Assvertising

[Content Note: Misogyny.]

This advert has been running for more than a year (see, for example, Nerdy Feminist's Oct. 2014 post on it), and I have seen it no fewer than eleventy trazillion times, and every single time it irritates the shit out of me.

Video Description: A white family—Mom, Dad, Teenage Sister, and Little Brother—sit around the table in their clean, white, upper middle-class kitchen. Teenage Sister is telling a story about something that happened with her school friends in rapid-fire speech. Dad listens with feigned interest. Mom gives her a patronizing smile. A female voiceover says: "This story had 30 minutes left—" Teenage Daughter says: "—was that he was with Jessica," before pausing to take a bit of mac and cheese. The voiceover continues: "—until Kim realized that Stouffer's mac and cheese is made with real aged cheddar." Teenage Daughter dreamily savors the mac and cheese. Dad prompts her: "So what about Jessica?" Teenage Sister replies, "What about her?" Voiceover: "Stouffer's: Made for you to love."
And, apparently, made for you to shove in your teenage daughters' mouths so they shut the fuck up about dumb stuff, like their lives.

I know, I know—I'm the Most Humorless Feminist in all of Nofunnington! Don't I understand it's all just in good fun? After all, surely we can all agree that teenage girls are annoying and vapid and talk too much and must be silenced!

I am reminded of this great video by Sabrina, aka NerdyAndQuirky, which I linked in a blogaround earlier this year [CN: video autoplays at link]: "Stop Being Shitty to Teenage Girls."

Sabrina, a young thin woman of color, wearing a blue t-shirt and black framed glasses, appears onscreen in front of walls decorated with National Geographic covers. She says:

Hello, welcome to NerdyAndQuirky. It's been awhile since I made a rant, but I am angry! I just came back from VidCon, only to find an article that called it a "scream fest where teenage girls chase YouTube stars through the halls." One: Really inaccurate! Aside from a few incidents, VidCon was mostly just people mulling around, trying to connect to Wifi. And two: Can we please stop being so mean to teenage girls?! PLEASE?!

Yes, I know I'm a little bit biased being a 17-year-old girl. But this article wasn't alone in its condescending attitude towards young women. The media has this really degrading way of using teenage girls as a scapegoat for stupidity—and, quite frankly, it's insulting!

For everyone who's ever made a joke about fangirls, or how teenage girls ruin everything you love: Listen up, because I'm gonna lay this out for you like a real nice buffet table.

One: This is the salad portion of your meal. And in the salad of fan culture, girls may be the lettuce. We are the most visible, because there are so many of us. But that doesn't change the fact that there may be tomato guys or gender non-conforming croutons wandering around the expo halls, too.

Two: This is the fried food. This is why you came to an all-you-can-eat buffet. And guess what? Teenage girls want it, too! They probably want it more than you do! Because here's the thing: Gender roles present in society right now teach guys to repress any sense of excitement, unless it has to do with sweaty guys putting balls in holes. [images of sports] It's a sucky topic for another time. But girls—we're allowed free rein while we're teenagers. We are taught that it's all right to be wholeheartedly enthusiastic about whatever we love, and it is beautiful!

Whether it's musicians or actors or books or movies or TV shows—if teenage girls like it, they're gonna go ham! You stick a reference on a t-shirt, we'll buy it! You make buttons for it, we'll buy it! You make posters—well, we already got it and stuck it to our walls! You take any piece of media we like, stick it to a cheap piece of plastic produced in China and mark the price up by five hundred percent, we! will! still! buy it!

You wanna know why? It's because in a world that pits teenage against each other, that tells us we have to look prettier or compete over guys, fan culture, fandom, is like a vacation.

You have people who are just as excited over things as you. You have people who will cry over head canons and argue for hours over who the best Avenger is. And that is not a bad thing!

Too many people—myself included!—are starting to react to this excitement with cynicism. That it's immature, or you're falling to the corporate machine! But take a second and pull your head out of your crusty old white philosopher loving ass and realize that what teenage girls are so obsessed over is a feeling of belonging.

And Chris Evans' immaculate body.

And is that so ridiculous?

Number Three: The Heart Burn. You can, in fact, have too much of a good thing. And I won't deny that some fangirls go way too far, whether it's chasing their favorite celebrities or creeping outside their rooms, but, mind you, this occurs almost 100% of the time in conventions, where the mob mentality takes over; where these people—not just teenage girls—crave a unique, one-on-one interaction with their idols.

They have paid countless dollars for this, and some part of their brain makes them think, "This is okay!" Which it's not. It's inexcusable. If you ever think it's okay to do any of that—don't.

But these people are in no way the majority. If 50 people, or 150 people, are lurking where they do not belong, that is still probably at least out of 15,000 people. That is about 1%; that is the overwhelming minority. So stop acting like a group of overexcited teenagers are ruining the world.

Number Four: The Dessert. Here's a pie, or a cake, that I'm going to rub in your face if you don't already get my point. Every celebrity that you have ever idolized—I can promise you that the driving force behind their rise to fame was teeage girls.

Because that enthusiasm, that willingness to wait hours in line to say hello and maybe snap a selfie with their idol, that downright desire to buy any cheap trinket that can help advertise their love—that's what makes people famous.

So the next time you find yourself making fun of a teenage girl being excited, take a step back, realize how sad your life has gotten that you're getting angry over someone's happiness, and just go find something you enjoy.

I'd tell ya to fuck off, but you don't need that. What you need is to embrace your inner teenage girl and do something you love doing without caring how stupid you look while doing it.

Please share this video. I know it won't stop media from hating teenage girls, but I hope to at least make a dent. Hit "like" to help support one such teenage girl, and I will see you on Tuesday.
Sabrina makes a bunch of really great points here, but I want to highlight her observation that teenage girls' enthusiasm is indicative of a feeling of belonging.

In fandom, among their friends, and in their families.

The silencing of female people starts young, and it intensifies exponentially when we become teenage girls, just as many of us are becoming increasingly vocal about our lives and loves. Just as many of us feel ourselves bursting with an intensity of emotion, of unfettered exuberances and Hindenburgian heartbreaks, we are told to be quiet.

And that silencing is justified on the basis that nothing we says even matters, anyway.

We are told that we have nothing of value to say, and so we should say nothing at all. And this policing and silencing continues well into adulthood, where many of us struggle to find our voices and esteem for years. Some of us forever.

So yeah. I don't find it particularly amusing when a company says, "Shove our food into your teenage daughter's mouth to shut up her useless babbling." Because I know all too well how much the world really hates teenage girls, and what they have to say.

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F@#k Trump

[Content Note: Islamophobia.]

Yesterday, Republican presidential front runner Donald Trump released a statement on his website (to which I'm not linking, because fuck him) reading in full:

Donald J. Trump is calling for a total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States until our country's representatives can figure out what is going on. According to Pew Research, among others, there is great hatred towards Americans by large segments of the Muslim population. Most recently, a poll from the Center for Security Policy released data showing "25% of those polled agreed that violence against Americans here in the United States is justified as a part of the global jihad" and 51% of those polled, "agreed that Muslims in America should have the choice of being governed according to Shariah." Shariah authorizes such atrocities as murder against non-believers who won't convert, beheadings and more unthinkable acts that pose great harm to Americans, especially women.

Mr. Trump stated, "Without looking at the various polling data, it is obvious to anybody the hatred is beyond comprehension. Where this hatred comes from and why we will have to determine. Until we are able to determine and understand this problem and the dangerous threat it poses, our country cannot be the victims of horrendous attacks by people that believe only in Jihad, and have no sense of reason or respect for human life. If I win the election for President, we are going to Make America Great Again."
First of all, let's be clear that the statistics Trump is citing are from a thoroughly debunked poll conducted by the Center for Security Policy (CSP), a garbage group of Islamophobic fearmongerers founded by Frank Gaffney, described by the Southern Poverty Law Center as "one of America's most notorious Islamophobes."

Secondly, Trump's call for "a total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States" is vile bigotry on its face, and ridiculous as a policy proposal, given that he and his surrogates are defending it by arguing it's only a temporary policy, until, per Trump, "our country's representatives can figure out what is going on," a meaningless description of an endpoint making zero sense.

In the history of electoral politics in the US, there has been a lot of rank prejudice dressed up in the costume of serious policy, but Trump's Islamophobia doesn't even rise to that level. Trump's "proposal," such as it is, has all the sophistication of a suggestion from a Drunk Uncle monologue.

Which is notable because it is his incredible and uncredible ranting, not disguised as serious policy, that appeals to a sizable portion of the conservative base and has garnered him the reputation as a straight-shooter, a truth-teller, the vessel through which "what everyone is thinking" is being delivered to the national stage.

The other Republican contenders have largely remained silent in response to this contemptible display of hatred, because of course they have. They know Islamophobia is popular with the people whose votes they want.

But, this morning, on CNN, Senator Lindsey Graham was blunt: "You know how you make America great again? Tell Donald Trump to go to hell."

Graham, who is an anti-choice, Social Darwinist nightmare, looks like a fucking hero compared to his fellow candidate Donald Trump.

But Trump cannot be shamed. Pressed to answer whether he would have supported the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II, one of the greatest stains in this nation's history, he shrugged: "I would have had to be there at the time to tell you, to give you a proper answer. I certainly hate the concept of it. But I would have had to be there at the time to give you a proper answer."

We know, however, how Donald Trump is behaving in this moment, this current moment of nationalistic alarmism, othering, scapegoating, fearmongering, and racism. He is leading the charge in perpetuating ignorance, resentment, fear, and hatred.

And he couches his reactionary swill in a claim of courage, of refusing to succumb like a weakling to the scourge of political correctness, but these are not the actions of a person who is brave. These are the actions of a person who is deeply fearful. These are the words of a man conceding to terrorists, conceding that they have already defeated his limited resolve and undetectable decency.

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Open Thread

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Hosted by goldenrod.

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Question of the Day

Suggested by Shaker moseyonby: "When was the last time you gave or received applause that was not just customary or polite, but rather real and true and deep and ardent? In other words, when did you last experience applause that was inflected with stirrings of the heart, whooping, and goosebumps?"

At the end of Creed. The entire audience of a very full theater erupted into applause at the end of the film. And deservedly so!

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I Mean

[Content Note: Misogynist slur. Video may autoplay at link.]

Fair and balanced, y'all:

Two Fox News commentators were suspended on Monday for using profanities while criticizing President Obama on Monday.

Ralph Peters, a Fox News "strategic analyst," called the president a "total pu---" who "doesn't want to hurt our enemies."

A couple of hours later Stacey Dash, a Fox contributor, said the president "didn't give a sh--" about Sunday night's terrorism speech.

"Earlier today, Fox contributors Lt. Col. Ralph Peters and Stacey Dash made comments on different programs that were completely inappropriate and unacceptable for our air," Fox senior executive vice president Bill Shine said.

"Fox Business Network and Fox News Channel do not condone the use of such language, and have suspended both Peters and Dash for two weeks," he said.
Obviously, everything about this is perfect, including and especially the fact that Fox News can run 24/7 content that is absolutely obscene in its bigotry and mendacity, but as long as their paid shills use "civil" language while doing it, no problem. Go ahead and question the president's very citizenship and use reprehensible racist dog whistles all day every day and spend all kinds of time engaging in the most lurid misogyny, gross transphobia, contemptible homophobia, and every other imaginable prejudice—just don't say the word "shit" while you do it.

Epic fucking eyeroll.

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The Monday Blogaround

This blogaround brought to you by sodapop.

Recommended Reading:

gallagherwitt: [Content Note: Male privilege. NB: Some male-identified people need and use tampons, too.] Male Privilege & a Basket of Tampons

Nina: Putting Adolescent Girls at the Center of HIV Prevention Efforts

Princess Weekes: [CN: Misogynoir] What TV Shows Still Haven't Learned About Writing Female Leads of Color

Ragen: [CN: Fat hatred; body shaming] Amy Schumer Isn't Fat and Other Things That Don't Matter

Miriam: Two States Are Making It Much Easier to Get Birth Control

Digby: [CN: Guns; death] The Scottish Hellscape

Atrios: [CN: War] Another 20,000 Should Do The Trick

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

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An Observation

[Content Note: Objectification.]

Last night, Iain and I were watching (again) Carrie Fisher's amazing interview on Good Morning America, and cheering her general awesomeness together, and it put me in mind of the early part of our relationship, when we would watch Star Wars together (on VHS!), over the phone, 4,000 miles apart.

I still remember the first conversation we ever had about Star Wars, and the first thing that Iain said about Princess Leia. "She's so fucking cool."

I had spoken about Star Wars with a number of men in my life before that point, and, if they had mentioned Princess Leia at all, it had inevitably been in the context of relaying to me unsolicited recollections about their middle school masturbation fantasies. Jerking off to Princess Leia, in a gold bikini.

So it was remarkable to me when the first thing Iain said was, "She's so fucking cool." Remarkable enough that I remember it, 14 years later.

That was the moment when I realized the Force was strong with this one.

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Two-Minute Nostalgia Sublime



Gladys Knight & the Pips: "Midnight Train to Georgia"

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Quote of the Day

[Content Note: Misogyny; transphobia.]

"Some of this problem in which we find ourselves today started with the feminist rebellion. That's not to say patriarchalism is the thing, that's not to say traditions and men mistreating women and women getting less pay for the same work, I'm not condoning any of that. ...There is, whether you like it or not, a divine hierarchy in marriage. Wives must submit to their husbands; that will bring harmony."—Dr. Ashley E. Ray, senior pastor of Ridgeway Baptist Church of Memphis, offering some stellar incoherence on how patriarchy will solve the problem of misogyny. Or something.

I mean, does this guy imagine that it's someone other than feminists and womanists of the "feminist rebellion" who have led the way on equal pay and eradicating gendered violence?

Because whoooooooooops!

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Olivia the White Farm Cat curled up in a chair with her paw over her face and her little pink nose peeking out
Little pink nose and toes!

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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In the News

Here is some stuff in the news today...

[Content Note: Terrorism; anti-Semitism] Welp, this interview with San Bernardino shooter Syed Rizwan Farook's father is just all kinds of fucked up: "The man told the newspaper his son 'shared the ideology of [ISIS leader Abu-Bakr] al-Baghdadi to create an Islamic state, and was obsessed with Israel.' 'I would always tell him: Stay calm, have patience, in two years Israel won't even exist,' he told the journalist. 'The geopolitics is changing: Russia, China, even America, no one wants the Jews down there. They'll take them back to Ukraine. What's the point of fighting? We already did that and we lost. You can't beat Israel with armies but with politics. But nothing changed, he was obsessed,' the man said." Blink. Blink.

[CN: Terrorism; violence] At a London tube station Saturday, a man attacked two people with a knife, leaving one with serious injuries: "Scotland Yard named the suspect as Muhaydin Mire, 29, from east London, who is charged [with attempted murder] over the attack of a 56-year-old man on Saturday evening at Leytonstone underground station. ...Two men were reportedly attacked at the station by a knife-wielding man whom eyewitnesses said had declared: 'This is for Syria.' The disturbing episode was captured by fellow commuters, who filmed it on their phones and spread it on social media. The man was eventually overpowered by police officers, who used a Taser to disable and disarm him." Fuck.

[CN: Police brutality; racism] Wow: "The US Justice Department will open an investigation into the Chicago police department after protests over how it handled the case of a black teenager shot by a white police officer, according to several reports. The 'patterns and practices' investigation will determine whether the department systematically violates constitutional rights, according to Reuters. No further details were revealed about the investigation. A spokesman for the Chicago police department could not confirm the civil probe, which is expected to mimic those in Baltimore and Ferguson, Missouri following the shooting death of Michael Brown in 2014." This would be much better news if Justice Department investigations actually resulted in meaningful long-term changes.

[CN: Transphobia] And from suburban Chicago: "Over the past few months we've been reporting on Suburban Chicago's Palatine-Schaumburg High School District 211, which decided to defy a U.S. Department of Education ruling and discriminate against a transgender student by barring her from the female locker room. The school's decision risked the school district $6 million in federal funding until last week, when the school district reached a settlement with the Department of Education... Now, school officials are saying they might back out of the deal because they are furious about how the deal has been portrayed to the media, and over a hypothetical: what if Student A doesn't use the privacy curtains (which btw, she says she will)." The ACLU is representing the student and continues to fight with these dipshits to do their goddamn jobs and treat her like a human being.

[CN: Sexual violence; rape culture] Melissa Gira Grant on "How Stoya took on James Deen and broke the porn industry's silence: That silence was filled almost immediately by other porn performers, some with allegations similar to Stoya's, and about the same man, and saying that, despite what the reporters and critics and fans might have been wondering, yes, no matter what you see on screen, a porn performer has a right to her boundaries, on-set and off—and that yes, they believed her. That chorus of voices that followed Stoya's shook the porn industry. They reverberated, and now the public is hearing, perhaps as loudly as ever, about the particular structural problems the porn industry contends with, and the persistent and pernicious idea that sex workers are by definition unrapeable."

[CN: Racism; terrorism] Donald Trump continues his rampage of horrendousness: "Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump says the country's 'tremendous problem' with radical Islamic terrorism will get solved once President Barack Obama 'gets the hell out' of office. Trump slammed the president Sunday for not using the term 'radical Islamic terrorism' to describe the terror attacks in Paris and this past week's mass shooting in San Bernardino, California, hitting on a frequent Republican criticism of the Obama administration's language used to describe terrorism. 'Until he admits that this is a problem, we're never gonna solve the problem,' Trump said on CBS' Face the Nation. 'But he's only gonna be there, fortunately, a little bit more than a year. Because the problem will get solved when he gets the hell out.'"

[CN: Terrorism; guns] John Kasich is obviously a genius: "Republican presidential candidate John Kasich warned over the weekend that people on the terrorist watch list should be able to buy guns or it could 'tip somebody off' that they are being watched. ...'When our law enforcement stops somebody that's on the watch list, we don't tell them they are on the watch list,' he explained. 'We want to make sure we can exploit all the information that we can possibly get. So, if all of the sudden you tell everybody that’s on the watch list that you can't do this or that then guess what happens? Then we lose our ability to track, we lose our ability to gather information,' he added. 'So I think we have to be careful.'"

Damn: "In the mid 1900s, the most popular banana in the world—a sweet, creamy variety called Gros Michel grown in Latin America—all but disappeared from the planet. At the time, it was the only banana in the world that could be exported. But a fungus, known as Panama Disease, which first appeared in Australia in the late 1800s, changed that after jumping continents. The disease debilitated the plants that bore the fruit. The damage was so great and swift that in a matter of only a few decades the Gros Michel nearly went extinct. Now, half a century later, a new strain of the disease is threatening the existence of the Cavendish, the banana that replaced the Gros Michel as the world's top banana export, representing 99 percent of the market, along with a number of banana varieties produced and eaten locally around the world. And there is no known way to stop it—or even contain it." Because, spoiler alert, we should have addressed the way bananas are grown, not just switched to another variety and hoped the same thing wouldn't happen again. Sadface.

And finally! Do you want to see an adorable video of baby sloths learning to climb? Well, then you are in luck!

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Discussion Thread: Internet Friendships

Over the weekend, I had the lovely experience of meeting a terrific couple who were, the very next day, leaving to move to a new home in another state. In another time, that would have been the end of the story: A splendid bit of warm connection, contained to that moment and that space forever. But in this time, we exchanged emails, so we could keep in touch.

I've met so many people who are important in my life over the internet. My husband, many of my closest friends. And I maintain contact with friends I met offline, some long before the internet was A Thing We Use, who aren't just down the street or treading the same bit of carpet in a workspace or sitting at the next desk over in a classroom anymore.

I have made acquaintances with people in brief meetings, while standing in a line for a concert or taking a shuttle from the airport, and then developed friendships with them after exchanging emails or social media accounts.

Thank you for the internetz, Al Gore! Etc.

Anyway. We've talked about this before in this space, and it's always a fun conversation, so here we are again: Share your stories of making friends and/or falling in love over the series of tubes.

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Good News for Former President Jimmy Carter

[Content Note: Cancer.]

Former President Jimmy Carter announced yesterday that his cancer treatment has been very successful:

Carter said in a statement that his most recent MRI brain scan did not reveal any signs of the original cancer spots or any new ones and that he'll continue his treatment.

Carter, 91, initially made the announcement near the beginning of the Sunday School class he was teaching at Maranatha Baptist Church in Plains, a close friend and fellow church member said.

"He said he got a scan this week and the cancer was gone," Jill Stuckey said by phone from Maranatha, where Carter was still in the midst of teaching to about 350 people, many of them visitors. "The church, everybody here, just erupted in applause."

...[O]ne expert who is not involved in the former president's treatment cautioned that this latest bit of good news doesn't mean he is cured or is totally cancer-free.

"It doesn't mean that there is no cancer in his body; it means that there is no indication that they can find cancer for the present," said Dr. Len Lichtenfeld, deputy chief medical officer for the Atlanta-based American Cancer Society, who stressed he was speaking about cancer in general.

While the scans of Carter's brain and liver show no signs of the disease, cancerous cells could still be in his bloodstream, said Lichtenfeld. Still, he said, the news is encouraging for Carter.

"The President has done exceptionally well. There are still many patients with melanoma who don't have this outcome," said Lichtenfeld. "He's in the best possible place."
Carter is going to continue his treatment, in the hope of staying in that best possible place as long as possible.

I'm happy for former President Carter and his family and friends! I'm glad he has access to such great medical care, and I'm grateful that he is one of our statespeople who advocates that everyone should have the same access to great medical care that he has.

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So the President Gave a Speech Last Night

[Content Note: Guns; terrorism.]

Last night, President Obama gave a rare primetime Sunday night address from the Oval Office, to address the San Bernardino shooting, Islamic terrorism, and guns. Not mentioned anywhere during this address: The Colorado Springs Planned Parenthood assault that happened mere days before. For my feelings on that omission, please see this post from Friday.

Below is the President's address. The Guardian has a complete transcript here.

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Open Thread

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Hosted by fuchsia.

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The Virtual Pub Is Open

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

TFIF, Shakers!

Belly up to the bar,
and name your poison!

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Two-Minute Nostalgia Sublime



INXS: "Need You Tonight"

This week's TMNS have been brought to you by some of Shaker Kathy_A's favorite songs! ;)

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San Bernardino Shooting Now Being Investigated as an Act of Terrorism

[Content Note: Guns; terrorism; violence; Islamophobia; Christian Supremacy.]

Previous posts: Wednesday; Thursday; this morning.

The San Bernardino shooting is now officially being investigated as a terrorist act:

The FBI said Friday that it is officially investigating the mass shooting in California as an act of terrorism, while a U.S. law enforcement official revealed that the woman who helped her husband carry out the attack had pledged allegiance to the Islamic State group and its leader on Facebook under an alias.

...A Facebook official says Tashfeen Malik praised the leader of the Islamic State group in a post at 11 a.m. Wednesday, when the couple were believed to have stormed a San Bernardino social service center and opened fire.

The Facebook official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the person was not allowed under corporate policy to be quoted by name, said the company discovered the account Thursday. It removed the profile from public view and reported its contents to law enforcement.

...Another U.S. official said Malik expressed "admiration" for the extremist group's leader on Facebook under the alias account. But the official said there was no sign that anyone affiliated with the Islamic State communicated back with her, and there was no evidence of any operational instructions being conveyed to her.
When asked during a press conference for further details about the change in the investigation, Assistant Director of the FBI's Los Angeles office David Bowdich said there are "a number of pieces of evidence that has pushed us off the cliff."

But what those "pieces of evidence" are have not been disclosed, except for the trickling leaks about an affinity for IS and vague online communications with "persons of interest."

If you're detecting my dubiousness here, it's not because I don't think this shooting constitutes terrorism. To the contrary, I have filed my coverage of this shooting under the "terrorism" label since my first post. What's bugging me is way we culturally and legally define "terrorism," and how this shooting, which terrorized lots of people, was not considered terrorism until investigators turned up evidence, no matter how thin, of affiliation with Islamic extremism.

Not even merely religious extremism, but specifically Islamic extremism. As Aphra_Behn noted in comments earlier today, which I am reposting here with her permission:
So the CNN link has officials saying that they think Farook might have been "self-radicalized."

Meaning, I guess, he wasn't in contact with an organized terrorist group but became convinced he needed to strike out with violence to support his religio-political ideology? Maybe by consuming extremist media of various sorts advocating violent acts or resistance?

How the HELL does that make him different from Robert Lewis Dear? About whom I have yet to hear "self-radicalized" used as a descriptor. I sure have heard a lot of Republicans denying that violent anti-choice rhetoric could have played any role in his self-radicalizat— I mean, his inexplicable lone wolf actions.
I didn't need to know a thing about Syed Rizwan Farook's and Tashfeen Malik's religious beliefs or political ideologies to know that this was an act of terrorism, because I fail to understand how we can legally define one or more people picking up weapons and opening fire on civilians as anything but an act of terror, irrespective of their reasons.

(Unless it happens in a war zone, in which case it is a war crime and an act of terror.)

And I have a real goddamn problem with the fact that it only became "officially" an act of terrorism once they were connected to a particular religion and particular ideology, but had it been another religion and another ideology, it just would have been the inexplicable actions of madpeople.

This selective elevation to a terrorist act of only certain religions and ideologies is harmful. And the people it harms the most are those who broadly share identifying traits with the elevated terrorists.

Our government is being deeply hypocritical when it urges bigots not to blame all Muslims for acts of terror committed by Muslims, but refuses to identify as acts of terror the same sort of crimes committed, for the same ugly reasons, by Christians. If the government doesn't want all Muslims smeared as terrorists, then it needs to stop limiting to Muslims its elevation to terrorism of religiously-motivated mass murder.

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The Friday Blogaround

This blogaround brought to you by marbles.

Recommended Reading:

Rafi: [Content Note: Police brutality; racism; murder] Tamir Rice's Killer Thought "This Was an Active Shooter Situation."

Sesali: [CN: Shooting; misogynoir; war on agency; police violence] Why the Planned Parenthood Shooting Was Always About Black Lives

Angus: [CN: Racism; silencing] Loyola U Chicago Bars All Unapproved Public Demonstrations

Ahmed: [CN: Racism; silencing] Open Letter to the Financial Times: On Black Students Protesting Against Racism

Deepa: [CN: Shooting; racism; Islamophobia] Media and Political Responses to San Bernardino Massacre Reveal Racial Coding and Assumptions of Collective Guilt

Angry Asian Man: [CN: Racism; internment; Islamophobia] Cut the Wire Now: A Community Vigil in Support of Syrian Refugees

Monica: Africa Trans* Visibility Day in South Africa

Prison Culture: A Love Letter to Chicago Organizers

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

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Zelda the Black and Tan Mutt sitting on the floor in front of me, looking up at me with plaintive eyes
This 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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