In the News

Here are a couple of links of interest from the news today:

HILLARY CLINTON FTW!!!

Video clip of Hillary Clinton speaking at the Black Women's Agenda symposium today: "I'm thrilled to be with you. I'm thrilled to be associated with you. I'm also thrilled to be back on the campaign trail! [audience cheers] As the world knows, I was a little under the weather recently. The good news is: My pneumonia finally got some Republicans interested in women's health."
Ahhhhhhhhhhhhhahahahahahaha!

[Content Note: Racism] Over at Shareblue, we've got the lowdown on Donald Trump's "birther" sideshow today. "It is reprehensible that the Republican candidate for the U.S. presidency would treat as 'suspenseful' his position on a racist conspiracy theory designed to delegitimize the nation's first Black president. Cable nets played along with this ruse and got humiliated. As they waited for him to appear, he forced them to play an extended campaign commercial with a series of speakers who lauded his 'leadership.'" More at the link.

The WaPo's Greg Sargent, who has been great at pushing back on the media's obsequeience to Trump, summed it up pretty well:


[CN: Terrorism; death; self-harm] Fucking hell: "A suicide bomber shouted 'Allahu akbar' and blew himself up in a packed mosque in northwestern Pakistan, killing at least 25 people and wounding 30 during Friday prayers, a local official said. No group immediately claimed responsibility for the bombing in Payee Khan, a village in Mohmand Agency that is part of the lawless Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) bordering Afghanistan." My thoughts are with the people of Peshawar.

[CN: Police brutality; death; racism] "The family of a black Virginia teen who was fatally shot by a white police officer last year has agreed to settle a lawsuit for $1 million, the Associated Press reports. Earl Lewis Jr., the spokesman for the family of William Chapman II, told AP that although Chapman's mother has agreed verbally to the figure, she believes that her son's life was worth more." Blub. Yes it was.

In good news: "A federal appellate court on Wednesday rejected Louisiana's attempt to defund Planned Parenthood, marking a victory for thousands of Medicaid patients and reproductive health access in the state."

I love this picture of a caiman wearing a crown of butterflies.

What have you been reading?

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Olivia the White Farm Cat strolling around the living room, a blur of motion
Another day, another failure to get a picture of Olivia being still.

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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Dear Doctor: It's Not Me. It's You.

[Content Note: Diet talk, fat hatred, body shame, weight loss, weight gain, disordered eating, fat-related medical malpractice.]

Dear Doctor:

Breaking up is always hard to do. I can't believe it's come to that point. You treated me with such compassion and understanding when my mother died, talking me through the physical effects of grief, and helping me find the right antidepressant medicines for the short term and the longer term. For that I will always be grateful. And yeah, from the beginning, you gave me little suggestions like “eat a weight loss diet” and “how about losing a few pounds,” but you didn’t seem to push it. After all, I was physically active, and jogging on a regular basis, and my numbers (save for my underactive thyroid) looked pretty good.

True, you were ridiculously excited if I came in and my weight was 3 pounds lower than the last time. I didn’t have the heart to tell you that it was the difference between weighing me after my period vs. before. But I never thought it would go so wrong.

I think it goes back to that time I twisted my ankle rather badly. I had to give up running, on a temporary basis at least. Let me take responsibility for my actions: I did a poor job at finding replacement exercise. I felt pretty bad about putting on a swimsuit, for one thing. The long and the short of it is, I didn’t exercise, and my numbers didn’t look so great any more. I had new stress on my life, taking on the directorship of a program at my university. You pushed the diet talk more aggressively. Finally, after months of it, and because I felt I had to be the “good fatty” for you, I agreed to try one of the diet pills you wanted to prescribe.

I’ll never forget how your face lit up, how I so clearly crossed from Bad Fatty to Good Fatty in your eyes. You got misty-eyed and said you were glad I was doing this for myself. I replied something like “Well, no, I’m trying this because of your advice on my health.” But I don’t think you heard me, not really. You definitely did not hear me when I disclosed my history of disordered eating, because the drug you put me on, Contrave (which is a combination of the antidepressant wellbutrin and the anti-addiction drug naltrexone) is specifically not recommended for those with a history of disordered eating. But more on that later.

I actually liked being on Contrave—not for weight loss but for its mental effects. The combination left me more focused than wellbutrin alone, less likely to “dither,” as my mother would have said. It’s too bad it’s a “weight loss drug,” because I bet it could be used for its psychological effects alone, and be very helpful for some people. I felt confident enough put on a bathing suit for the first time in 10 years. I rediscovered swimming, which although I’m not so great at, I do enjoy.

I also tried jogging again, building up from walking, but I discovered something new: a sharp pain and bulging muscle in my right leg after running for about 10 minutes. I went back to you and asked about it, confident that since you are a runner you’d give good advice. You said it was “probably an injury” and recommended I slow down my raining and walk/run on even ground always. You also suggested switching to pool running for some workouts, and I did. And that was okay; pool jogging is fun! I tried this for a few months, then tried regular jogging programs again. Again, I was sidelined by pain in the same area and the same horribly bulging leg muscle.

When I tried to talk to you about it, you said it was probably an old injury. I asked about sports medicine or physical therapy. You shrugged, said it would probably not help, and said I could bicycle or do aerobics instead. Two activities I really don’t enjoy. You also decided that the 6 pounds I had lost on Contrave weren’t enough, and switched me to phentermine. Again, I mentioned having a history of disordered eating. I asked about going off of any antidepressant. You said, “oh, it has a stimulating effect. You won’t need an antidepressant.”

Now, I didn’t have a pharmacological dictionary at that moment, but as soon as I looked up phentermine, I learned that it’s basically speed. My blood pressure had been high, and yet you prescribed this. I had a history of disordered eating, and you prescribed a drug definitely not for those with this problem. Why?

Still, I tried to follow your advice. And you know what? I was a nervous wreck. Sure, I didn’t feel like eating much. But I was jumpy, couldn’t sleep, and my stress levels went through the roof. What the hell was I doing on this drug?

I quit the drug. I tried to walk a few times a week, but my interest in exercise was nil. I was depressed. I felt terrible about myself. And I dreaded going to see you because I knew I’d have to deal with diet talk.

Yes, that’s right. Your fat hatred made me not want to see you, to dread seeing you. Even for problems that had nothing to do with weight, because I knew weight loss would come up.

I finally came in for a physical. I was 10 pounds heavier than when we started. My test results were terrible. There were red flags everywhere. And your answer?

You suggested bariatric surgery.

Now, I am not a medical doctor, but I looked up bariatric surgery on my phone, in your office, and asked if it was really for me. I pointed out that I wasn’t in the weight range for which it’s really recommended. I asked about the considerable risks. You said that I could try something else for a while—maybe eliminate all fat from my diet and see how that worked. I asked about going back on an antidepressant. You never responded to that question.

I’ll never forget that day. Because I also brought up pain while urinating and my suspicion of having a bladder infection. You looked at my test results and confirmed that there were white blood cells in my urine, but…it was probably just from having eaten a fatty meal.

To be clear: I asked you about a bladder infection and you reiterated that I should try a non-fat diet.

That’s when I left your office for the last time.

An urgent care doc confirmed the bladder infection and after antibiotics I felt much better.

I was also doing some thinking.

I hated to leave you. Once upon a time you had been a caring doctor who seemed to listen. But once I stepped on your weight loss train, nothing could make you get off from that track. You didn’t listen. At all.Again, you prescribed a non-fat diet for a bladder infection. You had become one of those doctors that fat people tell horror stories about.

I was trapped in one of those doctor-patient relationships that ultimately kills fat people. It took me a while to realize this, as depressed and unhappy as I was, but I finally recognized our relationship for what it was: deadly.

It was time to go.

I know it’s probably tacky to talk about my new doctor here. (And I recognize how privileged I am to be in a position to be able to GET a new doctor.) After asking friends for recommendations of physicians who weren’t fat-phobic, I’m so far pretty happy with my new doc. He’s not a fan of diet pills, and listened carefully when I talked about a history of disordered eating (and he wrote it down, which I can’t recall you ever doing.). He listened to my discussion of stress and depression and agreed that going back on my old antidepressant would be a good idea. He listened carefully to my description of what had happened to my leg when running, asked about my flexibility, and came to a totally different conclusion: I wasn’t stretching enough. He talked about blood flow and unstretched muscles, and took the time to recommend a stretching program, as well as a local yoga class that specifically focuses on stretching and flexibility. He also looked at my shoes, talked with me about my stride, and recommended a place to get effective consultation on my running shoes. My numbers were terrible, but instead of saying I should give up fat, he suggested I try the exercise modifications, focus on stress management, and come back for a second round of tests in two months.

I’ve started the increased stretching, and man, has it made a difference. The antidepressant is helping me stay focused. I’ve gone back to the pool, am walking almost every day now, and even started a slow walk/ jog program. I got out my old weights and started a little strength training. And I feel so much better, because a key part of managing stress for me is getting lots of exercise. I don’t do it to lose weight, but to take care of myself. And for the first time in a long time, I feel like I am worth taking care of.

Here’s the thing, doc. I’m a feminist with lots of knowledge about fat hatred. I spent years overcoming my negative self image, and frankly I’m not all the way yet. And even so, you were able to pressure me into going along with your (futile and counterproductive) weight loss “program,” because I felt like it was necessary to get decent care from you. What's it like for people who aren't conversant with HAES (Health At Every Size)? By almost every measure, my health got worse: my cholesterol and other numbers, my blood pressure, my anxiety, my stress levels, and even ultimately, my weight that you care so much about. Far from getting better care from you, I couldn’t get you to see my health as anything other than completely centered on weight loss.

I know you probably won’t see this. But I’m hoping other people will. Maybe even some of those doctors who think that treating fat people this way is somehow promoting “health.” I would ask them: What would you rather have: a patient who is fat but whose stress is managed, whose blood pressure is good, whose lab results are in the desired range… or, a patient who loses some weight but who reports worsening stress levels and whose blood pressure goes up? When a fat patient discloses a history of disordered eating, do you assume that means they overeat? Or do you understand that fat people could have been anorexic and/or bulimic? When they report a sports injury, do you take it as seriously as you would in a thin person? Or do you assume they probably shouldn’t be doing that activity anyway, because they’re fat?

Anyway, Doc, I’m sorry it had to end this way, because I think you actually do care about your patients. I’ll always be grateful for the care you gave when my mother died. But I just couldn’t go on like this.

It’s really not me. It’s you.

Sincerely,

Aphra

[ETA: Commenting note: I am not soliciting healthcare advice in this post, and would be grateful if comments did not include such. Thanks.]

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Gross

Last night, Donald Trump appeared on The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon, and this screenshot is all you need to know about how it went:

screen shot of Jimmy Fallon ruffling Donald Trump's hair, while they both smile

OMG YOU GUYS DONZO LET JIMMY RUFFLE HIS HAIR! HOW ADORBZ! I guess he's not a supremely dangerous white nationalist AFTER ALL! He's really just a big lovable and super relatable dude!

If you are so inclined, you can view the entire clip at Shareblue.

Some people are asking what one would expect from a Tonight Show appearance, to which I will reply: There's nothing requiring Jimmy Fallon to have Donald Trump on his show in the first place.

It's a choice whether you want to have a disgusting bigot on your show and treat him like a fun bit of entertainment.

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ELECTION UPDATE!!!

1. Hillary Clinton returned to the campaign trail yesterday and gave a speech in North Carolina about how she's fighting to make life better for everyone, and then she also said: "Like a lot of women, I over-prepare. I sweat the details—whether we're talking about the exact level of lead in the drinking water in Flint, or the number of mental health facilities in Iowa, or the precise interest rate on your student loans, right down to the decimal. Because it's not a detail if it's your kid. It's not a detail if it's your family. It's a big deal. And it should be a big deal to your President." OMFG WHAT A MONSTER. HOW DARE YOU, HILLARY CLINTON!!!

2. Donald Trump got into a fight with a pastor and told lies about her, because he is terrible and there is no reboot and there is no reset and there is no new Trump and there never will be the end. Trump is Trump is Trump forever and ever. Cue the media writing their TRUMP RELOADED stories.

3. Our national media is garbage.

4. Tim Kaine continues to be very delightful and also makes good and serious points about how Donald Trump is a terrible candidate. I hope he's never sent or received any emails or started a foundation that has saved millions of lives or coughed or sat on a stool or felt faint from a combination of heat and pneumonia or rested against a pillow or SUSPICIOUSLY wore his purse on a different shoulder than usual one day or change his hairstyle or wear something unflattering. Although it probably doesn't matter, because he's a dude.

5. Mike Pence continues to be the absolute fucking worst.

52 more days of this shit.

That about sums it up! Discuss.

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Come On

[Content Note: Misogyny.]

So, Matthew Yglesias wrote this piece for Vox. I'm not going to link to it. You can find it if you're so inclined. Its headline is: "The race is tightening for a painfully simple reason."

It's all about how the race is tightening because Hillary Clinton is unlikeable.

Here are some actual sentences you'll find in this piece:

"[D]espite her campaign's emphasis on Trump's weirdness and unpopularity, that isn't the only force shaping this race. It's profoundly unusual across two other dimensions—the strength of third party candidates and the weakness of the frontrunner—that will probably prevent Clinton from ever opening up a sustained comfortable lead unless she can do something to make herself better-liked."

"Clinton is a freakishly unpopular frontrunner."

"Despite a couple of days' worth of bad polls, Clinton still leads in national polling averages. It remains the case that if the election were held tomorrow, she would win. In that context, her 42-56 favorable/unfavorable split in national polling is truly, freakishly bad."

"It's simply going to be very hard for Clinton to open up the kind of stable lead that her supporters think Trump's awfulness deserves while she herself is so little-liked."

"But the fact remains that her basic problem in this race is almost painfully simple. Over the course of her winning primary campaign she became a deeply unpopular figure."

Welp.

She just became unpopular. Like magic! She needs to "do something to make herself better-liked." Oh good idea! I wonder if her campaign has ever thought of that? They should consider positioning her as a hardworking, super-competent, highly qualified, eminently decent, and pretty damn funny candidate instead of HISTORY'S GREATEST MONSTER. Maybe that will work!

Here, by the way, are some words that never appear anywhere in the piece:

Woman.

Gender.

Sexism.

Misogyny.

Media.

Incredibly, the only mention of the press is the observation that Libertarian candidate Gary Johnson and Green Party candidate Jill Stein "aren't receiving much scrutiny from the press or the campaigns."

An entire piece about how Hillary Clinton has "freakishly low" approval and must "do something" to be more likable, without a single mention of the media coverage of Clinton.

Amazing.

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Open Thread

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Hosted by a pink sofa. Have a seat and chat!

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Question of the Day

Suggested by Shaker Alison Rose: "What's an interesting, unusual, or just little-known fact about the town or city you live in?"

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Two-Minute Nostalgia Sublime



Timbuk 3: "The Future's So Bright"

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My Favorite Thing of the Day

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Quote of the Day

"The FDA Food Police, which dictate how the federal government expects farmers to produce fruits and vegetables and even dictates the nutritional content of dog food."—A "sentence" from a Donald Trump campaign fact sheet, which has since been removed from his website, detailing why he would eliminate food safety regulations if elected.

Y'all. What is even happening.

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Sophie the Torbie Cat chilling on the back of the couch
"What?"

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 are a couple of links of interest from the news today:

[Content Note: Police brutality; misogynoir; death] "Attorneys for the Sandra Bland family say a settlement has been reached in their civil suit. Cannon Lambert, attorney for Bland's family, just told Eyewitness News the wrongful death lawsuit was settled for $1.9 million. The settlement with the Texas Department of Public Safety was capped by state statutes. The agency will pay $100,000." I don't even have words, beyond these: I'm thinking about her family and I take up space in solidarity with them.

[CN: Violent Holocaust imagery] Here's an actual thing Donald Trump, Jr. actually said today: "The media has been her number one surrogate in this. Without the media, this wouldn't even be a contest, but the media has built her up. They've let her slide on every in-discrepancy, on every lie, on every DNC game trying to get Bernie Sanders out of this thing. If Republicans were doing that, they'd be warming up the gas chamber right now." That, by the way, is a favorite insult of the alt-right. This campaign continues to mainstream and make direct appeals to white nationalism.

[CN: Misogyny; homophobia] Ivanka Trump did an interview with Cosmo about her dad's new "child care and maternity leave" policy, and it went about as well as you'd expect. What a terrific family.

If you care, Hillary Clinton and Tim Kaine released additional medical information. It does not, however, include video of colonoscopies, so I don't know if it's as transparent at it could be.

Also Donald Trump had a neato conversation with Dr. Oz about his health. Sounds about right.

"President Obama on Thursday created the Atlantic Ocean's first United States marine monument, preserving an expanse of sea canyons and underwater mountains off the New England coast as he races to use his executive power to protect vast stretches of land and water before he leaves office." I love late second-term Obama SO MUCH.

What have you been reading?

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And Again

[Content Note: Police brutality; racism; guns; death.]

Last night, a police officer in Columbus, Ohio, shot and killed a 13-year-old Black boy named Tyree King. This is the police account of what happened:

Police in Columbus, Ohio, say officers were responding to a reported armed robbery Wednesday night when they encountered a person who pulled what appeared to be a gun from his waistband.

...The Columbus police said that officers were called about an armed robbery just after 7:40 p.m. Wednesday. When they arrived, the alleged robbery victim told officers that a group of people — one carrying what appeared to be a gun — demanded money, according to the police.

Officers then saw three people who matched the descriptions given and approached them. Two ran away, and the officers followed them into an alley and went to take them into custody, police said. At that point, "one suspect pulled a gun from his waistband," police officials said, and was shot by an officer.

...An officer opened fire, hitting this person "multiple times," according to Columbus police officials. He was pronounced dead not long afterward.

Early Thursday morning, police said the person killed was 13-year-old Tyree King. Detectives processing the area where the shooting occurred found what they said appeared to be a handgun, but "upon further inspection, it was determined to be a BB gun with an attached laser site," according to a statement from the Columbus police.
If you're thinking this sounds a lot like the killing of 12-year-old Tamir Rice in Cleveland, you're not wrong.

Some people may reflexively feel compelled to note, however, that Tamir Rice was merely playing on a playground, while Tyree King was a suspect in a robbery. But there's a reason I noted the above description of the crime is the police account. Because, as you may or may not recall, the original police account of Tamir Rice's murder was that he had been "threatening people with a gun" and pulled his (toy) gun out of his waistband, which video then showed to be utterly false.

So forgive me if I'm not inclined to unquestioningly believe the police account of one of their officers fatally shooting a child with a toy. Especially since that officer has reportedly been involved in three shootings in the last six years.

Now, all that said, even if it turns out that Tyree King had been involved in a robbery, that is still not a capital offense.

The Columbus police don't wear body cameras, so there is no known video of the shooting. There are, however, some witnesses. And as we have seen over and over, witness accounts tend to differ from the official account, so we'll have to wait and see if that's the case here.

My condolences to Tyree King's family, friends, classmates, and community. I'm so sorry.

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This Is a Post About Me and Nobody Else

Often, when I travel, I get dehydrated. I can drink so much water and I still get dehydrated! It's very frustrating. When I am traveling around a lot, right in a row, I get so dehydrated that by the end of my journey I am basically just a pile of dust.

Sometimes, when I get dehydrated, I get a cough. A real hacker of a nagging cough. If I am talking a lot, it makes that cough even worse. Yikes that stupid cough.

The thing is, because I am a cis woman with the expected anatomy, when I cough really hard, sometimes it makes me pee. It's like, I don't even feel like I have to pee but I'm peeing anyway! Sometimes I just peed five minutes ago. WHERE IS THE PEE COMING FROM?!

And I'm a 42-year-old lady who's never had a baby and has no medical conditions that affect my continence (is that a word?), not, as just a totally random example, a 68-year-old lady who has had a baby. I can only imagine what it might be like if I were a completely hypothetical 68-year-old lady who has had a baby and was traveling all the time and talking and coughing!

And when I'm dehydrated from traveling, or talking, or from having pneumonia, I know I need to HYDRATE HYDRATE HYDRATE but also the more water I drink, the more likely I am to pee when I cough.

I had to explain this to a male friend of mine last week. Because I've been sick, I have a cough, and I had to tell him: Can you come over to my house instead of me coming to your house? Because at my house is a dresser full of clean underpants in case I pee myself from coughing.

I wasn't thrilled to have to tell my friend this thing, but he is a cis man with the expected anatomy and so he had never really thought about the whole coughing-peeing conundrum, especially when you're trying to stay hydrated while you're sick.

And also my friend laughed and understood and didn't make me feel weird or less than because I am a woman with different plumbing than he has.

Anyway. This is a story about me, and not about anyone else, and how glad I am that my job means I work at home when I'm cough-peeing and not standing in front of, say, the entire world.

I do sometimes wish, though, that women's bodies and how they work were a part of the public conversation at times other than when some dudes at fancy desks are trying to legislate what we're not allowed to do with them.

Just in case it would ever come up in our national discourse why it is that a lady in a position where no lady has ever been might have mean jokes and things said about her "inexplicable" resistance to hydrating.

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That Was a Choice

I've got a new piece up at Shareblue about how public trust in the media has fallen to a new low and why:

This is neither neutral nor objective. The media make value judgments about which stories to cover and how to cover them all the time. For example:

1. Is Hillary Clinton having pneumonia newsworthy?

2. If yes, how do we cover it? That is, do we make a straightforward report of the facts, or do we create or repurpose a frame into which we insert it?

3. If we create or repurpose a frame, what additional context, if any, do we need to provide for balance?

4. How much coverage do we dedicate to the story?

Here, the answers appear to have been: Yes; use existing false frame of "transparency"; provide very little to no balance by way of comparison with her opponent's lack of transparency on medical records; and A LOT.

Those are not the only possible answers to those questions, though the media frequently pretend that they are.

There was no requirement—by any standard—that the media were obliged to cover this story in the way that they did nor as intensely as they did.

That was a choice. And it is a choice that gets made, over and over, in order to create the news and shape it in a very particular way.
There is much more at the link.

People have lost trust in the media. And this is why.

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ELECTION UPDATE!!!

1. Hillary Clinton is SURROUNDED BY SCANDAL AND CONSPIRACY! Did you hear that her husband said yesterday that she has the flu?! BUSTED! This proves everything! ALL OF THE THINGS! Because she doesn't have the flu! She has pneumonia! And, sure, his spokesperson immediately said that he meant to say pneumonia, but WE KNOW THE TRUTH DON'T WE?! It's all a lie! Only a SINISTER MONSTER would claim to ACCIDENTALLY (yeah right!) have said "flu." It's not like half the country over 40 calls everything the flu or anything! Stomach upset? Flu. Bad cold? Flu. Pneumonia? Flu. Flu? Flu. OBVIOUSLY BILL HAS GIVEN AWAY THE CONSPIRACY WHATEVER IT IS.

2. Donald Trump had a physical from maybe a real doctor but who even knows, and apparently the results said he is fat, and that is literally the last fucking concern I have about Donald Trump. In fact, it is not a concern at all. I DO NOT CARE. What I care about is that he is a bigoted nightmare who says things like "With Iran, when they circle our beautiful destroyers with their little boats and they make gestures at our people that they shouldn't be allowed to make, they will be shot out of the water" which is A REAL THING DONALD TRUMP SAID AND I BET YOU HAVEN'T EVEN HEARD ABOUT IT BECAUSE HILLARY CLINTON HAS THE FLU PNEUMONIA AND FAILED TO ALERT THE PRESS!

3. Our national media is garbage.

4. Tim Kaine continues to be very delightful and also makes good and serious points about how Donald Trump is a terrible candidate. I hope he's never sent or received any emails or started a foundation that has saved millions of lives or coughed or sat on a stool or felt faint from a combination of heat and pneumonia or rested against a pillow or SUSPICIOUSLY wore his purse on a different shoulder than usual one day or change his hairstyle. Although it probably doesn't matter, because he's a dude.

5. Mike Pence continues to be the absolute fucking worst.

53 more days of this shit.

That about sums it up! Discuss.

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Open Thread

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Hosted by a yellow sofa. Have a seat and chat!

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Question of the Day

Suggested by Shaker Bellspice: "What do you want to be when you grow up?"

A dolphin. Obviously.

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Two-Minute Nostalgia Sublime



R.E.M.: "It's the End of the World"

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