"What I see is an unfathomable fortitude..."

[Content Note: Misogyny.]

I've got a new essay up at Blue Nation Review, "Indomitable: The Girl from Park Ridge Who Became Hillary Clinton." Here's an excerpt:

One of my best and oldest friends lives in Park Ridge, Illinois, so I've spent a lot of time there. It is the place where Hillary Clinton grew up. Perhaps because my friend and I talk politics a lot, or perhaps because we reminisce a lot, the way two friends who forged a lifelong friendship in the fire of becoming adults together tend to do, I've found myself thinking about the young Hillary, who came from that place.

I think about who Hillary might have been, as a girl striving to be a good student and make her parents proud; as a girl learning about the world, and the people in it, outside the borders of her safe Chicago suburb; as a girl encountering sexism for the first time, and the second, and the third, and being overcome by the dawning realization that the rules were different for her.

That even though there were people who may have told her that women have achieved equality to men, that we can be anything we want to be, it wasn't true.

I think about when it was that she started figuring out that there were different rules for girls and women, what her formative experiences might have been. I wonder if, like me, she ever overheard men asking her father if he was disappointed that she wasn't a son, or was scolded by a minister for inquiring why women couldn't be ordained.

I wonder what her earliest barriers were, before she'd even heard the word "feminism," and when it was that she realized that they were just the first in what would be a lifetime of encountering them.

To be in a girl in a world that believes girls to be less-than is to be discouraged, over and over again. To become a woman who has achieved what Hillary has achieved, and who continues to fight for access to the most exclusive men's club on the planet, is to be indomitable in the face of that discouragement, to confront it over and over again.
Please head over to read the whole thing.

The scariest part of submitting that piece for me is that there are no caveats. No obligatory "I know she's not perfect" or "I don't agree with her about everything." These things are true, but I wanted to be able to write one damn piece where I can say I'm fond of and grateful to her without apology. Because I am tired of having to reflexively say that my candidate isn't perfect, in a way no one else is obliged to do for their candidate, just because the candidate I support is a woman who is held to unreasonable expectations of perfection.

Even when I include caveats, I get bad faith criticism. I'm a shill; I'm uncritical in my support; I only support her because we're both women; whatever. So fuck it. I'm not going to keep breathing life into the idea that there must be special disclosures to signal support for Clinton.

If people don't know or believe by now that I'm not a mindless cheerleader, they're never going to. And obliging me to constantly acknowledge her failures in order to defend myself, as the cost of saying anything positive about her, doesn't serve either one of us. That's a game I no longer want to play.

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Open Thread

image of green nettles

Hosted by nettles.

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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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The Friday Blogaround

This blogaround brought to you by a big thumbs-up.

Recommended Reading:

Janet and Jeffrey: [Content Note: Fat hatred; body and health policing; disordered eating] Body Mass Index Is Not a Good Measure of Your Health

Nina: [CN: Misogyny; homophobia; transphobia] Governments Fall Short on Fulfilling Commitments to Women and Girls

JP: [CN: Poverty; racism; anti-immigrationism] What Dolores Huerta and Hillary Mean to Me

Richard: [CN: Disablism] My Inability to Make Eye Contact Does Not Need to Be 'Fixed'

Jenn: [CN: White supremacy; misogynoir] What They Really Mean When They Call Black Hair 'Unprofessional'

Angry Asian Man: [CN: Racism; whitewashing] Our First Look at Scarlett Johansson in Ghost in the Shell

Maddie: Trees Are Even More Amazing Than We Realized

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

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This Is Indecent

[Content Note: Rape culture.]

Here is just another reminder that "moderate" John Kasich is actually just as aggressively terrible as the other two dirtbags still lingering in the clown car:

The young woman, a first-year student at St. Lawrence University in Canton, New York, had asked the Ohio governor at a town hall here how he would help her "feel safer and more secure regarding sexual violence, harassment and rape" as president.

In answering the question, Kasich talked about efforts in Ohio to provide support for college students facing sexual harassment, such as access to confidential reporting, rape kits, and the opportunity to "pursue justice after you have had some time to reflect on it all."

Kasich said these efforts should be extended to the rest of the country as well so that students "know exactly what the rules are" and do not feel vulnerable. He also reflected on how having two daughters affects his views on the issue.

"I have two 16-year-old daughters and I don't even like to think about it," Kasich said.

"It's sad, but it's something that I have to worry about," the student responded.

Kasich jumped in, saying he had advice.

"Well I would give you, I'd also give you one bit of advice. Don't go to parties where there's a lot of alcohol. OK? Don't do that," Kasich said as the audience applauded.
In lieu of a 2,000-word screed riddled with profanity, I will simply say: Governor Kasich, this is a horrendous piece of advice that tasks women with preventing our own rapes and absolves rapists of accountability. It is a very indecent thing to say, and you are dangerously wrong.

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Dudley the Greyhound sleeping on the sofa, just his head poking out behind a pile of blankets and pillows
This dog!

For the record, he's not all bundled up inside that pile of blanket; he's sleeping behind it, with just his head poking out. He smooshed all the pillows and blankets to one end, so he could take up the rest of the couch. And when I say "he" did that, what I mean is that he stood there and whined pitifully until I got up and smooshed them all to the side, so His Majesty could stretch out unimpeded.

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: Earthquake] Just one day after a powerful earthquake rattled Japan near Kumamoto city on the island of Kyushu, an even more powerful magnitude-7.1 quake at a depth of 10km hit Kumamoto. "A tsunami warning was issued, but has now been lifted." Nine people were killed in the earlier quake; it is not known yet whether there have been any casualties from the second quake and/or the tremor that followed. Damn. I'm hoping for the best.

[CN: War on agency; harassment] For fuck's sake: "The National Network of Abortion Funds (NNAF) on Thursday was the target of an apparent cyber attack, as emails with anti-choice messages were sent from NNAF's email address to donors and supporters of the organization. Thursday's attack marked the second one this week, according to a NNAF statement emailed to Rewire. One email included an image of a fetus and an infant with a thought bubble that included the words 'I hope I grow up big enough to go bowling someday.' The statement was an apparent reference to the National Abortion Access Bowl-a-Thon fundraising campaign."

[CN: War on agency; racism] "A bill to outlaw abortions based on sex or race that Democratic lawmakers and advocates have called a 'nightmare' made its way to the US House of Representatives committee floor late on Thursday, where Republicans invoked Frederick Douglass, the Book of Matthew, and Thomas Jefferson in arguing that abortions they believe to be discriminatory should be criminalized. 'It took the civil war to make the state-sanctioned practice of human slavery come to an end,' said Representative Trent Franks, the bill's sponsor, at a House judiciary subcommittee hearing on Thursday. He said that while the US has 'made great progress' in the advancement of civil rights and bringing an end to racial discrimination, 'one glaring exception is life itself, the most foundational civil right of all.' The Prenatal Discrimination Act (PRENDA) seeks to make it illegal to have an abortion based on the sex or race of the fetus. But advocates argued the proposal would force physicians to report on patients they suspect of having an abortion for those reasons without having any real way of knowing. They warn it would also effectively institutionalize racial profiling on the part of doctors and violate the physician-patient relationship. 'This bill is so horrendous that I could not believe it when it was first brought up,' said Representative Judy Chu of California. 'It is a nightmare.'" I highly recommend reading this piece by Imani Gandy, which she was obliged to write in response to the abortion-slavery conflation two years ago.

[CN: Police brutality; racism] "From the dashcam video that showed a police officer shoot 17-year-old Laquan McDonald 16 times to the youth-led activism that pushed out the state's attorney who many felt covered up that shooting, Chicago has been under fire of late for its race problem. Now, a new report from the Police Accountability Task Force outlines exactly how much racism informs the city's justice system." Spoiler Alert: It's a lot.

[CN: Religious supremacy; class warfare. Video may autoplay at link] Do you want to read the speech that Bernie Sanders gave at the Vatican? Well, if you do, here you go!

[CN: Homophobia; eliminationism] Rage seethe boil: "Alexandra, Judd, a waitress in Charlotte, North Carolina, says that instead of a tip, a customer left her the Leviticus Bible verse calling for death to gay people. ...The bottom of the receipt had a message for her as well: 'Praying for you!' ...Wrote Judd on Facebook: 'I don't care what anyone says, this is the most disrespectful thing you can do. Don't pray for me darling, I have everything I could possibly want and need in my life.'" Terrific response, although I am very sad and very angry that she was obliged to say it in the first place.

Interesting: "The Czech Republic wants to be known as 'Czechia' to make it easier for companies and sports teams to use it on products and clothing. The country will retain its full name but Czechia will become the official short geographic name, as 'France' is to 'The French Republic.' If approved by parliament, the name will be lodged with the United Nations."

[CN: Image of bug at link] "The eighth biblical plague that tortured Egypt was a plague of locusts. As described in Exodus 10:5, 'And they shall cover the face of the earth, that one cannot be able to see the earth: and they shall eat the residue of that which is escaped, which remaineth unto you from the hail, and shall eat every tree which groweth for you out of the field.' Flip the aforementioned 'they' from locusts to cicadas, and that's actually a pretty apt description of what residents in some parts of Ohio, New York, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia, and West Virginia will experience next month when the soil warms to 64 degrees and billions of cicadas rise from the ground to mate. This particular group of insects has a 17-year-life cycle that begins underground and culminates in the air as they swell and swarm and scream and sing, issuing deafening cries as the males desperately seek mates. This current 17-year-cycle, which began in 1999, begins to end next month, reports Cicada Mania. As billions of insects emerge, they can reach a density of 1.5 million cicadas an acre in some areas." Neat!

Sharon Stone wants to know how much acid Bernie Sanders has taken: "'I wonder, like, how much acid has this guy taken?' she says. 'I really do, that's not a joke. We were so aggressive asking people, 'Did you smoke pot?' But in reality, how much acid has Bernie Sanders taken? Because there's a certain edge to his personality and way about his behavior that makes me wonder, 'How much LSD have you taken?'' I have to say, I dropped a lot of acid back in the day, and I definitely recall feeling less like Bernie Sanders and more like Ben Carson.

And finally! BLUBBBBBBB: "It was a really bad thunderstorm and Dennis McDonald was driving his truck when he saw a supposedly dead cat on the side of a road in British Columbia, Canada. McDonald had a strange feeling that the kitty might still be alive, so he turned back to check on him and discovered that the cat was still breathing." The cat was severely injured, but is expected to make a full recovery. And he now has a new forever home with McDonald. ♥

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Quote of the Day

"[T]he business about discounting Clinton support as coming from 'conservative states' in the 'Deep South' actually exemplifies the problem I saw in the Sanders campaign from the beginning, and made me distrust both the movement and the man. What you see, on this as on multiple issues, is the casual adoption, with no visible effort to check the premises, of a story line that sounds good. It's all about the big banks; single-payer is there for the taking if only we want it; government spending will yield huge payoffs—not the more modest payoffs conventional Keynesian analysis suggests; Republican support will vanish if we take on corporate media. In each case the story runs into big trouble if you do a bit of homework; if not completely wrong, it needs a lot of qualification. But the all-purpose response to anyone who raises questions is that she or he is a member of the establishment, personally corrupt, etc. ...I know some people think that I'm obsessing over trivial policy details, but they're missing the point. It's about an attitude, the sense that righteousness excuses you from the need for hard thinking and that any questioning of the righteous is treason to the cause."—Paul Krugman, in "Why I Haven't Felt The Bern."

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Ted Cruz Does "Comedy"

Oof. Ted Cruz appeared on The Tonight Show and participated in a skit with Jimmy Fallon, in which Fallon did his spot-on Donald Trump impersonation and called Cruz as Trump, offering to give him advice.


[Video Description: Jimmy Fallon, dressed as and doing an impression of Donald Trump, is pictured on the left side of a split-screen. He's sitting in an office bedecked with ostentatious adornments, with a portrait of Donald Trump on the wall behind him, and speaking into a mobile phone. Ted Cruz, as himself, is pictured on the right side of the split-screen, wearing a grey suit and white shirt, sans tie. You know, to look "casual." He is also speaking into a mobile phone. They have a conversation, the pretense of which is Trump giving Cruz advice on how to nail his Tonight Show interview. It's a series of silly jokes, and Cruz's timing, delivery, and expressions are absolutely dreadful. He looks like he wants to be at home eating a bowl of chunky soup.]

Ughhhhhh! So awkward. Just painful.

This isn't the first time Fallon has enlisted a presidential candidate to participate in this set-up. Last September, Hillary Clinton appeared in a virtually identical skit, and the results were, ah, significantly better.


[Video Description: Fallon, dressed as and doing an impression of Trump, is pictured on the left side of a split-screen. He's sitting on the same set as above described, and speaking into a gold phone. Hillary Clinton, as herself, is pictured on the right side of the split-screen, wearing a bright pink tunic accented with nice jewelry. She is speaking into a mobile phone. They have a conversation, with the same pretense of advice-giving. It's a similar series of silly jokes, but Clinton's timing, delivery, and expressions are delightful. She laughs a lot and looks like she's having a good time.]

I would tell Ted Cruz to stick to his day job, but I don't really want him doing that any more than I want him attempting comedy.

And, listen, not everyone is great at comedy, and being good at comedy isn't a requirement of the presidency. But I will say that having a robust sense of humor about oneself is a trait that seems to match well with being a good leader. So there's that.

It's also interesting to me, looking at the juxtaposition of these two videos, that it's Hillary Clinton among the presidential contenders who has the seemingly intractable reputation as an icy, humorless robot who is sooooo boring and unlikeable and doesn't know how to have any fun.

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My Review of the Debate: Best Job Interview Ever

Man: I AM AGAINST BAD THINGS AND FOR GOOD THINGS.

[Audience stands to applaud his brilliance. Audience throws cash. Audience throws luxury car. Audience throws corner office.]

Moderator: Sir, what is your plan for achieving your goals?

Man: I AM AGAINST BAD THINGS AND FOR GOOD THINGS. I WILL GET RID OF THE BAD THINGS, AND MAKE MORE GOOD THINGS.

Moderator: Ma'am?

Woman: Focusing on making things less bad, here are three strategies. Each has a number of advantages and disadvantages. Depending on circumstances, I envision using one or more of them.

Man: THE FIRST ONE. THE ONE WITH THE THING.

[Audience cheers. Man raises finger.]

Man: AND I WOULD CHALLENGE THIS YOUNG LADY TO DO THE FIRST ONE. YOUNG LADY, WILL YOU PROMISE TO DO THE FIRST ONE, IRRESPECTIVE OF FUTURE CIRCUMSTANCES AND POTENTIALLY DISASTROUS CONSEQUENCES?

[Woman laughs quietly to herself.]

Woman: You heard what I said about my strategy.

[Audience boos]

Man: YOU'VE ALWAYS OPPOSED MY IDEA TO END THE BAD THINGS. WHY DO YOU LIKE BAD THINGS?

[Audience cheers]

[Woman laughs quietly to herself.]

[Audience member yells "She hates the thing!" Audience member yells "She wants things to be bad!" Audience chants man's name.]

Fin.

[I know that's not exactly how things went down, but that's pretty much what it feels like at this point. None of us are getting tenure, it what I'm saying.]

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Democratic Debate Wrap-Up

So, Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders met for yet another debate in New York last night, ahead of next Tuesday's New York primary, and the gloves came off.

The Washington Post has a complete transcript, and, as always, I've Storified my tweets for anyone who wants to read them.

The story of this debate was that it was a perfect reflection of the entire primary: Hillary Clinton was a policy wonk who spoke in nuance and detail, and Bernie Sanders was a polemicist who spoke in promises and jeremiads.

The difference in their styles was thoroughly evident, right down to their body language. They interrupted each other probably in equal measure; it was really what they did when they weren't interrupting each other that I found of interest.

When Sanders spoke, Clinton would (generally) turn slightly toward him and look at him and listen while he spoke. When Clinton spoke, Sanders would (generally) look down or at the moderators, wagging his finger and making faces.

Clinton is a listener; Sanders is a lecturer. And it was very evident, just watching them onstage together.

Anyway.

I can't imagine that the debate would have changed anyone's mind if their mind was already made up. I'm guessing it just underlined for each of the candidates' supporters why they're supporting them.

It certainly did for me, anyway.

And, of course, underscored that either one of them is galaxies better than anyone the Republicans will put forth as their nominee.

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Open Thread

image of pink oleander flowers

Hosted by oleander. [Photo: Jonathan Zander.]

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Question of the Day

Suggested by Shaker Kathy_A: "Who was your favorite teacher?"

Being the daughter of two public school teachers, and having many friends who are public school teachers or college professors, I always really enjoy this question!

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Democratic Debate Tonight

There is yet another Democratic debate tonight (heaving sigh) which will be broadcast on CNN beginning at 9:00pm ET. You will also be able to watch the livestream at CNN.com.

I'll be watching, and I may do a little tweeting. As always, I'll have a wrap-up post tomorrow morning, but here's a place to discuss it live this evening, if you are so inclined.

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Two-Minute Nostalgia Sublime

[Content Note: There are some twinkly lights in this video.]



Spice Girls: "Say You'll Be There"

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Number of the Day

63%: The percentage of "Republican voters [who] want Donald Trump to support the Republican nominee if he does not get the party's nomination, even if he arrives in Cleveland with the most delegates but short of the magic number of 1,237, according to the results of a national CBS News poll out Thursday."

It is also the percentage of Trump supporters who "said they think Trump should continue his quest for the White House even if he is denied the Republican nomination, in the form of an independent or third-party run."

So, two-thirds of GOP voters want Trump to give it up if doesn't win it outright, but two-thirds of his supporters want him to keep on trucking.

Good luck with your primary, Republicans!

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Olivia the White Farm Cat crawling up onto my lap from beneath my desk, a blur of motion
Olivia, the Hungriest Cat in the World, hoping I drop some of my lunch.

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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Enthusiasm Gap: Part Whatever in an Endless Series

Just yesterday, I wrote a piece about the supposed lack of enthusiasm among Hillary Clinton supporters, and now the media has obliged me to write about it yet again, in a new piece for Blue Nation Review:

The public—and the media—have long bemoaned the lack of serious candidates who value substance over sound bites. In Hillary, we have a candidate who is serious and substantive, and who is winning both votes and endorsements based on her detail-centered policy approach.

Yet the narrative is that the public is not enthusiastic about her. This is not only inaccurate, but destructive to our expressed desire that candidates be thoughtful campaigners with thoughtful policy ideas.

The last time we saw a candidate get constant flak for being a "boring policy wonk" about whom "no one" was excited was 2000. Al Gore was a robotic nerd, while George W. Bush was a fun guy with whom everyone wanted to have a beer. And we know how that worked out.
Click through to read the whole thing.

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In the News

Here is some stuff in the news today...

[Content Note: Misogyny; abduction; abuse; terrorism] Two years ago today, Boko Haram kidnapped 276 girls from the Chibok Government Secondary School in Nigeria. Some of them were able to escape, but 219 remain missing. Of the ones who remain missing, it is almost a certainty that some of them have been killed, by being forced to participate in acts of violent terror or by other means. Many, or all, of the survivors have been subjected to unfathomable tortures and abuse. I feel utterly helpless to do anything meaningful, except to continue to write about this, and the ongoing abductions that Boko Haram continues to orchestrate. I take up space in solidarity with the girls who are missing, and with their families, who desperately want them home.

[CN: Earthquake] Oh no: "A powerful earthquake with a preliminary magnitude of 6.4 has knocked over houses in southern Japan, and police said people could be trapped underneath the rubble. The Japanese Red Cross Kumamoto hospital said it had admitted or treated 45 people on Thursday, including five with serious injuries. The quake struck at 9.26pm (12.26pm GMT) near Kumamoto city on the island of Kyushu. There was no risk of a tsunami. ...Japan's chief cabinet secretary, Yoshihide Suga, told a news conference that the damage was being assessed, but there were no abnormalities at nearby nuclear facilities. The epicentre was 74 miles (120km) north-east of the Sendai nuclear plant, the only one operating in the country." I hope there are no fatalities. Still, there is a lot of damage, and, as of right now, the most profoundly affected areas have no water access. UPDATE: I see the linked story has been updated to reflect that two people have died. My condolences to their loved ones.

[CN: Guns; death] Wow: "In a major blow to gun companies, a judge in Connecticut on Thursday decided the lawsuit brought by 10 families affected by the December 2012 massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School against the maker of the Bushmaster AR-15 rifle used in the shooting will continue. At issue is the 2005 federal law that provides gun businesses immunity from civil lawsuits, known as the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act (PLCAA), or PLCAA for short. Connecticut State Judge Barbara Bellis on Thursday rejected the gun companies' motion to dismiss the case."

[CN: Carcerality; racism] "From Ferguson to Chicago to Newark, communities across the country are being called out for growing local justice systems planted in racist soil. Now, the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation aims to help make over those systems. Today (April 13), the foundation announced that it will support justice system reform to the tune of $25 million as part of a larger $75 million commitment to transforming how America uses jails. It is issuing 11 grants of $1.5 to $3.5 million to 11 jurisdictions, plus another nine grants of $150,000 each. The money is earmarked to address racial and ethnic disparities and reduce jail populations. Each grantee had to submit a proposal that outlined a project that is meant to not only function locally, but act as a model for other locales. The projects cover everything from implicit bias training for law enforcement to community-based substance abuse treatment programs to alternatives to incarceration, and each emphasizes community engagement and collaboration."

This is very good news: "Small-time crime and arrest records will be sealed automatically for thousands of people [in Pennsylvania] under new legislation, dubbed the Clean Slate initiative, introduced by a large bipartisan group of lawmakers in Harrisburg. The Clean Slate initiative is the first of its kind in the nation. Several states from Ohio to Mississippi to California have reformed their recordkeeping laws in recent years as activists called attention to the lingering harms that even a simple arrest with no criminal charge can inflict. But Pennsylvania will be the first to automate the process, a significant step forward for people who don’t have the resources to petition the court for the kind of relief other states have made available." Good job, Pennsylvania!

[CN: Transphobia; homophobia] Of course: "Mat Staver and the Liberty Counsel, who served as lawyers for Rowan County, Kentucky clerk Kim Davis, are behind more than 20 anti-LGBT 'bathroom bills' around the nation, CBS News reports: ''It is only about being free to pursue your faith,' said Mathew Staver. 'We have no interest in discriminating against anyone.' Staver is the founder and chairman of Liberty Counsel, which has affiliated attorneys in all 50 states—drafting bills, advising lawmakers and defending clients in what they believe to be the great cultural clash of our time…Lately, Liberty Counsel has been helping to draft legislation for conservative lawmakers in at least 20 states. 'There's certainly a thread of information that is similar and the same,' Staver said. 'They all have the same intent and that is to protect religious freedom.' But opponents say Liberty's handiwork actually protects those who, for religious reasons, decline to employ or serve gays, lesbians, or transgender people.'" Just because someone uses religion to try to justify their bigotry doesn't actually make their reason "religious."

[CN: Rape culture; victim-blaming] Rage seethe boil: "Brigham Young University students who are victims of sex crimes say they are investigated by the school and sometimes disciplined after reporting their abuse, a consequence that critics say silences victims and emboldens offenders. At colleges nationwide, student victims are encouraged to report sexual assaults to schools' Title IX officers, charged with enforcing a federal law that guarantees students don't face hostility on campus based on their gender. But multiple students say that at BYU—a private university owned by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints—Title IX staff routinely alert the Honor Code Office. ...In a statement, BYU said a student 'will never be referred to the Honor Code Office for being a victim of sexual assault,' and that its Honor Code proceedings are 'independent and separate' from Title IX investigations. But multiple BYU students investigated by the school's Honor Code Office disagree, saying they were scrutinized as a result of reporting a sex crime. In some cases described by past and current students, Honor Code investigations were launched even when the accused assailants were not BYU students—the alleged victim being the sole possible target."

[CN: War on agency] Guess those assurances that Donald Trump is just "playing a role" and doesn't believe all the heinous shit he's saying aren't valid! What a shock! "Donald Trump's charitable giving includes donations to anti-choice organizations, along with a crisis pregnancy center (CPC), according to his charity's tax returns and a document provided by the Trump campaign and published by the Washington Post. In 2013, tax filings show the Donald J. Trump Foundation gave $25,000 to Justice for All, an anti-choice group targeting college campuses."

[CN: Nuclear war] Hillary Clinton has penned an op-ed excoriating Trump for his irresponsible rhetoric on nuclear proliferation and warfare: "Keeping America safe is the most solemn responsibility of any President. So when Donald Trump says 'we need unpredictability' when it comes to nuclear weapons, when he talks casually about actually using these weapons, and when he says he sees no problem in letting more countries develop nuclear weapons, he's not just wrong. This kind of loose talk is dangerous. These may be the most reckless statements on national security by any major presidential candidate in modern history. ...Our national security is too important to entrust to someone who hasn't thought long and hard about how to keep us safe. And remember: Loose cannons tend to misfire. That's a risk we just can't take."

[CN: Splaining; Christian Supremacy] John Kasich is still flying under the radar, but never forget that he is also extremely terrible: "Kasich's travels in New York brought him yesterday to a Jewish bookstore, where he met students of the Talmud. Having thus met people who spend their entire day scrutinizing religious texts, Kasich's reaction was to ask them if they were aware of facts about those texts that they probably knew as very small children. 'They sold [Joseph] into slavery, and that's how the Jews got to Egypt. Right? Did you know that?' For those who never attended Sunday school, this is a bit like visiting MIT, wandering into a physics lab, and asking people if they ever heard of this guy named Isaac Newton." There's video at the link.

No thank you! "AMC, the biggest movie theater chain in the United States, has a new CEO in Adam Aron, and he's up for some changes to the moviegoing experience. Granted, there are plenty of things that could be improved about theaters, but 'allowing texting in theaters' isn't one of them—despite his willingness to try it. This is it. This is the hill my youth dies on. I guess I'm glad it's a movie theater-shaped hill, anyway." LOL.

And finally! All the blubs forever: "A dog and kitten who lost their home were reunited in a heart-warming encounter caught on video at a California animal center recently. And there's more good news! Ami the dog and Mikaela the kitten have both been adopted by a loving family." ♥

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Obama + Kids + Science = WIN

Yesterday was the annual White House Science Fair, which means it was time for our annual SQUEE over President Obama and kids adorably interacting while geeking out over science!

C-SPAN has video of the President touring the science fair and checking out the exhibits, and below is video of the President's address:


Even though it's 22 minutes, I highly recommend watching the whole thing, or reading the transcript, because there's a lot of good stuff in it. And also because I can't even remember the last time I saw President Obama as happy as he was giving these remarks. It was probably at last year's White House Science Fair!

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