This Is Your Irregularly Scheduled Reminder That Deeky Gashlycrumb Is History's Greatest Monster

So, in addition to texting each other a steady stream of silly bullshit, Deeky and I also have a habit of tweeting ridiculous pictures at each other. Which amuses us to no end, because we're dipshits.

Anyway. Last night, Deeks tweeted at me, "You know what? @Shakestweetz is an awesome friend for reminding me I won't die alone. We're besties, like these two," followed by a picture of Guy Fieri and Larry King.

To which I replied that I hated him, and then, "We're besties, like these two," followed by a picture of Statler and Waldorf from The Muppet Show.

This went on for a bit. Jay Leno and an old lady. Sure. Nicolas Cage and Andrew Dice Clay. Obviously. Admiral Thrawn. A nod to Iain. Kiefer Sutherland jumping into a Christmas tree. Classic.

And then I said, "Speaking of TOTALLY us and Christmas..." followed by the iconic image of then First Lady Nancy Reagan sitting on Mr. T's lap and kissing him on the head while he's dressed as Santa Claus.

(The '80s, man.)

To which Deeky replied:

image of a tweet authored by Deeky reading: 'This is probably slightly more accurate.' followed by the same image of Nancy Reagan and Mr. T into which he's photoshopped the Guy Fieri skittle he bought me for my birthday

Yes, that is the goddamned Guy Fieri skillet Deeky bought me for my birthday photoshopped into Nancy Reagan's hand. Because nothing amuses Deeky W. Gashlycrumb more than tormenting me with Guy Fieri merchandise.

Liss: LOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOL best use of Photoshop EVER.

Deeks: obviously! I deserve a fucking Pulitzer for that!

Liss: Fuck yeah you do.

image of a Pulitzer with Guy Fieri on it

MAJOR AWARD. Major.

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Quote of the Day

[Content Note: Colonialism.]

"It only took 150 years, but we look forward to a much brighter future. ...I didn't think it would be so definitive. I was actually prepared for something much less. It's not very often that I'm without words, and I'm quite overwhelmed at the moment."—Grand Chief Stewart Phillip, president of Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs, on the Supreme Court of Canada's decision today to grant "declaration of aboriginal title to more than 1,700 square kilometres of land in British Columbia to the Tsilhqot'in First Nation, the first time the court has made such a ruling regarding aboriginal land."

In addition to establishing "what title means, including the right to the benefits associated with the land, and the right to use it, enjoy it and profit from it," the decision "places a greater burden on governments to justify economic development on aboriginal land."

Additionally, Vancouver's city council has unanimously voted "to acknowledge that the city is on unceded Aboriginal territory. ...'Underlying all other truths spoken during the Year of Reconciliation is the truth that the modern city of Vancouver was founded on the traditional territories of the Musqueam, Squamish and Tsleil-Waututh First Nations and that these territories were never ceded through treaty, war or surrender,' reads part of the motion from the city."

It is terrible that such an acknowledgment should be remarkable, but so it is. Let it be the first of many such acknowledgments, in Canada and the US.

[H/T for the first link to Shaker Aphra via email and Shaker Annafel in comments, and for the second link to Jonathan Lavallee on Twitter.]

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Dudley the Greyhound lying on the floor in front of me, looking up at me
Long, adorable dog is long and adorable.

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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Richard Dawkins Is Still Terrible

by Shakesville Moderator Hallelujah_Hippo

[Content Note: Misogyny; racism.]

This time, he's taking the bold stance that the achievements of old white guys are talked about and lauded not because of bias, but because they are just the best at everything, all the time.

screen cap of a tweet authored by @Tormny_Pickeals reading: 'if i could condense all of mankinds worth to a dvd shot into space i would be sure to include only old white guys' and Richard Dawkins responding: ''Old white guys'? Who then would you choose as a better poet than Shakespeare, better scientist than Einstein . . . etc ?'

Later, Heina Dadabhoy tweeted at Dawkins: "Just so I'm sure I'm reading this right, are you intending to say that old white men are the best at everything?"

To which he replied: "No of course not. But do you know a better poet / composer / scientist than Shakespeare / Schubert / Einstein?"

There are about a million things wrong with this bullshit (feel free to tease all of them out in comments), but I'm going to focus on the ones that struck me first.

Leaving aside that I can think of lots of examples to counter his shitty rhetorical question, his premise completely ignores institutional barriers (such as lack of funding, active exclusion, and purposeful erasure) to women seeking education and practicing talents in a hell of a lot of countries for a hell of a long time, while simultaneously denying the existence of languages other than English in which non-white dudes are considered some of the greatest poets ever. For a start.

Additionally, given his specific choice of examples, Shakesville Mod Aphra_Behn (quoted with permission) said it by email better than I could:
The fictional Shakespeare's sister and her limited opportunities are of course central to this blog's history. And the real-life Mileva Marie Einstein, who gave up a fucking PhD in physics after becoming pregnant with Albert's child, is another fucking bookend to the story of limiting brilliant women.

Shakespeare's sister and Einstein's wife, asshole. Get a fucking clue.
The stories historians tell are not free of bias or agendas, and the people held up as superlative figures in their field and work are not chosen in a vacuum free of prejudice, agenda, and race- and gender-based assumptions (just to name two factors at play).

To keep pretending that old white dudes are the focus of praise to the exclusion of everyone else because they are inherently better than everyone else, is to keep pretending that other people have not been ignored, marginalized, and silenced in order to better support that very narrative.

And that is mendacious bullshit.

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Damn!

[Content Note: Policing; emotional auditing; projection; heterocentrism; disablist language; misogyny.]

This "Frisky Rant" in which the writer, Sara Benincasa, splutters bile at women who brag about their husbands on Facebook, is one of the most strangely hostile things I've read in awhile. [H/T to Tami Winfrey Harris.] It starts out from the dubious premise that any woman who brags (or what I would call "happy shares") about her husband definitely has a terrible marriage which is headed for divorce, and goes downhill from there.

The first thing that struck me about the article is that is fails to explore why it is that some people do use social media to cultivate the illusion of a perfect life via carefully curated imagery in service to a specific narrative for a variety of reasons. It just hates on women who do it.

And not every piece is about every thing, but it certainly feels unfair to read something so aggressively contemptuous of a particular behavior without even the most cursory investigation of the motivations of that behavior. Beyond, basically, "some women are such stupid bitches, amirite?"

The second thing that struck me about the article is that the habit of happy sharing about one's partner is not a uniquely female, nor a uniquely straight, thing. My same-sex partnered friends happy share about their partners, too.

Of course, that doesn't fit into existent misogynist narratives about how women who "brag" about their husbands are just competitive harpies with no individual identities.

Also, at least among my friends, most of the male-partnered women with whom I'm friends tend to happy share about their partners in ways that undermine, rather than reinforce, patriarchal norms. Like: He's so great for being so supportive of my work, or he's such a nurturing parent, etc.

I don't see a lot of "my partner is SO PERFECT" among my friends, although I do see a lot of "I am grateful to have such a terrific partner." And, frankly, I love reading that!

I dunno. Maybe the author just needs more feminist friends.

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Two-Minute Nostalgia Sublime



Joan Jett & the Blackhearts: "I Love Rock 'n' Roll"

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In the News

Here is some stuff in the news today...

The Supreme Court also ruled unanimously that "President Obama lacked constitutional authority to make high-level government appointments at a time he declared the Senate in recess and unable to act on the nominations." The Republicans will be gloating about this now, but have fun the next time you've got a president in the White House, since recess appointments have been one of your party's favorite ways of sneaking in unfathomably terrible appointees.

In good news: "The House Appropriations Committee passed the fiscal year 2015 State Department and Foreign Operations appropriations bill yesterday with an amendment to remove a provision banning the Peace Corps from funding abortions for its volunteers."

In more good news: Maine Senator Susan Collins is the fourth Republican US Senator to affirm her support for same-sex marriage. Give that woman a domino lapel pin!

Ikea has announced they are raising the minimum wage for their US workers: "Ikea is acting on its own to lift the minimum wage, and it's doing it in a unique way: The U.S. average will be $10.76 and hour, but will be adjusted in different areas for cost of living. Ikea workers in Woodbridge, Va., will get the highest, at $13.22 an hour. Workers in Pittsburgh and West Chester, Ohio, will get the lowest, at $8.69. The changes go into effect on Jan. 1, 2015. ...On average, Ikea's pay change will be a 17% increase, the company said." Because I am an asshole, I will point out that this will give Ikea a lot of good free publicity, but it won't actually give their workers a livable wage. If you want to impress me, give your workers a raise that will meaningfully change their lives.

[Content Note: Child endangerment] This is a really weird story: A man's son missing for 11 days was found alive in his basement, even though law enforcement had searched the basement. And the man was informed live on Nancy Grace's garbage show that his son was found alive in his basement. Just...what? I'm really relieved the boy appears to be physically okay, though!

[CN: Scatological reference] Um: EPA Employees Told to Stop Pooping in the Hallway. "Environmental Protection Agency workers have done some odd things recently. Contractors built secret man caves in an EPA warehouse, an employee pretended to work for the CIA to get unlimited vacations, and one worker even spent most of his time on the clock looking at pornography. It appears, however, that a regional office has reached a new low: Management for Region 8 in Denver, Colo., wrote an email earlier this year to all staff in the area pleading with them to stop inappropriate bathroom behavior, including defecating in the hallway." Welp.

[CN: Fat bias; disablist language] Melissa McCarthy covers People magazine, and they give her the sappiest rubbish headline ever: "My Journey from Tears to Triumph." Oh fuck off, People. That kind of headline is gross when it's about someone who's overcome a disease or catastrophic injury or whatever, but it's SUPER GROSS when the implication is that Melissa McCarthy has triumphed over being fat. It's like they didn't read their own article, either: "A recent reference to her as 'America's plus-size sweetheart' in an article did not go unnoticed. 'It's like I'm managing to achieve all this success in spite of my affliction ... Would you ever put that in the headline for a male star?'" Get it together, People.

And finally! [CN: Home invasion] I love this police officer for letting a cat traumatized by a burglary ride around on her shoulders during the investigation. "I feel safe up here!" Love.

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Another Rancid Garbage Ruling from an Increasingly Contemptible Court

[Content Note: Hostility to consent and safety.]

The Supreme Court unanimously struck down Massachusetts' abortion buffer zone law this morning, "ruling in favor of anti-choice protesters who argued that being required to stay 35 feet away from clinic entrances is a violation of their freedom of speech."

"By its very terms, the Act restricts access to 'public way[s]' and 'sidewalk[s],' places that have traditionally been open for speech ac­tivities and that the Court has accordingly labeled 'traditional public fora,'" the opinion states. "The buffer zones burden substantially more speech than necessary to achieve the Commonwealth's asserted interests."

Reproductive rights advocates had been hoping the justices would uphold the policy, which they say has gone a long way to ensure that woman can safely enter abortion clinics. More than 30 pro-choice organizations filed an amicus brief urging the Supreme Court to rule in favor of Massachusetts' buffer zone, which was approved in response to a mass shooting at several of the state's abortion clinics.

...Thursday's decision may put other areas' buffer zones in jeopardy, too. Now that Massachusetts' policy has been invalidated, it could pave the way for opponents to strike down similar laws on similar grounds. In practical terms, that means it's probably about to get harder for many women to access clinics.
Shaker SuzanneF wrote this powerful piece about buffer zones and what actually goes on outside clinics under the auspices of "free speech." And it's pretty fucking rich for nine justices to sniff haughtily at people who want a safe space for women and others just trying to access healthcare, when "the Supreme Court itself has a large buffer zone around it to prevent protesters from picketing on its 252-by-98-foot plaza, requiring demonstrations to take place on the sidewalk."

I don't even know what else to say. Fuck you, SCOTUS. Must be nice to have a permanent job with terrific healthcare in a safe building, from which you can abstractly prioritize harassment defined as "free speech" over the basic safety of vulnerable women.

All the discussion of this case will be about "free speech" rights, but what actually happened today is that the Supreme Court of the United States just empowered one of the most brazen, unapologetic terrorist campaigns in the nation, at the expense of the people they target.

That ain't justice.

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Wow

This is the cover photo on the Indianapolis Star's Facebook page this morning:

screen cap of the Indianapolis Star's FB page showing a picture of two young white men kissing after being married in Indianapolis yesterday

That is a picture of Jake Miller and Craig Bowen, the first same-sex couple to wed in Indianapolis yesterday.

And below is a picture, also care of the Indy Star, of the "couples lined up this morning ahead of the Marion County Clerk's 8 a.m. opening. Clerk Beth White said her office held more than 186 same-sex weddings on Wednesday."

image of a long line of people standing in line, waiting to be married

This picture makes me so happy, because LOOK AT ALL THE PEOPLE WHO ARE GOING TO GET MARRIED TODAY! And it also makes me a little sad, because look at all people who are going to get married today, before the state is possibly granted a stay while they appeal the ruling, and marriage equality comes to a screeching halt in Indiana again.

I don't want to presume to know that anyone standing in line feels like they have to get married today. But the fact that it's reasonable anyone even might feel that way, because their state government is fighting to rescind the right granted to them, is bullshit.

Marriage Equality now and forever.

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Note from Doctor Coach

image of a note 'written' by Men's Soccer Team USA Coach Jurgen Klinsman reading: 'To Whom It May Concern: Please excuse [blank] from work on Thursday, June 26th. I understand that this absence may reduce the productivity of your workplace, but I can assure you that it is for an important cause. The #USMNT has a critical World Cup game vs. Germany and we will need the full support of the nation if we are to advance to the next round. By the way, you should act like a good leader and take the day off as well. Go USA! Jurgen Klinsman, Head Coach, US Men's National Team'

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Open Thread

image of a white man wearing a black cap and a brown knit beard

Hosted by a knit beard.

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Question of the Day

What is your favorite song to put on at a high volume when you are super happy and/or celebratory?

Naturally, if you mark being super happy and/or celebratory in some other way, please feel welcome to share that instead!

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I Write Letters

screen cap of tweet authored by me reading: 'Dear Whatever Judge Hears the Indiana AG's Emergency Stay Request: DENY THE FUCK OUT OF IT, PLEASE. Thank you. Love, Liss.'

"Indiana Attorney General's office has filed an emergency motion for a stay in the same-sex marriage case, pending appeal."

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The State of Same-Sex Marriage in the US

My old pal Steve Benen breaks down where we are after today's rulings in Indiana and Utah, and concludes with this rather amazing graphic:

image of a map of the US showing in which states same-sex marriage is now legal (20), in which states bans are being challenged (22), and in which states bans have been ruled unconstitutional but are on hold pending appeal (8)

Every single state in the union now has legal same-sex marriage, a pending appeal, or an ongoing constitutional challenge. Every single state.

[H/T to Shaker Kathy_A, in comments.]

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Zelda the Black and Tan Mutt sitting next to me on the couch

Zelly, having wedged herself in next to me on the couch, and pulled forward one of the cushions to use as a pillow for maximum comfort while I scratched her neck and earsies.

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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Ugly Girl

[Content Note: Body policing; fat bias; harassment.]

Before I was fat, I was ugly.

I've been fat—by which I mean, I was called fat, by people who wanted to hurt me—since I'd quickly developed large breasts by the seventh grade. My soft and growing body was called fat, long before it actually was.

But even before that, I was called ugly.

I remember the first time a neighbor kid called me ugly, and how it felt so surprising. I was maybe seven. We were playing on my swingset, and I wouldn't get off the swing he wanted, even though there was another just like it.

"Your face is ugly," he told me. Matter-of-factly. Casually swaying back and forth with his arm curled around a support beam of the swingset.

I'd never even contemplated my appearance before, and the first time I was obliged to do so was to wonder if I was ugly, like he said I was. I decided I must be. I wasn't sophisticated enough yet to realize there might be other reasons for calling someone ugly, besides the fact that they are.

Thereafter, when one of the boys called me ugly—it was always boys, at least to my face—it stung. Not because I felt like they were being mean, but because I felt like they were simply stating the truth.

By the time I reached middle school, with glasses and braces and a face full of zits, being called ugly had become routine. I was called a frog, a pig, a cow, four eyes, pizza face. A cute boy on which I had a desperate, quiet crush wrote in my yearbook on the last day of school: "To a nice but very ugly-looking girl..."

I remember cradling the book in my hands, and reading it, and feeling the hot blush of embarrassment illuminate my cheeks. And then anger, at myself, for feeling anything at all. He was just telling the truth.

None of this should have mattered. I should have understood that my value as a person wasn't predicated on what I looked like, as adults who cared for me assured me. But my value as a person, as a girl, was predicated on what I looked like.

That was obvious. It even mattered to the people who told me that looks didn't matter, who gently suggested a different hairstyle or the use of zit cream or two years of braces. My looks mattered, and I was ugly and needed to be fixed.

For a long time, my only tool of resistance was not letting my looks matter to me.

Not in a badass way. Not in an I'm gonna look like whatever the fuck I want to look like in whatever the fuck way that makes me happy way.

In an avoid mirrors and pictures and pretend I'm basically a brain in a flesh jar way.

In an avoid being visible way.

I tried to be invisible. Even, and especially, to myself.

Occasionally, someone would compliment me on my appearance, and I simply wouldn't believe them. It wasn't false modesty, or self-pity, as my rejection of their compliment was often understandably received. It was just authentic disbelief, firmly rooted in having been told otherwise.

As I got older, and fatter, the insults switched. Now "fat" was the ostensible insult that came first.

But "fat" didn't feel like an insult. It was just an objective observation.

Something about this—about fat being used an insult, with the attendant implication that I didn't deserve to be treated kindly because I am fat; the thing that made me a fat activist; the idea that fat is just an objective and morally neutral description of a body—made me start engaging with the idea of being ugly.

Which is subjective, but I had always treated as objective. At least when it was being said to me.

I had been encouraged to regard "ugly" as a subjective assessment, when it was being regularly deployed against me, but that was never very much help. Ultimately, what was helpful was my belief, lasting since childhood, that "ugly" was an objective fact about me.

As I thought about how I deserved to be treated like a human being even though I am fat, I began to think too that I deserved to be treated well even though I am ugly.

Or not ugly. Or whatever.

A lot of self-acceptance rhetoric involves admonishments to find everyone beautiful in some way, as an entrance to finding oneself beautiful.

Which, in some way, only empowers "ugly" as an insult. And underwrites the idea that beauty is the threshold past which acceptance and love and respect is found.

The place I have reached is this: It's not even that I don't care if other people think I'm ugly; I don't even care if I do.

I can look at myself and see what is there, really there. My splotchy skin, my slightly crossed eyes, my wildly asymmetrical mouth. My arching brows, my long lashes, my high cheekbones. I can see all these things, those that are the markers of valued beauty and those that are the markers of deviation from valued beauty. They are just the facts of my face.

Maybe if I'd always been told I were beautiful, I'd feel differently.

But I don't long to be beautiful. I don't even long to be not ugly. I simply want to be able to look at myself, in the mirror, in pictures, in my reflection in a window as I stroll past, and see the facts of myself. To not value them or devalue them, or use them to value or devalue myself.

I want my act of resistance against a world that values women on their beauty not to be to disappear, but to be visible. To myself, most of all.

All "you are ugly" means to me anymore is that I have been seen.

And having been seen, I expect my humanity to be respected. That is, after all, the reason that visibility is important—to humanize, to acknowledge, to include.

All of the words about how beauty is subjective and everyone is beautiful in their own way and true beauty is on the inside—well, they're all true, but they're also irrelevant, in a culture where there is a rigidly enforced beauty standard and "ugly" is deployed as justification for abuse and neglect.

Being ugly needs to be okay.

By which I mean: Being ugly cannot be a justification for harm.

So I am happy to concede I am ugly, in order that I may argue that I am deserving of nothing less than if I were beautiful. And so is everyone else.

This is not a fishing expedition for compliments. It is an argument for all of us to matter, to be valued, to be seen.

I don't need to hear that I'm beautiful. If you want to tell me anything at all, tell me: I see you.

Because there are always going to be people who deviate, significantly, from the beauty standard. And we can talk endlessly about how beauty is subjective, but what I'd rather be talking about is how basic human rights are not.

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The Wednesday Blogaround

This blogaround brought to you by ACTIVIST JUDGES!!!

Recommended Reading:

Andy: 10th Circuit Upholds Ruling Striking Down Utah's Ban on Gay Marriage

Anne: [Content Note: Physical, sexual, and emotional abuse] Robin Thicke and the Dynamics of Abuse

Adrienne: [CN: Racist slur] Who Has Spoken Out Against the Redsk*ns?

Mustang Bobby: [CN: Christian supremacy] Minimum Qualifications

Fannie: [CN: Misogyny; harassment] This Little Blog

BYP: First Lady: "U.S. Is Ready for a Female President"

Veronica: #365FeministSelfie News: "Ohhhh, we're half way there!"

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

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Two-Minute Nostalgia Sublime



Journey: "Don't Stop Believin'"

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Indiana's Same-Sex Marriage Ban Ruled Unconstitutional

OMG OMG OMG YAYAYAYAYAYAYAYAY!!!

A federal judge struck down Indiana's ban on same-sex marriage Wednesday, ruling that gay couples have the same marriage rights as couples of opposing genders.

The ruling takes effect immediately, meaning same-sex couples can begin marrying Wednesday. The clerk in Marion County, home to Indianapolis, says the office will start issuing marriage licenses.

U.S. District Judge Richard Young ruled that the state's ban was unconstitutional. The ruling involves lawsuits from several gay couples.

The Indiana attorney general's office says it will appeal but had no other immediate comment.

Federal courts across the country have struck down gay marriage bans recently, but many of those rulings are on hold pending appeal. Attorneys on both sides of the issue expect the matter to eventually land before the U.S. Supreme Court.
The AG might be able to successfully finagle a stay, to delay implementation of legal same-sex marriage in the state, but they are virtually guaranteed to lose any appeal. (I'm sure they'll still happily waste taxpayer dollars on it nonetheless!) In any case, this is really exciting and I am joyblubbing all over my desk!

image of falling dominoes

Again I will note that I would be perfectly happy to post that picture every single day until same-sex marriage is legal in every single corner of the US.

UPDATE: Care of Aphra_Behn, here is an article with more detail about the ruling and a link to the decision.

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In the News

Here is some stuff in the news today...

One of the neatest stories from the World Cup is how the Japanese fans, as part of their own soccer tradition, clean up the stadium after their national team's matches. That is a really terrific tradition, and I think USA fans should adopt it, with gratitude to the Japanese.

[Content Note: Misogynistic violence] Strong Support For IVAWA and CEDAW in Senate Hearing: "In an iconic display of support, eight women Senators testified [yesterday] at a Senate subcommittee hearing in support of the need to take action against violence against women globally. Senator Barbara Boxer (D-CA), Chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Subcommittee on International Operations and Organizations, Human Rights, Democracy, and Global Women's Issues, made clear that to fully address violence against women the Senate must pass the International Violence Against Women Act (IVAWA) and ratify the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW). Testifying at the hearing [yesterday] were Senators Tammy Baldwin (D-WI), Heidi Heitkamp (D-ND), Mazie Hirono (D-HI), Amy Klobuchar (D-MN), Patty Murray (D-WA), Debbie Stabenow (D-MI), and Elizabeth Warren (D-MA). ...The committee room was standing room only, packed with women leaders and activists, and a long line of supporters... The hearing, entitled 'Combating Violence and Discrimination Against Women: A Global Call to Action,' focused on the epidemic of violence against women around the world, and called on the Senate to take action on two tools to help reduce violence and advance the status of women: IVAWA and CEDAW."

[CN: Rape culture] Relatedly: "Law enforcement officers and campus administrators need better training in how to interview and assist students who report sexual assaults on college campuses. That was the takeaway on Monday from the final installment of three roundtable discussions on Capitol Hill about how to address the problem of campus sexual assaults. 'We are having way too many interviews of sexual assault victims by someone who does not know how to do a forensic interview,' said Sen. Claire McCaskill, in her opening remarks as host to the group of college administrators, advocates and campus and county police officers who convened to talk about colleges' adjudication processes for handling sexual assaults."

Here's some good news: "The US supreme court [has ruled] that the constitution does not allow police to conduct warrantless searches of cellphones carried by people they have arrested."

[CN: Dangerous weather] Tis the tornado season in the Midwest, and a tornado touched down in Indianapolis yesterday. It did some damage, but no one was injured, which is amazing and great. Yay!

Chicago has won the bidding war for the new $1 billion Lucas Museum of Narrative Art, which will be built on the city's lakefront museum campus "on a 17-acre site located on parking lots between Soldier Field and McCormick Place. It will open in 2018." Neat!

[CN: Antisemitism] Gary Oldman doubles-down on his fuckery with a weirdly belligerent and sarcastic-sounding apology for defending Mel Gibson and saying that the entertainment industry is "run by Jews."

RIP Eli Wallach. One of the great character actors, and a ubiquitous crossword puzzle answer. The 2006 rom-com The Holiday isn't a great film, but I love Eli Wallach's character in it so much. It's one I'll stop and watch if I see that it's on while I'm flipping channels, because he's so terrific in it.

A new study says that Breaking Bad is the most binge-watched show. I could have saved them the money and told them that, because OBVIOUSLY IT IS!!!

screen cap of Huell from Breaking Bad sitting alone in an empty room
I hope Huell has Netflix.

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