The Mormon Church Really Wants You to Know It's Still Not Cool with The Gays

[Content note: homophobia, transphobia, holocaust reference]

Yesterday afternoon, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints held a press conference, which by its official account was about "Religious Freedom and Nondiscrimination."

What it was really about was the need for civility between "LGBT people" and members of the LDS church (as if those two circles don't overlap).

The church is pretty upfront about the fact that they still have problems with homosexuality:

"We are announcing no change in doctrine or Church teachings today."
Which, sure, it's your press conference. Do what you want. I mean, that seems like a pretty weird reason for a notably insular church to hold a press conference, but I don't tell you how to run your religion, you don't tell me which pharmacists to patronize, right?

The prepared statements start off well enough:
"On one side of the debate we have advocates of LGBT rights. This movement arose after centuries of ridicule, persecution and even violence against homosexuals [sic]." (emphasis mine)
I'm pretty glad you managed to gather the media together on Holocaust Remembrance Day to let everyone know that violence against homosexuals is a thing. (Or was a thing. Given that your press conference already makes it clear that you don't know the difference between "LGBT people" and "homosexuals", I'm guessing you didn't really do much research for this part of the press conference. It's really a shame, given how rarely you do one of these.

Anyhow, that's pretty much the end of the love fest.
"The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints believes that sexual relations other than between a man and a woman who are married are contrary to the laws of God.

This commandment and doctrine comes from sacred scripture and we are not at liberty to change it. But, God is loving and merciful."
Wevs. I mean, I have no interest in your doctrine. At least, I endeavor to not be interested in it.
"the Church has publicly favored laws and ordinances that protect LGBT people from discrimination in housing and employment."
I don't actually remember that, but thanks? I mean, I would have said thanks at the time, but I honestly don't remember what you're referring to. So, I guess that's a much-needed clarification on your part. I hope nobody in the media interprets this as a major shift in church policy.

But why are we really here?
"Since 1791 the guarantees of religious freedom embodied in the First Amendment have assured all citizens that they may hold whatever religious views they want, and that they are free to express and act on those beliefs so long as such actions do not endanger public health or safety."
Again, I get that this press conference to announce a significant stasis in church policy came at you without any warning, but I'm pretty sure the relevant bit of the First Amendment actually reads "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof."

I'm no Benjamin Quincy Jefferson, but I interpret that as meaning that you have a right to have your own religion, but nobody is obligated to give a fuck. And I don't. give. the. tiniest. fuck.

Since this is a press conference about civility (my word choice, not yours), I'll just point out that this is probably the point where we should shake hands and go home.

I get that you're super touchy about anti-Mormon discrimination. Some of the rituals (and tenets) of your particular sect of Christianity are different from the rituals (and tenets) of other Christian sects. I'm totally not cool with folks using your particular set of rituals and beliefs as a reason to discriminate against you. What you do in your church is your deal.

Lots of people treat me like crap because I have tits and a wang. Oh, and I also sleep with another lady. I'm all :( that your god is uncool with my relationship with my wife. (We'll just leave my titswang for another time in exchange for you not pretending to care about trans rights. This conference is about you pretending to care about LGB rights.)

Whatever. You can hold whatever religious beliefs you want. The government can't stop you. And I can sleep with whoever agrees to sleep with me-- the government can't stop us. I'm really glad we could have this conversation.

BUT WAIT.
[A public university system won't support a group that has a discriminatory membership policy.]
[The government of Houston started investigating whether churches violated terms of their tax exemption.]
[Johnny Weir is a big meanie.]
[Mozilla Guy!]
[Also, this supplement material]

Oh.
"Accusations of bigotry toward people simply because they are motivated by their religious faith and conscience have a chilling effect on freedom of speech and public debate....Churches should stand on at least as strong a footing as any other entity when they enter the public square to participate in public policy debates. (emphasis mine)"
Yeah, I've heard that before. You should probably not tip your hand by implying that disciples of your God might be entitled to a disproportionate say in determining the laws of our secular nation. Also, you're confusing freedom of speech with being subject to the law. You're free to hold all the press conferences you want. You still have to follow the law, though.

Like I said, there's nothing new here.
"It is one of today’s great ironies that some people who have fought so hard for LGBT rights now try to deny the rights of others to disagree with their public policy proposals."
Yep. Right between rain on your wedding day and deflated footballs. Ours are truly ironic times.
We believe laws ought to be framed to achieve a balance in protecting the freedoms of all people while respecting those with differing values.
Really? Me too! (PS: No homo, amirite?)

--
The press conference just goes on and on from there. Pretty much three-quarters of the press conference is about how people (particularly "LGBT people" / "gays and lesbians" / "homosexuals" / "activists" / "gay men and women") need to shut up and do what the LDS church says. The government needs to protect Mormons from people like me. Boycotting pharmacists who refuse to practice pharmacy is the opposite of free expression.

I mean, they actually ended the prepared remarks by pointing out that their sacred scripture lays out how non-church government (to the extent that the church eve is supposed to work, cough, cough, nudge, nudge. So it's no wonder that:

WaPo lead with "Mormon church announces support for legal protections for gay people."

Time chose "Mormon Church Supports LGBT Protections in Shift" which not only shares the Mormon church's confusion about trans people, but also misses the multiple times where the people convening the press conference stated that nothing is changing.

The AP and ABC went with Mormon Leaders Call for Measures Protecting Gay Rights." Okay, that's arguably an accurate headline. However, they actually went to the trouble of spelling out transgender (it's all the rage these days). Oh, and the article contains this sweetheart of a line:
"Much has changed since Mormons led a fight against same-sex unions in California."
The more things change, the more they stay the same.

The LDS wants to people to treat people however they feel like it (in many cases, badly), and the media is more than willing to report "both sides" of the story, even when that means completely ignoring context (and content!) to tell whatever story it deems most beneficial to its interests. (In this case, I'm assuming a major policy shift is more likely to draw readers than the details of what actually happened.)

The LDS Church has its own sacred doctrine to justify its damaging actions. What's Time's problem?

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Authentic Mitt!

[Content Note: Classism.]

Remember Mitt Romney's monumentally failful attempts at being "authentic" during the last presidential election? In case you've wiped it from your brainpan, here's a little reminder:

image of Romney counting on his fingers to which I have added text reading: 'Let me count all the ways in which I'm totally an unofficial Southerner: 1. I like grits, and things, 2. I have friends who own NASCAR teams, 3. I drive a truck, and like 200 other cars, 4. I say y'all ALL the time, 5. I own a pair of alligator shoes, which I bet came from your lovely swamps, 6. Did I mention that I like grits, and things...?'

Oof, man. Oof.

This time around, he's trying a different strategy—and nothing says "authentic" like saying, "This time, I'll really be authentic, I promise!"
After losing two straight presidential races, Mitt Romney packed up his home in Massachusetts and journeyed west to Utah, building a mansion here in the foothills of the Wasatch Range that has served as his sanctuary from defeat.

..."He feels very at home here," said John Miller, a close friend in Utah who has been talking with Romney throughout his recent deliberations. "This is a very prayerful thing. ...In the end, it's really a decision between he and Ann and their belief system, their God. That's the authentic Mitt."

If he runs again in 2016, Romney is determined to rebrand himself as authentic, warts and all, and central to that mission is making public what for so long he kept private. He rarely discussed his religious beliefs and practices in his failed 2008 and 2012 races, often confronting suspicion and bigotry with silence as his political consultants urged him to play down his Mormonism.

Now, Romney speaks openly about his service as a lay pastor in the Mormon Church, recites Scripture to audiences, muses about salvation and the prophet, urges students to marry young and "have a quiver full of kids," and even cracks jokes about Joseph Smith's polygamy.

...Although Romney served as governor of Massachusetts and his past campaigns were based in Boston, he recently registered to vote in Utah. Members of his political circle said they are considering making Salt Lake City, the cradle of Mormonism, his 2016 campaign headquarters. Wealthy Mormons across the Mountain West played a central role in financing his 2012 campaign, and a 2016 bid would lean heavily on the same network.

"He was Utah's favorite adopted son, and now he's a Utahn," said Thomas Wright, a former state GOP chairman. "People here know Mitt, they trust Mitt, they respect Mitt, and they still want to call him President Romney."
Well, that all sounds TERRIFIC. Anyone who knows me knows I can't get enough of politicians talking about their religious beliefs, especially when they couch reproductive coercion inside of god-talk! That's the kind of Real AmericanTM authenticity that makes me SWOON.

And don't even get me started on the totes authentic authenticity of an East Coast elite moving back West and finding Jesus—or Joseph Smith—again. Not only is that SO AUTHENTIC, but it's also SO ORIGINAL.

Let's hear more about Authentic Mitt 2.0.
In Holladay, an upscale suburb of Salt Lake City, the Romneys have built a manse complete with a "secret door" hideaway room and an outdoor spa off the master bath. They consider it their primary residence, near their son Josh and his wife and children.

Together with another family, the Romneys also bought an 8,700-square-foot ski chalet in nearby Park City. They still own a lakefront estate in Wolfeboro, N.H., and a beach home in the La Jolla area of San Diego, which made news in 2012 because of planned renovations that include a car elevator.

...Romney has signaled that poverty would be a central theme of his next campaign.

..."In spite of the comments about the '47 percent,' he now talks about lifting the poor," said friend Fraser Bullock, referring to Romney's 2012 remarks about people dependent on government. "That's something he's done his whole life, but he's done it quietly, ministering his faith and helping people who are struggling with this issue or that issue. That was all hidden last time."
Fair point. Romney's deep compassion for struggling people was certainly well hidden behind his contemptible rhetoric about how PEOPLE ARE NOT ENTITLED TO FOOD.

The thing about the 47 Percent video, that no amount of photo ops and sending surrogates to talk about Romney's faith and good works will ever change, is that the Mitt Romney in that video is clearly, undeniably, the Authentic Mitt Romney. A man who stands before a room full of other rich white men just like him, and, when he thinks there are no cameras around, sniffs about the outrage that is people in the richest country in the world thinking they are entitled to food.

That's the real Mitt Romney. We all knew it then, and we aren't going to forget it.

[H/T to Shaker George.]

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Open Thread

image of a markhor, with big twisty horns

Hosted by a markhor.

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Question of the Day

Suggested by Shaker lupinella12: "What trend were you really ahead of the curve?"

LOL none of them ever?

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LOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOL F@#K YOU

[Content Note: Misogyny.]

Mike Huckabee has an interesting new strategy for appealing to female voters in 2016: Call us "trashy" if we use naughty words!

Appearing last Friday on Mickelson in the Morning, an Iowa-based radio show, Huckabee recounted the culture shock he experienced when hearing profanity in the workplace while working for Fox News in New York City.

"In Iowa, you would not have people who would just throw the f-bomb and use gratuitous profanity in a professional setting," Huckabee said. "In New York, not only do the men do it, but the women do it!"

He continued: "This would be considered totally inappropriate to say these things in front of a woman." But "for a woman to say them in a professional setting," Huckabee went on, "that's just trashy!"
Any delicate ladyflowers from Iowa want to take issue with this fuckery?

Y'all know there ain't much that genuinely offends me, but the suggestion that my frail lady constitution can't handle hearing profanity is some of the most offensive shit I've ever heard.

And this, from a man who would happily force me to carry to term an unwanted pregnancy and push out of my body a baby I don't even want. But don't say "fuck" in front of my fragile ears?! FUCK THAT and FUCK YOU!

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Zelda the Black and Tan Mutt lying on the loveseat, making a plaintive face
Dat face.

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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This Trash Again

[Content Note: Privilege; gatekeeping.]

Jonathan Chait is at it again, with a new piece for New York Magazine entitled [DoNotLink] "Not a Very PC Thing to Say," and subheaded, because of course it is, "How the language police are perverting liberalism."

There are a lot of people on Twitter who have said very smart things about this piece today, among them: Sydette, Imani, Jess, and Dianna, whom I am recommending with their permission. That's not a complete list, by any means, but I've particularly appreciated lots of their commentary today.

There's little I can say in response to this piece that wouldn't merely be a variation on what I've already said before.

But I do want to note this important context: Chait et. al. have spent a very long time making a living treating defining the terms of debate as the debate itself.

And that's why we get these petulant thinkpieces about "the nature of the debate" and tortured explanations about how what they do is speech, but what their critics do is something that endangers speech.

Chait is a professional gatekeepers, whose career is built upon having conversations he defines as important exclusively with people who view his being white and male as credentials, but don't practice identity politics. Ahem.

And the thing about professional gatekeepers is that they get very miffed indeed when people start saying fuck the rules of sitting at your table; we'll build our own table.

Oh the terrible rending of garments when you make it clear you don't care about their rules of engagement for discourse, because their discourse is garbage.

Chait, and his defenders, miss the point utterly that no one cares if they don't want to engage with our anger, because our anger is sometimes designed to alienate them.

I'm just saying: When someone who wants to 'splain at me declares my anger too off-putting for dialogue, that ain't a loss for me.

Or the people at my table.

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Quote of the Day

[Content Note: Misogyny; rape culture; war on agency.]

"I'm told that they're still going to bring [the bill proposing a 20-week abortion ban] back, but because there was such division among our Republican females [over the stipulation that rape must be reported to authorities to qualify as an exception], they pulled the bill that day. And that was extremely unfortunate, and it sent the entirely wrong message."—Republican Congressman from Texas Louie Gohmert, during a conference call with pastor E.W. Jackson today.

Females. Wow.

Divisive females who send the wrong message by standing (the most marginally possible) with survivors.

It continues to be a real mystery why Republicans aren't connecting with a majority of voting women.

Huh.

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News from the Conservative Legislation Lab

This is a real thing in the world:

[Republican Indiana] Gov. Mike Pence is starting a state-run taxpayer-funded news outlet that will make pre-written news stories available to Indiana media, as well as sometimes break news about his administration, according to documents obtained by The Indianapolis Star.

Pence is planning in late February to launch "Just IN," a website and news outlet that will feature stories and news releases written by state press secretaries and is being overseen by a former Indianapolis Star reporter, Bill McCleery.

"At times, Just IN will break news — publishing information ahead of any other news outlet. Strategies for determining how and when to give priority to such 'exclusive' coverage remain under discussion," according to a question-and-answer sheet distributed last week to communications directors for state agencies.

The Pence news outlet will take stories written by state communications directors and publish them on its website. Stories will "range from straightforward news to lighter features, including personality profiles."

The endeavor will come at some taxpayer cost, but precisely how much is unclear. The news service has two dedicated employees, whose combined salary is nearly $100,000, according to a search of state employee salary data.
Emphases mine. A state-run news outlet, also known as propaganda, which will be funded by taxpayers to the tune of at least $100k, in a state where 1 out of 6 people rely on food pantries and meal service programs, because they don't have enough to eat.

This is absurd. Though, of course, not unprecedented: A decade ago, he Bush administration was sending out pre-packaged news segments for local news to air without disclosing their origins. It's a fine Republican tradition.

Gross then; gross now.

Pence says he plans to "clarify" what Just IN will be. Can't wait.

[H/T to Jordan.]

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An Observation

[Content Note: Fat hatred.]

Fat haters think that fat advocacy is about asking people to like you.

No.

Fat advocacy is about asking people to respect you. And about liking yourself, irrespective of whether anyone else does.

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Two-Minute Nostalgia Sublime



The Oak Ridge Boys: "Elvira"

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In the News

Here is some stuff in the news today...

[Content Note: Extreme weather] How y'all doing on the East Coast? "High winds and whiteout conditions swept across New England on Tuesday as a strong winter storm moved up the East Coast, leaving the island of Nantucket without power. The storm veered away from New York City, leaving less than a foot of snow in Central Park. Hartford also received less than expected, but the storm was barreling down on Boston, where forecasters were still expecting two to three feet. By 10 a.m., several areas of Massachusetts had reported more than a foot of snow, the Weather Service said, with an unofficial total of 31 inches in Shrewsbury and 27 inches in Ayer."

[CN: Class warfare] In the path of the storm, cities are scrambling to provide shelter for people who are homeless. After, you know, in many places, investing in policies that created more homelessness.

[CN: Surveillance] Whaaaaaat: "The Drug Enforcement Administration has initiated a massive national license plate reader program with major civil liberties concerns but disclosed very few details, according to new DEA documents obtained by the ACLU through the Freedom of Information Act. ...With its jurisdiction and its finances, the federal government is uniquely positioned to create a centralized repository of all drivers' movements across the country—and the DEA seems to be moving toward doing just that." Good lord.

[CN: Police brutality; racism] This is an excellent interview with Netta Elzie: "The Women of #BlackLivesMatter." Go read it!

Wowowowow: "Images from NASA's Kepler mission have found yet another set of Earth-sized planets, but these are something special: The set of five orbit a Sun-like star, and the system may be the oldest of its kind in our galaxy. ...Named Kepler-444, the star is about 11.2 billion years old. That's 2 1/2 times older than Earth, and well toward the earliest days of the universe."

Welp! "Scientists Find Way to 'Unboil' an Egg, and Say It Could Streamline Drug Development." All right then!

[CN: Multiple oppressions] Are you fucking kidding me? "ABC added to its pilot pickups Monday [including a comedy] from 'It Gets Better' LGBT activist Dan Savage. ...On the comedy side, the untitled Savage comedy is a single-camera semi-autobiographical entry based on the LGBT activist/boundary-pushing columnist's life. It centers on a picture-perfect family that is turned upside down when the youngest son comes out of the closet. What seems like the end of their idyllic life turns out to be the beginning of a bright new chapter when everyone stops pretending to be perfect and actually starts being real." I bet I'm not the only person who finds it objectionable that Savage is repeatedly identified as an LGBT activist, despite having unapologetically engaged in transphobia and biphobia, not to mention misogyny, fat hatred, disablism, rape apologia, etc. Gross.

In better entertainment news: Ava DuVernay (the director of Selma) and David Oyelowo (the star of Selma) will be reteaming for "a love story and murder mystery" set against the backdrop of Hurricane Katrina. Sounds interesting.

And finally! This cat just prefers taking a nap on top of her dog BFF. No biggie!

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Jason Brown Does More Spinny Jumps!

Hey, do you remember last year when US figure skater Jason Brown did an amazing long program at the National Championships, which earned him a second-place finish and a trip to the Winter Olympics, and also revealed that I am terrific (blink. blink.) at doing figure skating video transcripts?

Well, this year, our old pal Jason Brown, now 20 years old, won the US National Championship! Yayayayay!

Below is his free skate program, and I AM SORRY that I know no more about figure skating terms than I did last year, lol. Enjoy!


Jason Brown, a thin white young man with brown hair pulled back into a ponytail, wearing olive trousers, a white blousy top, a sparkly dark green vest, and brown pleather waistbelt and skate covers (sort of a Robin Hood on ice look, maybe?), skates onto the ice and raises his hands in the air to greet the crowd. They cheer wildly.

He poses on the ice, with his hands on opposite shoulders, his head down and eyes closed, waiting for the music to begin. Very dramatic! As the slow music starts, his torso sways around, and then his eyes come open and his hands peel off his shoulders and his feet move apart and we! are! skating!

The announcers mention that Jason has the easiest technical program of the top competitors; he is known not for the biggest technical performance, no quads, but for perfectly executing his program and for his artistry.

Slowly skating with flowy arms. A little spinny jump. A couple of increasingly dramatic spins. Backwards skating with flowy arms to pick up speed. Triple spinny jump! Another spinny jump! He lands them both so smoothly!

Skating. Petting the sides of his face with his hands. Little twisty body moves and arm flourishes and he skates to pick up momentum again. T-spin. Another t-spin. Grabby skate over head! Backwards with flowy arms. The music is getting dramatic now!

Skating. Twisty body. Arm flourishes. Backwards with flowy arms. Tiny hopping jump then BIG SPINNY JUMP! The crowd goes wild. Air splits! One-knee spin! Leaping t-jump! T-spin! Crouch spin! T-spin! Crouch spin! T-spin! He spins up and down so gracefully and the crowd cheers.

Then he stops! The music halts! He grabs his side as if he's been stabbed by a mean elf! He lurches forward and begins to skate slowly, as the music changes. Backwards with flowy arms. Big unexpected spinny jump! Desperate reaching arms. Twisty body. Sad face flowy skating past the judges. Sad shimmies. Petting the face. Air splits. Fists and flowy arms. Why did you leave him?! IT CLEARLY BROKE HIS HEART!

Backwards. Big spinny jump! Reaching arms. Skating. Big spinny jump! Another spinny jump! Ta-daaaa arms! But muted, because this is SAD.

But then the music is picking up again. Skating. Dramatic windmill arms. Backwards t-jump. Big spinny jump! Little hop! Another spinny jump! Ta-daaaa arms! Fully so! Air splits! Windmill arms! One-knee slide! Ta-daaaa arms! Leg kick! Crouch! Hop! Skate skate skate! The crowd is going wild!

Sideways splits! Spinny jump! Spinny jump! Crouch spin into standing spin! T-spin! Grabby skate over head! Crouch spin! Aaaaaaand slide backwards with dramatic arms THE END!

He stands and looks grateful and happy and waves at the crowd as they shower him with flowers. [A bunch of commercials.] We come back to Jason and his team waiting for his scores. They are awesome and he wins! YAY!

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Thanks, Citizens United!

[Content Note: Class warfare.]

Here's a cool headline: "Koch-backed network aims to spend nearly $1 billion on 2016 elections."

How neat for them! How neat for ALL OF US! It's so terrific that these conservative shitlords have all that money, and that they're willing to spend it on buying elections in an ostensible democracy, and that the Supreme Court paved the way for them to do so. Congratulations, rich people!

If I had a billion dollars, well, I'd use it to try to lobby to close the loophole that let me spend a billion dollars on an election. But, if that didn't work, I'd give a billion dollars to the first candidate to advocate a universal basic income of slightly or significantly more than the social minimum.

What would you use your billion dollars for?!

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Open Thread

image of a giant eland, with huge twisty horns

Hosted by a giant eland.

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Question of the Day

What is your favorite thing to eat at a time of day with which it's not traditionally associated in your culture? So, eggs for dinner, or soup for breakfast, or...

Sometimes I wake up just desperately craving greens, so I'll have a salad or sauteed spinach and mushrooms for breakfast. Which Iain thinks is VERY weird, lol.

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Beautiful Things

Via Misty, check out "The Wildlife Photography of the Year Awards." There are some creepy crawlies among the images, so be warned if those sort of pix bother you!

Naturally, I love the one of the bat.

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Quote of the Day

"No, no, no, no, never."Senator Rand Paul, on the prospect of another Mitt Romney presidential run, last night. Sooooo, it sounds like he's pretty excited about the possibility!

Romney "would have made a great president," added Paul, rumored to be considering his own White House bid. "But to win the presidency you have the reach out and appeal to new constituencies. And I just don't think it's possible."

"And if he thinks, 'Well, I'm just going to change a few themes and next time I'll reach out to more people,' I think it's a little more visceral than that," the libertarian lawmaker said of Romney.
Correct! Except for the part about where Mitt Romney would have made a great president. Typical Rand Paul: He says one thing that sounds good, and then something else that reminds you most of what comes out of his mouth is trash.

Welp, I don't know about you, but I'm definitely loving this Republican primary where the candidates are absolutely totally for sure not going after each other like rabid monsters this time! It's working out GREAT so far!

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Breaking Clown Car Nooz

image of Chris Christie at a speaking engagement, screaming and holding his hands up; I've added text to appear as though he's holding it in his hands reading: 'I'M TERRIBLE!'

Republican New Jersey Governor Chris Christie is GETTING SERIOUS about running for president, because today he set up his fundraising PAC to receive massive donations from nightmare billionaires who will spend enormous amounts of money on terrible garbage candidates who promise to protect less of their money than they'll spend on presidential contests from taxation to help feed the poor:
After addressing a gathering of conservatives in Iowa over the weekend, the governor of New Jersey announced on his Facebook page on Monday morning that he was convening Leadership Matters for America "to get real leadership back in our country".

"America has been a nation that has always controlled events and yet today events control us," said a statement on the PAC's official website. "Why? Because leadership matters."

The PAC allows Christie, who will serve as its "honorary chairman", to raise funds and begin assembling a group of allies and aides who could form the basis for an official presidential campaign team.

...Mike DuHaime, a PR executive who was the lead strategist on Christie's successful gubernatorial races in 2009 and 2013, will serve as the PAC's senior adviser.

"We believe there's a void right now in leadership throughout the country," DuHaime told the [Wall Street Journal]. "We aim to support candidates who are willing to take on tough problems and make tough decisions."
Presumably like the tough decision to give the go-ahead to a PAC name that sounds like a riff on one of the country's most prominent lefty media criticism sites.

Anyway! This all sounds great, because we definitely need REAL LEADERSHIP back in AMERICA, and who better to do it than a mean bully jerkface who shuts down bridges out of spite and loves to just yell at people who say things he doesn't like. LIKE A LEADER.

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Matilda the Fuzzy Sealpoint Cat, sleeping on the arm of the couch with her paw on her head and the tip of her tongue hanging out
Just sleeping with her paw on her head and her tongue hanging out. Like ya do.

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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