Kellyanne Conway Strikes Again

[Content Note: Video may autoplay at first link.]

In an interview with Mike Kelly of the Bergen Record, Kellyanne Conway appeared to suggest that President Obama may have spied on Donald Trump through his microwave:

"What I can say is there are many ways to surveil each other," Conway said as the Trump presidency marked its 50th day in office during the weekend. "You can surveil someone through their phones, certainly through their television sets — any number of ways."

Conway went on to say that the monitoring could be done with "microwaves that turn into cameras," adding: "We know this is a fact of modern life."

Conway did not offer any evidence to back up her claim.
Of course she didn't. Because none exists!

After she was resoundingly criticized for disgorging such evident garbage, she appeared on CNN's New Day with Chris Cuomo, where she insisted she was making a general commentary on how spying can be done, not making a specific allegation. And then she said (emphasis mine):
"I'm not Inspector Gadget," she said. "I don't believe people are using the microwave to spy on the Trump campaign."

"However," she continued, "I'm not in the job of having evidence. That's what investigations are for. I have said many, many times throughout the week that the president is pleased that the House and Senate intelligence committees have agreed that this should be part of the investigation that already exists about Russia and the campaign, an investigation that apparently has gone nowhere so far."
"I'm not in the job of having evidence." No kidding. She's in the business of having "alternative facts."

She's in the business of making wild-ass accusations that cannot be substantiated with even a shred of evidence, and then saying that it's Congress' job to investigate whether those wild-ass accusations are true, on the taxpayer dime.

Another way of saying that: She's in the business of lying.

This entire administration is in the business of fundamentally and irreparably undermining faith in democratic institutions, in the intelligence community, in the press, and in reality itself. They want to burn it all to the ground, and everything out of Kellyanne Conway's mouth is kindling for the bonfire.

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The Trump Effect

[Content Note: Misogyny.]

This story is a week old now, but I only just saw it yesterday. Jena McGregor at the Washington Post: Men's Negotiating Styles Toward Women Grew More Aggressive after Trump's Election, Study Shows.

Wharton assistant professor Corinne Low didn't set out to test the effect Donald Trump's election might have on men's and women's negotiating patterns last year. A gender and family economist, she was looking more broadly into gender differences in communication styles, using experiments to look at how men and women negotiate with one another in a lab at Wharton, the University of Pennsylvania's business school.

But after the November election, she noticed something interesting in her data. Comparing the results from lab tests she ran during early and late October with tests she ran the week after the election, she noticed a change she called "extremely stark:" On the whole, negotiating partners were more adversarial in their chat-based communication threads. In particular, men were more aggressive when they negotiated with counterparts they knew they were female, using hardball tactics more often.

..."Not only was the communication more aggressive, it was also less effective," she said.
Low notes that their dataset can't tell them whether it's a phenomenon contained to the immediate aftermath of the election, which will diminish with time, or whether "it is something that's shifted and is going to last the entire presidency." But it was a marked departure among men, in the wake of Trump's election.

What I suspect is that Low's finding is not an anomaly. There are almost certainly measurable changes in behavior, specifically behavior of men toward women, across a wide spectrum of interactions. I don't imagine for a moment this increased aggression is limited to negotiation.

And that is very concerning.

Trump's election empowered a lot of ugliness, and now his administration endeavors each day to codify that empowerment.

I don't know where it will end. It will take a long time for us to recover, if we can.

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Today in Republican White Supremacy

[Content Note: White supremacy; nativism; Islamophobia.]

Yesterday, Republican Rep. Steve King of Iowa, who is consistently a contender for worst member of Congress, expressed his support of white supremacist Dutch politician Geert Wilders. In the same tweet, he also expressed support of a gross nativist narrative about white reproduction.

screen cap of tweet, which shows the original tweet authored by an account called 'Voice of Europe,' which reads: 'Hundreds of Islamists shouting 'Allahu Akbar' in Rotterdam, the Netherlands. Wilders is right for over 10 years. #turkijerel' and features a cartoon of Wilders sticking his finger in a dam labeled 'Western Civilization.' King's response reads: 'Wilders understands that culture and demographics are our destiny. We can't restore our civilization with somebody else's babies.'

King's tweet was met with praise from David Duke, and with horrified condemnation from all decent people.

The thing is, King's tweet isn't—or shouldn't be—surprising. (Which doesn't make it any less vile.) He has always been a rank white supremacist; he's just being even more blatant about it, feeling empowered by Donald Trump's presidency and the attendant empowerment of white nationalism.

The sentiment he's expressing here, about "restor[ing] our civilization with somebody else's babies," is, although he doesn't say it explicitly, a reference in part to declining white birth rates—which has been a grave concern of white supremacists in the U.S. for a very long time.

First, they were concerned about declining white birth rates in Europe, and then they were concerned about declining white birth rates in the U.S.. Their concerns reached a fevered pitch around 2012, when births of non-white newborns starting outpacing births of white newborns.

King is hardly the first member of the Republican Party to express these concerns: In 2014, then-Senate candidate (and now Senator) Thom Tillis of North Carolina publicly wrung his hands that "the Hispanic population and the other immigrant populations are growing in significant numbers," while "the traditional population of North Carolina and the United States is...not growing."

Declining white birth rates and the simultaneous enactment of a record number of anti-choice restrictions in state houses across the country is not a coincidence. The white male Republican legislators primarily responsible for these restrictions are trying to force white women to have more white babies.

Never mind women of color will be forced to have more babies, too, which is, in part, why Trump's white supremacist administration is ruthlessly undercutting environmental protections and jettisoning environmental justice plans like lead remediation. Communities of color disproportionately bear the costs of unregulated poisons. One of those costs is higher rates of infant and childhood mortality.

It is important to see all of these things in the same picture. Assaults on communities of color; efforts to decrease non-white birth rates, via various sterilization schemes and family disruptions (see: mass incarceration, for example), for more than a century; efforts to increase white birth rates; anti-abortion and anti-contraception strategies; conservative Christian reproductive movements like Quiverfull; conservative broadcasting showcasing huge white broods like the Duggars; anti-immigration policies; border walls; Muslim bans—it's all been a response to the idea King is expressing: White people are losing "our civilization" to "somebody else's babies."

As I've previously noted: Control over reproduction is central to white nativist nationalism. Patriarchy is an inextricable part of white supremacy.

We must acknowledge that, and we must identity it plainly, and we must resist these narratives and the strategies they underwrite with everything we've got.

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Open Thread

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Hosted by a purple sofa. Have a seat and chat.

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The Virtual Pub Is Open

image of a pub Photoshopped to be named 'The Beloved Community Pub'
[Explanations: lol your fat. pathetic anger bread. hey your gay.]

Belly up to the bar,
and be in this space together.

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The Friday Blogaround

This blogaround brought to you by turquoise.

Recommended Reading:

Rafi: [CN: Nativism] Daniela Vargas, the DACA Recipient Detained by ICE After Speaking to the Press, Is Finally Getting Released

Pam: Pondering Happiness and Joy in Times of Struggle

TransLawCenter: Now Launching…TLC's Action Center

Jendella: [CN: Misogynoir] Patriarchy and the Idealisation of Motherhood

[CN: Misogyny] This Twitter thread by Martin is a must-read.

Ryan: Are Humpback Whales Plotting to Take over the World?

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

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Shaker Gourmet

Whatcha been cooking up in your kitchen lately, Shakers?

Share your favorite recipes, solicit good recipes, share recipes you've recently tried, want to try, are trying to perfect, whatever! Whether they're your own creation, or something you found elsewhere, share away.

Also welcome: Recipes you've seen recently that you'd love to try, but haven't yet!

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So This Happened

At today's White House press briefing, Sean Spicer was asked about Donald Trump having dismissed past jobs reports as garbage, but now seems to like the newest one:

REPORTER: In the past, the president has referred to particular jobs reports as "phony" or "totally fiction." Does the president believe that this jobs report was accurate, and a fair way to measure the economy?

SPICER: Yeah, I talked to the president prior to this, and he said to quote him very clearly: "They may have been phony in the past, but it's very real now."

Spicer laughs; the reporters in the room laugh.

*jumps into Christmas tree*

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Zelda the Black and Tan Mutt curled up with her nose in a blanket on the couch
Snuggly Zelly!

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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We Resist: Day 50

a black bar with the word RESIST in white text

One of the difficulties in resisting the Trump administration, the Republican Congressional majority, and Republican state legislatures is keeping on top of the sheer number of horrors, indignities, and normalization of the aggressively abnormal that they unleash every single day.

So here is a daily thread for all of us to share all the things that are going on, thus crowdsourcing a daily compendium of the onslaught of conservative erosion of our rights and our very democracy.

Stay engaged. Stay vigilant. Resist.

* * *

Here are some things I've read today:

[Content Note: Video may autoplay at link] Pamela Brown and Jose Pagliery at CNN: Sources: FBI Investigation Continues into 'Odd' Computer Link Between Russian Bank and Trump Organization. "Federal investigators and computer scientists continue to examine whether there was a computer server connection between the Trump Organization and a Russian bank, sources close to the investigation tell CNN. Questions about the possible connection were widely dismissed four months ago. But the FBI's investigation remains open, the sources said, and is in the hands of the FBI's counterintelligence team—the same one looking into Russia's suspected interference in the 2016 election."

If you've lost track of that "widely dismissed" story from some months back, in November, I recommended this piece at Slate by Franklin Foer. And I'll go ahead and recommend it again, because it's a good summary and explanation of the server connection.

Relatedly: This thread details the finding that one of Wikileaks' IP addresses is hosted by the Russian Federation Moscow Mir Telematiki Ltd. Um.

Sharon Begley at STAT: House Republicans Would Let Employers Demand Workers' Genetic Test Results. "A little-noticed bill moving through Congress would allow companies to require employees to undergo genetic testing or risk paying a penalty of thousands of dollars, and would let employers see that genetic and other health information. Giving employers such power is now prohibited by legislation including the 2008 genetic privacy and nondiscrimination law known as GINA. The new bill gets around that landmark law by stating explicitly that GINA and other protections do not apply when genetic tests are part of a 'workplace wellness' program." This is a must-read piece. The consequences of this legislation are enormous, especially for marginalized people.

Kimberly Kindy at the Washington Post: House GOP Quietly Advances Key Elements of Tort Reform. "House Republicans are advancing a series of bills that would make changes to the civil justice system long sought by doctors and U.S. corporations, including a cap on some medical malpractice awards and new roadblocks for classes of people seeking to sue jointly to address harm. ...None of the four proposals has been aired in a congressional hearing. The House Judiciary Committee quietly voted along party lines to approve them over the past several weeks. House leaders 'are turning the legislative process into a kind of subterranean operation,' said Rep. Jamie B. Raskin (D-Md.), a leading opponent of the bills. 'While the populace is spellbound by [Trump], the conservatives in Congress are dismantling access to justice and our tort civil liability system.'" Also a must-read.

Earlier today, via the NYT's Julie Davis: "Per pool, Trump said ACA was designed to become 'a disaster' in 2017, 'that's the yr it was meant to explode, because Obama won't be here.'" So now Trump is accusing President Obama of sabotaging his own healthcare reform. For what reason? Same reason he tapped Trump Tower, I guess.

Elana Schor and Jennifer Haberkorn at Politico: Conservatives Want to Blow Up Senate Rules to Kill Obamacare. "A growing number of conservative lawmakers on Thursday urged GOP leaders to push the limits of how much of the health law they can reshape under a powerful procedural maneuver known as budget reconciliation—and to overrule the Senate parliamentarian if she doesn't decide in their favor. ...If the Senate changes precedent for what can be passed under reconciliation now, a future Senate—whether controlled by Republicans or Democrats—could enact a wide range of legislation with just a simple majority."

Eric Lipton and Suzanne Craig at the New York Times: With Trump in the White House, His Golf Properties Prosper. "On Memorial Day weekend, the Senior P.G.A. Championship will be held at the Trump National Golf Club in suburban Washington. In July, the company's course in Bedminster, N.J., is hosting another major event, the United States Women's Open. The company is also bidding to host the Scottish Open or a half-dozen other possible professional tournaments at courses it owns in spots around the world from Miami to Dubai. 'The stars have all aligned,' Eric Trump, who as executive vice president of the Trump Organization oversees all its golf properties, said on Thursday morning, while sipping an iced tea at the restaurant inside the Trump International Hotel before appearing at a promotional event for the Memorial Day tournament. 'I think our brand is the hottest it has ever been.'"

*cough* emoluments clause *cough*

[CN: Video may autoplay at link] Courtney Reagan at CNBC: Ivanka Trump's Brand Saw HUGE Online Surge in February. "Counselor to the president Kellyanne Conway got caught up in an ethics controversy for urging Americans to 'go buy Ivanka's stuff' during an interview on Fox News in early February saying 'you can find it online.' It turns out, shoppers did. Sales of Ivanka Trump merchandise dropped 26 percent online in January compared to January 2016, but the trend reversed in February. According to Slice Intelligence, online sales of Ivanka Trump merchandise swelled 207 percent in February from the prior month."

What great news all around for a great family! *jumps into Christmas tree*

[CN: Video may autoplay at link] Marina Fang at the Huffington Post: Congress Warns Donald Trump: Stop Deleting Your Tweets. "When Donald Trump or a member of his staff deletes a tweet, they may be violating federal law, two top congressmen warned the White House this week. Reps. Jason Chaffetz (R-Utah) and Elijah Cummings (D-Md.), chairman and ranking member of the House Oversight Committee, sent a letter to White House counsel Don McGahn on Wednesday expressing concerns about the Trump administration's record keeping habits and its nontransparent use of social media and other forms of electronic communication. One example the lawmakers cited is Trump's habit of misspelling and then deleting tweets, which they warned 'could pose a violation to the Presidential Records Act' if the deleted tweets are not archived."

Russell Berman at the Atlantic: Sam Brownback Might Not Be Governing Kansas Much Longer. "The president reportedly will name Governor Sam Brownback as the U.N. ambassador for food and agriculture, ending his second term nearly two years early." A promotion from his tanking governorship. Getting the same favor as the unpopular Mike Pence, though in a much less visible position.

[CN: War on agency] Nicole Knight at Rewire: Wyoming Went Decades Without New Abortion Restrictions, But Now Has Two. "The Republican-backed HB 182 requires doctors to inform patients seeking abortion care of the opportunity to view an ultrasound. HB 116, a GOP measure based on an anti-choice front group's discredited smear campaign against Planned Parenthood, makes it a crime punishable by up to 14 years in prison to sell, transfer, or distribute cells or tissues from an aborted fetus. [Republican Governor Matt Mead] reportedly signed the legislation at a ceremony attended by several dozen reproductive rights opponents."

Bryce Covert at ThinkProgress: Trump's Administration Is Nearly Three-Quarters Male So Far. "After ProPublica released a list of all the officials Trump has appointed to federal agencies, Bloomberg analyzed their gender breakdown through name analysis and crosschecking with public profiles. It found that of the 436 people hired by Trump so far, just 27 percent are women. Among the more high-profile 24 people nominated to his cabinet so far, just four are women—about 16 percent. Trump is on course to have a smaller share of women in his first cabinet than Presidents Obama or Clinton and on par with President George W. Bush."

What have you been reading that we need to resist today?

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Discussion Thread: Trump Despair

We've had two previous Trump Despair threads, first during his transition period, and again during his cabinet nomination process.

Now that we're midway through his first 100 days in office, I thought maybe some of us could use another one.

I am feeling profoundly overwhelmed by the onslaught of troubling news. Every day brings a fresh new hell. With each reminder that Trump's objective is to utterly destroy the federal government, decades of diplomacy, the economy, and everything we value, I feel deeper despair.

And I feel very concerned about the creeping normalizing of all of it.

I am figuring I'm (still) not alone in that. So here is a thread to talk about it, again, for anyone and everyone who needs it.

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Republicans Should Not Be in Charge of Healthcare Policy

[Content Note: Misogyny; classism.]

There are a lot of reasons Republicans should not be in charge of healthcare policy, like: Not believing that healthcare is a right; prioritizing corporate profits over people's health and very lives; not regarding abortion (and, in many cases, even contraception) as basic parts of healthcare. As but a few examples.

Over the past few days, Republican men in particular have been showing their asses on healthcare policy, demonstrating exactly why they cannot and should not be entrusted to decide healthcare policy for anyone.

First, there was Rep. Jason Chaffetz of Utah, saying: "Americans have choices. And they've gotta make a choice. And so maybe, rather than getting that new iPhone that they just love and they wanna go spend hundreds of dollars of that, maybe they should invest it in their own healthcare."

Then, there was Rep. Mark Meadows of North Carolina, invoking that old chestnut about how everyone can get healthcare at emergency rooms. As though a federal law mandating emergency treatment is a solution for terminal disease. Or chronic illness. Or disability. Or preventative care.

Then, there was White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer refusing to answer how many people would be covered (or lose coverage) under the Republican healthcare proposal, and instead deflecting to commentary about access, as if how many people have (or don't have) health insurance isn't a key part of the access issue.

Then, there was Speaker Paul Ryan, the intellectual [sic] leader of the GOP, revealing he does not understand and/or does not care how insurance works at the most fundamental level.


Then, there was Rep. John Shimkus of Illinois demanding to know why men should have to pay for prenatal healthcare coverage.
Democratic Rep. Mike Doyle of Pennsylvania: I'd just like to say to our friend from Oklahoma: None of us think this bill is perfect. I've never heard a single Democrat say that this bill was perfect. We knew that it needed work, and we wanted for the last seven years to work with Republicans to try to improve this bill. You guys weren't very interested in that. I'm not sure what the gentleman is talking about when he talks about mandates. What mandate in the Obamacare bill does he take issue with? Certainly not with preexisting conditions, or caps on benefits, or letting your child stay on the policy to 26. So I'm curious, what is it we're mandating—

Republican Rep. John Shimkus of Illinois: Will the gentleman yield?

Doyle: Yeah, sure.

Shimkus: What about men having to purchase prenatal care? [Doyle stutters in disbelief; murmurs throughout the chamber] I'm just— Is that not correct?

Doyle: Ah, ah, reclaiming my time!

Shimkus: Should they?!

Doyle: Reclaiming my time! There's no such thing as ala carte— [call for order] There's no such thing as ala carte insurance, John. You don't, you don't get a list and say, "Gimme that."

Shimkus: That's the point! That's the point! We want the consumer to be able to go to the insurance market and be able to negotiate on a plan—

Doyle: You tell— Reclaiming my time! [call for order] You tell me what insurance company will do that. There isn't a single insurance company in the world that does that, John. So you're talking about something that doesn't exist!
And then there was Rep. Roger Marshall of Kansas, who incredibly argued that poor people "just don't want health care and aren't going to take care of themselves."

In response to a question about Medicaid expansion, Marshall said:
"Just like Jesus said, 'The poor will always be with us,'" he said. "There is a group of people that just don't want health care and aren't going to take care of themselves."

Pressed on that point, Marshall shrugged.

"Just, like, homeless people. …I think just morally, spiritually, socially, [some people] just don't want health care," he said. "The Medicaid population, which is [on] a free credit card, as a group, do probably the least preventive medicine and taking care of themselves and eating healthy and exercising. And I'm not judging, I'm just saying socially that's where they are. So there's a group of people that even with unlimited access to health care are only going to use the emergency room when their arm is chopped off or when their pneumonia is so bad they get brought [into] the ER."
Echoes of Mitt Romney's 47 percent of people refuse to "take personal responsibility and care for their lives" comments. It was ignorant, indecent rubbish then, and it's ignorant, indecent rubbish now.

And finally, of course, there was Donald Trump, skipping out on promoting his party's healthcare proposal, and instead just tweeting: "Despite what you hear in the press, healthcare is coming along great. We are talking to many groups and it will end in a beautiful picture!"

And in the sense that there's a chance it could end in a photo of him at a desk, signing a piece of garbage legislation, I suppose it could end in a picture. But given that it would be a picture of a cruel man signing people's death sentences, it would hardly be a beautiful one, as far as I'm concerned. Leave it to Trump to describe the endgame of this horror show in terms of optics, whether he meant so literally or figuratively.

I just don't know how much more evidence any person could need that the Republican Party is catastrophically unfit to be tasked with healthcare policy. They have zero credibility—and, more importantly, they have zero compassion.

Healthcare policy that does not center compassion is healthcare policy not worth consideration.

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Secretary of State Rex Tillerson Recuses Himself from Keystone Pipeline Concerns

Yeganeh Torbati and Eric Beech at Reuters:

U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson has recused himself from issues related to TransCanada Corp's application for a permit for the Keystone XL pipeline, the State Department said in a letter on Thursday to the environmental group Greenpeace.

"He has not worked on that matter at the Department of State, and will play no role in the deliberations or ultimate resolution of TransCanada's application," said the letter from Katherine McManus, the State Department's deputy legal adviser.
Why did Tillerson have to recuse himself? Because he is the former CEO of Exxon Mobil, which "has investments in Canadian oil sands" and thus stands to benefit from the approval of Keystone XL.

This, of course, comes a week after Attorney General Jeff Sessions had to recuse himself from Russia investigations, after he failed to disclose, and lied under oath about, having met multiple times with Russian Envoy Sergey Kislyak.


This administration is dirty. And that is a top-down problem. Donald Trump has all kinds of conflicts of interests; he has a curious relationship with Vladimir Putin and has had in his employ, during the campaign and onward, a dozen people (that we know of) who have ties to Russia; he has naught but contempt for the rule of law and our democratic institutions; he's running a dual discrediting campaign against the intelligence community and the press; and he's an inveterate bigot.

When the buck stops with a guy who thinks ethics are for losers, this is the kind of governance we get: A Secretary of State who imagines it's sufficient to say he's recusing himself from a major international project, leaving questions about who will take the lead at State, as well as questions about how it's really possible to be the head of a multibillion corporation one day and just "recuse" yourself from projects that benefit that corporate the next.

This is exactly the disaster that Trump critics feared and warned his presidency would be. This mess was avoidable. But here we are.

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Open Thread

image of a pink couch

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

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Question of the Day

Suggested by Shaker Angelfish: "If the Doctor showed up in his TARDIS and offered you a trip anywhere in space and time, where would you go and which Doctor would show up?"

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Throwback Thursdays

image of my BFF Deeky and me at a restaurant, sitting side-by-side, and I am lying my head on his shoulder
Deeks and me, June 2016. Posted with his permission.
I love this picture, and I love this guy. ♥

[Please share your own throwback pix in comments. Just make sure the pix are just of you and/or you have consent to post from other living people in the pic. And please note that they don't have to be pictures from childhood, especially since childhood pix might be difficult for people who come from abusive backgrounds or have transitioned or lots of other reasons. It can be a picture from last week, if that's what works for you. And of course no one should feel obliged to share a picture at all! Only if it's fun!]

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I'm Just Saying

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Fat Fashion

This is your semi-regular thread in which fat women can share pix, make recommendations for clothes they love, ask questions of other fat women about where to locate certain plus-size items, share info about sales, talk about what jeans cut at what retailer best fits their body shapes, discuss how to accessorize neutral colored suits, share stories of going bare-armed for the first time, brag about a cool fashion moment, whatever.

* * *

A new favorite tee, care of Torrid:

image of me on my front porch wearing a Star Wars t-shirt

I love that Torrid does old movie tees. I had a t-shirt with (IIRC) this same graphic on it when I was a kid, and now I've got one again! Yay!

Anyway! As always, all subjects related to fat fashion are on topic, but if you want a topic for discussion: Do you have a much-loved piece of clothing or accessory that features a favorite pop culture reference?

Have at it in comments! Please remember to make fat women of all sizes, especially women who find themselves regularly sizing out of standard plus-size lines, welcome in this conversation, and pass no judgment on fat women who want to and/or feel obliged, for any reason, to conform to beauty standards. And please make sure if you're soliciting advice, you make it clear you're seeking suggestions—and please be considerate not to offer unsolicited advice. Sometimes people just need to complain and want solidarity, not solutions.

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Dudley the Greyhound stretching in the kitchen
Two-dimensional dog stretch!

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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We Resist: Day 49

a black bar with the word RESIST in white text

One of the difficulties in resisting the Trump administration, the Republican Congressional majority, and Republican state legislatures is keeping on top of the sheer number of horrors, indignities, and normalization of the aggressively abnormal that they unleash every single day.

So here is a daily thread for all of us to share all the things that are going on, thus crowdsourcing a daily compendium of the onslaught of conservative erosion of our rights and our very democracy.

Stay engaged. Stay vigilant. Resist.

* * *

Here are some things I've read today:

Massimo Calabresi at Time: Inside Donald Trump's War Against the State.
But no matter what he tweets from his Palm Beach Xanadu, Trump is more author than victim of this crisis. Neither he nor his White House staff provided any evidence for his extraordinary accusations against what some of them call a "deep state." Obama denied Trump's assertions, and was soon joined by former Director of National Intelligence James Clapper and, via intermediaries, FBI Director James Comey. Trump is rallying his political base against the federal agencies he oversees, thus partnering his presidency with a radical fringe. Win or lose, the standoff he has engineered will diminish the credibility of the government.

Approaching the halfway point of his first 100 days, this has become a defining aspect of Trump's presidency. His latest Twitter attack, like other actions before it, targeted institutions that stand in his path to what aides say is a larger political purpose: undoing much of what government has become over the past century. Few, if any, Presidents have paid so little deference to the chief executives and legislators who came before them. The extent of Trump's battle plan remains unclear.

But at a recent gathering of conservative activists in Washington, Trump's top strategist, Stephen Bannon, said the goal was the "deconstruction" of the administrative state. "The progressives for the last 100 years have set up really a fourth branch of government," he tells TIME. "So the deconstruction of that is really a massive project."
Shiver.

* * *

Joan McCarter at dKos: Paul Ryan, Intellectual Leader of the Republican Party, Doesn't Know How Insurance Works. "Paul Ryan spent the morning giving a deeply dishonest presentation, with PowerPoint no less, on Trumpcare. But one part sticks out as being just mind-numbingly bad and unbelievable. [He said insurance can't work if healthy must pay more to subsidize the sick. But this is exactly what happens in every employer plan.] This is exactly what health insurance is. It's what all insurance is. You pay into a pool that covers disaster for any and everyone else who has paid into the pool. That's just how it works. It's, like, the definition of insurance! Seven. Years. Seven fucking years Obamacare has been the one thing Republicans have been obsessing over and their big brain, their chief wonk, their intellectual leader doesn't know how health insurance works." OMG.

Travis Gettys at Raw Story: Trump's 'Unofficial Adviser' Nigel Farage Visits Julian Assange's Home After CIA Docs Leaked. "Nigel Farage, who led the push for Brexit and a campaign backer of Donald Trump, visited the Ecuadorian embassy two days after WikiLeaks dumped a trove of purported CIA documents online. Farage, who serves as an 'unofficial adviser' to Trump, visited the London embassy where WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has claimed asylum since 2012, reported Buzzfeed. A reporter from the website approached Farage as he left the embassy, but the former leader of the UK Independence Party claimed he couldn't remember what he'd been doing in the building just moments earlier." Sounds legit.

[Content Note: Video may autoplay at link] Christina Wilkie at the Huffington Post: Jeff Sessions Likely Met Russian Ambassador a Third Time. "Attorney General Jeff Sessions was forced to amend prior testimony to Congress this week, acknowledging that contrary to an earlier statement, he'd encountered the Russian ambassador to the United States twice in the last year. Sessions appears to have left out a third instance in which they crossed paths. In April of 2016, Sessions attended a VIP reception at a hotel in Washington, D.C., with Donald Trump and roughly two dozen guests, including four ambassadors. One of them was Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak."

Andy Towle at Towleroad: Rachel Maddow Fits a New Damning Piece into the Puzzle of Trump's Russia Cover-Up. "Last night's on-fire A-block segment concerned former campaign chairman Paul Manafort's involvement with a Kiev-based Russia national, Konstantin Kilimnik. Kilimnik had suspected ties to Russian intelligence and has been under the scrutiny of the FBI and State Department for two trips he made to the U.S. during the presidential campaign."

Michael R. Gordon at the New York Times: Russia Has Deployed Missile Barred by Treaty, U.S. General Tells Congress. "A senior American general told Congress on Wednesday that Russia has deployed a prohibited cruise missile, the first public confirmation by the United States that the Kremlin had fielded the weapon in violation of a landmark arms control agreement. The missile is believed to have been moved in December from a test site in southern Russia to an undisclosed operational base. 'We believe that the Russians have deployed a land-based cruise missile that violates the spirit and intent of the Intermediate Nuclear Forces Treaty,' Gen. Paul Selva, the vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told the House Armed Services Committee. 'The system itself presents a risk to most of our facilities in Europe,' he added. 'And we believe that the Russians have deliberately deployed it in order to pose a threat to NATO and to facilities within the NATO area of responsibility.'"

CBS News: Trump Taps Jon Huntsman as U.S. Ambassador to Russia. "Trump is nominating former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman to serve as U.S. ambassador to Russia, two sources familiar with the situation have confirmed to CBS News' Major Garrett. ...If confirmed by the Senate, Huntsman would assume the diplomatic post at a critical time as the federal government engages in a broad investigation into links between Mr. Trump's associates and Russia during the 2016 presidential campaign."

James Hohmann and Breanne Deppisch at the Washington Post: Jon Huntsman's Strange Odyssey to Become Donald Trump's Man in Moscow. "The 56-year-old has earned a reputation as someone who ingratiates himself with his patron of the moment but whose long-term loyalty cannot be counted on. His critics—including some who have worked with him—complain privately that he's always thinking about how he can climb the next step up the ladder. When his name comes up around this town, one often hears words like craven and opportunistic." Terrific. A man with zero principles is just who we need to be dealing with Russia on behalf of the Trump administration.

Stephen Braun and Chad Day at ABC News: Former Trump Aide Flynn Says Lobbying May Have Helped Turkey. "President Donald Trump's former national security adviser, Michael Flynn, who was fired from his prominent White House job last month, has registered with the Justice Department as a foreign agent for $530,000 worth of lobbying work before Election Day that may have aided the Turkish government. Paperwork filed Tuesday with the Justice Department's Foreign Agent Registration Unit said Flynn and his firm were voluntarily registering for lobbying from August through November that 'could be construed to have principally benefited the Republic of Turkey.'" JFC.

Jordan Fabian at the Hill: Pence, Not Trump, Plans Kentucky Healthcare Pitch. "Vice President Pence plans to travel to Louisville, Ky., on Saturday as the White House ramps up its sales pitch for the GOP proposal to repeal and replace ObamaCare. ...Trump was expected to make the trip himself, the Courier-Journal newspaper reported Wednesday. But Pence will go instead. ...Pence has made the rounds on Capitol Hill, as well as talk radio and local television, to sell the House GOP-authored plan."

Carimah Townes at Think Progress: After Promising to Revitalize 'Inner Cities,' Trump Decides to Shred Affordable Housing. "Under the Office of Management and Budget's (OMB) latest budget proposal, the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)—the federal agency tasked with expanding housing access for low-income families—could stand to lose billions of dollars. According to the Washington Post, the proposal calls for $6 billion to be cut from the department's budget for Fiscal Year 2018. And the pool of money for public housing repairs and the Community Development Block Grant Program will be hit especially hard."


Related Reading to the above: Here's Why Trump's Promise to "Bring Back Jobs" Is a Cruel Lie.

Drew Gilpin Faust at the New York Times: Killing a Program That Brings History to Life. "I would wager that few readers of this newspaper, and probably few Americans anywhere, are untouched by an National Endowment for the Humanities-sponsored project or program. ...Like its sibling the National Endowment for the Arts, the endowment brings the humanities into parts of the country that might otherwise never get to see a world-class museum exhibition or hear a lecture by a Pulitzer-Prize winner. ...Reports suggest that the Trump administration's coming budget will defund the endowment."

Andrea Peterson at Think Progress: Trump Leaves Key Cybersecurity Jobs Vacant Across the Government. "The Trump administration is leaving many top technology jobs across government vacant, raising concerns about the security and maintenance of federal computer systems in the wake of an election where hacks dominated the headlines. The White House's own cybersecurity practices are another source of concern, say experts. Of the nine agency-level Chief Information Officer (or CIO) roles that are politically appointed, only one is currently filled—and that top tech slot is occupied by a holdover from the Obama administration."

[CN: Anti-semitism; terrorism] Ben Fractenberg, Aidan Gardiner, Rachel Holliday Smith, and Nicholas Rizzi at DNA Info: Bomb Threat at Jewish Children's Museum Sparks Evacuation, NYPD Says. "The Jewish Children's Museum on Eastern Parkway was evacuated as police investigated a bomb threat that was called in Thursday morning, the second threat in the city against a Jewish center this week, police said. ...On Tuesday, someone called the Midtown headquarters of the Anti-Defamation League, saying a bomb would explode there within 20 minutes, officials said. 'These are coming at an unprecedented rate,' said the NYPD's Chief of Detectives Robert Boyce, during a Tuesday press conference." Rage. Seethe. Boil.

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