage and the female viewers who shouldn't have to navigate such rank misogyny to engage with his female characters.

As for me, the cost of entry has become too steep. So long and thanks for all the dragons.

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Sophie the Torbie Cat and Olivia the White Farm Cat sitting on the kitchen table beside each other, looking in opposite directions
"Hey cats!"

image of Sophie and Olivia sitting on the kitchen table beside each other, looking at me
"Yes?"

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 Monday Blogaround

This blogaround brought to you by cranberries.

Recommended Reading:

Imara: [Content Note: Racism] Cliven Bundy, Donald Sterling, and Affirmative Action

BYP: [CN: Guns; death] Chicago Activist Leonore Draper Shot and Killed after Leaving Anti-Violence Event

Vaidehi: [CN: Racism] Finding Your Different

Terri: [CN: Misogyny] The Naming of Things

Andy: Japan's First Lady Akie Abe Joins Tokyo Gay Pride Parade

Ron: Astronomers Have Discovered a Star That's as Cold as Ice

And last but not least: Congratulations to fat activist Cat Pausé on her 100th show!

Leave your links and recommendations in comments...

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Two-Minute Nostalgia Sublime



Jay-Z with Alicia Keys: "Empire State of Mind"

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In the News

Here is some stuff in the news today...

[Content Note: Tornadoes; injury and death] At least 16 people have been killed by a wave of tornadoes across Arkansas, Oklahoma, and Iowa. Many people were injured, and many people have lost their homes, property, businesses. I haven't yet seen links to aid for the affected areas; please feel welcome and encouraged to leave links in comments as they are made available. I'm so sorry to everyone who survived these storms. I hope you get the resources you need, that you're reunited with pets, that your recovery is not any more difficult than it has to be.

[CN: Racism; antisemitism] Over the weekend, a recording was made public of LA Clippers (basketball) owner Donald Sterling making racist comments to V. Stiviano, who, at the time of the recording, was his girlfriend, and who is a woman of color. Deadspin has 15 minutes of the recording, with partial transcript. There's nothing to say besides this guy's an indecent fuck. Well, I will say two quick things: 1. I love that Magic Johnson, with whom Stiviano had posed for a picture, which started the fight recorded and later made public, is interested in buying the Clippers. Perfect. 2. I have read in article after article about Sterling's rank racism that he's "from another century" or variations on that theme. Nope. He's not. He expressed what are very much contemporary views for a whole lot of white people. Part of meaningfully addressing racism, white privilege, and white supremacy means being honest about that.

[CN: Torture; Christian supremacy] Former Republican vice-presidential candidate Sarah Palin said during a speech at the National Rifle Association's "Stand and Fight" rally this weekend that, if she were president, she wouldn't hesitate to torture accused terrorists. "Well, if I were in charge, they would know that waterboarding is how we baptize terrorists." What a truly terrible person she is.

[CN: Guns] Also at the NRA convention this weekend: "The National Rifle Association on Sunday offered young children free membership and the opportunity to win a high-powered rifle or shotgun. A 'Youth Day' at the influential gun lobby group's annual convention in Indianapolis was scheduled to culminate with a prize draw in which participants could take home a WBY-X rifle or shotgun supplied by Weatherby, a major firearms manufacturer and a sponsor of the event. All were also given a free six-month youth membership of the NRA." I don't even have words. I really don't.

[CN: War on agency] Mississippi pro-choicers are fighting to keep open the last abortion clinic in the entire state: "Mississippi could become the first state in the country without a single abortion clinic, depending on the outcome of a current legal challenge that's in the hands of a conservative federal appeals court. ...In 2012, Republican lawmakers in the state enacted a burdensome new state law that requires abortion doctors to obtain admitting privileges at local hospitals. The only two doctors who provide abortion care in Mississippi fly in from out of state to serve their patients, and they haven't been able to get hospitals to agree to those partnerships, so the future of their work is in jeopardy." Sob.

And finally: Here is just a great video of a swimmer being protected by a pod of dolphins from a(n unseen) shark. Coincidentally: "Walker's swim raised money for the Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society." Aww!

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Guns Everywhere

[Content Note: Guns.]

Last week, I mentioned that Republican Georgia Governor Nathan Deal had signed a "guns everywhere" bill into law, which allows registered gun owners "to carry their weapons into churches, schools, libraries and bars." And elsewhere.

Which means, among other things, that stories like this will become increasingly common:

A man carrying a gun in a holster prompted parents at a children's baseball game to halt play and round up the children behind a dugout, but authorities say no crime was committed.

Parents and others at the Forsyth County park north of Atlanta flooded the 911 center with 22 calls about the man Tuesday evening.

Parent Karen Rabb tells WSB-TV the man was asking people if they saw his gun, saying there's nothing anyone could do about it.

Forsyth County sheriff's deputies questioned the man, and found that he had a valid gun permit. Authorities said that since the man made no verbal threats or gestures, they couldn't arrest him.

Sheriff Duane Piper said the man had the right to carry the gun, but called his conduct inappropriate.
I think it's really neat (by which I mean terrible) that brandishing a weapon, asking people if they see it, and telling them there's nothing they can do about it doesn't constitute making "verbal threats or gestures."

I am not part of the gun culture. I'm part of the no-gun culture. But there's no room for a no-gun culture anymore, not when people are allowed to take guns anywhere and everywhere.

[H/T to Aphra_Behn.]

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It Continues to Be a Real Mystery Why Republicans Aren't Connecting with a Majority of Female Voters

[Content Note: Misogyny; victim-blaming.]

This is something that a person running for office actually said:

One of the six Republican primary challengers to Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) once blamed women for causing most divorces – even when their husbands are unfaithful.

Det Bowers made the remarks during a sermon at the Christ Church of the Carolinas, where he served for more than a decade as pastor. The sermon was available for download until the podcast was removed recently ahead of the June 10 primary. But Politico obtained an audio recording of the sermon and published his comments Thursday.

"I find that in about 95 percent of broken marriages, though the husband's the one that ran out on his wife, the wife loves her children more than she does her husband," Bowers said. "That is an abominable idolatry."

He then directed his comments, his voice rising, to the women in his congregation, which he led from 2000 to 2012.

"Do you hear me, ladies?" Bowers said. "It is an abominable idolatry to love your children more than you love your husband, and it will ruin your marriage. And yet you blame it on him because he ran off with some other woman! He did run off with some other woman, and you packed his bags. All of his emotional bags, you packed for him. Is that true in every case? No, but it's true in the vast preponderance of them."

..."You just ran him off," Bowers said. "You paid more attention to your children than you did to him. 'Oh, he doesn't need me?' He needs you more than they do. He chose you, they didn't. An abominable idolatry."
Bowers released a statement explaining that, as part of his role in "steering my flock away from the destruction of the sacred union between husband and wife," he "simply shared with the congregation the information I received from the couples I counseled."

Sure. I'm definitely certain that the "couples" he counseled shared the information that cheated-on and abandoned wives were to blame for their husbands' behavior.

Well, maybe one-half of those couples did.

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Your Progressive Pope

[Content Note: Anti-choice rhetoric; Christian Supremacy.]

Hey, remember when Pope Francis said that the Roman Catholic church has become "obsessed" with abortion, same-sex marriage, and contraception, and that they shouldn't talk about it so much anymore, and everyone was all "WOO PROGRESSIVE POPE!" and I was all "UH, NOT REALLY!" and then everyone just kept ignoring when Pope Francis said stuff like abortion is "horrific," so they could maintain this fantasy about a Pope who loves to talk about poverty but refuses to support women's control over their own reproduction, which is one of the most crucial means by which women have of avoiding poverty? Remember all that?

Well, here's some more terrific stuff for everyone invested in the Progressive Pope meme to ignore!

Ahead of the weekend's [historic sainthood mass in Vatican City], Pope Francis showed glimpses of that complexity on Friday, when he made a seemingly rare statement to a group of African bishops in which he strongly condemned abortion.
"Abortion compounds the grief of many women who now carry with them deep physical and spiritual wounds after succumbing to the pressures of a secular culture which devalues God's gift of sexuality and the right to life of the unborn."
Pope Francis has made a habit of focusing on poverty and social inequality rather than abortion, which remains a divisive issue both within and beyond the Catholic church. Two weeks before, he had called abortion "an unspeakable crime" during a speech to an Italian anti-abortion group.
Let's just review that: "Abortion compounds the grief of many women who now carry with them deep physical and spiritual wounds after succumbing to the pressures of a secular culture which devalues God's gift of sexuality and the right to life of the unborn."

Said Shakesville contributor Aphra_Behn, who sent me this story, which I'm sharing with her permission: "I really enjoy the way he worked in slut-shaming, mental health myths, AND a fundamental disrespect for bodily autonomy into one pullquote. Pope Totally Awesome!!!!!!!"

And NOT ONLY THAT! But he managed to work in heterocentrism and ciscentrism, while disappearing atheists and victims of rape. There's an awful lot of wrong packed into that quote!

But he's totes progressive blah blah fart.

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Open Thread

image of a bunch of cilantro

Hosted by cilantro.

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Open Thread

image of a dish of baba ganoush

Hosted by baba ganoush.

This week's open threads have been brought to you by the letter B.

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Open Thread

image of a bluejay sitting on a branch

Hosted by a bluejay.

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The Virtual Pub Is Open

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

(See what I did there?)

TFIF, Shakers!

Belly up to the bar,
and name your poison!

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Welp

Putin Halts All Talks with White House:

Since the invasion of Crimea, President Vladimir Putin and President Barack Obama have had regular phone calls in an often half-hearted attempt to deescalate the ongoing crisis inside Ukraine. But as the U.S. and EU prepare to unveil new sanctions against Russia, Putin has decided the interactions should stop. The Kremlin has ended high-level contact with the Obama administration, according to diplomatic officials and sources close to the Russian leadership. The move signals an end to the diplomacy, for now.

"Putin will not talk to Obama under pressure," said Igor Yurgens, Chairman of the Institute for Contemporary Development, a prominent Moscow think tank, and a close associate of Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev. "It does not mean forever."

...On Friday, Kerry warned that new round of American financial assaults on Russia were on the way. "We are putting in more sanctions, they will probably come Monday at the latest," he said in a private meeting in Washington, according to an attendee. Russian businesses and individuals close to Putin would be on the sanctions list, he added.

Diplomatic sources close to the process confirmed that Putin is not interested in speaking with Obama again in the current environment. The two leaders might talk again in the future but neither side is reaching out for direct interaction, as they had been doing since the Ukraine crisis began. The failure of the agreement struck last week in Geneva between the contact group of the U.S., EU, Russia, and Ukraine has made further direct Washington-Moscow interactions moot.

...That leaves the channel between Secretary of State John Kerry and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov as the only semi-functioning high-level diplomatic channel between Washington and Moscow. But even that often-frosty relationship has further chilled as the two sides hurled insults and accusations this week.
I don't even know what to say. I'm just watching this unfold with wide eyes.

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Important Jem & the Holograms News

Last month, I shared the news that Jem and the Holograms was getting its own live-action film, and said I hoped that Aja, Shana, and Carmen would not be whitewashed. So, the film has now been cast, and the good news is that Aja and Shana have not been whitewashed.

Aubrey Peeples, best known for a role on TV's Nashville, will play Jem. Disney star Stefanie Scott is Jem's sister Kimber, Aurora Perrineau (Pretty Little Liars) is Shana and Hayley Kiyoko (Lemonade Mouth) is Aja.

Jon M. Chu is directing from a script by Ryan Landels. The director posted a photo of the full Jem and the Holograms movie cast, which you can check out below.
images of the actresses next to their characters' respective names

It's still not set in the '80s, though! But I'll take it.

Discuss.

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The Jury Is Still Out on Climate Change

[Content Note: Climate change; fat bias.]

Here are two things I read today:

1. Drought Now Covers Every Last Inch of California: "According to the April 22 release of the U.S. Drought Monitor, every last inch of California is in a state of 'moderate' to 'exceptional' drought—the first time in the monitor's 15-year history that's occurred. Indeed, the vast majority of California's territory is now either at 'extreme' or 'exceptional,' which are the two most severe levels."

2. The First Week of May Will Be Decidedly Un-Springlike for Much of the Country:

A significant multi-day severe weather outbreak is looking increasingly likely for this weekend. The powerful low pressure system associated with those storms will push temperatures up into the 80s (or even 90s) across much of the south until Monday or Tuesday.

After the storm system slowly moves through, blocked in place by an impressive blob of high pressure over Canada, a sharp north-to-south elongation of the jet stream will usher in some seriously frigid weather. The first week of May is looking decidedly unspringlike, especially for the Gulf Coast. Low temperatures on May 1st could be in the 30s from Dallas to Birmingham—challenging hundred-year-old record lows—with cold weather of nearly that magnitude spreading to the East Coast by next weekend.

There's even a (slim) chance of snow as far south as St. Louis, Chicago, Detroit, and Boston next week. There hasn't been measurable snowfall in St. Louis in May since 1929.
If we have snow next week, I am going to— I'm gonna— well, there's nothing I can really do about it, so I'm prolly gonna do this!


[Video clip from Pretty in Pink of Duckie, having just tried unsuccessfully to beat up Blaine, bouncing off a locker and then running down the hall, tearing down a prom banner.]

Rrrwahh!

Meanwhile, this article about #1 climate change activist Al Gore starts out with an observation about how much weight he's lost: "Al Gore is richer and skinnier than ever." I'm sure that's definitely what Al Gore was hoping would be the lede of an article which later describes him as "steamed...about the lack of clear progress in combating global warming, a failure that clearly eats at him."

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Olivia the White Farm Cat curled up with a blue blanket, sound asleep
Cat nap.

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 is brought to you by naps.

Recommended Reading:

Save Wįyąbi Project: [Content Note: Rape culture; racism] #DecolonizeSAAM Week 4: Anti-Blackness

Health At Every Size® Blog: [CN: Fat bias; discussion of intersectional oppression] HAES® Matters: Understanding the New HAES Principles

Jes: [CN: Fat bias; body policing; disordered eating] Six Things That I Understand about the Fat Acceptance Movement

BYP: [CN: Racism; misogyny] Study: Faculty Members More Likely to Respond to White Males

The Mary Sue Staff: [CN: Sexual violence; other forms of violence] A Frank Discussion of Game of Thrones's Rape Scene and Its Epidemic of Sexual Violence

Prison Culture: [CN: Carcerality] Data Visualization: Rise of U.S. Incarceration 1978-2012

Dayvoe: The Right Wing Web. Again.

Leave your links and recommendations in comments. Self-promotion welcome and encouraged!

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Here Is Just a Great Video of a Man Finding Out That's He's Going to Be a Grandpa

Awwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww blub!

An older white man with a mustache, wearing a blue Cubs jacket, sits in a booth at a restaurant. He opens a little package and pulls out a pacifier with a note attached. At first he doesn't notice the note.

He laughs. (He has a great laugh.) "This looks like something you used to suck on when you was little," he says.

"Yeah?" says his daughter, from behind the camera. "You should probably read it."

He reads the note, which is a note from his only daughter, 20 years after her mother and his wife died, informing him that he's going to be a grandfather. His eyes widen and his entire face lights up. He laughs. "All right!" His daughter and (presumably) her male partner laugh.

He reads the note again, cradling the pacifier in his hands, then clutches it to his chest and smiles. "Really?" he asks excitedly.

They laugh. "Yeah!" says his daughter.

"Aw!" he says. He looks down at the pacifier cradled in his hands. His eyes well up. He clutches it to his chest again, grinning. His daughter laughs happily as he wipes away tears.

"Told you he was gonna cry," she says, though joyful laughter. He cries. "I'm ten weeks," she says. He puts his hand to his mouth and looks at her.
Congratulations to the whole family and best wishes for an uneventful pregnancy and safe birth!

[Via Marisa.]

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