This Is Exhausting

[Content Note: Misogyny.]


Hillary Clinton has a 23-point lead with women. And that is described by CNN as having "an edge with women over Trump." An edge.

For a moment, let's all just contemplate how it would be described if Trump had a 23-point lead with women—or any demographic—over Clinton. Would it be described as having an edge? The fuck it would.

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Open Thread

image of pomegranates

Hosted by pomegranates.

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Question of the Day

Suggested by Shaker Titanica: "What movie(s) can you quote from the most? With examples, of course. :)"

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Two-Minute Nostalgia Sublime



Travis: "Be My Baby"

Great cover of this song.

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This Is Real

[Content Note: Incitement.]

From the BNR Team: "EXCLUSIVE: Big Media Mentioned Hillary's Emails EVERY DAY of 2016."

In fact, I can tell you, since I was involved in the research on this project, that the media has mentioned Hillary Clinton's emails every. single. day. for more than a year, back to August 1, 2015. And probably longer, though that's where we stopped.

Peter Daou writes: "It is an unfathomable reality: Donald Trump, who bashes the media with unrestrained aggression, gets a day or two of tepid coverage for profoundly reckless and dangerous statements. Meanwhile Hillary cannot spend a single day campaigning without having the public reminded about a situation for which she apologized and was found by the FBI to have committed no intentional wrongdoing."

Today marks exactly one week since Trump called for the "Second Amendment people" to find a solution for Clinton getting to nominate Supreme Court justices. And I found only three mentions of it in major media today:

1. At CNN: "Yitzhak Rabin's son: 'Words do kill'."

2. At USA Today: "Yuval Rabin: My father was killed at a moment like this."

3. At the Boston Globe: "Donald Trump lays out plan to fight ISIS."

That's it. One week after Trump tacitly incited the assassination of Clinton, there are three articles about it in major media, two of which are because Yuval Rabin is speaking out about it.

Meanwhile, we have had daily mentions of Clinton's email usage for more than a year.

Our media is broken. Profoundly broken.

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Discussion Thread: Trump Dread

[Content Note: Bigotry; anxiety.]

I'm hearing (and feeling myself) a lot of anxiety and anger about Donald Trump's candidacy. Not even necessarily about the possibility he may become president—although that, too—but about just his candidacy and the hatred and violence his rhetoric and policy are inciting.

And I've read a couple of articles lately about couples in which one of them supports Trump, which is devastating the other, and I know that lots of people are experiencing conflict with family members, friends, and coworkers on social media and sometimes face-to-face.

So, if you need to express feelings of stress, anger, regret, fear, frustration, whatever, about Trump's candidacy, his potential presidency, and/or the strife you're experiencing because of interaction with his supporters, etc., here's a place to do it.

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Zelda the Black and Tan Mutt standing in front of me with her chin on my knee, looking up at me
"Two-Legs, may I have some cuddles, please?"
(The answer, of course, was yes. The answer is always yes.)

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: Flooding; death; displacement] No words: "An enormous and slow-moving rainstorm has laid waste to much of southern Louisiana, which the National Weather Service has called a '1,000-year' disaster. By Monday afternoon, more than 20,000 residents had been rescued from the historic floodwaters, and as many as seven had died. People here stay prepared for hurricanes, and all the cataclysm they bring. But this storm did not arrive with noise and velocity; instead it unfolded over several days, sneaking up almost without notice. Then the rivers topped their banks."

[CN: War] Um. "Russian bombers launched attacks in Syria from an Iranian air base for the first time on Tuesday, potentially altering the political and military equation in the Middle East. Long-range Tupolev-22M3 bombers, which would otherwise have to fly from Russia, used an Iranian base near Hamadan to hit a series of targets inside Syria, according to a brief statement from the Russian Defense Ministry. The agreement to let Russia use the base significantly deepens the country’s military role in the region, most obviously in Iran."

[CN: War on agency] In good news: "An effort to defund Ohio Planned Parenthood affiliates by Gov. John Kasich (R) and the Republican-held legislature has come to an end. Judge Michael R. Barrett of the U.S. District Court of the Southern District of Ohio on Friday ruled in Planned Parenthood's favor, granting a permanent injunction on an anti-choice state law."

[CN: Healthcare access; video may autoplay at link] Goddammit: "Health insurer Aetna Inc. will stop selling individual Obamacare plans next year in 11 of the 15 states where it had been participating in the program, joining other major insurers that have pulled out of the government-run markets in the face of mounting losses. Aetna will exit markets including North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Florida, and keep selling plans on state exchanges only in Iowa, Delaware, Nebraska, and Virginia, according to a statement Monday evening. In most areas it's exiting, Aetna will offer individual coverage outside of the program's exchanges. The decision is the latest blow to President Barack Obama's signature domestic policy accomplishment." Yes, and, rather more importantly, the latest blow to people who need healthcare access.

[CN: Racism; video may autoplay at link] What the fuck: "A New Mexico restaurateur is stirring the pot once again with his questionable 'Black Olives Matter' branding—this time on T-shirts and hats. Paisano's owner Rick Camuglia, who came under fire last month for erecting a Black Lives Matter-riffing sign to shill his olive tapenade, recently began selling the merch to offer customers a souvenir from the Italian eatery. 'It's just something to do that's kind of fun now,' Camuglia told local ABC affiliate KOAT, which first reported the news. ...Though many commenters on the Albuquerque joint's Facebook page raged against the political correctness machine and told dissenters to 'quit being a bunch of pansies,' several others panned the restaurant for trivializing a serious social movement." I GUESS BOTH SIDES HAVE A POINT OH WELL. Seethe.

[CN: Video may autoplay at link] President Obama 'Tired' of Talking About Donald Trump. You and me both, Mr. President.

[CN: Misogyny] Hey, COOL HEADLINE, Newsweek. "Meet Hillary Clinton's Inner Circle, the Queenmakers Who Won't Rest Until She's President." #HillaryCoverageIsCrap

Lolsob foreverrrr: "CNN's Carol Costello and guest Errol Louis lose it over Mike Pence campaigning with Marco Rubio, who just called Trump a 'con artist' but said he'd still support him." Laughing all the way to America's future nightmare hellscape!

[CN: Misogynist slur, but used positively] This guy really, really, really loves Hillary Clinton!

[CN: Misogyny] Gee, this narrative seems familiar... "It seems that if Ghostbusters wasn't perfect from the second it appeared in theaters, it would be branded a flop, talked about as if it were a flop, no matter what was actually happening."

[CN: Moving gif at link] "This impossibly cute sea creature looks like a googly-eyed cartoon octopus." As advertised!

And finally! PERFECT LIFE. [Video Description: A small tabby cat naps with a toy in a suspended glass bowl, slowly spinning.]

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Top Five

Here is your topic: Top Five Best Days of Your Life.

1. The day Iain and I went hiking in Glen Affric.
2. The day of my 40th birthday party.
3. The day after President Obama was elected, spent walking around Chicago with Iain and the Space Cowpokes.
4. The day Olivia came back after being missing for three days.
5. The day we bought our house.

Please feel welcome to share stories about why your Top Five picks are what they are, though a straight-up list is fine, too. Please refrain from negatively auditing other people's lists, because judgment discourages participation.

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"Hillary’s life has been preparation for this very moment."

I've got a new essay at BNR about Hillary Clinton, her exceptional campaign, and what an extraordinary candidate she is—and would be no matter against whom she was running.

Hillary's life has been preparation for this very moment. She has built a career fighting for educational and housing rights, for women's workplace rights, for healthcare access, for reproductive rights, for people – children and women and first responders and veterans and people who need jobs, childcare, food. For marginalized people who need someone in power to recognize their value, their humanity.

She was listening, and learning, and figuring out how to be a change-maker as a student. As a young attorney. As the First Lady of Arkansas. As the First Lady of the United States. As a U.S. Senator. As a presidential candidate. As Secretary of State. And still, even now, as the first female nominee of a major party in the nation's history.

Long before she even considered that she might one day be president, she was nonetheless preparing for the role – by living a life in pursuit of being as effective an advocate for change as she could be, which eventually led her toward the presidency.

She hasn't spent a lifetime figuring out how to be president. She's spent a lifetime becoming one.

So when we look at the glaring disparities between her opponent, calamitously unfit by every conceivable measure, we shouldn't judge her by his rock-bottom garbage standard, but by the extraordinary standard she has set.
Head on over to read the whole thing.

And, in one of my favorite Twitter responses ever to something I've written:

screen cap of tweet about my article from some dude reading: '@peterdaou Melissa McEwan brushes off the email issue to avoid connecting it
to the foundation questions, which she ignores.  Millennial.' to which I have responded: 'You're about 20 years off, but thanks!'

I feel like I just got carded at a bar.

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Oh, Andy Murray

[Content Note: Misogyny.]

John Inverdale is an ass, and Andy Murray is terrific:

Following tennis player Andy Murray's second consecutive Olympic gold medal win Sunday night, casual sexism reared its ugly head once again in a post-game interview.

According to the Evening Standard, when BBC reporter John Inverdale praised Murray for being the first "person" to win two Olympic medals in tennis, Murray interjected with a gentle reminder that women are people too.

"You're the first person ever to win two Olympic tennis gold medals," Inverdale said. "That's an extraordinary feat, isn't it?"

"I think Venus and Serena [Williams] have won about four each," he said.

Doing some on-the-spot fact-checking, Murray clarified he had only made history for being the first to win two consecutive gold medals for the singles title, not in Olympic tennis overall. Indeed, Venus and Serena Williams each have one gold in tennis singles and three in doubles, the latter hardware earned as a team.
BOOM! Murray's response—which is what anyone in his position should have said, but we all know damn well how rare it is all the same—got kudos from lots of people, including First Minister of Scotland Nicola Sturgeon.


Murray didn't come to this moment by accident. He has long had a female coach, Amélie Mauresmo, and seeing up close the "criticism and prejudice" she has faced on the basis of her gender affected him: "Have I become a feminist? Well, if being a feminist is about fighting so that a woman is treated like a man then yes, I suppose I have."

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This Guy Is Terrifying

[Content Note: White nationalism; anti-immigrationism; racism.]

Yesterday, during his foreign policy address, Donald Trump proposed what's essentially a purity test for immigrants. I have a new essay about that up at BNR:

We must view this latest intolerably offensive proposal within the context that my colleague Peter Daou has laid out in three parts – that Trump is not strictly running a presidential campaign at all, but "purposely working to lead an uprising of the extreme right, to be a 'heroic' figurehead for white nationalism, to create an atmosphere of violence, intimidation, and nullification."

Trump is no longer running to be president (if he ever was), but to be a historical figure with a legend bigger than even the U.S. presidency can confer. He is not seeking fame, but infamy. And losing the U.S. presidency would cast him as a martyr to a far right, white nationalist movement, whose members greet with cheers every brick he's laying in the foundation of this martyrdom – rigged elections, a corrupt establishment, political correctness run amok.

And to understand the true devilry of this proposal, and the crucial role it plays in further outreach to white nationalists, one must understand the nature of immigration in the United States. Specifically, the history of a racial hierarchy in immigrant preferences.

...It is within this newly-empowered long-term movement of white nationalism that Trump's "ideological test" for immigrants must be viewed. This is not just another "stupid" idea from a man running an "incompetent" campaign. It is instead another terrifying dog whistle to his white nationalist supporters that they can count on him to carry their mantle.
Head on over to read the whole thing.

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Open Thread

image of red apples

Hosted by apples.

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Question of the Day

Suggested by Shaker GreyLadyBast: "What is your favorite cartoon and why? 'I don't like cartoons because [reasons]' is of course a valid answer."

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Two-Minute Nostalgia Sublime

[Content Note: There is some flickery lighting in this video.]



Fiona Apple: "Shadowboxer"

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The Monday Blogaround

This blogaround brought to you by beets.

Recommended Reading:

Shane: Usain Bolt: The Greatest Showman on Earth

Ragen: [Content Note: Fat stereotypes] What Fat Olympians Prove (And What They Don't)

Chauncey: [CN: Eliminationism; racism; misogyny] Donald Trump's Violent Rhetoric Is the Lingua Franca of American Conservatives in the Age of Obama

Jim: [CN: Racism; racist imagery/language; auditing] How Not to Respond to Accusations of Racism: World Fantasy Convention Edition

TLC: [CN: Transphobia] Wisconsin Transgender Student Asks Court to Take Immediate Action to Stop Discriminatory Policy Before School Starts

Samantha: [CN: Description of snake encounter] Yep, I Still Hate Weather

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

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Quote of the Day

[Content Note: Terrorism.]


"By the way, under those eight years, before Obama came along, we didn't have any successful radical Islamic terrorist attack in the United States. They all started when Clinton and Obama got into office."—Rudy Giuliani, who, as I note in my piece at BNR, was the Mayor of NYC on September 11, 2001, and whose 2008 presidential run was once summed up by Joe Biden as "a noun, a verb, and 9/11."

If you watch the video, you can see that he knows what he's saying is complete bullshit, but he says it anyway, because Donald Trump and his surrogates will say literally anything in order to try to harm Hillary Clinton and President Barack Obama.

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Whut.

[Content Note: Gender essentialism; policing masculinity; disablism; abuse.]

What in the hell is this, and why on earth was it posted at the Washington Post's Wonkblog? "Today's men are not nearly as strong as their dads were, researchers say."

I'm having a hard time deciding what the worst part of this is: Is it the image of the "Muscle Beach" strongman, labeled "This is your dad. He can still crush you like a twig."? No, that is not my dad, and what a "funny" thing to say about dads when so many people have survived physical abuse at the hands of their fathers.

Or is it the information that fundamentally undercuts the entire purpose of the article, offered essentially as an aside?

Now, there is a caveat here. The participants in the North Carolina study were recruited from college and university settings, so they're not representative of the population as a whole. If you were to look exclusively at young adults who never went to college, for instance, you might get different results.
Or is it the exclusive definition as "strong" as muscular strength?

Or it is this glib har-harring? "A new study in press at the Journal of Hand Therapy (yes, a real thing)..." The friend who sent this article to me noted in her email: "Why the fuck wouldn't that be a real thing? As someone who has had multiple rounds of hand therapy, I resent the implication that a journal dedicated to that subspecialty is somehow ridiculous."

What's ridiculous is this article. All of it. What's ridiculous is that it was commissioned, written (by someone presumably paid for their work), edited, and published, and nowhere in that process did anyone say: "You know, maybe this is dogshit."

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Dudley the Greyhound lying in a blue armchair, gazing out the window
This guy. ♥

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: Toxic water; racism; classism] East Chicago, Indiana, is poised to become the next Flint: "The unfolding health emergency in East Chicago is a window into a larger environmental justice crisis playing out in neighborhoods across the country. And the historically minority, lower-income residents of the Calumet neighborhood will suffer the consequences." Rage. Seethe. Boil. Alongside a total lack of surprise.

[CN: Police brutality; racism; death] This terrible case in the UK is a necessary and terrible reminder that Tasers are deadly, too: "The former Aston Villa footballer Dalian Atkinson has died after police Tasered him near his father's home in Telford. West Mercia police said a 48-year-old man had died. It is understood the man was Atkinson, who also played for Sheffield Wednesday and Ipswich Town. He is believed to have been visiting his 85-year-old father, Ernest. ...Neighbours said the former footballer had made frequent visits in his Porsche. Matthew Bothwell said: 'Every time he would come he would have crowds around him. It's a close-knit community. I just can't bear to think what his family are going through.' Tina Bothwell said: 'He was loving, caring and got on with everybody in the street. He always got on with the kids because they absolutely loved his car.' Another resident, Paula Quinn, said Atkinson appeared to be 'almost staggering' in the street before he was Tasered. She said he went down 'like a lead balloon' after being hit by the stun gun." Fucking hell.

[CN: Police brutality; guns; racism] Meanwhile, in Milwaukee: "Shots have been fired during new protests in the US city of Milwaukee, police say, as demonstrators took to the streets for a second night. Protests erupted on Saturday after Sylville Smith, 23, was shot dead in a police chase. Mayor Tom Barrett said Smith, an African-American, did not drop a gun he was holding when told to do so. ...Milwaukee police chief Edward Flynn did not say what prompted officers to stop Smith's car, saying only that he was 'behaving suspiciously'."

[CN: Islamophobia] "The mayor of Cannes has banned overtly religious clothing on the beach and in public swimming pools... Muslim women who opt for modest dress but still wish to be integrated in public space have in recent years adopted full-body swimsuits, known as 'burkinis.' This decree, however, compromises the freedom of Muslim women, and more specifically, those who have decided to adopt a modest attire. So what's the reason Cannes Mayor David Lisnard decided to ban burkinis? The order states: 'Beachwear which ostentatiously displays religious affiliation, when France and places of worship are currently the target of terrorist attacks, is liable to create risks of disrupting public order.' Lisnard also described the full-body swimsuit as a 'symbol of Islamic extremism.' This suggests that Muslim women who choose to wear headscarves and cover their bodies are symbols of extremist groups such as the Islamic State, and are therefore enemies of France." This is appalling.

[CN: War on agency] The Guttmacher Institute has published a new report, "Time to Appointment and Delays in Accessing Care Among U.S. Abortion Patients," which has explored the pressures which contribute to "the time lapsed between making an appointment and obtaining abortion services," the average for which is 7.6 days. A highly recommended read.

Welp: "Handwritten ledgers show $12.7 million in undisclosed cash payments designated for [Donald Trump's campaign chair Paul] Manafort from Mr. Yanukovych's pro-Russian political party from 2007 to 2012, according to Ukraine's newly formed National Anti-Corruption Bureau. Investigators assert that the disbursements were part of an illegal off-the-books system whose recipients also included election officials." Naturally, Manafort denies it.

Eric Boehlert: "How Clinton Emails Became the New Whitewater: A 'Scandal' in Search of a Crime. ...Today, the only lynch pin still holding this non-story together is the media's beloved 'optics': the story doesn't look good. The story has 'raise[d] questions.' You know what else 'raise[d] questions'? The fact that in 2013 Donald Trump wrote a $25,000 check to help reelect Florida Republican Attorney General Pam Bondi just six days after her office announced it was reviewing allegations of fraud against the Trump University enterprise. After the generous check arrived, the Florida attorney general said the state wasn't going to investigate Trump University. That's a political access story worthy of extraordinarily focus and coverage. But few news organizations seem interested: Since that story broke in June, The Washington Post and New York Times have published just a handful of articles noting Trump's convenient $25,000 donation to Bondi, according to Nexis. By contrast, since June the Times and Post have published more than 200 Clinton email stories."

[CN: Misogynist slur, but used positively] RuPaul's endorsement of Hillary Clinton is pretty terrific: "If you're a politician—not just in Washington but in business and industry, you have to be a politician—there are a lot of things that you have to do that you're not proud of. There are a lot of compromises you have to make because it means that you can get this other thing over here. And if you think that you can go to fucking Washington and be rainbows and butterflies the whole time, you're living in a fucking fantasy world. So now, having said that, think about what a female has to do with that: All of those compromises, all of that shit, double it by ten. And you get to understand who this woman is and how powerful, persuasive, brilliant, and resilient she is. Any female executive, anybody who has been put to the side—women, blacks, gays—for them to succeed in a white-male-dominated culture is an act of brilliance. Of resilience, of grit, of everything you can imagine. So, what do I think of Hillary? I think she's fucking awesome. Is she in bed with Wall Street? Goddammit, I should hope so! You've got to dance with the devil. So which of the horrible people do you want? That's more of the question. Do you want a pompous braggart who doesn't know anything about diplomacy? Or do you want a badass bitch who knows how to get shit done? That's really the question."

Umm. "Ivanka Trump on Sunday took an afternoon of her family vacation in Croatia to walk through the scenic city of Dubrovnik with Wendi Deng Murdoch. Deng, who was divorced from Rupert Murdoch in 2013 and who has been linked romantically to Russian strongman Vladimir Putin in recent months, was pictured in an Instagram photo alongside the GOP nominee's daughter posted to Trump's account."

RIP Fyvush Finkel: "Fyvush Finkel, a longtime bastion of Yiddish theatre and actor who appeared on the stage of vaudeville, Broadway, television and film, died Sunday at his Manhattan home. He was 93." My condolences to his family, friends, colleagues, and fans.

[CN: Bugs; image of cockroaches at link] Good grief—like the heat isn't bad enough on its own: "Apparently, a delightful side effect of New York City in the summertime is that it's the perfect weather for inspiring American Cockroaches to take flight, experts said. 'In hot steam tunnels, something with the temperature and the humidity encourages them to fly,' said Ken Schumann, an entomologist at Bell Environmental Services. 'When it's warm and steamy that seems to be what they like.' The American Museum of Natural History's resident bug expert, Louis Sorkin, added that 'with more heat they have more use of their muscles.'"

And finally! An adorable "swimming" chihuahua! LOL!

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