GOOD NEWS!

[Content Note: Racism; carcerality.]

Last month, I wrote about Mike Anderson, the man who, because of a clerical error, was never asked to report to prison to serve his sentence of 13 years after being convicted of armed robbery. That is, until the error was discovered, and Anderson, who had spent the intervening time building a lawful and productive life, was taken to prison after a SWAT team armed with automatic weapons showed up at his front door while he was making breakfast for his three-year-old daughter.

Now, Anderson is a free man again:

Today, after 10 months behind bars, a judge gave him back his freedom.

The AP reports:
Judge Terry Lynn Brown lauded Anderson's "exemplary" behavior during his 13 years of freedom before the arrest. "You've been a good father. You've been a good husband. You've been a good taxpaying citizen of the state of Missouri. That leads me to believe that you are a good man and a changed man."

As the judge announced his decision, about 10 of Anderson's relatives broke out in sobs and cried. Anderson stared straight ahead but dabbed tears from his eyes. Afterward, he hugged his toddler daughter tight. The hearing lasted about 10 minutes.
In a statement, Missouri Attorney General Chris Koster said he was pleased with the outcome.
I could not be happier for Anderson and his family and friends.

Ten months in prison, however, is no small thing. I can't imagine the disruption to his and his family's lives, and I desperately hope that he and his family are able to restore what has been lost.

[H/T to Shaker Miranda.]

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Dudley's face and looooong nose in close-up, with his head resting on a pillow

This guy. ♥

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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Next-To-Last Update on the Wendy Davis Transcript

Volunteers will have gotten the email last night, but I am basically done with the transcript project. (YAY! SO MANY TIRED YAY!) I've jammed all 266 transcribed segments into a single epub document, which was by far the bear share of the work. The only things left for me to do is to put words on the cover, finish putting in the full list of volunteers, and upload the thing onto Amazon and Barnes&Noble. I hope to have that finished THIS WEEK, at which point the following will happen:

1. I will sleep for a week. This project has been going on for, no joke, almost a full year. I have basically not been sleeping for the past month, just from wanting to get this done. (YAY!)

2. I will put up a final transcript update letting people know where they can get a copy, etc. Then a part of me hopes to never talk about this again, lol, not because it wasn't a good project (IT WAS. IT IS.) but just because now I have to move forward and live with the day-to-day of being in New Gilead right now and that's a lot of feels to work through.

I know some of you have asked me about a paper version of the transcript, and I gotta go thresh out some feels on that. The PDF version of this thing ended up being, like, 2,000+ "pages" long (for a large definition of "page", probably larger than a book would use), and I'm not even sure Amazon's Print on Demand service provides for something of that scope. I'd have to research that and...

...I honestly don't know if I have the brain for that right now, or if there's a corresponding level of demand to off-set the cost. I could Kickstarter it, except that too has an activation energy cost--I'm not sure I'm in a peppy-enough plce for a Kickstarter right now. So, long story short, we'll see on paper and I might need to gauge interest on that but for right now we're looking at ebook only for the near future.

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Two-Minute Nostalgia Sublime



The Carpenters: "Top of the World"

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In the News

Here is some stuff in the news today...

[Content Note: Racism] It seems like Samsung's new smart watch has a race problem: A Shaker who works in a Samsung call center, and who wants to remain anonymous, emailed me with a heads-up about the new family of Samsung smart watches launched in April. The watches feature a heavily touted embedded heart-rate monitor. However, the sensor is not working particularly well — especially on skin tones other than white. Shaker Anon says, as far as zie can tell, Samsung is aware of the issue, but hasn't halted sales, nor has publicly disclosed that people of color with darker skin tones may have issues with their technology. "The last I heard," says Shaker Anon, "is a vague 'it's being looked into' statement."

The uninsured rate for US adults has dropped to a record low of 13.4%: "This is the lowest monthly uninsured rate recorded since Gallup and Healthways began tracking it in January 2008, besting the previous low of 13.9% in September of that year. The uninsured rate peaked at 18.0% in the third quarter of 2013, but has consistently declined since then." Huh! I wonder what it is that could have had this remarkable effect? "This downward trend in the uninsured rate coincided with the health insurance marketplace exchanges opening in October 2013." Welp. The floor is yours, Republicans! *crickets*

(I will note, again, that I have problems with the ACA, and also observe that 13.4% uninsured is still far too high. But that doesn't mean this hasn't been a game-changer for a hell of a lot of people. More and more and more progress on access to healthcare, please!)

[CN: War; violence] The situation in Ukraine continues to deteriorate: "Ukrainian troops fought pitched gun battles Monday with pro-Russian militias occupying the eastern city of Slovyansk, and the government sent an elite national guard unit to the southern port city of Odessa as Kyiv scrambled to bring much of the country back under the capital's control. The Ukrainian Interior Ministry said four officers have been killed and another 30 soldiers injured in the fighting. Gunfire and multiple explosions were heard in and around Slovyansk, a city of 125,000 people that has become the focus of the armed insurgency against the new interim government in Kyiv."

[CN: Terrorism; school violence] In Waseca, Minnesota, a 17-year-old's plan to kill his family and cause massive damage and injury at his high school was thwarted by police: "The investigation began in late March after three small explosive devices were discovered at an elementary school playground in the city of 9,400 people, about 80 miles south of Minneapolis. The youth allegedly admitted setting off practice bombs there. He allegedly told police he planned to shoot his mother, father and sister, then start a fire in a rural field to distract first-responders while he went to the school to set off pressure-cooker bombs in the cafeteria. He also allegedly planned to throw Molotov cocktails, gun down students, and kill a school liaison officer while he helped injured students. He said his ultimate goal was for a SWAT team to kill him. ...Police recovered seven firearms, ammunition and three functional bombs from the boy's home, along with black clothing and a ski mask." What a huge relief that he was caught in time. What a terrifying situation for the residents of Waseca nonetheless.

[CN: Christian Supremacy] The Supreme Court has ruled "that a town in upstate New York may begin its public meetings with a prayer from a 'chaplain of the month,'" because of course they have. Background on the case here and here.

In good news: "The United States Department of Education's Office for Civil Rights (OCR) issued guidelines this week clarifying for the first time that Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 prohibits discrimination against transgender students. 'Title IX's sex discrimination prohibition extends to claims of discrimination based on gender identity or failure to conform to stereotypical notions of masculinity or femininity and OCR accepts such complaints for investigation,' the guidelines state. The guidance, included in a larger document on school's responsibilities to protect students from sexual violence, also declares that schools must provide equal access to all programs and facilities for transgender students, consistent with the student's gender identity."

[CN: Sexual violence] Last month, director Bryan Singer was accused in a lawsuit of drugging and sexually assaulting a teenage boy in 1999. Another suit has been filed, alleging sexual abuse of another teenage boy. Singer's lawyer denies the allegations, naturally.

[CN: Guns; violence] The latest news from the Oscar Pistorius trial is that a neighbor testified Pistorius was upset after shooting and killing Reeva Steenkamp. I'm sure he was.

And finally, this is one of the best stories ever: After their dog Reckless was separated from them during Hurricane Sandy, the James family searched and searched for him, but couldn't find him. "Eighteen months later, the James family decided it was time to welcome another dog to their hearts and restored home. ...Charles and Elicia walked into Monmouth County SPCA to adopt their new family member but instead spotted Reckless, the one they had lost 1.5 years ago. 'I told my wife 'That dog looks like Reckless' and she said 'It is Reckless!'' Charles James told NY Daily News. 'He started jumping three feet in the air and we started crying.'" ALL THE BLUBS FOREVERRRRRR!

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Quote of the Day

black and white image of Gabby Sidibe, a fat black woman, scrunching up her face and looking tough as hell

"'How are you so confident?' I'm an asshole! Okay? It's my good time, and my good life, despite what you think of me. I live my life, because I dare. I dare to show up when everyone else might hide their faces and hide their bodies in shame. I show up because I'm an asshole, and I want to have a good time."—Gabourey Sidibe, in a speech, transcribed here, that she delivered last Thursday at the Ms Foundation Women of Vision Gala.

[H/T to everyone in the multiverse, and my thanks to each and every one of you!]

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Protest March Leaders Arrested in Nigeria

[Content Note: Abduction; terrorism; misogyny; abuse.]

Three weeks after 276 Nigerian school girls were abducted, 223 of whom are still missing after some of the girls managed to escape, the Nigerian government has been roundly criticized for its inaction in recovering the girls, held by terrorist organization Boko Haram.

Last week, in an embarrassing demonstration of his administration's lack of urgency, Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan established a "fact-finding committee" to "map out strategies to rescue the more than 200 abducted female students of Government Secondary School Chibok in Borno State" and to "liaise with relevant authorities and the parents of the missing students to establish the actual number and identities of girls abducted; interface with the security services and Borno state to ascertain how many of the girls have returned; mobilise the surrounding communities and the general public to support the rescue strategy and operation among other terms of reference."

This colossal insufficiency was met with a protest march, the female organizers of which have been arrested:

Saratu Angus Ndirpaya, from of Chibok where the kidnappings took place, said state security service agents drove her and protest leader Naomi Mutah Nyadar to a police station on Monday after an all-night meeting at the presidential villa in Abuja, the capital.

She said police immediately released her but that Nyadar remains in detention.

...Ndirpaya says First Lady Patience Jonathan accused them of fabricating the abductions.

"She [Jonathan] told so many lies, that we just wanted the government of Nigeria to have a bad name, that we did not want to support her husband's rule," she said in a telephone interview with AP.

Ndirpaya said other women at the meeting cheered and chanted "yes, yes," when the first lady accused them of belonging to Boko Haram, the group accused of kidnapping the girls.

"They said we are Boko Haram, and that Mrs Nyadar is a member of Boko Haram."

She said Nyadar and herself do not have daughters among those abducted, but are supporting the mothers of the kidnapped daughters.
So, while the actual terrorist organization responsible for the kidnapping, who have released 57-minute video claiming responsibility, remain at large and unaccountable, the women who march in protest of that inaction are accused of being members of that organization to discredit their criticism. Awesome.

International governments, including the United States, have offered the Nigerian government assistance in the search and rescue of the missing girls. My strong suspicion is that outside intervention on the ground would not improve these girls' fates, but would put them in even more danger. Instead, I would like to see the US and other countries put enormous pressure on the Nigerian government to take meaningful action. Immediately.

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Yeah, It's a Real Mystery Why Hillary Clinton Doesn't Like the Press

[Content Note: Misogyny; violence.]

See, here's the thing: It's not "self-pity" to feel upset that there are news organizations who casually invoke your assassination while willfully misconstruing your comments in order to demonize you:

On the May 3 edition of [Fox News' Cashin' In], panelist Wayne Rogers criticized the Obama administration's response to the September 2012 attacks [in Benghazi] and in particular then-Secretary of State Clinton's comments at a Senate hearing, in which she asked "what difference at this point does it make" when questioned about the editing process of a set of talking points relating to the attacks.

Distorting the nature of her comments, Rogers asked his fellow Fox panelists, "Imagine that Hillary Clinton runs for President and gets assassinated in the process and somebody shows up — a Congressman — and says, 'well, what difference does it make anyway?' I mean — The New York Times would have it on the front page."

Host Eric Bolling agreed, adding, "They would have a field day."

Co-panelist Juan Williams quickly explained to Rogers and Bolling that they were distorting comments Clinton made while testifying about the attack.

During her January 2013 testimony, Clinton responded to a question from Sen. Ron Johnson (R-WI) about the State Department's role in editing Obama administration talking points on the attack, and said, "[T]he fact is, we had four dead Americans. Was it because of a protest? Or was it because of guys out for a walk one night and decided they'd go kill some Americans? What difference at this point does it make?" She added, "It is our job to figure out what happened and do everything we can to prevent it from ever happening again."

Conservative media figures have repeatedly distorted this Clinton comment, imagining it to reflect indifference to the lives lost in the attack, including Ambassador Chris Stevens. In reality, it is a direct rebuttal to the ongoing conservative obsession with the set of talking points, which were subject to changes made based on intelligence assessments available at the time. Clinton was accurately noting during her testimony that given the ongoing efforts to capture those who were responsible for the attacks and to provide security for U.S. consulates and embassies, the bureaucratic details of who edited a government memo were trivial at best.
When you think it's absolutely fine to toss out a rhetorical about someone being assassinated while running for president, for any reason, no less in the process of a mendacious attempt to discredit that person, you really need to stop and take a breath and reexamine your fucking life.

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Open Thread

image of text showing some common diphthongs

Hosted by diphthongs.

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Open Thread

image of a large parking lot full of parked cars

Hosted by cars.

This week's Open Threads have been brought to you by the letter C.

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Open Thread

image of a modern black candelabra with white candles

Hosted by a candelabra.

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The Virtual Pub Is Open

image of a pub photoshopped to be named 'The Maybe a Vestment Pub,' with a picture of actor Kevin Branzahan sticking his head in from the bottom left corner
[Explanations: lol your fat. pathetic anger bread. hey your gay. maybe a vestment.]

TFIF, Shakers!

Belly up to the bar,
and name your poison!

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117

Add another seat at the periodic table!

The periodic table has been extended, with the announcement of the confirmation of the yet to be named element 117.

In 2010 a US Russian collaboration announced they had produced atoms of an element with 117 protons, filling a gap that appeared when 118 was made four years earlier. However, International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) insists on corroboration by two independent teams before it allows new elements to be added to the Periodic Table, although a temporary name of Ununseptium is in use until confirmation has been made. It has taken four years, but this appears to have finally arrived.

"Making element 117 is at the absolute boundary of what is possible right now," says Professor David Hinde of the Australian National University, one of the authors of a paper published today in Physics Review Letters. "That's why it's a triumph to create and identify even a few of these atoms."

Hinde was part of a team at the GSI laboratory in Germany who fused calcium 48 and berkelium 249. This is not easy, because berkelium 249 is both hard to produce in substantial quantities and has a half life of 320 days...

In general large atoms have shorter half lives, that is decay more quickly through radiation, as their masses become greater. However, what are know as islands of stability exist, and the authors believe the one hour half life of 270Db "marks an important step towards the observation of even more long-lived nuclei of superheavy elements located on an 'island of stability.'"

...Element 117 is the most recent of six elements first announced by the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research in Russia. Of these 113, 115, and 118 remain unconfirmed, although claims have been made for the first two.
Element 117 has been produced in such small quantities that it's not easy to study, and it's certainly not about to change the world with widespread use. Still, this is pretty damn cool.

[Via Misty.]

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The Friday Blogaround

This blogaround brought to you by the sound of raising voices.

Recommended Reading:

Preston: [Content Note: Child sex abuse; descriptions of acts of sexual assault] Taking Away My Childhood: On Sexual Assault and Boyhood

Jess: [CN: Sexual violence] My Thoughts on the Latest Vanderbilt Rape Case News

Andy: [CN: Homophobia] Challenge to Idaho Gay Marriage Ban to Get Hearing on Monday

Prison Culture: [CN: Carcerality; racism] The Growth of Incarceration in the US

Sun Tzu: [CN: Video game violence] The Importance of Female Voices Inside Games

Angry Asian Man: [CN: Racism] UPS Calls Customer "Chink" in Delivery Documentation

Fannie: [CN: Misogyny; antifeminism] Welp, That Sounds Fantastic

Aura: [CN: Hostility to undocumented immigrants] Documented Opens in Theaters

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

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On Game of Thrones, Part Three: "Realism"

[CN: Rape, sexual abuse, misogyny, violence. This post contains spoilers for Game of Thrones.]

Part 1 is here. Part 2 is here.

In discussions regarding Game of Thrones' portrayal of sexualized violence against women, I note that the excuse of "historical realism" is frequently invoked. As Liss has already noted, this is a troubling response, since the program isn't historical docudrama, but a fantasy world of dragons and giants.

But even if we grant that it's supposed to be closely modeled on the Wars of the Roses and other episodes in European history, so some historical reality is necessary, I still find that reaction troubling.

Why, I wonder, do the "realism!!!" rape apologists never expect to see any of the real-life historical dynamics which occasionally helped protect women from violence, or at least minimize it somewhat by punishing men's violence? Why is "realism" only invoked in one direction?

Take, for example, the absence of anything like the medieval Christian Church in the television story. Historically, that was a highly misogynist institution, yes. But it also offered rules and punishments about sexuality and violence which sometimes might restrain men's worst behavior. The men at Craster's, for example, might "realistically" include some men who would hesitate at committing mass rape, particularly in the face of death and with oathbreaking and rebellion already on their consciences.

And what about women having options other than childbearing? What if all-female holy orders existed? What if Gilly could take refuge in a convent, rather than a brothel? What if Ned's "talk" with Arya also offered the possibility of becoming a wise and powerful abbess? (I don't think Arya would like that any better than the fate her father actually outlined, but it would mean her "realistic" options were more than one.)

And what about the Church's rather important role in politics? In theory at least, the Church controlled marriage and demanded consent from both parties. What would these stories look like if women and girls could at least delay marriage by denying consent? What if Roz's murder meant excommunication for Joffrey (or had ANY consequences at all?)

And speaking of politics, what if women could gain power through their piety? What if, for example, Margaery's acts of charity were part of her larger reputation for personal piety, one she could use to her advantage in King's Landing? What if Sansa could gain the status of living saint through her devotion and purity? So far both women have played a conventional role by pleasing men, but what if they could play an alternative role, pleasing the gods? Why has one of the most important ways that women historically gained influence out of these women's reach?

I find the last question especially interesting, considering that the only woman we've seen who gains influence via religion is Melisandre. And as Liss wrote to me (and I quote with her permission), she is "... pure evil. And uses her reproduction to kill people!" On top of that, the only woman we've seen portrayed as fervently pious is Selyse Florent, Stannis' wife and Melisandre's disciple. Last time we saw her, she was fresh from cheering on the mass burning of heretics. Not especially nice, and not especially empowered.

Let me be clear: I'm not saying that inserting an analogue to the medieval Church would be all-empowering to the female characters (it wouldn't), nor that it is necessary for the show (it isn't).

What I *am* saying is that you can't use "realism" as an excuse for every bit of violent misogyny without acknowledging the absence of some "realistic" elements that might mitigate parts of that same misogyny. There is nothing, nothing in the show that "realistically" is similar to the historical Church, not in any meaningful way that might affect women's experiences. The rape apologists want all the misogyny that can come from religion without any of the ways it has sometimes empowered women, or at least restrained a few of their victimizers.

And that is not "realism." That is mere silencing, employed in defense of rape culture.

[ETA: I am solely addressing the television program here, and restricting commentary to it, in part because its treatment of women does differ from the books. This piece isn't about those differences, but about the "realism" defense in regards to the show, only. Please respect this in comments, particularly as some fans of the show have not read the books and may not wish to be spoiled.]

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Olivia the White Farm Cat stretched out across my lap with her front legs splayed wide and hanging off over my leg

This is how Olivia likes to sit on my lap. "You're not going anywhere, Two-Legs!"

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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Nooz

Here's an interesting single-paragraph news story, care of NBC News:

Looks like more Americans are getting inked according to a new NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll. The findings reveal just 21 percent of respondents said someone in their household had a tattoo in 1999. Today, that percentage has doubled to 40 percent. Meanwhile, Americans are reading less ink. In 1999, 79 percent said they read the newspaper in print at least three times per week. Now it's just 47 percent.
The common thread here is "ink," but the juxtaposition between body ink and news consumption, existing under a headline about tattooed people, unintentionally reinforces stereotypes against (certain) people with tattoos—that they are thugs, that they are antisocial, that they are other in some way.

This isn't a stereotype with which I have to contend. I mean, I'm sure there are some strangers who look at me and draw some stupid conclusions, but my white privilege, and my self-employment, insulate me from having to deal with any practical consequences of that. Not everyone with body art shares that privilege.

Like lots of other trends, the increasing popularity of tattooing is frequently used as evidence that the world is a-changing for the worse. Ditto the decline of print newspapers—despite the fact that news is available via more media than it was in 1999, so, nostalgic reverence for print news aside, stats about declining circulation and readership give no insight into actual news consumption habits.

There's an embedded commentary here about cultural decline, even if unintentional. Thumbs down.

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Two-Minute Nostalgia Sublime



Billie Holiday: "Autumn in New York"

This week's TMNS have been brought to you by songs about New York City.

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In the News

Here is some stuff in the news today...

[Content Note: War; violence] The situation in Ukraine continues to intensify: "The Ukrainian military launched its first serious offensive to retake [the rebel-held city of Slavyansk], which is being held by pro-Russia militia, early on Friday morning. The rebel militia said Ukrainian troops had launched attacks on several checkpoints. Ukraine's defence minister, Arsen Avakov, said his forces had taken control of nine checkpoints to form a 'tight ring' around the city. Two Ukrainian helicopters were shot down and their pilots killed, both Russian and Ukrainian media reported. One militant was killed and another injured, according to the reports. Ukraine's security service said one helicopter had been brought down by a surface-to-air missile, citing this as evidence that Slavyansk's defenders were not just citizens who had armed themselves."

[CN: Accident; injury] Two hundred passengers were injured when two Seoul subway trains collided today. Fortunately, there were no fatalities or grave injuries. South Koreans are having a rough time of it at the moment. Even for people who don't know anyone involved in either the ferry disaster or this accident, the doubling up of major incidents can be stressful and anxiety-provoking. National tension doesn't get talked about a whole lot, but it's hard to weather for a lot of folks. My thoughts are with the people of South Korea.

Good news in Seattle: The city will "raise its minimum wage to $15 an hour over the coming years under a deal brokered by Mayor Ed Murray and blessed by labor and business groups alike." The bad news is that $15/hour is the best in the nation. And it's still not great.

In other economic and jobs news: "US employers added a robust 288,000 jobs in April, the most in two years," which is good, especially because the jobs added were "broad-based and included higher-paying jobs," and "the unemployment rate sank to 6.3 percent, its lowest level since September 2008," which is not nearly as good as it sounds "because the number of people working or seeking work fell sharply. People aren't counted as unemployed if they're not looking for a job." Our actual unemployment rate remains much higher than the 6.3% number quoted by the Department of Labor.

And relatedly: "Census: U.S. has fewer 'near poor' as many slip into true poverty."

[CN: Guns; violence] Jesus fucking Jones: "[T]he emergence of traps is the latest example of the sort of vigilante justice individuals are attempting to justify under expansive self-defense doctrines." In other words, assholes with guns are setting traps to entice people to burgle them, in order that they might shoot and kill them. The thing that is absolutely terrifying to me about the case of the man who set a purse in view in his open garage is that I can totally imagine seeing a purse sitting out and grabbing it and taking it to the front door, thinking I'm helping someone out. I probably wouldn't wander into an open garage, but the point is that these trap-setting fuckheads might end up killing people who think they're helping. They think they're making the world a better place, but what they're doing is making decent people paranoid.

Tina Brown tells Hillary Clinton not to run for president. Because she's neat like that.

Pope Francis something something progressive something something debate something something wevs.

And finally: LOOK AT THIS SASSY RHINOCEROS CALF!!!

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That Sound You Hear Is My Mirthless Laughter Reverberating Through the Multiverse

[Content Note: Misogyny; Christian Supremacy.]

He seems neat:

A so-called "historian" who Glenn Beck hired to teach at his online university insisted this week that women had originally been denied the right to vote "to keep the family together," and for the good of "the entire culture and society."

On the Thursday broadcast of Wallbuilders Live, David Barton explained that biblical principles — and not sexism — were behind not allowing women to vote prior to 1920.

"So family government precedes civil government and you watch that as colonists came to America, they voted by families," he said. "And you have to remember back then, husband and wife, I mean the two were considered one. That is the biblical precept… That is a family, that is voting. And so the head of the family is traditionally considered to be the husband and even biblically still continues to be so."

Barton argued that in the time since the women's suffrage movement succeeded in the United States, "we've moved into more of a family anarchy kind of thing."
Which, y'know, might be an indication that the whole "keeping the family together" by treating women as property of their husbands wasn't working out so well for women.

Barton then went on to note that the reason for denying women the vote wasn't misogyny; oh no of course not. It was just a good old-fashioned respect for the family unit: "[T]he bigotry we're told they held back then, they didn't hold."

So, if it indeed wasn't misogyny, and women were satisfied with this arrangement in which families were "kept together" by denying women agency and political influence, I wonder why it is that Barton imagines that giving women the vote "weaken[ed] the family" and harmed "the entire culture and society."

I guess we just don't understand politics! Silly women.
In conclusion, Barton asserted that denying women the right to vote was necessary for "a strong culture, a strong society, and it was based on a strong family that preceded government. And they crafted their policies to protect a strong family."
So, it's not misogyny, but the only solution to stopping this complete breakdown of the family—by which he means women's autonomy, marriage equality, no-fault divorce, reproductive rights, and the usual aggressions on white male ownership of people—is denying women the vote. Cool math, bro.

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