Primarily Speaking

[Content Note: Racism; terrorism.]

illustration by Sarah Green of the nine victims of the AME shooting, with their faces, names, ages, and mini-bios
[Illustration by Sarah Green.]

Since the shooting in Charleston, the 2016 presidential candidates have been reacting to the heinous act of white supremacist eliminationist violence, with varying degrees of sensitivity, to put it far more politely than it deserves.

Although many of the GOP candidates' campaigns reacted with tweets condemning the shooting and offering prayers, none of them gave meaningful statements about violent white supremacy, most of them danced around the issue of the South Carolina continuing to fly the Confederate flag, and some of them also went on to offer statements that were straight-up racist bullshit.

Senator Lindsey Graham defended the Confederate flag, saying the flag is "part of who we are. The flag represents—to some people—the Civil War, and that was the symbol of one side. To others, it's a racist symbol, and it's been used by people in a racist way. [But] the problems we're having in South Carolina and around the world aren't because of a symbol, but because of what's in people's hearts."

What's in people's hearts. Like using "we" in a way that writes black Southerners out of the word entirely, for example. Or pretending that there is any use for the Confederate flag that isn't racist. Or diminishing an act of anti-black terrorism by calling it a "problem we're having in South Carolina," just one of many problems "around the world."

Former Governor of Texas Rick Perry meanwhile referred to Dylann Roof's mass murder as an "accident." Definitely not politicizing the shooting himself, ahem, he used the occasion to criticize President Obama for pointing to gun access as one culprit, and then said: "This is the M.O. of this administration, anytime there is a accident like this. You know, the president's clear. He doesn't like for Americans to have guns, and so he uses every opportunity—this being another one—to basically go parrot that message."

Clearly, it is much more principled to use the occasion of every mass death at the hands of a shooter to attack the President.

Former Governor of Florida Jeb Bush, speaking at the Faith & Freedom Coalition conference, well after Dylann Roof's motive was known, said: "I don't know what was on the mind or the heart of the man who committed these atrocious crimes." Explicitly asked later if he thought the shooting had been racially motivated, he answered: "I don't know. Looks like to me it was, but we'll find out all the information. It's clear it was an act of raw hatred, for sure. Nine people lost their lives, and they were African-American. You can judge what it is."

The reason he won't just fucking say it? Because the white conservative base is busily twisting themselves into pretzels trying to find any other motivation, and Jeb Bush wants these racists' votes more than he wants to address deadly racism.

Also at the FFC garbage conference, Senator Rand Paul said this bullshit: "We had a shooting this morning [sic] in South Carolina. What kind of person goes into church and shoots nine people? There's a sickness in our country, there's something terribly wrong, but it isn't going to be fixed by your government. It's people straying away, it's people not understanding where salvation comes from."

Yes, that was it. Not white supremacy, but not enough Jesus. (Roof, by the way, was a Lutheran. And having been raised Lutheran, I can assure you that Lutherans talk a lot about salvation.)

Senator Ted Cruz, keeping with his tradition of making inappropriate jokes in the wake of a tragedy, said at a campaign event in Iowa days after the shooting: "You know the great thing about the state of Iowa is, I'm pretty sure you all define gun control the same way we do in Texas—hitting what you aim at." He also said that there's no sense talking about Root's racist motivations: "It appears to be racially driven from what it was reported this strange man said, and a racial hate crime is horrific, any hate crime is horrific. I don't think we should be using this tragedy to try and divide people and to try and seek partisan advantage. I think we should be praying for those who lost loved ones in this horrific murder."

Cruz is one of several Republican candidates who received campaign contributions from Earl Holt, the "leader of a rightwing group that Dylann Roof allegedly credits with helping to radicalise him against black people."

As is former Senator Rick Santorum. Santorum was quick to call the shooting at attack on religious freedom, but later called it an act of terrorism and said: "It was clearly racially motivated. Clearly."

Dr. Ben Carson penned an editorial [CN: disablism] for USA Today in which he wrote: "Not everything is about race in this country. But when it is about race, then it just is. So when a guy who has been depicted wearing a jacket featuring an apartheid-era Rhodesian flag walks into a historic black church and guns down nine African-American worshipers at a Bible study meeting, common sense leads one to believe his motivations are based in racism. ...We know what's at stake here, so let's stop all the interpretive dance around the obvious. ...When an event of this magnitude occurs in the middle of an election cycle, politicians are often quick to try to score political points, look for scapegoats and easy answers. That's the lowest common denominator of politics at a time when we need true leadership. ...I know we can [heal the sickness of racism]. But first we have to face the facts."

Dr. Carson is, of course, the only black Republican candidate.

On the other side of the aisle, Senator Bernie Sanders drew ire after holding a political rally "just feet from a Capitol Hill prayer vigil for the Charleston shooting victims in South Carolina," the day after the shooting. "The chants from the rally reportedly overpowered speakers at the prayer vigil." I don't even know what the fuck he was thinking.

Later in the day, he offered this message: "The Charleston church killings are a tragic reminder of the ugly stain of racism that still taints our nation. This senseless violence fills me with outrage, disgust, and a deep, deep sadness. The hateful killing of nine people praying inside a church is a horrific reminder that, while we have made significant progress in advancing civil rights in this country, we are far from eradicating racism. Our thoughts and prayers are with the families and their congregation."

Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton used [CN: disablism] the occasion of her speech to the U.S. Conference of Mayors over the weekend to talk about the shooting, to observe that racism is still a powerful force in the country, and to talk about white privilege. After reiterating the President's message about the need for gun control, Clinton said:
But today, I stand before you because I know and you know there is a deeper challenge we face.

I had the great privilege of representing America around the world. I was so proud to share our example, our diversity, our openness, our devotion to human rights and freedom. These qualities have drawn generations of immigrants to our shores, and they inspire people still. I have seen it with my own eyes.

And yet, bodies are once again being carried out of a Black church.

Once again, racist rhetoric has metastasized into racist violence.

Now, it's tempting, it is tempting to dismiss a tragedy like this as an isolated incident, to believe that in today's America, bigotry is largely behind us, that institutionalized racism no longer exists.

But despite our best efforts and our highest hopes, America's long struggle with race is far from finished.

I know this is a difficult topic to talk about. I know that so many of us hoped by electing our first Black president, we had turned the page on this chapter in our history.

I know there are truths we don't like to say out loud or discuss with our children. But we have to. That's the only way we can possibly move forward together.

Race remains a deep fault line in America. Millions of people of color still experience racism in their everyday lives.

Here are some facts.

In America today, Blacks are nearly three times as likely as whites to be denied a mortgage.

In 2013, the median wealth of Black families was around $11,000. For white families, it was more than $134,000.

Nearly half of all Black families have lived in poor neighborhoods for at least two generations, compared to just 7 percent of white families.

African American men are far more likely to be stopped and searched by police, charged with crimes, and sentenced to longer prison terms than white men, 10 percent longer for the same crimes in the federal system.

In America today, our schools are more segregated than they were in the 1960s.

How can any of that be true? How can it be true that Black children are 500 percent more likely to die from asthma than white kids? Five hundred percent!

More than a half century after Dr. King marched and Rosa Parks sat and John Lewis bled, after the Civil Rights Act and the Voting Rights Act and so much else, how can any of these things be true? But they are.

And our problem is not all kooks and Klansman. It's also in the cruel joke that goes unchallenged. It's in the off-hand comments about not wanting "those people" in the neighborhood.

Let's be honest: For a lot of well-meaning, open-minded white people, the sight of a young Black man in a hoodie still evokes a twinge of fear. And news reports about poverty and crime and discrimination evoke sympathy, even empathy, but too rarely do they spur us to action or prompt us to question our own assumptions and privilege.

We can't hide from any of these hard truths about race and justice in America. We have to name them and own them and then change them.
I have said before that Clinton has not seemed confident or well-prepared talking about race previously. This isn't perfect, but it is a marked improvement.

I am especially grateful that she drew a direct line from racist rhetoric to racist violence, and said plainly that this is not an isolated incident, but a terrorist act firmly centered in institutional racism.

I never imagined I'd have occasion to say this, but I agree with Dr. Ben Carson: Anyone who is not willing to talk about racism, even in the wake of eliminationist violence against nine black women and men perpetrated by an avowed white supremacist, is not fit to lead this nation.

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"Racism, we are not cured of it."

[Content Note: Discussion of racism and racist violence; use of a racist slur.]

Today, if you browse the news, you will probably see a lot of headlines about how President Obama used the n-word, during an interview with comedian Marc Maron on his podcast. And it is notable that the President used that particular slur, during a discussion of racism, but not for the tittering, tutting, pearl-clutching reasons around which most of the discussion is centered, eliding the import of everything else he was saying.

The full context of his use of the word is crucial, and the ideas he was elucidating are important. We need to hear everything he said.

The entire podcast is available here.

image of President Obama sitting down with Marc Maron in his studio
[Photo by Pete Souza.]

Here is an excerpt from that interview:
I always tell young people, in particular, do not say that nothing has changed when it comes to race in America, unless you've lived through being a black man in the 1950s or '60s or '70s. It is incontrovertible that race relations have improved significantly during my lifetime and yours.

[But] the legacy of slavery, Jim Crow, discrimination in almost every institution of our lives, you know, that casts a long shadow, and that's still part of our DNA that's passed on. We're not cured of it. Racism, we are not cured of it. Clearly. And it's not just a matter of it not being polite to say nigger in public. That's not the measure of whether racism still exists or not. It's not just a matter of overt discrimination. Societies don't, overnight, completely erase everything that happened 200 to 300 years prior.
It shouldn't be the least bit controversial for any black person (or any person at all) to observe that racism still exists. But it is, because there are so many white people who aggressively police anyone who states the manifestly obvious, because they are deeply invested in pretending otherwise, even as they endeavor to transmit to the next generation the language and imagery and narratives and dog-whistles and every other bit of reprehensible detritus that defines and maintains white supremacy and white privilege.

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Open Thread

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Hosted by peas.

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The Virtual Pub Is Open

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

Belly up to the bar,
and be in this space together.

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Quote of the Day

[Content Note: Racism; terrorism.]

"This impulse to blame the massacre in Charleston on everything but race—and not acknowledge that this is indeed a hate crime and is in fact about something broader than one individual—is based on a reluctance to confront America's long and bloody past head on. Messages of #BlackLivesMatter are as much about recent killings of unarmed black people as they are about America's consistent devaluation of black lives during and after death. ...Roof, who was finally captured early Thursday after a massive manhunt, has apparent white supremacist ties, and a picture is circulating of him wearing two overt racist symbols: the South African flag under apartheid and the flag of formerly white-controlled Rhodesia (which later became Zimbabwe). In other words, Roof is literally wearing a racist's uniform. We must be able to admit the truth that is right in front of our faces. When a white supremacist walks into one of the most historic and famed black churches in the United States and massacres nine black people, the catalyst is race at the most fundamental level."—Zerlina Maxwell, in a must-read piece: "The Charleston Church Shooting Is Another Reminder That Racism Is Not a Thing of the Past."

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The Friday Blogaround

This blogaround brought to you by hummingbirds.

Recommended Reading:

Sameer: [Content Note: Racism; violence; white supremacy] Read Derrick Weston Brown's Devastating Poetic Response to Charleston

Rebecca: [CN: Racism; violence; misogyny; white supremacy] White Women as Inviolable; Black Women as Disposable

Jack: [CN: Racism; violence; white supremacy] How the Charleston Shooting Is Linked to the Confederate Flag, According to a South Carolinian

Angry Asian Man: [CN: Misogynist terrorism; racism; violence; self-harm] Suspect Identified in Attacks on Asian Women

Emily: [CN: Rape culture] Military Sexual Assault Reform Blocked Again in Senate

Monica: [CN: Transphobia] All the Seven Sisters Will Admit Trans Feminine Students

Fannie: [CN: Misogyny] Framing Is Everything

Kyler: [CN: Homophobia] Check Out This Woman's Brilliant Response to Homophobic Neighbor Who Told Her to Tone Down Her 'Relentlessly Gay' Yard

Elliot: Shelter: Not Impossible—A Tiny Home for the Big Outdoors

Lauren: First Set Photos of Female-Led Ghostbusters Show Three of Our Heroines in Costume

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

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Daily Dose of Cute

One of Dudley's favorite games is a variation on "chase me!"—but because he's so fast, no human can really chase him very effectively, so it's basically a game of "I will run really fast, then pause near you, wait for you to take a few steps toward me while we both pretend you might be able to catch me, and then I will run really fast again."

Here's a video of Dudley playing That Game with me in the yard the other day, and the video goes into slow-motion for one of his runs, so you can get a better look at the greyhound double-suspension gallop. While most dogs are suspended above ground at least once per stride at a full gallop, sighthounds are suspended above ground twice in each stride—once in the tucked position, at which point their back feet nearly reach past their front shoulders (!), and once in the fully extended position, at which point the curve of their spines actually reverses (!).

Dudley isn't going full speed here, so it's not as dramatic as it looks at top speed, but it's still pretty damn amazing. Greyhounds are so strong and so flexible, and watching him run is truly one of the great joys of my life.


Video Description: Dudley the Greyhound runs around from one side of the yard to the other, and pauses near a young redwood tree (underneath which he's dug a hole), then waits for me to take several steps toward him before leaping away and running to the other side of the yard again. This happens several times, Zelly the Black and Tan Mutt standing on a stone patio near me, watching, until he is finally out of gas, and I walk up and pet his adorable little wedgy head.

* * *

Although Zelly didn't join Dudley on this particular run, she is no slouch in the racing around the yard department, and he looooooves to chase her and chase her, while she rolls and tumbles to try to escape him. My favorite is when she runs directly underneath him, because he's so much taller than she is, and he pulls up short, like, "Where did she go?" They're the best.

image of Zelly running toward me in the backyard with Dudley in pursuit
She's running. He's basically strolling, lol.

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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Two-Minute Nostalgia Sublime



Woody Guthrie: "You Fascists Are Bound to Lose"

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In the News

Here is some stuff in the news today...

Today is Juneteenth, a holiday commemorating the end of slavery and black independence in the US. Laura Saunders Egodigwe has written a terrific piece on Juneteenth, and there are tons of Juneteenth events all over the country, many of which will be stretching into the weekend, and many of which you can find online, if you want to attend or support a local celebration.

[Content Note: Racism; terrorism] This is pretty great: In an interview yesterday, Hillary Clinton called for "a candid national conversation about race and about discrimination, prejudice, hatred" in the wake of the murders in Charleston, and called out Donald Trump's profoundly racist rhetoric from his campaign announcement address as contributing to a culture in which people act on racial hatred. "For example, a recent entry into the Republican presidential campaign said some very inflammatory things about Mexicans. Everybody should stand up and say that's not acceptable. You don't talk like that on talk radio. You don't talk like that on the kind of political campaigns." The interviewer told him she could use Trump's name, but she declined, saying: "I think he is emblematic. I want people to understand it's not about him, it's about everybody. We should not accept [hateful speech in national political conversation]. Decent people need to stand up against it." Right on. This shit doesn't happen in a vacuum.

[CN: Wildfires] Fuck: "With the official start of summer just days away, wildfire season is off to a hot start across the West. As the Associated Press reports, there are currently blazes in at least four states—Alaska, Arizona, California, and Washington—and over 1,000 people have been evacuated in total. According to the U.S. Forest Service there are currently 17 large fires burning."

[CN: Appropriation; video may autoplay at link] Rachel Dolezal has been voted off a police oversight committee in Spokane during a City Council meeting. "The Spokane City Council voted 6 to 0 to remove Rachel Dolezal from the Police Ombudsman Commission due to misconduct which was originally reported in a whistle-blower complaint."

[CN: Homophobia; regionalism] Matthew Tully writes a piece for the Indy Star about what has been happening in Indiana since "the religious freedom spotlight faded, after the cable news networks and everyone else turned away." And, while I think he should have noted more prominently, and not just as an aside, that there's still plenty of homophobia and bigotry being expressed by individual Hoosiers, he's absolutely right to point out that "in public polls and public actions, in ways both quiet and loud, grassroots and corporate, the real Indiana in recent weeks has shown itself not to be a caricature of flyover-state intolerance but rather a state that, like so many others, rejects discrimination and embraces diversity." And, no, it's not because we were shamed into it. The people of the state and the government of the state are often at odds here, and often wrongly conflated by outsiders.

[CN: Near-drowning, but rescue] Kids today! "[Four] young boys are being hailed [as] heroes for their quick actions after they saw a swimmer in distress in an Orlando pond. ...'We were yelling for him to get out of the water. Then he tried to get out of the water and he got caught in a lily pad,' said Kevin Lewis, 9. Freeman Robinson, 10, said he acted fast when he saw the man struggling. Robinson said he directed his two friends, Devonta Hall, 10, and Marion Lukes, 10, to run across the street to an Orlando EMS division. ...Firefighters said the man wasn't conscious when they pulled him out and got him in an ambulance, but regained a pulse after life-saving efforts. The boys said helping rescue the man is an experience they'll likely never forget. 'I never saved somebody's life before,' said Hall. 'I feel really happy because it's, like, my first time helping somebody out,' said Lukes." Blub. THE CUTEST.

[CN: Homophobia] Cool Pope. Very progress. "Pope Francis once again stressed the importance of children being raised by heterosexual parents on Sunday (June 14), likening a long-lasting marriage to a good wine, in which a husband and wife make the most of their gender differences. ...He stressed that heterosexual marriages ensure a couples' happiness and are essential for good parenting. 'Children mature seeing their father and mother like this; their identity matures being confronted with the love their father and mother have, confronted with this difference [between women and men],' Francis said." Yawn.

Twitter is planning to launch some new project which just sounds like a terrible mess. I have never seen a company so determined to ruin the basic functionality of their product.

If you are a fan of Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul then you may be excited to hear that Vince Gilligan definitely wants Bryan Cranston (and other BrBa faves) to make appearances in the spinoff series. "All of the wonderful characters who may eventually appear on Better Call Saul will appear when it is most organic and fitting to the storytelling of Better Caul Saul and also when we can work out scheduling issues with actors. I would love to see that personally." Me too!

And if you are a fan of Friday Night Lights and/or True Detective, which is set to begin its second season this week starring (among others) FNL alum Taylor Kitsch, then maybe you will enjoy this profile of The Kitsch, especially if you like hearing about how handsome and manly he is!

And finally! This puppy is determined to get attention from hir uninterested older sibling, and it is hilarious.

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"The Other" Among Us

[Content Note: White supremacy; racist apologia.]

Something I'm seeing a lot of in discussions of Dylann Roof's terrorist act is white people expressing a shocked inability to understand him. Which, in some cases, is simply ignorance born of unexamined white privilege, but in lots of cases is the rehearsed expression of a performance all white people know, because we are all taught to do it as part of our indoctrination into white supremacy.

We pretend that we don't understand, in order to create distance from white people like Dylann Roof, to separate ourselves, and to uphold the lie that white supremacy isn't active and proximate in all of our lives.

All white people are intimately connected to white supremacy.

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We Need to Talk About the Furiosa Comic

[Content Note: Rape, abortion, forced pregnancy, homophobia, gender policing, descriptions of violence.]

We need to talk about the Mad Max: Fury Road Furiosa (#1) comic and how awful it is. Huge content notes on this post, like, in big block capitals and neon letters because this issue is triggery and terrible, and really aptly illustrates just how awful MMFR could have been if it were made without intentionally setting aside lazy (and terrible) narratives about women and rape in order to be better than that. Also, I would honestly recommend going into this post with the mindset that this comic is some kind of terrible non-canon spinoff, because I don't want to ruin MMFR for anyone. And I want to hat-tip Lindsay Ellis for bringing it to my attention.

Here is the comic (and link here and here):

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His Motive Is Known

[Content Note: Terrorism; racism; death; white supremacy.]

Throughout the day yesterday, the nine women and men who were killed by Dylann Roof were identified and their names, pictures, and brief biographies released to the public. These are the people who were killed:

collection of images of the six women and three men who were killed

Top left: Ethel Lance, 70, a sexton at the church who worked as a custodian at the Charleston's Gaillard Municipal Auditorium for more than 30 years before retiring in 2002. Top center: Tywanza Sanders, 26, a graduate of Allen University who earned a degree in business administration last year. Top right: Cynthia Hurd, 54, manager of the St. Andrews Regional Library who had worked for the Charleston County Public Library for 31 years. Middle left: Rev. Depayne Middleton Doctor, 49, a church singer and former Charleston County community development block grant employee who retired in 2005. Middle center: Rev. Clementa Pinckney, 41, a pastor at Emanuel AME and South Carolina State Senator. Middle right: Susie Jackson, 87, a longtime church member who was a member of the choir and served on the usher board. Bottom left: Myra Thompson, 59, an active member of the Delta Sigma Theta sorority who was married to the Rev. Anthony Thompson, a vicar at Holy Trinity REC in Charleston. Bottom center: Rev. Daniel Simmons Sr., 74, a member of the church's ministerial staff. Bottom right: Sharonda Coleman-Singleton, 45, a speech therapist and girls' track and field coach at Goose Creek High School in suburban Charleston.

Dylann Roof walked into their church, what should have been a sanctuary from violence, and killed these people because he is a violent white supremacist who believed them to be his inferior, exclusively because of the color of their skin, and his. A pissant ninth-grade dropout with nothing going for him believed that his life was worth more than nine people who were each successful, dedicated, contributing members of their community.

That is resentful, vengeful hatred on a level I can barely comprehend.

Roof reportedly spared a woman who witnessed his massacre so she could recount what happened. It was Rev. Pinckney's cousin, Sylvia Johnson, who spoke to this survivor and repeated Roof's words to her: "You rape our women and you're taking over our country. And you have to go."

Roof wanted the world to know why he had committed this heinous act of eliminationist violence. He had accomplished nothing yet in his life, was probably angry that he hadn't been handed the great life that white supremacy and patriarchy had promised him and to which he felt entitled, didn't want to work for it, scapegoated people of color for ruining the country, and decided to substitute instant infamy for the hard work of building a life for himself, like people without his privilege (and people with it) do all the fucking time.

He wanted the world to know that he was killing black people because he hated and resented them. He let a woman survive specifically so she could deliver that message.

And now the media is full of headlines suggesting that his motive is "unknown."

His motive is not unknown. He made it known.

And even had he not apparently let a woman survive just to tell his gruesome tale, he was active in white supremacist groups. He wore white supremacist gear, had a Confederate license plate on his car, told racist jokes, spent six months detailing to his roommate his plan to execute black people. (And how is that guy not under arrest for criminal conspiracy?)

Dylann Roof made his motive abundantly clear. It is not a mystery. To pretend otherwise is to be complicit in concealing white supremacy.

We know his motive. This is cultural gaslighting.

And many news outlets who are at least willing to concede that maybe we knew what was motivating this active white supremacist are nonetheless spinning tales about how he was a "loner" and soft-spoken and quiet and all the same narratives we hear about white male mass murderers every single time. Even when the facts don't really seem to fit that narrative.

The Washington Post, for instance, headlines their biographical spelunking mission by describing Roof as someone whose life had "quietly drifted off track"—only for the story to document how Roof has been harassing mall employees so insistently that the police finally got involved. Was that a "quiet drift off-track" for the people he was harassing like a fucking creep?

He was a loner, but had a roommate in whom he confided for half a year about his murder plans. He was quiet, but he harassed people enough to get himself arrested. He had slipped away from his family, but his dad bought him a gun for his birthday.

Human lives are complicated. Someone can be both quiet and a creep, can both be distant from and remain in contact with their families. My point is just that we are exhorted to see Roof as troubled, as an outsider, as someone who didn't fit in, because that's a more appealing narrative for lots of white people than the one which correctly centers him within a normalized white supremacist culture, which he merely took to the extreme.

His motive for his deliberate, carefully planned act of terrorism is known. He made no bones about it, and neither should we.

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Open Thread

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Hosted by ombre nails.

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

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Question of the Day

What's for dinner? Or whatever the next meal of the day is in your part of the world.

I don't even know yet. Probably salad and chicken of some description. I've got some berries in the fridge to which I'm really looking forward for dessert, though.

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Olivia the White Farm Cat cuddled up on a blanket on the chaise; in the background, Dudley the Greyhound's long snoot is poking out from behind a pillow
Olivia is adorably cuddly—and the champion photobomber gets photobombed herself for once.

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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AME Shooting: Double Standards

[Content Note: Racism; eliminationist violence; white privilege.]

As I have mentioned, the apologia on behalf of Dylann Roof, by individual white people and by the media, is already coming fast and hard. We are, as but one example, being admonished to consider whether he is "concentrated evil" or just a "sweet kid," a bullshit dichotomy proposed in order to force a choice between rank monsterization that absolves him of human accountability or infantilizing sympathy that absolves him of adult accountability.

screen cap of tweet posted by the Seattle Times reading: 'Concentrated evil' or 'sweet kid': Details on the suspect in Charleston church shootings

In either case, we are certainly to understand that he is not accountable for his vile actions.

One of the things we all can do—and which white people must do—is identify and push back against the double standards that we see in language and imagery that is used to discuss a white man who killed nine black women and men in a heinous act of terrorism, versus the language and imagery that is used to discuss people of color who commit violence as well as people of color who are victims of violence.

This is a place in which to highlight all of those double standards.

If a person of color commits an act of mass violence based on the identity of hir victims, zie is a terrorist and hir crime his terrorism. If a white person commits an act of mass violence based on the identity of hir victims, zie is a "lone gunman" and hir crime is, at best, a hate crime.

Black people even suspected of a crime are frequently killed in the street by police. A white man who killed nine people is taken into custody alive.

Black teenagers killed by police or non-black people are called thugs and their lives put on trial and they are described as "men." A white man who killed nine people is called a "boy," a "kid," and his life is not interrogated, but mined for evidence that he was "mentally ill."

White people are not being explicitly asked to condemn this crime, on the basis that the shooter is white, the way black people are explicitly asked to condemn a black person's criminality. (Or alleged criminality.)

White families are not being pathologized and held to blame for Dylann Roof's mass murder, the way that black families are pathologized and held to blame for black people's criminality. (Or alleged criminality.)

People who are extremely vocal about "religious freedom" when it comes to homophobes who don't want to bake a cake or pharmacists who don't want to dispense birth control are suddenly very silent on black people's religious freedom being encroached by terrorist acts in their houses of worship.

Any crime committed by any black person is said to be reflective of intrinsic problems with "black culture," but crimes committed by white people, even those with an obvious link to white supremacy, are considered isolated incidents.

This is hardly a comprehensive list. Please add in comments your own observations of racist double standards, and how they are being engaged in order to defend Dylann Roof, absolve him of accountability, redirect attention away from white supremacy, and minimize the gravity and intent of his crimes.

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In the News

Here is some other stuff in the news today...

[Content Note: Terrorism; death] Boko Haram has orchestrated another attack in Niger: "The governor of the Diffa region in Niger says that an attack by the extremist group Boko Haram based in neighboring Nigeria has killed 40 people in two villages. ...Boko Haram last attacked Niger in April and killed at least 58 people. Boko Haram took control of a large swath of northeast Nigeria until a multinational force this year forced them out of towns and villages but it still engages in cross-border hit and run attacks."

[CN: War; violence; displacement] The annual United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Global Trends report has found that "worldwide displacement from wars, conflict and persecution is at the highest level ever recorded. And it's getting worse. The [report] says nearly 60 million people were forcibly displaced at the end of 2014. 'This is a staggering escalation in terms of people being uprooted every year. What we are talking about right now is 42,000 people are being forced out of homes every day,' [spokesperson Babar Baloch] said." The Washington Post has a UNHCR graphic that shows which countries have the highest documented rates of global displacement.

[CN: Worker exploitation] After the Senate refused to pass President Obama's trade legislation, the House of Representatives has passed it: "The 'fast-track' trade bill must now go the Senate for approval, which is by no means assured."

[CN: Racism] The Supreme Court has ruled against "a Confederate veterans group seeking the right to put the controversial flag on Texas speciality license plates. The case, Walker v Sons of Confederate Veterans (SCV), centered on first amendment issues of free speech and to what extent a speciality license plate represents the views of the state that issued it or the drivers who put it on their car. The court ruled 5-4 that rejecting the Texas confederate flag plate did not contravene free speech." Good.

The Obama administration has announced it will replace Alexander Hamilton on the $10 bill. There is no word yet on who it will be, although Harriet Tubman won the poll (which was met with mixed feelings) run by a group petitioning to have Andrew Jackson replaced on the $20.

[CN: Homophobia] Here we go again: "Candidates seeking the Republican presidential nomination will be urged Thursday to sign a pledge promising to support a constitutional amendment defining marriage as being between one man and one woman. The National Organization for Marriage's request comes as the nation waits to see if the U.S. Supreme Court will rule this month to legalize same sex marriage across the country." These assholes never give up.

Something something Brian Williams, who of course deserves a second chance blah blah.

Neat: "In our solar system, the objects with rainfall, rivers and oceans can be counted on two fingers: Earth, and Saturn's moon Titan. Both also share a thick atmosphere, rocky ground and plate tectonics, and now, they have one more thing in common: polar wind that pulls gases from their atmospheres right out into space. Saturn's largest moon, Titan, is the first known planetary body besides Earth to have such a peculiar polar wind."

And finally: Beautiful black and white portraits of animals at a zoo.

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Obama's Statement on AME Shooting

[Content Note: Terrorism; racism; death; white supremacy; guns.]

Here is President Obama's statement on the mass murder at the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church:


I will provide a link to a transcript when one becomes available. The White House has provided a transcript of the President's statement.

The President focused disproportionately on "gun violence," which is honestly not the point here. As Kirsten West Savali observed on Twitter, if the weapon had not been a gun, it would have been a bomb. History tells us as much.

I understand why President Obama may feel like he can't talk about racialized violence, but Vice President Joe Biden was standing RIGHT THERE. Let him call it out then.

White men need to be talking about this. So give Biden the podium, if that's what it takes to say what needs to be said.

Calls for unity and healing are less than worthless when we can't even name the problem. White supremacy thrives and depends on the fairy tale that it doesn't even exist.

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AME Shooting Update

[Content Note: Terrorism; racism; death; white supremacy; guns.]

The shooter who killed nine people at the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church, a historic black church in Charleston, South Carolina, has been identified as 21-year-old Dylann Roof.

He has been located and taken into custody by police. Alive.

Lucky for him, he wasn't suspected of stealing or selling cigarettes.

Pictures of Roof show him wearing white supremacist gear and sitting on the hood of a car sporting a Confederate license plate. He was deep into movement white supremacy, underlining that this act is not attributable to "mental illness," nor is it an isolated incident, nor is it an incomprehensible act of senseless violence; it is a deliberate act firmly centered in ancient white supremacy.

Nonetheless, the apologia has already begun:

[Roof's] uncle said he recognized Roof from the police photo and "described him as quiet and soft-spoken," according to Reuters.

...White Knoll High School had a mix of black and white students. [John Mullins, who went to high school with Roof] says they occasionally mixed, and the school had "a lot of preps, a little bit of gang members, and a lot of outcasts." But Roof wasn't one of the outcasts, Mullins said.

Nor did Roof make a habit of spouting racist messages.

"I never heard him say anything, but just he had that kind of Southern pride, I guess some would say. Strong conservative beliefs," he said. "He made a lot of racist jokes, but you don't really take them seriously like that. You don't really think of it like that."

But now, "the things he said were kind of not joking," Mullins added.

Many of Roof's Facebook friends, including those from his high school, are black.
He was "quiet and soft-spoken," and he didn't "make a habit of spouting racist messages," except for when he was telling "a lot of racist jokes."

And he has a lot of black Facebook friends. Which we're meant to read as evidence that he had meaningful relationships with black people (and thus couldn't possibly be racist), even though Roof could have been surveilling them as potential targets under the auspices of friendship.

This is reprehensible. And there is going to be a lot more of it, because we simply refuse to acknowledge that this is straight-up terrorism, rooted in the white supremacist eliminationism that was a central feature of the founding of this country and defines it still.

[Commenting Guidelines: Anything even resembling apologia for this act of white supremacist terrorism will be deleted. Anything even resembling policing of black people's emotions will be deleted. Further, this is not the space to work out your white privilege. White people need to be doing that right now, as ever, but that is work to be done with other white people, not in a public forum where people of color who don't have the luxury of ignorance afforded by privilege are obliged to encounter and navigate it as a cost of participation.]

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Dear White Men

[Content Note: Terrorism; racism; white supremacy; patriarchy.]

White people need to be talking to each other about the white supremacist terrorist act in Charleston last night.

We need to be talking to each other about what we, as individuals, are doing to dismantle white supremacy, and we need to be holding each other accountable for the ways in which we uphold white privilege.

We need to be pushing back on minimizing language that seeks to turn the perpetrator of this heinous act into a troubled boy who acted in isolation, and challenge narratives that seek to frame this mass murder as an isolated incident, just one of eleventy million "isolated incidents," that supposedly share nothing in common.

White men, there is a particular role you need to play in these conversations.

According to a survivor of the attack, the shooter said: "You rape our women and you're taking over our country."

White men, you need to talk to each other about white supremacist patriarchy today.

I can say all day long "you don't own me; I am not your woman" to white supremacist misogynists, but they don't listen to women.

White men, you need to be talking to other white men about not using ownership of white women as a justification for genocidal violence.

This Birth of a Nation bullshit needs to be denounced, hard and fast and loud. White men do not own white women, but men who believe they do are using that contemptible patriarchal garbage in order to justify mass murder of black men and women.

I will demand over and over and over that they stop using me, but men who believe that they own me, and who leverage the fact that other white men share that belief, aren't inclined to listen to me.

So you need to step the fuck up.

I am a white woman and a survivor of rape, and I am angry in ways I cannot even begin to articulate that my identity and my lived experience is being invoked in defense of eliminationist violence against black women and men.

And my anger doesn't matter to the men who do it. My agency doesn't matter. My refusal doesn't matter.

This is the role you need to play. You need to talk to other white men about how you don't own white women. You need to talk to other white men about how this patriarchal ownership narrative has been used since this country's inception to justify violence against black women and men.

You need to be visibly angry about white women's agency being usurped and our lived experiences being appropriated in order to rationalize and defend racist violence. You need to have a zero-tolerance policy on white supremacist patriarchy.

You need to talk to dangerous men and stop letting people be killed at their hands, because you can't be fucking bothered to get involved.

Open Wide...