Let's Talk About Clinton and Foreign Policy

[Content Note: War; violence; sexual assault.]

So, because I support and defend Hillary Clinton, I am routinely accused of not caring about certain parts of her record, and one of the most common refrains is that I don't care that she's a "warhawk."

I don't think it's any secret that I have disagreements with Clinton on foreign policy, given that I've written about them a number of times, but okay. Let's talk about Clinton and foreign policy.

Clinton is more inclined to support military intervention than I am. As examples: She voted for the Iraq War, which she concedes was a mistake. Her advocacy for intervention in Libya is often criticized, but, as far as I can tell, that was a "best of all terrible options" situation, given that our foreign policy was never going to include not doing something. She has supported the US policy on using drones, to which I have repeatedly objected.

But military intervention hardly represents her entire foreign policy record, which is far more complex.

For a start, Clinton has often said, including during debates during this primary, that she prioritizes diplomacy whenever possible over military intervention, and I believe that.

The same thing could be said for President Obama, of whom I've sometimes had strong criticisms regarding his foreign policy. But I don't think there's a single case where he could have exclusively used diplomacy and chose instead to rely on military intervention as his first approach.

A "warhawk" does not prioritize diplomacy. A "warhawk" does not even consider strategic and targeted military intervention, when they have determined, rightly or wrongly, that military intervention is the last resort.

Hillary Clinton, even if she is more inclined to support military intervention in cases where I might not, is not a warhawk.

Most importantly, a warhawk doesn't spend her tenure as Secretary of State doggedly advocating on behalf of women and children who are victimized by rape as a weapon of war:

"We believe there should be no impunity for the sexual and gender based violence, and there must be arrests and punishment because that runs counter to peace."—Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, in Congo today, where she "unveiled a $17 million plan on Tuesday to fight the widespread sexual violence in eastern Congo, a problem she said was 'evil in its basest form'."
And again:
"The Mugunga Internally Displaced Persons Camp sits in a land of volcanoes and great lakes on the edge of Goma, a provincial capital in the eastern Congo. The camp is now home to 18,000 people seeking refuge from a cycle of violent conflict that has left 5.4 million dead since 1998. … Women and girls in particular have been victimized on an unimaginable scale, as sexual and gender-based violence has become a tactic of war and has reached epidemic proportions. Some 1,100 rapes are reported each month, with an average of 36 women and girls raped every day. … I came to Goma to send a clear message: The United States condemns these attacks and all those who commit them and abet them. They are crimes against humanity. These acts don't just harm a single individual, or a single family, or village, or group. They shred the fabric that weaves us together as human beings. Such atrocities have no place in any society."—Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, in a piece for People magazine called "What I Saw in Goma."
And again:
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said on Tuesday Guinea's military leaders should quit after soldiers went on a rampage at a protest rally, killing more than 150 people and raping women.

...Clinton said U.S. diplomats had spoken to Guinea's leaders in the "strongest possible terms." The State Department said U.S. officials had expressed "deep outrage" and "condemned the massacre and egregious human rights violations."

…Clinton said she was particularly appalled by the violence against women.

"In broad daylight in a stadium, it was criminality to the greatest degree," she said. "Those who committed such acts should not be given any reason to expect that they will escape justice."
And again:
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton votes to adopt a United Nations Security Council resolution addressing sexual violence in armed conflict at U.N. headquarters September 30, 2009 in New York City. Clinton chaired a Security Council session on 'Women, Peace and Security.'
Nor does a "warhawk" talk about violence against women as a security issue:
"So-called women's issues are stability issues, security issues, equity issues. The World Bank and many other analyses have proved over and over again that where women are mistreated, where they are denied equal rights, you will find instability that very often serves as an incubator of extremism."—Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, in a great interview in the New York Times about the "gender agenda" of the Obama administration's State Department under her leadership.
Nor does a "warhawk" repeatedly talk about how women are key to peacekeeping:
And next week at the Security Council, we're going to be taking steps to improve the United Nations' response to sexual violence committed during armed conflict. I will be speaking next Wednesday on behalf of a U.S.-sponsored resolution to better implement the commitment that we should have to the role that women and girls should play in their lives, in their communities, and their countries, and in particular, to appoint a special representative of the Secretary General to lead, coordinate, and advocate for efforts to end sexual violence in armed conflict. I think we have to elevate that no matter what country we're from. Those of us who have traveled, as I think all of us here have done, have seen the consequences, and some of you have lived the consequences and your families have suffered the consequences as well.

So we intend to make this a centerpiece of my term as Secretary of State. There are people who say, well, women's issues is an important issue, but it doesn’t rank up there with the Middle East or Iran's nuclear threat or Afghanistan and Pakistan. I could not disagree more. I think women are key to our being able to resolve all of those difficult conflicts, as well as provide for a better future.
And again:
The most extraordinary day of the entire trip was a testament to this very idea, what Clinton calls "smart power," and it is something she is very passionate about: that the micro-economies of the poor are deeply important, and when the so-called soft issues—violence against women, food safety and agriculture, sustainable development—are not tended to, the result is chaos, instability, conflict, and war.
And again:
Women's participation in [peacemaking, peacekeeping, and peace building] is not a "nice thing to do." It's not as though we are doing a favor for ourselves and them by including women in the work of peace. This is a necessary global security imperative. Including women in the work of peace advances our national security interests, promotes political stability, economic growth, and respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms. Just as in the economic sphere, we cannot exclude the talents of half the population, neither when it comes to matters of life and death can we afford to ignore, marginalize, and dismiss the very direct contributions that women can and have made.
Those are but a few examples of Hillary Clinton's powerful and unrelenting advocacy on behalf of women and children in war zones and destabilized nations and, frankly, everywhere around the world—and a few examples of her highlighting how mistreatment of women and children creates the instability from which armed conflicts emerge.

No other candidate so passionately and eloquently tries to address this source of instability and warfare. None.

Calling Clinton a "warhawk," or talking about her record as disproportionately and exclusively "militaristic," is dependent on ignoring all of this incredibly important and specialized work that she's done.

(Of course, she's done it on behalf of women and children, so it's pretty easy for lots of Very Important People Who Care About Serious Issues to ignore, because who gives a fuck about women and kids.)

It also requires ignoring, as but one example, an entire diplomatic career of facilitating peace, stretching all the way back to her tenure as First Lady, when she played a crucial role in the Irish peace process.

The point is not to say that my areas of disagreement with her don't matter to me, but to say that I view her record as complex. Because it is complex.

That is, naturally, not the narrative we get care of the corporate media, who talk about her Iraq vote in one day more than they have ever talked about her diplomatic successes or work on behalf of women and girls in war zones.

But its concealment doesn't mean it doesn't exist.

She has a long foreign policy history, which includes some things with which I disagree and some things I strongly support. On balance, I find enough to warrant my support of her candidacy. People draw their lines in different places, and there are certainly people who are familiar with the entirety of her record who don't feel there's enough. That's valid.

But it's a rare day indeed when I interact with someone who accuses me of "not caring" about her hawkishness who's even heard of any of the things mentioned above.

If there's a lack of care being taken with regard to Clinton's foreign policy experience, it isn't with the people who are familiar with and appreciate the breadth of that experience, but the people who haven't bothered to report or research anything but that which serves the mendacious narrative that she loves war.

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In the News

Here is some stuff in the news today...

RIP Prince. The singer has reportedly died at his estate, at age 57. [UPDATE: His publicist has now confirmed the unfortunate news that he has indeed died.] I don't even know what to say. His innovative music was extraordinarily influential; he was one of the most successful singers in history, having sold over 100 million albums globally. He was a total weirdo (which is a word I trust you know by now I don't use in a mean way), and I am just so sorry to all his fans who loved him and his work.

RIP Chyna: "Former pro wrestling star Joanie 'Chyna' Laurer was found dead in her home today, according to her manager. She was 45 years old. Her official Twitter and Facebook accounts both confirmed the news." I'm not a fan of wrestling, so I don't know a whole lot about Chyna, but I know that she meant a lot to female wrestling fans.

2016: You have a lot to answer for, you cruel shit.

[Content Note: Drones; war; death and injury] "Because US drone strikes are cloaked in secrecy, occur in remote or dangerous locales and target people presumed to be terrorists, Americans rarely hear from survivors or their relatives. But a theme emerges in interviews the Guardian has conducted with more than half a dozen drone survivors: the pain from the strike never ends, as the apparatus of secrecy renders closure unobtainable." A difficult but very important read, on the human cost of the US' drone warfare.

[CN: Guns] "Hillary Clinton slammed the abundance of guns in the United States on Thursday, in her latest remarks stressing the need for a national movement to blunt the influence of the gun lobby and end the cycle of violence perpetuated with firearms. 'It is just too easy for people to reach for a gun to solve their problems. It makes no sense,' Clinton said in remarks preceding a panel in Hartford, Connecticut, that featured family members of gun-violence victims, including at nearby Newtown's Sandy Hook Elementary in 2012. 'And we can do this consistent with the Second Amendment, we can do this with the support of responsible gun owners, and that is exactly what we will do. And I want you to know that I know I don't have all the answers.' Prefacing her remarks in Connecticut ahead of the state's Tuesday primary, Clinton said, 'I'm not here to make promises I can't keep. I am here to tell you I will use every single minute of every single day if I'm so fortunate enough to be your president looking for ways that we can save lives, that we can change the gun culture.'"

[CN: Misogyny] "The Young Turks' Jimmy Dore: Clinton Campaign 'Devalues' the Term Misogynist; 'If Bernie Sanders Is a Sexist, Everybody Is a Sexist." Bernie Sanders is magically immune to internalized misogyny despite being socialized in a patriarchal culture! Film at 11!

[CN: Transphobia] "Transgender people should be able to use whatever bathroom they want, Donald Trump said Thursday. 'Oh, I had a feeling that question was going to come up, I will tell you. North Carolina did something that was very strong. And they're paying a big price. There's a lot of problems,' the Republican presidential candidate said during a town hall event on NBC's Today. Referring to comments from an unnamed commentator who on Wednesday said North Carolina should 'leave it the way it is right now,' Trump said he agreed. 'Leave it the way it is. North Carolina, what they're going through with all the business that's leaving, all of the strife—and this is on both sides. Leave it the way it is,' he said, referring to companies that have canceled plans to move or expand businesses in the state as a result of the law, which bans transgender individuals from using a bathroom that does not match their gender at birth. 'There have been very few complaints the way it is. People go. They use the bathroom that they feel is appropriate,' Trump said. 'There has been so little trouble.'" Fucking hell. Welp. When Donald Trump is the voice of reason on transgender issues, you know you have derailed. (Countdown to Trump backpedaling from this momentary lapse of decency in 3...2...)

[CN: Bigotry] If you are suffering from insomnia and need something to help you fall asleep, maybe you could try reading John Kasich's interview with the Washington Post editorial board. Also if you're feeling chilly, you could print it out and burn it!

[CN: Transphobia] Curt Schilling, yet another sports-dude of whom I'd never heard until he said something profoundly offensive, has been fired for a transphobic Facebook rant. Good.

Kids these days! Get ON my lawn! "Last week, two new wearable technologies gained a spotlight when their creators were awarded the Lemelson-MIT student prize, a yearly cash award to a handful of collegiate inventors. The twist? These promising technologies weren't developed by major corporations or experienced PhDs—some were developed by people who can't even legally drink alcohol. ThinkProgress spoke with a few of the winners about exactly how their inventions work, and how they hope they will transform the ability to communicate with two different populations: children with autism and deaf users of American Sign Language."

"VW reaches US deal in emissions scandal: Final details of the packages offered will be announced in June, but a court had given VW and regulators until Thursday to reach a deal in principle. Last year, US regulators discovered that VW cars were fitted with software that could distort emissions tests. The German giant subsequently said 11 million cars worldwide were affected. Details of the preliminary agreement were announced in a California court. US district court Judge Charles Breyer said the settlement would include a buyback offer for nearly 500,000 2.0-litre vehicles. He did not give details of how much car owners would offered in compensation, but said the deal between Volkswagen, the US government and private lawyers would be 'substantial.' Judge Breyer said VW would also pay into an environmental fund and commit other money to promote green car technology."

[CN: Moving GIF at link] And finally! All the blubs foreverrrrrrrr: "Rescue Pit Bull Gets His Own Kitty; Loves Her Like a Daughter." ♥ ♥ ♥

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This Guy

We now interrupt our relentless schedule of election coverage and assorted misogynist fuckery to bring you this important reminder that David Beckham is everything:

Why should it be any different? They're both— You know, women's and men's tennis, they're both playing the same sport; they're both playing at the highest levels, so why not earn the same money when you win or when you make a final? You know, there's no reason why it should be any different. So, the girls have got a right to really speak up. And, you know, there's no one better than Serena [Williams] to stand up and to say what she's saying and to prove her point, because she's a true, true winner.
Now, y'all know I don't give cookies for basic decency, but I'm still really glad that he said this so unreservedly—and I love that he subtly snuck in there some perfect pushback against the implicit assertion threaded throughout these conversations that women don't have the right to demand equal pay.

Good job, Becks! A+

[H/T to Shane.]

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Hot Take

So, I guess men writing hot takes about "how to keep women happy" is still a thing? Cool.

Obviously, I'm not an expert, since I'm a woman myself and also have this zany idea that women aren't a monolith who are all made happy by the same things, but here's my hot take on How to Keep a Woman Happy:

1. Ask her what would make her happy.

2. Do it.

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LADIES

[Content Note: Video may autoplay at link.]

"Clinton campaign chief: 'No question' women will be on VP list."

Hillary Clinton's campaign chairman John Podesta said the Democratic presidential front-runner would be open to an all-female ticket.

"We'll start with a broad list and then begin to narrow it. But there is no question that there will be women on that list," Podesta told the Boston Globe describing the process of picking Clinton's runningmate in an interview published Wednesday.

An all-female presidential ticket would be a historic first in a presidential election full of surprises as Clinton competes to be the first female president of the United States.
That would be very cool! Although my money is still on Julian Castro. And I wouldn't be mad about that!

Naturally, it wouldn't be an article about Democratic women without a mention of Senator Elizabeth Warren, who is apparently the only other woman in politics that anyone in the United States of America can name.
One prominent name that might make the list: Sen. Elizabeth Warren, the progressive figure that has so far avoided campaigning for either Clinton or Sen. Bernie Sanders. Warren remains the only female Democratic senator not to have formally endorsed Clinton's presidential bid.
Oooh she is a woman AND she hasn't endorsed her! That must mean...SOMETHING!

I also wouldn't be mad if Warren were on Clinton's ticket, although I don't think Warren wants the job and she'd probably be more effective in the Senate, anyway.

I'm very excited to see who she chooses! Whoever it is!

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We Are Builders

I've got a new essay up at Blue Nation Review, "Unite: A Message to Fellow Progressives Taking a Second Look at Hillary."

I have found throughout my life that my first impression of someone is rarely the same as my last impression of them.

This was my experience with Hillary Clinton, too.

I am now a fervent Hillary supporter—but I have not always been one. It was only after I spent time deep-diving into her background and career that I came to appreciate who she really is, and how vastly she diverges from the media caricature of her.

...It's funny how people disposed toward distrusting the establishment aren't more distrustful of the corporate media, which are about as establishment as it gets.

Because the media are doing them a grave disservice. As Hillary moves ever closer to the Democratic Party's nomination, many Bernie supporters will happily support Hillary. There will likely be a number of his supporters who are deeply grieving. Their hearts will be hurting because they'll believe there is no one who will represent their progressive values in the general election.

Some of them will begrudgingly support her, if only to stop whatever nightmare candidate the Republicans end up nominating, but it feels better to be enthusiastic for your candidate.

And if they take another look at her—if they can get past that first impression, past the funhouse mirror version of her that we're offered by the media, they might find someone they actually like—even if they still have policy disagreements with her.
I'm really proud of this one, and I hope you like it, too!

I don't know if it will actually help mend fences between relationships fractured during this primary, as I know a lot of people have experienced, but I did my best to try to write something that people could use to try, if they're so inclined.

Head on over to read the whole thing.

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Open Thread

image of hardware nuts, as in nuts and bolts

Hosted by nuts.

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Question of the Day

Suggested by Shaker h2o_girl: "What are you reading?"

I am currently reading Superstud: Or How I Became a 24-Year-Old Virgin, by Paul Feig.

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Of Course

"Republican establishment warms to Trump after big New York win." I'll bet.

Because the Republican platform has always been about winning. And, just like always, they don't care how far right their party is dragged, as long as the person dragging it there can win.

Which is exactly how they ended up with Trump as their probable nominee in the first place.

Chasing the win, down into the dirt.

Like I've been saying for ages: They were never worried about him because he was too extreme; they were worried about him because he was too unfiltered. They were worried he couldn't win with that sort of behavior.

But now that he's winning big, well, maybe they're not so worried after all about his brash bigotry not being "representative" of their party.

So down the same road they go, in pursuit of winning, at any cost.

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Two-Minute Nostalgia Sublime



Whitney Houston: "Greatest Love of All"

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The Wednesday Blogaround

This blogaround brought to you by bobbleheads.

Recommended Reading:

Wendy: [Content Note: Food allergies; PTSD; triggers; disablism] On Trigger Warnings and Double Standards

Jenn: [CN: Police brutality; anti-blackness] Peter Liang Will Not Serve a Day in Jail for Killing Akai Gurley

Fannie: [CN: Online abuse and harassment] Verge Piece on Comment Moderation

Monica: Transform California Launches with LA Rally

Shay: [CN: Misogynoir; white supremacy] The Mules of the World, or a Black Woman's Reflection

Issa: [CN: Anxiety] I Don't Care What You Think About Me

Indian Homemaker: [CN: Hostility to consent] The Right to Deny or to Give Consent Takes the Power away from Patriarchy, and Gives It to the Individual

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

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Just a Thought

[Content Note: Classism; bigotry.]

At NPR, Danielle Kurtzleben finds that "Sanders Has Been Losing in States Where Income Inequality Is Worse." She writes:

It's a counterintuitive trend because Bernie Sanders' whole campaign is built on inequality. The phrase "millionaire and billionaire class" (or some variation on it) seems to feature in every single one of his speeches.

...The fascinating question is why this is happening.

Spoiler: There's no single great explanation.
She delves into possible explanations, including race, regional differences, and facts like: "High poverty levels help drive southern inequality, while in states like New York, Wall Street executives help push inequality higher." And concludes: "Still, given Sanders' focus on the issue, he and his campaign might have thought he would be able to break through in places where inequality was worst. It just hasn't happened."

One of the major reasons, in my estimation, is that people who are entrenched in poverty, who struggle to find enough to eat no less pay the bills, tend to quite reasonably have a very different view of what and who are responsible for their circumstances than people who are working hard but carrying lots of debt and eking out a living, making enough to get by but not to thrive.

The former group tends to take a broader view of the systemic inequities that contribute to their poverty. They're more likely to see, as but one example, the intersection of identity-based bigotries, lack of jobs, restriction of reproductive rights, institutional neglect, substandard education, high incarceration rates, etc. as part of a constellation of societal issues that feed oppression.

The latter group tend to see corporate greed and political corruption as the primary drivers of their circumstances.

And neither group is necessarily wrong. Which is why one group is disproportionately (though not unilaterally, of course) casting votes for the candidate who talks about breaking down all the barriers that stop people from living up to whatever they can achieve with their own hard work and talents, and the other group is more likely to cast votes for the candidate who speaks very specifically to busting up the institutions that are their primary (and sometimes only) cultural barrier to thriving.

It basically comes down to what I've said before: Breaking up the banks doesn't guarantee abortion access. Rinse and repeat for a whole slew of other social issues that are decided primarily on the state or local level.

People know their own lives. I'm pretty sure that's why Sanders has been losing in states where income inequality is worse.

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Olivia the White Farm Cat sitting at the top of the stairs, looking down at me
I always feel like / somebody's watching meeee...

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: Climate change] This is a really great piece about climate change, the Paris Agreement, and what it's really going to take to make a difference: "Representatives from more than 150 countries will gather at the United Nations on Friday to officially sign a global accord aimed at slashing greenhouse gas emissions and slowing climate change. But in the four months since that historic pact was negotiated in Paris, a drumbeat of grim scientific findings has underscored that staving off the worst consequences of global warming may take far more aggressive actions. ...Amid these bleak signs, there is general consensus that the Paris accord is simultaneously an important milestone worth celebrating—Friday is expected to draw the largest number of countries to sign a U.N. agreement on a single day—and, by itself, only a start to what must be a more aggressive effort to mitigate the worst effects of climate change. ...'I can't overestimate the political importance that every country is involved. That's absolutely crucial,' [Paul Bledsoe, a former Clinton adviser on climate and now an independent consultant] said. 'It really is a testament to a profound political evolution. But we do have to recognize what it is and what it isn't. It's an incredibly important step that gets us halfway there, but it's not in and of itself the ultimate solution.'"

[CN: Environmental pollutants] In related news: "More than half of the US population lives amid potentially dangerous air pollution, with national efforts to improve air quality at risk of being reversed, a new report has warned. A total of 166 million Americans live in areas that have unhealthy levels of of either ozone or particle pollution, according to the American Lung Association, raising their risk of lung cancer, asthma attacks, heart disease, reproductive problems, and other ailments. The association's 17th annual 'state of the air' report found that there has been a gradual improvement in air quality in recent years but warned progress has been too slow and could even be reversed by efforts in Congress to water down the Clean Air Act."

Today, Treasury Secretary Jack Lew will reportedly announce "a decision to keep Alexander Hamilton on the front of the $10 bill and put leaders of the movement to give women the right to vote on the back of the bill, sources tell POLITICO. Treasury will also announce that it plans to replace former President Andrew Jackson on the $20 bill with Harriet Tubman, the sources said. There will also be changes to the $5 bill to depict civil rights era leaders." Though getting rid of some of these old white dudes is an idea whose day has definitely come, I refer you back to Jay Smooth addressing the complicated symbolism of replacing Andrew Jackson with Harriet Tubman on the $20 bill.

[CN: Anti-choice terrorism; Islamophobia] "The man behind a pair of 2013 arson attempts at a Planned Parenthood health center in Joplin, Missouri, has pleaded guilty, the U.S. Department of Justice announced Monday. Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Vanita Gupta and Tammy Dickinson, the U.S. attorney of the Western District of Missouri, said Joplin resident Jedediah Stout, 32, also pleaded guilty to committing arson at the Islamic Society of Joplin mosque in 2012. The plea led to one count related to damage to the mosque, two counts of arson at the Planned Parenthood clinic, and one count of violating the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances Act. Stout told federal, state, and local investigators that he attacked the mosque because he didn't 'like Islam as a religion,' according to the Justice Department release. ...Stout during the recent court hearing admitted that he used the same kind of incendiary device in the mosque arson that he used during the arson attempts at Planned Parenthood in October 2013. He admitted that he targeted the clinic because it provided reproductive health services, federal officials said." This fucking guy.

[CN: Misogynist violence; human rights violations] "Norwegian mass murderer Anders Behring Breivik has won part of a human rights case against the Norwegian state. The court upheld his claim that some of his treatment amounted to 'inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.' ...In her ruling, judge Helen Andenaes Sekulic said the right not to be subjected to inhuman treatment represented 'a fundamental value in a democratic society' and also applied to 'terrorists and killers.' Breivik had challenged the government over his solitary confinement, which saw him kept alone in his cell for 22 to 23 hours a day, denied contact with other inmates and only communicating with prison staff through a thick glass barrier." I couldn't have less sympathy for this guy, or more anger about what he did, but this is the right ruling nonetheless.

[CN: Transphobic violence; misogynoir] "James Dixon, 25, will be sentenced to 12 years in prison for beating to death a 21-year-old Black trans woman, Islan Nettles, in August 2013 in New York City. ...'This is not a win for the trans community,' Lourdes Hunter, co-founder and national director of the TransWomen of Color Collective (TWOCC), told Rewire in a phone interview. 'James Dixon going to jail will not stop trans murders, it will not bring Islan Nettles back, it will not bring peace to Delores Nettles [Islan's mother], who for many years sat in anguish as the murderer of her child roamed the streets due to the negligence of the New York Police Department and the New York District Attorney.' ...Both [Shelby Chestnut, co-director of community organizing and public advocacy with the New York City-based Anti-Violence Project] and TWOCC's Hunter agree that locking Dixon up will not stem the tide of violence against the trans community, since mass incarceration has proved to be an outright failure in terms of preventing crime. 'Sending someone to prison is not 'justice,'' Chestnut said. 'We need to address the bigger, systemic issue, which is: Why is violence like this allowed to permeate our society? And how are we investing in modes of prevention and education for everyone, so that a young, trans women of color can walk down the street and not be killed simply for who she is?'"

[CN: Classism; bigotry] "In the wake of a dominant victory in Tuesday's New York primary, Donald Trump delivered a victory speech that was subdued by his standards. In a sign that he's possibly toning things down ahead of the general election, the Republican frontrunner avoided the incendiary rhetoric that has characterized his campaign to date. But Trump made a more subtle incendiary statement by choosing to deliver his victory speech while standing next to 2010 New York gubernatorial candidate Carl Paladino. Paladino, a real estate developer who rode the tea party wave to a surprising victory in that year's Republican primary before he was trounced by Democrat Andrew Cuomo in the general contest, is mostly remembered for a series of ridiculous and offensive things he said and did (during and before his campaign)... Trump attempted to try to use his victory speech on Tuesday night to moderate his tone and pivot to the general election. But if you were wondering whether Trump has really changed, just look behind him."

Welp: "The chairman of the Senate Republican campaign arm is telling vulnerable colleagues in tough races to stay away from the GOP presidential convention this summer. Sen. Roger Wicker (R-Miss.), the National Republican Senatorial Committee chairman, warns that a fight between supporters of candidates Donald Trump and Ted Cruz at a contested convention in Cleveland is the last place vulnerable Republicans need to be. 'If there's going to be a brouhaha, I'm advising candidates to be present for more unifying events,' Wicker told The Hill."

OMG: Senator Ted Cruz whined in a fundraising email to supporters how hard it is running for president and how many personal sacrifices he was having to make, and Senator Elizabeth Warren was not having it! A+

[CN: Harassment] "Sanders' supporters are lashing out, but here's how they might be hurting his campaign." Spoiler alert: It's by harassing people.

[CN: Racism] BuzzFeed has apologized for its ill-considered (ahem) "27 Questions Black People Have For Black People" video, promising they "want to get better at earning the trust of our black audience." But they haven't taken down the video.

LOLOLOL: "The Guggenheim's monstrous golden toilet sums up the obscene art world." Coincidentally, it also sums up Donald Trump's obscene presidential campaign!

Always cool: "The occurrence of Lyrid meteor showers has started and the meteor showers will peak Friday onwards. NASA stated that they have been active for three days and are going to last up to April 25. The meteor showers are expected to peak in the mornings of April 22 and April 23. A peak meteor shower is the time of maximum activity and the moment when the most meteors are visible. Stargazers can probably witness 10-20 Lyrids per hour under ideal conditions. As per PennLive, during these days, a full moon night can hinder the ability of seeing meteors. Regardless of the moon obstacle, stargazers worldwide have been gearing up to see the event."

And finally! This is TOO CUTE!!! "Rescue Dogs Hug When Asked 'Who's Your Best Friend?'" Awwwwww! ♥

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No Kidding

[Content Note: Toxic masculinity.]

Michael Rosenwald for the Washington Post: "'Damaged masculinity' may help explain Columbine and other mass shootings."

Oh really? Do tell me more.

Forgive my sarcastic contempt on this very serious subject. It's not that I treat it lightly; to the absolute contrary, it's something about which I (and many other feminists) have been writing for years. Which is the source of my ire.

It's not that I don't appreciate Mr. Rosenwald writing about it, nor the WaPo publishing it. It's just that women have been saying this very thing for years. And in the time that women have been saying it, and either being flatly ignored or shouted down by people calling us man-hating hysterics, more people have been harmed as a result of unchecked toxic masculinity.

LISTEN TO WOMEN.

Well, maybe now that a man has said it, people will actually pay attention.

[H/T to Aphra_Behn.]

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News from Flint

[Content Note: Environmental racism; classism; water contamination. Video may autoplay at second link.]

Background on the Flint water crisis.

Today, Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette will reportedly announce criminal charges "in connection with his ongoing investigation of the Flint drinking water crisis."

Officials believe the city got artificially low lead readings because they didn't test the homes most at risk — those with lead service lines or other features putting them at high risk for lead. Among those to be charged is a City of Flint official who signed a document saying the homes Flint used to test tap water under the federal Lead and Copper Rule all had lead service lines — a statement investigators allege was false.

Schuette is to announce felony and misdemeanor charges against at least two, and possibly as many as four people, according to two other sources familiar with the investigation. The investigation is ongoing and more charges are expected, sources said.

The charges, which will be brought against individuals connected with the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality and the City of Flint, relate to the lead contamination of Flint's drinking water and not to the possible link between Flint River water and an outbreak of Legionnaires' disease that is tied to the deaths of 12 people, one of the sources said.

Schuette, a Republican who is widely expected to run for governor in 2018, opened an investigation in January, tapping former Detroit FBI Director Andrew Arena and Royal Oak attorney Todd Flood to head the probe.

...A person familiar with the matter said that other parts of state and Flint city government remain under investigation.
There is much more at the link.

While I am genuinely glad that there is some attempt being made to hold accountable the people who orchestrated this vast harm against the people of Flint—especially children, the scope of the consequences for whom won't be fully known for years—real justice will only come with comprehensive lead remediation nationwide.

Lead in pipes and paint in old housing continue to be a present threat, especially to poor people. And truly meaningful accountability is making sure that what happened in Flint can never happen again, anywhere, through any means.

Lead remediation is costly and time-consuming. It will need federal management. For that reason, I desperately hope that whoever our next president is will make lead remediation a priority of her or his administration.

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New York Primary Wrap-Up

image of my hand holding a glass with a shot of whiskey in it; on the glass is Hillary Clinton's logo accompanied by text reading: 'Made from 100% shattered glass ceiling.'
Cheers!

So, as you may have heard, New York had its primary yesterday! Congratulations to Hillary Clinton, who won the state for whom she served two terms as US Senator by almost 16 points! Wow!

(Here is her [video autoplays] victory speech. A transcript is not yet available.)

Clinton was awarded 139 delegates, and Bernie Sanders was awarded 106.

On the other side of the aisle, Donald Trump also won, taking 60% of the vote. He was awarded 89 delegates, and John Kasich was awarded 3. Ted Cruz was awarded no delegates. Whoooooops! There's some New York values for ya, pal.

Since who fucking cares about the Republicans, let's go back to the Democrats.

Clinton won more votes in New York than all the GOP candidates combined. She passed the ten million vote threshold for this primary. In exit polling, 72% of voters said she had energized the Democratic Party (compared to 64% for Sanders). She won by double digits. Will the media at long last stop with the garbage narrative about an enthusiasm gap?

Probably not! At least if the Washington Post's late-night coverage is any indication: "Hillary Clinton won New York, but her image is underwater." Hahahahahaha of course it is!

This, meanwhile, was their complementary piece on Trump: "New York blowout gives Donald Trump big boost in GOP race." Perfect.

Anyway.

Team Sanders is vowing that they'll still take it all the way to the convention, even though the math makes it virtually impossible for him to win. Actually impossible, unless basically all the superdelegates abandon Clinton for Sanders. Which won't happen.

I certainly hope that Sanders will reconsider his hard negative campaign strategy, especially since it's not even working. But I fear that we're just going to see more of the same. I'd be happy for my fears to be proven unfounded!

I guess we'll have to wait and see.

In the meantime, congratulations to Clinton supporters who are so happy! To the Sanders supporters who are merely disappointed, as anyone is when their candidate loses, my sympathies. I know it's a bummer.

And to the Sanders supporters who are losing their fucking shit over Clinton's win, let me make a suggestion: You wouldn't be so devastated if you hadn't turned this primary into an epic battle of good vs. evil. As you may have noticed, when Clinton loses in the entirely typical way that happens during primaries, I'm basically like, oh well, better luck next time. But since you've turned your opponent into HISTORY'S GREATEST MONSTER, it's no wonder you can't have a reasonable response to losing.

Just settle down. You've done your darnedest to demonize her, but she's not actually a demon. She's just a politician who won this one, not because of some grand conspiracy, but because she's run a better campaign in the opinion of more people. Shrug.

I strongly suggest reserving the apoplexy for the general election, when we'll all be facing an opponent who genuinely deserves it.

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Open Thread

image of New York City from above, at dusk, just as light are starting to come on

Hosted by New York City.

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Question of the Day

How are you?

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