Planned Parenthood Cleared by Grand Jury; Center for Medical Progress Members Indicted Instead

[Content Note: War on agency. Video may autoplay at link.]

Careful what you wish for—especially when your accusations of lawbreaking are projection:

A grand jury convened to investigate whether a Houston Planned Parenthood clinic had sold the organs of aborted fetuses on Monday cleared the clinic and instead indicted the undercover videographers behind the allegations, surprising the officials who called for the probe and delighting supporters of the women's health organization.

The Harris County grand jury indicted David Daleiden and Sandra Merritt, both of California, on charges of tampering with a governmental record, a second-degree felony with a possible sentence of up to 20 years in prison. It also charged Daleiden, the leader of the videographers, with the same misdemeanor he had alleged – the purchase or sale of human organs, presumably because he had offered to buy in an attempt to provoke Planned Parenthood employees into saying they would sell.
Whoooooooooops!

The record-tampering charges were brought because Daleiden and Merritt made counterfeit California driver's licenses with the intent to defraud Planned Parenthood.

As you probably recall, members of the absurdly named Center for Medical Progress posed as biotech reps, and then recorded various employees of Planned Parenthood without their knowledge discussing how fetuses are aborted in order to preserve their organs for medical research and the costs of getting that tissue to researchers, then heavily edited the videos and publicly released them, prompting more than a dozen states to launch investigations into Planned Parenthood, all of which found that Planned Parenthood was doing nothing illegal nor outside normal medical practices.

This particular investigation has lasted more than two months, and not only did the grand jury find that Planned Parenthood had not broken the law, but that CMP had.
"As I stated at the outset of this investigation, we must go where the evidence leads us," said [Harris County District Attorney Devon Anderson], a Republican. "All the evidence uncovered in the course of this investigation was presented to the grand jury. I respect their decision on this difficult case."
That doesn't mean that Texas' state investigation is complete, however.
Gov. Greg Abbott, a Republican, said on Monday that the inspector general of the state's Health and Human Services Commission and the Texas attorney general's office have been investigating Planned Parenthood's actions.

"Nothing about today's announcement in Harris County impacts the state's ongoing investigation," Mr. Abbott said in a statement. "The State of Texas will continue to protect life, and I will continue to support legislation prohibiting the sale or transfer of fetal tissue."

The state attorney general, Ken Paxton, said in a statement: "The fact remains that the videos exposed the horrific nature of abortion and the shameful disregard for human life of the abortion industry. The state's investigation of Planned Parenthood is ongoing."
Of course it is.

Well, if we're lucky, maybe that investigation will somehow culminate in indictments for Abbott and his cronies, too! Karma apparently gets her healthcare at Planned Parenthood.

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Open Thread

image of a cartoon zeppelin

Hosted by a zeppelin.

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Question of the Day

What is your favorite animated thing of all time? A full-length movie, a series, a short film, whatever!

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Democratic Debate Tonight!

The fifth and final Democratic debate, which is really "a town-hall-style forum," will be held tonight at Drake University in Des Moines, launching us into the final week before the Iowa Caucuses. "The two-hour event, hosted by CNN, will be the last chance to see the three Democratic presidential candidates alongside one another before votes are cast."

I am almost certainly not going to watch it, because I am sick and need a nap! And also because I don't want to!

But I might!

In any case, here is a space to discuss it, before and during, if you are so excited about watching Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders say things at each other, while being occasionally interrupted by Martin O'Malley!

image of Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton at a previous debate, laughing; I have inserted Martin O'Malley peeking his head in from the bottom left corner saying, 'Hey, what are you guys laughing about? Did I miss something fun?'

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Two-Minute Nostalgia Sublime

[Content Note: This video contains imagery of a car accident.]



Adele: "Chasing Pavements"

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The Monday Blogaround

This blogaround brought to you by fuckwinter.

Recommended Reading:

Mari: [Content Note: Misogynoir; privacy violations; Islamophobia] I'm a 16-Year-Old Black Girl and Donald Trump Is Afraid of Me

Suzanna: [CN: War on agency] The Feministing Five: Reproaction's Erin Matson and Pam Merritt

Johanna: [CN: Chronic illness; disablism; misogyny; abuse] Sick Woman Theory

Ragen: [CN: Fat hatred; body shaming] Things "Fat" Doesn't Mean

Lola: [CN: Sexual exploitation; abuse] What to Do with a Problematic Fave

Jennifer: [CN: White Supremacy] An 11-Year-Old Black Girl Starts #1000BlackGirlBooks

Ashley: [CN: Misogyny] Ralphie May Went on an Off the Rails Twitter Rant About Chelsea Peretti

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

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Quote of the Day

[Content Note: Guns; slavery; genocide.]

"I don't know if you know the genesis of the right to bear arms. The Second Amendment comes from the right [for white men] to protect themselves from slave revolts, and from uprisings by Native Americans. So, a revolt from people who were stolen from their land or revolt from people whose land was stolen from—that's what the genesis of the Second Amendment is."—Actor Danny Glover, addressing Texas A&M students at an event being held in honor of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

Never have I heard such a perfect, succinct, devastating explanation of the heinous roots of the Second Amendment.

So, naturally, "a conservative student group is launching a petition against the school's 'leftist bias.'"

Of course they are.

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Matilda the Fuzzy Sealpoint Cat sitting at the top of the stairs looking down at me
The piercing blue eyes of judgment.

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: Carcerality; violence] This is good news: "Henry Montgomery is 69 years old. He has spent his entire adult life in prison. In 1963, Montgomery killed a sheriff's deputy in East Baton Rouge, Louisiana. He was 17 years old at the time of his crime and was sentenced under a state law that required a sentence of life in prison without parole. On Monday, however, the Supreme Court announced in Montgomery v. Louisiana that 'prisoners like Montgomery must be given the opportunity to show their crime did not reflect irreparable corruption; and, if it did not, their hope for some years of life outside prison walls must be restored.' Under this decision, thousands of people sentenced to life without parole for crimes they committed as juveniles could be given back some portion of their life."

[CN: Transphobia; abuse; carcerality; racism] "On Friday, January 22, trans people and their allies marked the first International Trans Prisoner Day of Action with solidarity events and letter-writing campaigns taking place all over the world, from Toronto to Vienna. In the United States, where an estimated one in six transgender people have been incarcerated in their lifetime, the Day of Action generated events in more than a dozen states. ...In a zine produced to mark the occasion, trans activists referred to the initiative as a 'call to action against the system which seeks to erase our very existence,' adding that the survival of trans people and other sexual and gender minorities is not a 'quaint conversation about awareness, but a struggle for us to live in a world determined to marginalize, dehumanise, and criminalise us—especially trans women, and especially Black, brown, and indigenous trans people.'"

[CN: Violent entitlement; guns; death; hostility to consent] Rage seethe boil: "A mother of two was followed to her car, shot, and killed after she reportedly rebuffed a man's advances in a Pittsburgh bar. According to WTAE, Janese Talton-Jackson, 29, of Penn Hills, Pa., located just outside Pittsburgh, was leaving the bar around 1:50 am when the suspect followed her to her car, where she was shot, Pittsburgh police said." The man who is alleged to have shot her has been taken into custody following a police chase. My condolences to Talton-Jackson's family, friends, and colleagues. I resolve once more to continue to do whatever I can to help dismantle the culture of violent male entitlement.

[CN: Illness] Fuck: "The Zika virus is likely to spread across nearly all of the Americas, the World Health Organization has warned. The infection, which causes symptoms including mild fever, conjunctivitis, and headache, has already been found in 21 countries in the Caribbean, North and South America. It has been linked to thousands of babies being born with underdeveloped brains and some countries have advised women not to get pregnant. No treatment or vaccine is available." But many otherwise healthy people recover quickly. On Friday, New York state health officials said "that three people in New York State, including one from Queens, tested positive for Zika, a mosquito-borne virus that has prompted concern as it has spread rapidly, mostly in Latin America and the Caribbean. All three had traveled to places outside the United States where the virus had been spreading. ...One person has fully recovered, and the two others are recovering without complications."

[CN: War on agency] Senator Bernie Sanders has finally committed to repealing the Hyde Amendment. It's a good thing Hillary Clinton is in this race to push Bernie Sanders to the left. Ahem.

Gold toilet aficionado Donald Trump's big pitch (and astonishingly well-received pitch) to Republican primary voters is that, as proved by his grotesque wealth, he is very greedy, and, if elected president, will be greedy on behalf of the United States.

Perfect headline is perfect: "Resurfaced Video of a Young Ted Cruz Reveals He Was Always an Entitled Douchebag."

[CN: Militarism] Former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld has developed an app, which is "an incredibly devilish version of solitaire" based on World War II. Yeah, that sounds about right.

Yawn: "Facebook has turned the word 'friend' into a verb, but just because you've friended someone on Facebook does that make them your friend in real life? Not according to a study that found almost all Facebook friends are entirely fake. Robin Dunbar, a professor of evolutionary psychology at Oxford University, conducted research into how Facebook friendship correlates with real-life friendship. Of the 150 Facebook friends the average user has, Dunbar found that only 15 could be counted as actual friends and only five as close friends."

[CN: Video autoplays at link] And finally! Tian Tian the Giant Panda frolicking in the snow at Washington, DC's Smithsonian National Zoo is just colossally cute!

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2016: Bloomberg

Maude save me from the 2016 election.

"Michael Bloomberg considers a presidential run." Oh.

"The billionaire is considering spending $1 billion of his own money to support his bid as an independent candidate." Oh.

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Sanders' Biggest Problem

So, one of the criticisms I have made of Bernie Sanders is that he doesn't have detailed plans for how he is going to enact his agenda if he is elected. Again, on Friday night, I tweeted: "'How are you going to actually get these things done?' is a legit question I would like answered. It's not sinister. I want to know. That this is being treated as an unreasonable question, or an 'attack,' is absurd in the extreme. I want practical details. I expect them. Congress is intractably dysfunctional at the moment. That's part of why we need 'revolution,' right? So tell me how this shit gets done. I'm not going to pretend that I don't know how government works, or that it doesn't matter that Congress is profoundly broken at the moment."

I want and need to see evidence that Sanders has a plan, and that he is committed to finding a way to work with Congress. I want and need to see evidence of the diplomacy, negotiating skills, preparedness, and competence that is demanded of an effective US president.

This is not just a concern that I have. In their endorsement of Hillary Clinton this weekend, the Des Moines Register noted:

The presidency is not an entry-level position. Whoever is sworn into office next January must demonstrate not only a deep understanding of the issues facing America, but also possess the diplomatic skills that enable presidents to forge alliances to get things done.

By that measure, Democrats have one outstanding candidate deserving of their support: Hillary Clinton. No other candidate can match the depth or breadth of her knowledge and experience.

...But Sanders admits that virtually all of his plans for reform have no chance of being approved by a Congress that bears any resemblance to the current crop of federal lawmakers. This is why, he says, voters can't simply elect him president, but must instead spark a "political revolution."

Easier said than done. Congress has the largest Republican majority since the 71st Congress of 1929-31.

A successful Sanders presidency would hinge on his ability to remake Washington in his own image. It's almost inconceivable that such a transformation could take place, even with Democrats controlling both chambers of Congress.
And in an interview with Politico, President Obama, without explicitly endorsing Clinton, made much the same point:
In fact, Obama's experiences in office have brought him around to Clinton's hardheaded view of the presidency, first forged during her eight years as first lady. "I think that what Hillary presents is a recognition that translating values into governance and delivering the goods is ultimately the job of politics, making a real-life difference to people in their day-to-day lives," he said, echoing the very critique Clinton makes of Sanders.
(That interview is worth a read in its entirety, especially for what the President says about having run against Clinton eight years ago, noting that she had to "do everything that I had to do, except, like Ginger Rogers, backwards in heels. She had to wake up earlier than I did because she had to get her hair done. She had to, you know, handle all the expectations that were placed on her.")

There is legitimate skepticism, good faith skepticism, among lots of left-leaning people of Sanders' contention that his success is contingent on a people-powered revolution.

And yet, when Sanders appeared on Meet the Press this weekend, and host Chuck Todd asked him why he doesn't support reparations, despite the fact that many of his other proposals are just as unlikely to be passed by Congress, the senator deflected back to the same refrain:
What we are trying to do say that in an American democracy, maybe it's a radical idea, but Congress should represent working families and the middle class rather than just wealthy campaign contributors. So Chuck, what I am trying to do now, is change the dynamics of American politics. Bring millions of young people, working-class people, in to stand up and fight for their rights. When you do that, yes, we can raise the minimum wage. We can create jobs. We can make public colleges and universities tuition-free. That is what we have got to do.
There are two big problems with this answer (in addition to the fact that it's not an answer for why he refuses to advocate for reparations): First, it fails utterly to acknowledge the millions of people who are currently engaged. People who contact our legislators, start and sign petitions, blog, tweet, march, protest. Now. Currently. Actively. Is his premise that the millions of us who are currently politically active just aren't effective? But a bunch of people who have never been politically active before will be effective where we've failed? Welp.

Secondly, his assertion that there is no one in Congress who represents anyone other "than just wealthy campaign contributors" shades both the Congressional Black Caucus and the Progressive Caucus, many of whose members are not beholden to wealthy campaign contributors and who not only advocate on behalf of the middle and working classes but people in poverty.

Sanders continually says his presidency would succeed based on a massive coalition of engaged citizens, but it's tough to build a successful coalition when you're shitting on dedicated progressive activists and the members of Congress who would be most disposed toward working with such a coalition.

This is just straight-up bad politics. And it underscores the limited value of a presidential candidate who "doesn't act like a politician" and "says whatever he wants and doesn't care what anyone thinks."

Sanders' response when Todd pressed him on the issue that he was not getting support from Democrats was possibly even worse:
Todd: Well, but as you know, a lot of Democrats are concerned. And not a single one of them has endorsed your candidacy. I just read through that. Not a single Democratic senator has endorsed your candidacy. Not a single Democratic governor has endorsed your candidacy. What does that tell you?

Sanders: It tells me that we are taking on the political establishment, we're taking on the economic establishment, the financial interest in this country, and we're taking on the corporate establishment. That is what is unique about this race. That in fact, we are trying to make a political revolution bring millions of people into the political process that Washington and all of these politicians have significantly turned their backs on.

So yes, we have the establishment supporting Secretary Clinton. That is not a secret. But the reason that our campaign is generating so much interest and enthusiasm is people think it's time that we take on the establishment. Take on Wall Street. Take on big money interest. And that's why I believe we're doing as well as we are.
Sanders' response to Todd creates a dynamic in which, if any of those Democratic Senators (or governors) had been inclined to endorse him, their endorsement may now be construed as tacit endorsement of his contempt for their colleagues. So anyone who was considering endorsing him now has to weigh whether they want to risk good will to do it. Again: This is just terrible politics.

Further, in that broad proclamation about Senate Democrats, Sanders included, for example, Senator Elizabeth Warren and Senator Sherrod Brown. Whooooops.

At this point, anyone who doesn't support Bernie Sanders is, according to Bernie Sanders, part of the establishment. He is dismissing all criticism and concerns out of hand with sweeping rhetoric and his "political revolution" incantation.

Which, frankly, only underscores the validity of those concerns, as they're rooted in questions about whether Sanders can effectively work with people with whom he shares deep ideological disagreements to get shit done.

Sanders seems to be saying he can't. Or won't.

That is his biggest problem as a candidate, and it is a grave concern. It should be a grave concern to his supporters, who are supporting him expressly because of the promises he's making to them.

Policy proposals are worth less than the paper on which they're printed, if there is no plan for making them happen.

And "a political revolution of millions of people" isn't a plan. Especially not when its leader is busily torching every bridge in sight.

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Snowpocalypse 2016

[Content Note: Extreme weather; death. Video may autoplay at first link.]

Winter Storm Jonas hammered the US Eastern Seaboard over the weekend, dropping as much as three feet of snow in some places, and creating extremely hazardous road conditions. According to The Weather Channel, "At least 27 people have died in the storm, a quarter of a million customers have lost power, and hundreds of crashes have been reported."

This interactive map at the New York Times shows how much snow has fallen across the region. There are places that got more than three feet of snow in two days. Terrifying.

That kind of snowfall in such a short time can create all kinds of structural problems, and the clean-up is a nightmare. If the snow melts slowly, with freezing temperatures overnight, it makes roads just a sheet of ice every morning. If it melts quickly, it can cause massive flooding. And it's a nightmare to deal with that much snow in the meantime.

Recovering from this storm is going to take some time.

How's everyone doing?

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Open Thread

image of several zebras standing on a savannah

Hosted by zebras.

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The Virtual Pub Is Open

image of a pub Photoshopped to be named 'The Pro-Choice Pub'
[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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Terrific

[Content Note: Public safety violations.]

I don't even have words:

Water authorities across the US are systematically distorting water tests to downplay the amount of lead in samples, risking a dangerous spread of the toxic water crisis that has gripped Flint, documents seen by the Guardian show.

The controversial approach to water testing is so widespread that it occurs in "every major US city east of the Mississippi" according to an anonymous source with extensive knowledge of the lead and copper regulations. "By word of mouth, this has become the thing to do in the water industry. The logical conclusion is that millions of people's drinking water is potentially unsafe," he said.

Documents seen by the Guardian show that water boards in cities including Detroit and Philadelphia, as well as the state of Rhode Island, have distorted tests by using methods deemed misleading by the Environment Protection Agency.

...[Dr Yanna Lambrinidou, a Virginia Tech academic] warned that the issue of misleading test results was widespread. "There is no way that Flint is a one-off," she said. "There are many ways to game the system. In Flint, they went to test neighbourhoods where they knew didn't have a problem. You can also flush the water to get rid of the lead. If you flush it before sampling, the problem will go away."

"The EPA has completely turned its gaze away from this. There is no robust oversight here, the only oversight is from the people getting hurt. Families who get hurt, such as in Flint, are the overseers. It's an horrendous situation. The system is absolutely failing."
It's a libertarian wonderland. Every water drinker for hirself.

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Two-Minute Nostalgia Sublime



Cyndi Lauper: "Sally's Pigeons"

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The Friday Blogaround

This blogaround brought to you by ink.

Recommended Reading:

Verónica: [Content Note: War on agency] Abortion Is a Social Good—So Let's Start Treating It Like One

FMF: [CN: War on agency; anti-choice terrorism] Abortion Providers and Escorts Join with Rep. Donna F. Edwards and Reproductive Rights Leaders to Urge House Select Investigative Panel to Focus on Anti-Abortion Violence, or to Disband

Sesali: Some of Our Favorite Actresses Read Real Abortion Stories for #DrawTheLine

Susie: How Change Happens

Carly: [CN: Misogyny] Gillian Anderson Offered Less Money Than David Duchovny to Star in the Same Damn Show

Maddie: Why the Full Moon Could Make This Weekend's Blizzard More Destructive

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

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I Have a Problem with This

[Content Note: Misogyny; harassment.]

So, a few days ago, Bernie Sanders "responded to a question about Clinton's endorsements [from Planned Parenthood and the Human Rights Campaign] with a broad criticism of the 'establishment,' explaining, 'What we are doing in this campaign—and it just blows my mind every day, because I see it clearly, we're taking on not only Wall Street and the economic establishment, we're taking on the political establishment. And so I have friends and supporters in the Human Rights Fund [sic], in Planned Parenthood. But you know what, Hillary Clinton has been around there for a very, very long time and some of these groups are, in fact, part of the establishment."

Lots of people, myself included, criticized Sanders for these comments. Yesterday, Aphra_Behn explained what had pissed her off about Sanders calling Planned Parenthood part of the establishment he is seeking to dismantle.

Today, I read this MSNBC headline: "Sanders walks back Planned Parenthood, Clinton 'establishment' comments." The story reads:

"That's not what I meant," Sanders told NBC News in an interview during his campaign swing through the first-in-the-nation primary state. "We're a week out in the election, and the Clinton people will try to spin these things."

Pressed on whether he views the groups as "establishment," Sanders said: "No. They aren't. They're standing up and fighting the important fights that have to be fought."

Sanders said he was specifically talking about the leadership of those groups and their endorsement decisions.
Okay, first of all, that headline is rubbish. Sanders did not "walk back" his comments. He made a specious distinction that he was talking about the leadership of a prominent pro-choice organization and a prominent LGBT rights organization, who are key to "fighting the important fights that have to be fought."

That isn't, for the record, a distinction that is relevant in terms of much of the criticism of his comments. Even had Sanders explicitly said, "We're taking on the political establishment... But you know what, Hillary Clinton has been around there for a very, very long time and some of the leadership of these groups are, in fact, part of the establishment," my reaction and criticism would have been no different, given that he is calling "part of the establishment" people who seek from the establishment inclusion and access on behalf of marginalized people.

And further given that the entire comment was vituperative sniping from someone who clearly felt entitled to their endorsements.

Sanders says, "That's not what I meant," as if his critics had misunderstood him, and then grouses, "The Clinton people will try to spin these things."

That's some gaslighting bullshit, right there. You didn't hear what you think you heard—and, even if you did, you're just looking for things to get mad about.

It's also a neat way of discrediting any critics by accusing us of operating in bad faith. We're all, to a person, just a bunch of political operatives with an agenda.

Gee, where have I seen that behavior before?

Talking about this via email, Aphra_Behn wrote (which I am sharing with her permission):
By calling the criticism from "the Clinton people," he is once again reinforcing the conspiracy theory framework.

People like me and you and Sady Doyle and any other feminist criticizing Sanders aren't giving him pushback from the feminist trenches. We're "the Clinton people."

Which frankly is another dogwhistle to his supporters that it's okay to attack us. Including the people who don't even support Clinton, for God's sake.

He's reinforcing the "conspiracy of the establishment" even as he claims that's not what he meant.

Seriously, Sanders can fuck right off with this shit. WE SEE YOU.
All Sanders had to say was: "That was a really poorly thought-out statement, and I regret it. Planned Parenthood and the Human Rights Campaign are not part of the establishment that I want to dismantle, and I apologize for suggesting otherwise." That's it. Done.

But that would have meant conceding that he'd said something reactionary, careless, and unfair in a moment of pique. Which he doesn't seem able or willing to acknowledge, even to himself.

I just said yesterday regarding my assessments of presidential candidates: "I look at how capable they seem of being able to pivot, when they are proven wrong. I look at their willingness to be accountable for mistakes and fuck-ups and endorsements of shitty policy. I look at the quality of their apologies, and whether they are willing to apologize at all."

This is not how I want my president to behave. I don't want my president making crabby and thoughtless statements like this in the first place, and I don't want them responding to criticism for making them with non-apologies and accusations of corrupt agendas.

Part of the reason I wrote that piece yesterday, and its follow-up, is because I have increasingly been hearing from people, especially women, that they don't feel like they can express support for Hillary Clinton without getting shit for it from Sanders supporters.

That is so upsetting to me. And if the fact that so many women I know are, quite understandably, intimidated to publicly support Clinton doesn't speak to the misogyny on which Sanders is trading, I don't know what would.

And instead of refusing to trade on it, instead of challenging it at every opportunity, Sanders doubled down by implying that his critics are bad faith actors and they're all in the bag for Clinton. Which puts a target on the back of any woman, in particular, who says she supports Hillary Clinton.

Because "the Clinton people" attack Bernie, you know.

We see you.

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Zelda the Black and Tan Mutt sitting on the couch, looking at me with a sweet expression
Zelda. ♥

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: Extreme weather; death] More dire warnings about the blizzard bearing down on the US East Coast: "National weather experts are warning of a potentially '[debilitating] winter storm' bearing down on the eastern US from Friday through Sunday that began forming quickly late Wednesday, with deadly results. Washington DC is in the bull's eye of the approaching tempest, but storm conditions ranging from hail and severe thunder to several feet of snow are forecast from Florida to New England. ...By Thursday afternoon, one man had died in Maryland after being hit by a snow plow, one man was killed when his car slid off the road in snow in north-eastern Tennessee, and two women died in North Carolina in car accidents on icy roads. The storm is prompting warnings beyond routine winter snowfall because of the prospect of sustained winds making lengthy blizzard conditions especially dangerous and because it is unusual for a storm to bring a foot of snow or more to such a large area, according to the National Weather Service. Its meteorologists expect the snowstorm to affect up to 50 million people and its various effects to be felt across a third of the US."

Let's make it happen, Congress: "Yesterday, after months-long delay, the Senate Armed Services Committee held the confirmation hearing for Eric Fanning. Fanning has been acting secretary of the Army for months since the GOP has held up his confirmation. Fanning stepped aside from his post earlier this month after Republican senators complained that Fanning's serving as acting secretary without being confirmed. ...The timing for a vote on Fanning's confirmation is still unknown."

[CN: Racism; disablism; police brutality] "A white Atlanta-area police officer who shot a naked, mentally ill black veteran who was unarmed has been indicted on felony murder and other charges. The decision came on Thursday after DeKalb County prosecutors presented their case against Officer Robert Olsen, who fatally shot Anthony Hill on 9 March 2015 while responding to a call of a naked man behaving erratically outside a suburban Atlanta apartment complex. The family of the 27-year-old Hill says the US air force veteran struggled with mental health problems." You know what I'm going to say: Real justice will look like no more people being shot and killed by police.

[CN: Police brutality; video autoplays at link] Gwen Carr, the mother of Eric Garner, the black man who was killed by police after being detained for allegedly selling loose cigarettes, has endorsed Hillary Clinton, writing in an email that she is the "only candidate right now who's talking about how we can be strategic in trying to" address police brutality.

(It's interesting to me that Carr is endorsing Clinton because of her emphasis on strategy, which resonates with me. Just last night, Bernie Sanders' campaign manager Jeff Weaver was on MSNBC saying that "presidential races are about who has the vision." And the strategy to back it up.)

[CN: White supremacy] WOW: "Oscar nominee Charlotte Rampling has claimed the current campaign to boycott the 2016 Academy Awards over claims of a diversity deficit is racist to white people. Rampling, 69, is up for the best actress prize for her role in the British drama 45 Years... Asked for her take on the current furore over all-white lists of nominees on French Radio network Europe 1 on Friday morning, the British actor did not mince her words. 'It is racist to whites,' she said. 'One can never really know, but perhaps the black actors did not deserve to make the final list,' added Rampling." Holy shit. And Michael Caine showed his ass, too: "Speaking on the Today Show on Radio 4 on Friday, Rampling's fellow sixties icon Michael Caine advised black actors to 'be patient,' and said it had taken him 'years to get an Oscar, years.' Added Caine, 82: 'There's loads of black actors. In the end you can't vote for an actor because he's black. You can't say: I'm going to vote for him, he's not very good, but he's black, I'll vote for him.'" Someone show these two relics the door.

[CN: White supremacy] Meanwhile, here's Viola Davis, on the same subject, being awesome as usual: "The problem is not with the Oscars, the problem is with the Hollywood movie-making system. How many black films are being produced every year? How are they being distributed? The films that are being made, are the big-time producers thinking outside of the box in terms of how to cast the role? Can you cast a black woman in that role? Can you cast a black man in that role? ...You can change the Academy, but if there are no black films being produced, what is there to vote for?"

[CN: White supremacist nationalism] Donald Trump (again) retweeted something posted by a Nazi sympathizing white nationalist. And he really doesn't have any fucking excuse, since the account handle is "@WhiteGenocideTM." This fucking guy.

Yesterday I mentioned that there is a once-in-a-decade alignment of five planets in the morning sky. Andrew Fazekas explains how to see the the five planets align, and notes: "If you look at the right time, the moon will also be a part of the cosmic parade."

Whoa: "A new image from the Hubble Space Telescope shows off a cluster of brilliant stars that look like diamonds in the sky. The cluster Trumpler 14, which lies around 8,000 light years away from Earth in the Carina Nebula, features some of the brightest stars in our galaxy. The brightest star in the image—supergiant HD 93129Aa—is two and a half million times brighter than the sun, and 80 times as massive."

And finally! "7 Pictures of Scotland Looking Like Siberia as Husky Dogs Train for the Aviemore Sled Dog Rally." Awesome.

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