Hillary Clinton, Y'all

Sam Levine and Sam Stein at the Huffington Post: Hillary Clinton's Campaign Turns over Email List to DNC.

The Democratic National Committee announced on Sunday that Hillary Clinton's campaign had turned over its email list, giving the party a major boost as it rebuilds under a new chair and prepares for the midterm elections next year and the 2020 presidential race.

The list, provided as an in-kind contribution from the Hillary for America campaign organization, includes more than 10 million new names that the DNC did not have on its voter files, according to both Clinton and DNC aides. The contribution was valued as $3.5 million, according to data from the Federal Election Commission.

..."[P]utting the DNC on a strong footing is something that she's been very focused on since the campaign, when she set out to leave the DNC in the black and did so," said Clinton spokesman Nick Merrill. "But in addition to a strong financial footing, sharing campaign data and resources is something she views as critical to electing Democrats in 2017, 2018 and beyond. It is an important and unprecedented step toward a strong, unified Democratic Party going forward."
Emphases mine.

Hillary Clinton's whole career has been defined by the hideous misogyny of Can't Fucking Win, and the aftermath of the 2016 election has been no exception. If she doesn't say anything publicly, she's not stepping up. If she does say something publicly, she should go away. She can't fucking win.

But Clinton has never allowed herself to be sidelined by the impossibility of meeting these unfair and contradictory standards. So here she is once again, plowing ahead despite being expected to play by rules in a game no person could ever win.


For years, Clinton has been followed by narratives about her voracious ego and destructive ambition, and, at this point, it should be abundantly clear that the only people who believe those narratives are people who want an excuse to hate her.

We know what a candidate who is driven sheerly by ego looks like: All we have to do is cast our gazes toward the White House.

By stark contrast, Clinton has followed up her loss—after a campaign in which her (temporarily) Democratic primary opponent traded on three decades of Republican lies about her to create a gross caricature of her record; a large swath of Democratic voters uncritically regurgitated lies about her and shared gross memes about her; the media was ruthlessly cruel to her; her general election opponent engaged in rank misogyny against her; a foreign government orchestrated a campaign to defeat her, about which her warnings were not heeded; and then she was blamed for being a "shitty candidate" despite winning the popular vote—by giving an extraordinary gift to her party, because she cares about this country, its people, and its future in unfathomable measure.

Hillary Clinton is one of the greatest patriots this nation has ever known. And anyone who doesn't see that is making a grand effort not to.

* * *

Relatedly: I did some tweetstorming over the weekend about Hillary Clinton having gotten Donald Trump exactly right during the campaign, and how none of the election postmortems address the reality that everything we talk about regarding Trump these days are things about which Clinton warned us. I have Storified those tweets, for anyone who would like to read them.

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Aaaaaaaand We're Back!

So what did I miss over the past week?

*checks news*

Syria, Russia, Tillerson, Putin, United Airlines, "the most beautiful piece of chocolate cake that you've ever seen," Carter Page, Sean Spicer, Trump's trademark, China currency manipulation, Planned Parenthood, Paul Manafort, Steve Bannon, Jared Kushner, "Why I won't date hot women anymore," Sheila Abdus-Salaam, Jonathan Martinez, MOAB, North Korea, Andrew Sullivan, White House visitor logs, Mar-a-Lago, Bonnie Currie, Steve Stephens, Mike Pence...

Oh goddddddd. I need a vacation.

* * *

I was, of course, keeping up on the news during my staycation, because Trump's chaotic administration means I can't ever really look away and hope to catch up after the fact.

But it was a very different experience to be checking in occasionally, rather than being immersed in it all day.

One day midweek, I was at a mall, largely empty because it was a weekday afternoon, getting my eyes checked as I desperately need new glasses. I walked out of the appointment and checked the news. We had just dropped the MOAB in Afghanistan. Iain was checking his phone, too. We looked at each other, and we expressed our horror.

All around us, people just shuffled quietly by. The mall music played quietly over speakers. It was surreal, being in that anodyne space, detached from reality in the way malls are, reading about this massive bomb being deployed.

So vastly a different experience for me than getting news at my desk, with my mind completely consumed by politics, connected to this community and the other contributors and my social media network, populated by people who are greeting the news with the same urgency that I am.

I felt unmoored.

Being tethered to the news often feels oppressive, especially during this shitshow of an administration. But being tethered to community who share similar thoughts about that news saves me.

I was glad for a break, and I am glad to be back.

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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 + Programming Note

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.

I will be taking next week off. I know it's not great timing, but I don't think there's ever going to be a "good" time to take off while Trump is in office.

More importantly, because I was doing double-duty at BNR/Shareblue most of last year, where I had no time off, I haven't had an entire week away from work since July 2015, and I am burned out like whoa.

So I'm going to imminently flame out if I don't take a much-needed break.

And the mods could all use a break, too!

Because I know myself, lol, I will be very inclined to show up if something major happens, but I'm really going to try not to do that. I got very lax about self-care during a very difficult election and its aftermath, and it's catching up to me.

So, with my apologies, as I know this is an inconvenience for people who depend on this space for their news, I am going to take a week, and I will see you back here Monday, April 17.

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The Friday Blogaround

This blogaround brought to you by hope.

Recommended Reading:

Jessica Mason Pieklo: Welcome to the Gorsuch Court

Sarah Kurchak: [Content Note: Disablism; privilege] How William Shatner Betrayed Autistic People's Trust

Tariq Luthun: [CN: Appropriation] Why Stanford Accepting the Teen Who Wrote #BlackLivesMatter 100 Times on His Application Does Little for Black Lives

Miriam Zoila Pérez: In a New Memoir, Dr. Willie Parker Pushes for a 'New Theology of Abortion'

Angry Asian Man: [CN: Racism] Airbnb Host Cancels Woman's Reservation Because She's Asian

Monica Roberts: It's About Our Kids

Cory Doctorow: A Lawn Sign Welcoming All People, in Spanish, English, and Arabic

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

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Gee, This Seems Familiar

[Content Note: Misogyny.]

Step One: A bunch of entirely premature articles run about how this female Democratic candidate will/should definitely run for president in an election that is still very far away.

Step Two: A bunch of thinkpieces run about how that woman is insufficiently progressive, citing positions she once held but on which she has since moved leftward.

Step Three: Her motives, integrity, and authenticity are questioned. Her leftward movement is deemed suspect and opportunistic.

Step Four: Before this woman has even said she is running for president, a movement to STOP HER emerges.

Am I talking about Hillary Clinton? Well, yes. But I am also talking about Senator Kirsten Gillibrand.

Case in point: In February, a slew of "Gillibrand 2020" stories were published, such as the New York Times' "Kirsten Gillibrand and the Anti-Trump Left: 2020 Foresight?," USA Today's "Gillibrand 2020? Senator Talks Future," and Syracuse's "Will Kirsten Gillibrand Run for President in 2020?," among others, many of which ran even after Gillibrand said she was not planning on running for president.

And now this [H/T to Amadi]: A Vice piece by Eve Peyser titled "The Resistance's Latest Hero Used to Be Pro-Gun and Anti-Immigration," and subtitled "New York Senator Kirsten Gillibrand is fighting against Trump, but will the left buy her conversion story?"

What's particularly obnoxious about this piece is that it links to the Rebecca Traister article I mentioned the other day, in which Gillibrand talks explicitly about changing her views after listening to people affected by the policies she supported. Which is ostensibly what we want progressives to do.

If that sounds familiar, it's possibly because I've made the same point about Hillary Clinton dozens of times. For example:

Progressives always say that we want Democrats to get more progressive, to admit their failures, to meaningfully apologize when they fuck up, to embrace better policies when shitty policies they endorsed fail, to progress. But when Clinton does precisely that, instead of being commended for doing exactly what progressives ostensibly want Democratic politicians to do, she's just a terrible harpy who only "evolves" for political expediency.

...[O]n a personal level, as someone who has publicly learned and changed her mind dramatically about a number of issues over the decade I've been doing this, I just find it really obnoxious when people are held to positions they've changed and mistakes they've made, for which they've apologized. Progressives are meant to progress.

...And then there's this: Holding the same views for decades is antithetical to progressivism. The world changes; views and policies need to change. Consistency isn't always a positive, when circumstances demand otherwise.
This seems like a fairly straightforward concept. Yet here we are again.

This is a dynamic to which white male politicians are simply not held. Never mind positions on which they've evolved or for which they've apologized; they are also not inescapably haunted by their worst moments outside of policy. There are legions of young (and not so young) Democrats who have never even heard about beloved "Uncle Joe" Biden's plagiarism scandal, nor his disgraceful behavior toward Anita Hill, nor his long history of "inappropriate" jokes.

The only time a white male candidate's ancient policies and flaws seem to matter is when he is running on the same ticket as a woman.

Anyway. This demonstrable dynamic tells us a lot about how far we have to go in terms of fair treatment of female politicians.

It also further exposes the lie (already made plain by the way people turned on Senator Elizabeth Warren when she endorsed Clinton) that "it's not that Clinton is a woman; I'd vote for a different woman." Sure sure. Except every woman mysteriously gets destroyed in precisely the same way, providing the same excuses not to vote for her.

Funny, that.

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Discussion Thread: Secret YouTube Confessions

So, this is a conversation I often have with friends, and it's always fun and fascinating, because it seems like everyone's got a secret interest they pursue via YouTube videos.

Often, I've discovered, it centers around some talent or hobby you'd like to cultivate, but don't have the time or money or courage to dive in, in real life.

Sometimes it's about a music genre that's wildly outside your typical faves, or a bit of foreign culture that compels you.

For me, it's definitely the former. I love watching instructional videos on how to play the flugelhorn, lol. I have watched so many Intro to Flugelhorn videos. Probably all of them, since there aren't that many!

I watch them and dream of a day that will probably never come when I have the time to take up an instrument that most people have never even heard of, haha.

You?

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Olivia the White Farm Cat napping on the back of a blue chair, while Sophie the Torbie Cat naps on the seat
Cat napz!

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 78

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 in the news today:

The Guardian has live updates on the diplomatic fallout from the Syrian bombing. A couple of important points of interest from their ongoing coverage:


Further to that: "The chair of the United Nations Association UK has questioned the wisdom of the US hit on Shayrat airbase. Stewart Wood said: 'It's unclear how US air strikes will make civilians safer.' In a blog post, Lord Wood of Anfield wrote: 'Unilateral action without broad international backing through the UN, without a clear strategy for safeguarding civilians, and through military escalation risks further deepening and exacerbating an already protracted and horrific conflict, leaving civilians at greater, not lesser, risk of atrocities.'"

Additionally: "The UN secretary general, António Guterres, has appealed to parties involved in the Syrian conflict for restraint to avoid adding to the suffering of Syria's people. 'Mindful of the risk of escalation, I appeal for restraint to avoid any acts that could deepen the suffering of the Syrian people,' he said in a statement."

This is all very concerning. As is this:


If you can't view the embedded screencap, it reads:
Russia said later Friday that it would also help the Syrian military bolster its air defenses in response to the attack on Shayrat.

"To protect the most sensitive facilities of the Syrian infrastructure, a set of measures will be taken in the immediate future to reinforce and raise the effectiveness of the Syrian armed forces' air defense system," Defense Ministry spokesman Major-General Igor Konashenkov said.

There were reports later that a Russian warship was sailing to the Mediterranean and expected to dock at the Russian base in Tartus, on Syria's coast.
That sounds unsettlingly like preparation for a proxy war.

Meanwhile, at home, as Republicans continue to see no problem with Trump acting without Congressional authorization, a number of Democrats are not so sanguine about it.


There is significantly more news, of course, about the strike on Syria. As always, please feel welcome and encouraged to share what you've been reading and recommend in comments.

* * *

Neil Gorsuch has been confirmed to the Supreme Court. Mike Pence presided over the confirmation, because everything is terrible.

Here is Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell getting as giddy as he gets ahead of the confirmation today, which his party only needed a simple majority to do, after he invoked the nuclear option and destroyed the Senate:

Of course my colleagues back me up. The American people spoke. And today we will confirm the nominee that the new president has selected. I think as we all know, this is a person of extraordinary credentials, who will bring honor to the Supreme Court for many, many years to come. So it is indeed a proud day.
Gross.

There's nothing insightful I can say about this. I am despondent. It sucks.

* * *

Nelson D. Schwartz at the New York Times: Job Growth Loses Steam as U.S. Adds 98,000 in March. "Job growth turned in a disappointing showing in March, according to data released Friday by the Labor Department. It is the latest official snapshot of the state of the American economy. 98,000 jobs were added last month. Economists had been anticipating a gain of about 180,000." So much winning.

Jennifer A. Dlouhy at Bloomberg: Trump Preparing Order to Expand Offshore Oil Drilling. "Donald Trump is preparing to issue an executive order with the goal of giving oil companies more opportunities to drill offshore, reversing Obama-era policies that restricted the activity. The offshore drilling directive is set to be issued soon, Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke told an industry conference in Washington on Thursday, according to three attendees who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss a session closed to the press. ...The order is also expected to begin the process of revoking former President Barack Obama's decision to indefinitely withdraw most U.S. Arctic waters and some Atlantic Ocean acreage from future leasing. Environmentalists say it would be unprecedented for any president to rescind such a designation, and the reversal would almost certainly be challenged in court." Fucking hell.

Mike Allen at Axios: Trump Eyes New Chief of Staff. "Trump is considering a broad shakeup of his White House that could include the replacement of White House Chief of Staff Reince Priebus and the departure of chief strategist Steve Bannon, aides and advisers tell us." Honestly, who the fuck even cares. I mean, don't get me wrong, it would be great to get Bannon out of the White House, but it's not like I expect anyone who ends up in the Trump White House is going to be anything but an aggressive garbage nightmare.

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

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Hillary Clinton, Y'all

Yesterday, Hillary Clinton sat down for an extensive interview with Nick Kristof (ugh) at the Women in the World Conference. Below, a video of the entire interview, for which I regrettably do not have a transcript.


There were so many good moments during the interview, like this one and this one, but I want to highlight the section in which Clinton talks about Putin and Russian election interference, because it's so smart and so right—and because she and her campaign (and many of her supporters, ahem) were way the hell ahead of the curve in talking about this stuff last summer. She deserves credit for being both authoritative on this subject and courageous for hammering away at it, including calling Trump a puppet of Putin right to his goddamned face during a debate.

So, here is Hillary Clinton, the person who should have been our president, on Putin.

NICK KRISTOF: Do you think that there was collusion between the Trump campaign and the Kremlin?

HILLARY CLINTON: I think that is what this investigation should look at. I'm hopeful that the Congress will pull together and realize that, because of the success that the Kremlin feels that it had, they're not going to go away. So, whatever party you are, whatever business you run, whatever kinds of concerns you have, if we don't take action together to hold whoever was involved accountable, they will be back, time and time again.

Look, from my perspective, I know Putin. I actually have sat with him, much as I'm sitting with you, Nick, and, you know, this is somebody who plays the long game. He plays three-dimensional chess; he's always trying to figure out how to advantage himself, his oligarchic companions, and his country. In that order. And, so, he is very much focused on destabilizing Europe, NATO, the United States—democracies. Real democracies.

And, you know, people have asked me, "Why do you think he did that to you?" And, you know, I don't—I don't think it's too complicated. I think he had his desire to destabilize us and others, and, you know, he's not exactly fond of strong women. So, you add that together, and that's pretty much— [applause]

Although he did shake hands with me! [smiles; Kristof laughs; the audience cheers and applauds]
So, so good.

And let us never forget that one of the major pieces—if not the most significant—of Putin's grudge against Hillary Clinton was that she is a champion of democracy and was an unyielding critic of Putin's subversion of democracy in Russia during her time as Secretary of State.

In order to defeat her, he proved her right.

And she is right about him still.

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Two Other Important Stories Today

Because of the military operation in Syria, these two stories are not going to get a lot of attention. Which is not a coincidence.

1. Jo Becker and Matthew Rosenberg at the New York Times: Kushner Omitted Meeting with Russians on Security Clearance Forms.

When Jared Kushner, [Donald] Trump's son-in-law and senior adviser, sought the top-secret security clearance that would give him access to some of the nation's most closely guarded secrets, he was required to disclose all encounters with foreign government officials over the last seven years.

But Mr. Kushner did not mention dozens of contacts with foreign leaders or officials in recent months. They include a December meeting with the Russian ambassador, Sergey I. Kislyak, and one with the head of a Russian state-owned bank, Vnesheconombank, arranged at Mr. Kislyak's behest.

The omissions, which Mr. Kushner's lawyer called an error, are particularly sensitive given the congressional and F.B.I. investigations into contacts between Russian officials and Trump associates. The Senate Intelligence Committee informed the White House weeks ago that, as part of its inquiry, it planned to question Mr. Kushner about the meetings he arranged with Mr. Kislyak, including the one with Sergey N. Gorkov, a graduate of Russia's spy school who now heads Vnesheconombank.
You may recall that I wrote about Kushner's undisclosed meetings with Kislyak and Gorkov, noting that Vnesheconombank financed a takeover of one of Ukraine's struggling steel groups, right in the middle of a Ukrainian election—an election which was won by the pro-Putin candidate Viktor Yanukovych, for whom both Trump campaign chair Paul Manafort and Sanders chief strategist Tad Devine worked during that election.

Vnesheconombank, as noted in the Times piece, is also "a target of American sanctions imposed in response to Moscow's annexation of Crimea and aggression in Ukraine. It is controlled by members of President Vladimir V. Putin's government, including Prime Minister Dmitri A. Medvedev, and has been used to bail out oligarchs favored by Mr. Putin and to fund pet projects like the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi."

That would be the same "aggression in Ukraine" regarding which members of the Trump campaign pressured changes in the Republican platform, "to include language against arming Ukrainians against pro-Russian rebels."

I know that's a lot to follow. Suffice it to say, there are questions about why Kushner would have been meeting with the head of Vnesheconombank at all, no less concealing it.

2. Eric Lichtblau at the New York Times: CIA Had Evidence of Russian Effort to Help Trump Earlier Than Believed.
The C.I.A. told senior lawmakers in classified briefings last summer that it had information indicating that Russia was working to help elect Donald J. Trump president, a finding that did not emerge publicly until after Mr. Trump's victory months later, former government officials say.

The briefings indicate that intelligence officials had evidence of Russia's intentions to help Mr. Trump much earlier in the presidential campaign than previously thought...

The former officials said that in late August — 10 weeks before the election — John O. Brennan, then the C.I.A. director, was so concerned about increasing evidence of Russia's election meddling that he began a series of urgent, individual briefings for eight top members of Congress, some of them on secure phone lines while they were on their summer break.

...[A]s the election approached and new batches of hacked Democratic emails poured out, some F.B.I. officials began to change their view about Russia's intentions and eventually came to believe, as the C.I.A. had months earlier, that Moscow was trying to help get Mr. Trump elected, officials said.

It was not until early December, a month after the election, that it became publicly known in news reports that the C.I.A. had concluded that Moscow's motivation was to get Mr. Trump elected.

In January, intelligence officials publicly released a declassified version of their findings, concluding that President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia had "aspired to help" Mr. Trump to win the election and harm Hillary Clinton, a longtime adversary.

...Some intelligence officials were wary of pushing too aggressively before the election with questions about possible links between Russia and the Trump campaign because of concerns it might be seen as an improper political attempt to help Mrs. Clinton.

But after her loss, a number of Mrs. Clinton's supporters have said that Mr. Comey and other government officials should have revealed more to the public during the campaign season about what they knew of Russia's motivations and possible connections to the Trump campaign.
Emphasis mine.

It will never stop being incredible and rage-making to me that intelligence officials let their decision be dictated by the possible accusation of partisanship. Their loyalty is supposed to be to the country, and keeping silent to avoid partisan criticism allowed the election of a man who they knew was being aided by the Russians and suspected may have been colluding with them.

And now here we are.

It's also incredible and rage-making that this is an accurate statement: "A number of Mrs. Clinton's supporters have said" they should have revealed what they knew when it mattered most. It shouldn't be only Clinton supporters, but it is. Because the Republicans are fucking cowards, and because all the non-Republicans who weren't Clinton supporters hate her so much that they don't care.

Whether it's partisanship or personal animus toward Clinton, or both, everyone but Clinton supporters are eminently willing to prioritize and prize their opposition to Clinton over their fealty to this nation and its democratic systems.

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We Bombed Syria Last Night

So, last night, without warning to the American people or authorization from Congress, Donald Trump launched 59 missiles at an airstrip in Syria.

Because Russian troops are embedded in Syria, as Putin is an ally of Assad, Moscow was warned, so they could get their troops out of the way. Which probably means Assad was warned by Moscow, meaning that the target of the strike knew it was coming before most of the members of the U.S. Congress did, but we're definitely not supposed to think about that too closely.

We're not supposed to think about a lot of things. Like this, for instance.


I did a lot of tweeting and retweeting last night (and some this morning) as events unfolded. I have Storified those tweets, as background and summary, rather than trying to recount everything here.

For now, what I want to do is note the many unanswered questions there are around this military action.

1. What were the casualties of this bombing? Were any of them civilian casualties?

2. On what basis, if any, does the Trump administration believe this military action was legal, given that the required Congressional authorization was neither sought nor given?

3. What was the true objective of this mission, given that even National Security Advisor H.R. McMaster conceded last night that this will not prevent Assad from orchestrating further attacks, including chemical attacks? And also because we know damn well that it wasn't Trump's concern for "the babies," since he has never cared about Syrian casualties before, even after far worse attacks, and he still refuses to budge on his despicable refugee policy, which would do far more to help the babies, and everyone else targeted in Syria, than dropping bombs will.

4. What was the extent of the communication with Moscow that happened ahead of the bombing? Do the White House and Pentagon have any reason to believe—and, if so, why—that Moscow did not warn Assad about the imminent attack?

5. Was there coordination with the Kremlin as part of a grander scheme around U.S.-Russia relations? Is Russia's condemnation real, or part of a plan that simultaneously helps Trump appear as though he's not a Putin puppet and gets Putin out of a tight spot, as he was under real pressure for his continued support of Assad following the latest chemical attack, but now this changes the conversation significantly?

6. Is the press interesting in answering questions about a possible long-term scheme, or just being excited about a president blowing shit up?

7. Is there even any way to get to the truth when the president is a compulsive liar, surrounded by loyalists who will participate in his deceit?

8. When Trump's approval numbers go up, as they inevitably will, in no small part because the press loves it when presidents drop bombs and will shamelessly suggest this is evidence of some emergent competency in Trump's presidency, what will we all do if/when Trump starts routinely killing people to shore up his popularity?

9. What now? What now for Syria, for the U.S., for Russia? What comes next?

This is, of course, not a comprehensive list, as there are so many questions to which we need answers, many of which we'll never get. Please feel free to add your own questions in comments.

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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 Kathy_A: "What family/friend inherited object do you have that you value/enjoy the most?"

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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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I Write Letters

[Content Note: Bigotry; rape culture.]

Dear Nicholas Kristof:

As you can imagine, I read your latest column, "My Most Unpopular Idea: Be Nice to Trump Voters," with great interest, as being told by men how to behave in the Trump Era is one of my favorite things.

If you'll indulge me, I do have some questions for you about how best to put your advice into practice.

Let's say I find a way to set aside that people who voted for Donald Trump voted affirmatively for his clearly articulated agenda of white supremacy, misogyny, queerphobia, disablism, nativism, and class warfare. (I will definitely never find a way to set that aside.) That still leaves me with the persnickety issue of being a survivor of sexual violence, and Trump voters being people who voted for a confessed serial sex abuser.

I recall that you have some interest in, and posit yourself an expert on, women's issues, including sexual violence. So you seem like the right guy to ask about this, especially given your admonishment that I should be nice to Trump voters.

Because, as I'm sure you'll agree, if there were one story about Trump that absolutely penetrated the national consciousness during the election, it's the one about how he bragged about grabbing women by the genitals. That wasn't some underreported, esoteric news item, but a major news story with video that ran on a loop 24/7 for days on end. And it was run again each time another of 14 women came forward, telling their stories about having been sexually assaulted by Trump. Trump even had to [CN: video may autoplay at link] acknowledge it, in a Facebook post that has over 24 million views.

And, if you are like me, Mr. Kristof, you are keenly aware that Trump voters knew about this story, because they all rehearsed and regurgitated perfectly their talking points to defend it. Locker room talk. Bill Clinton. Crooked Hillary Clinton's an enabler. One two three, like clockwork. Trump didn't do anything wrong, but, if he did, Bill Clinton is worse and LOCK HER UP!

Trump voters might not have been aware of pesky little details like his history of housing discrimination against people of color, or not paying subcontractors who worked for him, but they knew he had boasted about grabbing women by their genitals—and they knew how to push back on it, so they could justify voting for him anyway.

As I mentioned in something I wrote in response to a different one of your columns on the same subject: During the election, my next-door neighbors had a Trump sign in their front yard. When the news broke that Trump had openly admitted sexually assaulting women, that sign stayed up. Every time I walked out my front door, I was reminded that my neighbors were okay with a man doing to women something that was one of the worst things that has ever happened to me.

So, Mr. Kristof, here is my first question: How do you recommend I find a way to be nice to people who believe that?

The thing is, although you write that "Nothing I've written since the election has engendered more anger from people who usually agree with me than my periodic assertions that Trump voters are human, too," I don't fail to see Trump voters as humans, too. To the absolute contrary, I see them as humans who made a choice, which they proudly advertised on their front lawns and bumpers and hats, to vote for a sexual predator.

I have been writing about the rape culture for a very long time, and one of the things I know as well as I know my own name is that defending and supporting men who commit sexual violence is a decidedly human thing to do.

And the reality is that many Trump voters made that choice because they don't see me as "human, too." And lots and lots and lots of their other fellow Americans.

I'm just not sure where the space is, no less the obligation, for me to be "nice" to them.

My second question for you, Mr. Kristof, is: Why is it, exactly, that you are telling me, and millions of other people without your immense privilege, that we must be "nice" to Trump voters, and not telling them that they should try being "nice" to us?

You're a smart guy, so you probably realize that's not actually a question about how best to put your advice into practice. It's more a rhetorical question about how you should put your advice in a dumpster.

What you're doing is asking people who got hit with a rock from a slingshot to have sympathy for the person who slung it, because they got a boo-boo from the ricocheting sling. That is a very unreasonable request.

And, truly, "nice" or "not nice" isn't even the most basic issue. I can't trust Trump voters. And fixing that ain't on me. It's on them to make themselves trustworthy.

Which, at this point, most of them have no inclination to do.

That ain't on me, either.

No Love,
Liss

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Trump's New Syria Policy: Regime Change. Or Not.


Shit shit shit shit shit shit shit.

Worse yet, this casual announcement of a major policy shift was in the middle of a conversation in which Trump sounds just as clueless as ever on Syria.


Trump is beating the war drum for a couple of reasons: 1. Because he is a warmonger who thinks diplomacy is evidence of weakness; 2. He has no idea what else to do; 3. It's a distraction from the fact that his administration is in chaos and under multiple investigations for collusion with Russia.

And as absurdly unserious as Trump himself and his incoherent posturing are, we must take this seriously, because he is the president, surrounded with warmongers and abetted by a Republican majority in Congress who will rubber-stamp anything he proposes.

What's important to understand is that even saying something like this is a BFD, even if he reverses course tomorrow.

I am genuinely alarmed.

Open Wide...

Daily Dose of Cute

image of Matilda the Fuzzy Sealpoint Cat lying next to and against Dudley the Greyhound, in the same position
Beside me on the couch last night.

Longtime readers will recall that, when we first brought Dudley home, seven years ago this month, he was a very scared boy.

He was so timid that he would urinate on himself in a submissive gesture every time I got near him. I spent long hours lying on the floor, next to his crate where he felt safe, synchronizing my breathing to his, quiet and still, to reassure him I would never hurt him.

One day, he came out, and laid down beside me on the floor. I put my hand on his side, across a long scar the origins of which we do not know, and matched him breath for breath. There we laid, until he let me know he needed to go out, and I put on his leash without making him fearful for the first time.

That was the first step in what has been, and continues to be, a remarkable journey away from the track into a world he'd never experienced. He didn't know how to walk up or down stairs, or how to fetch a ball. He had no idea what it meant to be loved, or to receive—no less enjoy—affection.

The first time I touched him while he was lying at my feet, he jumped up like he'd been electrocuted. Now, he eagerly seeks out ALL THE CUDDLES! And he has even resigned himself to Matilda's relentless insistence on snuggling up beside him. She is an old lady cat now, and she wants to be snuggled up with someone bigger and warmer at all times. When Sophie was taking up my lap last night, Matilda decided Dudley would suffice.

Even Zelda, who is a massive snuggle-bug, doesn't tolerate this sort of nonsense.

I couldn't help but think about the terrified creature who arrived at our door, and who he has become.

I sent this picture to his foster dad, who is also the president of the rescue organization from which we adopted him, with a note saying that, against all odds, Dudley has become a confident and cuddly boy. He replied: "Greater odds than you can imagine. I've seen plenty that never get over their fears. He is one of the most gratifying rescues/placements I've been involved in. No matter how bad my day may have been, pictures of Dudley always turn me around. Thanks so much for helping him around that curve."

Making a space for Dudley to blossom has been one of the greatest joys of my life.

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April is National Greyhound Adoption Month! If you would like to adopt a greyhound or volunteer your time, you can find a rescue near you with this interactive map.

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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 77

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 in the news today:

[Content Note: Video may autoplay at link] Matt Flegenheimer at the New York Times: Senate Republicans Deploy 'Nuclear Option' to Clear Path for Neil Gorsuch.
Senate Republicans changed longstanding rules on Thursday to clear the way for the confirmation of Judge Neil M. Gorsuch to serve on the Supreme Court, bypassing a precedent-breaking Democratic filibuster by allowing the nomination to go forward on a simple majority vote.

In deploying the so-called nuclear option, lawmakers are fundamentally altering the way the Senate operates — a sign of the body's creeping rancor in recent years after decades of at least relative bipartisanship on Supreme Court matters. Both parties have likewise warned of sweeping effects on the future of the court, predicting that the shift will lead to the elevation of more ideologically extreme judges if only a majority is required for confirmation.

...Lawmakers first convened late Thursday morning to decide whether to end debate and advance to a final vote on Judge Gorsuch. Republicans needed 60 votes — at least eight Democrats and independents joining the 52-seat majority — to end debate on the nomination and proceed to a final vote. Only a handful of Democrats defected, and the vote failed, 55-45, leaving Republicans to choose between allowing the president's nominee to fail or bulldozing long-held Senate practice.

A final vote on Judge Gorsuch's confirmation is set for Friday, with a simple majority needed for approval.
I have no words. I am not surprised, but I am very angry and very disappointed.

Everyone has been (quite rightly) worried about Trump setting off a literal nuke, but Mitch McConnell decided to set off the figurative one first.

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Yesterday, during an interview with the New York Times, Donald Trump claimed that Rep. Elijah Cummings told him privately, "You will go down as one of the great presidents in the history of our country." Somehow I doubt that.

[CN: Rape culture] He said a lot of other bullshit, too, including this about serial sexual harasser Bill O'Reilly: "He's a good person. I think he may, you know, I think he shouldn't have settled, personally, I think he shouldn't have settled. ...No, I know Bill. Bill's a good person. I don't think Bill would do anything wrong."


[CN: Video may autoplay at link; continued CN for rape culture] Paige Lavender at the Huffington Post delivered reporting on this under the perfect, terrible headline: "Donald Trump Kicks off Sexual Assault Awareness Month by Defending Bill O'Reilly." That about sums it up.

* * *

[CN: Terrorism; death; description of violence] Jen Kirby at NY Mag: ISIS Slaughters 33 People, Execution-Style, in the Syrian Desert. "As the world grapples with Bashar al-Assad's war crimes, ISIS reminded everyone of its own gruesome brutality. CNN reports that the terror group murdered dozens, execution-style, in what is likely ISIS's largest mass killing in 2017. The London-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said ISIS 'slaughtered' people in Syria, near the desert city of Deir ez-Zor, with 'sharp tools' near the edge of a hole that became 'filled with blood.' It is unclear whether the victims were Syrian rebels or government soldiers or ISIS prisoners, but they were reportedly young, between the ages of 18 and 25."

Meanwhile, as Charles M. Blow notes in his latest column for the New York Times, Trump appears appallingly ignorant about the complexity of what's happening in Syria:
During the news conference, a reporter asked:

"If I may, Mr. President: You know very well that the Iranian militias and Hezbollah have been propping the Syrian regime for a while, over a few years now. Will you go after them? What message will you give them today? And will you work with the Russians to stop, to ground, the Syrian Air Force and to establish safe zones?"

Actually, it was clear that the president didn't "know very well." In fact, he seemed lost by the question. So instead of answering, he opened an attack on the Iran nuclear deal and ISIS.

The reporter had to point out the ridiculousness of the answer: "But sir, I'm talking about the Iranian militias in Syria supporting the Syrian regime, separate of the nuclear deal. What message do you have for them today?" Caught in his ignorance, Trump clumsily responded: "You will see. They will have a message. You will see what the message will be, O.K."

It was beyond embarrassing: It was mortifying. And it was terrifying.
Trump's terrifying ignorance is resulting in incoherent policy, as he scrambles to look like he knows what he's doing, which is leaving the Pentagon dangerously perplexed.

Nancy A. Youssef at BuzzFeed: Trump May Have Changed His Syria Policy And The Pentagon Is Confused. "Trump said on Wednesday, at a joint press conference with Jordan's King Abdullah II, that images of children and other civilians killed by a suspected sarin gas attack a day earlier in the Syrian city of Idlib 'crosses many lines, beyond a red line, many many lines.' He said he was appalled by the attack and called it 'unacceptable,' while adding that his opinion of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad had changed. ...But three defense officials told BuzzFeed News they cannot begin to craft a military response, if that is what Trump wants, without a clear understanding of what the president wants to see happen in Syria. Does he only want the Assad regime to stop using chemical weapons? Does he want regime change? Is he seeking a negotiated settlement? Or were Trump's comments simply rhetoric?"

He has no fucking idea what he is doing. We are in deep shit.

And not only does he have no clue about Syria, but as Josh Meyer reports at Politico: Trump Lacks Key Players for Meeting with Chinese Leader. "China watchers say he could easily be outmatched by a superbly well-prepped Beijing diplomatic team aiming to exploit gaping holes in the White House's fledgling China policy group. Trump will be relying heavily on son-in-law and real-estate magnate Jared Kushner with some assistance from old China hand Henry Kissinger and Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, an oil executive who is mostly unfamiliar with the customs and political protocols of a Chinese delegation that places a premium on them."

We are so fucked.

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Jonathan Swan at Axios: Bannon to Associates: "I Love a Gunfight." It's Bannon vs. Kushner in the White House. "Truth is, the hatred between the two wings is intense and irreconcilable. ...Killing Bannon won't be easy: His staunchest ally is one of Trump's closest confidants—Attorney General Jeff Sessions. Kellyanne Conway will go to the mat for him, as will policy advisor Stephen Miller. ...'Steve has developed strong and important relationships with some of the most powerful right-leaning business leaders,' said a close Bannon ally outside of the White House. 'I see some bad press in [Jared's] future.'" This is going to get so ugly.

Adam K. Raymond at NY Mag: Donald Trump Jr. Is Reportedly Talking About Running for Governor of New York. "Donald Trump Jr., the eldest son of [Donald] Trump, who is now running the family business with his younger brother Eric, is interested in seeking elected office of his own. The 39-year-old was a recent guest at F6 Labs gun club in Hicksville, where he told a crowd that he has his sights set on Albany... As he told the crowd of his fellow hunters and gun humpers, the politics 'bug bit' after helping his father reach the Oval Office. 'Going back to doing deals is boring after 18 months,' he reportedly said." Fuck all of these bored, rich fuckers. Politics is not a game to have fun and stave away the boredom of a life with no real stakes.

[CN: Nativism] Ed Pilkington at the Guardian: Mother of Four to Be Deported to Mexico in Sign of Trump Policy Shift. "The mother of four American children, the youngest of whom is three years old, has been picked up by federal agents at her home in Fairfield, Ohio, and taken into detention ahead of imminent deportation back to her native Mexico. Maribel Trujillo has been told that her deportation is set for next Tuesday from the US, where she has lived for the past 15 years. Her rushed removal is one of the starkest examples yet of Donald Trump's push to catch and deport undocumented immigrants who previously were tolerated by the authorities as law-abiding and peaceful members of society." Rage. Seethe. Boil.

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

Open Wide...

How to Help Extraterrestrials Deduce the Nature of Mike Pence's Chivalry

[Content Note: Rape culture, description of sexual assault, misogyny.]

When our extra-terrestrial (ET) overlords arrive in the US and demand to be taken to our dear leaders, what will we say when they ask about human propriety, respect, and etiquette?

Do we tell them, this, of Trump: He has admitted on tape to grabbing women's genitals without their consent, he has been accused of walking in on female, teenage pageant contestants in various states of undress, and he's been accused by multiple women of assault, groping, and harassment. He also regularly condoned chants of "lock her up" against his his female opponent in the 2016 Election and promised to imprison her if he won. His female opponent, we must explain, has been convicted of no crime.

Also, per Donald Trump, "Nobody has more respect for women than Donald Trump!"

Accordingly, our ET friends would ask, So, given the definition of respect on your planet, we shall introduce ourselves by reaching for the nearest set of genitals?

Well, I would explain, other views exist.

We would then turn to Pence: He is a politician who famously refuses to have dinner alone with women if his wife is not present. This refusal is respectful, we are to believe, as it is an avoidance of temptation and a way to honor his commitment to his wife.

Well, that seems better, the ET would say.  However, approximately half the humans Pence deigns to serve as a politician are women, yes?


I would answer in the affirmative.

They might continue: Then how can a man who can't be trusted to dine alone with women be trusted to make policy decisions affecting women? Isn't that sort of a wolf guarding the sheep-house situation?

I would correct their idiom usage but assure them that, yes, I believe their basic observation to be correct. It certainly does seem as though if a person is only able to see women through the prism "sexual temptation" that person might be unqualified to hold public office in a nation in which women exist.

Starting to get on a roll, our ET friends would continue: Then, can a man who can't be trusted to dine alone with women furthermore be trusted to even be alone in any space with them? Of all human  interactions that occur, what is the unique danger that dining poses to women, when men are nearby?

A logical question. And, perhaps at this juncture our ET friends would remember Donald's behavior toward women and would experience an ah-ha moment of sorts! Ah yes, they would speculate. Men must not eat alone with women because men run the risk of spontaneously grabbing women's genitals whilst dining and the way to keep women safe from men is to therefore exclude women from things.

I would try to interrupt our ET friends, letting them know that not all men (hashtag) are like that. But, if they were intelligent creatures (which they would be, having requested to speak with the feminists first), they would likely continue the line of logical inquiry: If men are so easily tempted and unable to control their sexual impulses during the course of basic bodily nourishment, as this Mike Pence suggests, why is it that men, rather than women, are in charge of so very many things on your planet? Why is not a more responsible gender in charge?

But the question, of course, would answer itself. And, together, ETs and I would enter a Sapir-Whorfian feminist hivemind of perfect knowledge: When men rule, men make the rules.

The rules do not have to be logical, they just have to ensure that the continuation of male supremacy is embedded as a consequence of the rules, even if the rules contain other, polite features. Pence's rule, for instance, ensures that women remain classified as "sexual temptation," but has the added bonus of, for him, eliminating infidelity opportunities.

So, despite what on the surface might look like Donald and Pence being very different sorts of men treating women very disparately, our ET visitors might deduce quite quickly that a wish for continued male supremacy is a bond that unites many men across the political spectrum like almost nothing else.

It is only the manifestations of this wish that differ and the extent to which it's cloaked.

Trump's brand of male supremacy is overt: Women's bodies can be violated simply because a powerful man wills it. Women are, under this doctrine, objects who lack full autonomy and whose boundaries are violable.

Pence's brand of male supremacy is similar, but on the surface—like himself—more polite. It's so polite-seeming that we endure endless rounds of critics asking, What's the big deal, even? So what that he won't eat with women!

What's the big deal? Well, it's like I always say.

Show me a man who insists on treating a woman like a lady, and you can almost always guarantee that he expects to be treated Like a Man. That is to say, as women's superior. Acknowledgement of this gender balance is one the many bargains women are continually asked to strike when it comes to Pence-esque "chivalry" or "benevolent" sexism.

Inherent in this bargain is that it's an agreement of sorts: conditions exist for both sides. For women, chivalry is not granted to all women, but only to certain classes of compliant women. Karen Pence, for instance, but usually not poor women, or women of color, or trans women, or queer women, or fat women, or butch women, or ambitious women. And so on.

Consider, for instance, that Pence-who-is-too-respectful-to-eat-with-women just cast a rare tie-breaking vote to withhold federal funding from Planned Parenthood. Our ET friends might ask, If this man is respectful of women, why would he decrease women's access to healthcare?

Here, I would remind them that when faced with such illogic, the more relevant question is usually, How does this action benefit male supremacy?
 
A second aspect of the "chivalry" bargain is that you best be grateful for it, women!  Here I would invite our ETs to, during their time on Earth, refuse a man's offered chivalry and then to report back how that worked out for them.

A third aspect of "chivalry," I would explain, is accepting the worldview that men and women have different, but complementary, roles with respect to one another—with the man on top. That these traits are ever-shifting across time, place, and culture speaks to their fragility, but the bargain requires us to pretend that these traits are, instead, fixed and universal.

Take a man who's used to treating only certain classes of men as his intellectual peers, remove him from his male-discourse-only bubble, and plop him instead into, say, a roomful of feminist women (the horror!). Suddenly, his roadmap for interaction is gone. The women are no longer reading from his preferred subservient script. Anything can happen and—

Wait! Our ET observers would interrupt with excitement. Could these fragile myths about gender, of which you speak, possibly manifest as the deliberate avoidance of women in certain public settings, because interacting with women in non-controlled settings might cause his "knowns" about the class "woman" to fall away? And if these "knowns" start to fall away, what other "knowns"—particularly the "known" of male superiority—might disintegrate?

At this point, I would beam with pride at our ET visitors and tell them what astute observations they have made thus far. To reward them, I would invite them into my home for dinner, because I'm afraid of neither aliens nor accidentally cheating on my spouse during meals.

I would end by politely asking for a cruise in their pod and suggesting that, considering what we've learned thus far, we skip the part where I take them to our leaders. After all, a far more decent, capable, and interesting person might be walking in the woods somewhere, and wouldn't it be something if we ran into her?

*whispers* The truth is out there.

Open Wide...