Trump Is Disloyal, and I Care About That a Great Deal

I did a thread on Twitter about why it is that the typical "I don't care if a politician had a consensual affair, because that's their private business, and who even knows what arrangements they may have with their spouse, which is none of my business" narrative isn't one that applies to Donald Trump's affair with Stormy Daniels, and not just because of the subsequent corruption.

For those who aren't on Twitter and/or may have missed it, I have embedded it below.

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Students Lead Historic March Against Gun Violence

This past Saturday, students led a march on Washington, DC and nearly 800 other cities around the world in response to gun violence in the United States.

Via the March for or Lives website:

"The mission and focus of March For Our Lives is to demand that a comprehensive and effective bill be immediately brought before Congress to address these gun issues.  No special interest group, no political agenda is more critical than timely passage of legislation to effectively address the gun violence issues that are rampant in our country."
Some estimates put the turnout as the largest single-day protest in US history, rivaling the inaugural Women's March in January 2017.

Whichever actually was larger, it's notable that both protests have occurred during Donald Trump's Republican Administration. So, along with his popular vote loss in the 2016 election, his potential complicity in Russian interference, his revolving door of staff members, and his ongoing, historically-low approval rating, his mandate and legitimacy as head of state are more questionable than, certainly, any president during my lifetime.

In addition, as speculative 2020 Democratic frontrunner Joe Biden trades toxic "locker room talk" with fellow septuagenarian Donald Trump, I think at this point the anti-Trump resistance is, without question, being led by women and youth, rather than white men who talk a big game about beating each other up and/or who demand that grown white men remain centered in politics.

To that point, I attended one of the sister March for Our Lives and was glad to see that it truly seemed to be student-led and intersectional, with only youth speaking and performing, rather than adult politicians. It was also inclusive of those who experience the threat of gun (and police) violence on a daily basis.

It turns out that women and kids have a lot to say about issues that uniquely impact our lives. But, going forward, which politicians are willing to listen? Which ones merely show up, talk at us with the same stump speech, hog the spotlight, and then leave? We see you.

And, to that point, if you haven't seen it yet, I highly recommend Emma Gonzalez's speech from the Washington March. It's one for the ages.

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Stormy Daniels Speaks on 60 Minutes

Last night, Stormy Daniels' much-anticipated 60 Minutes interview with Anderson Cooper aired on CBS. The entire video, which may autoplay at the link, and transcript are available here: "Stormy Daniels Describes Her Alleged Affair with Donald Trump."

The title is, frankly, a bit of a misnomer, as she didn't do much describing of the alleged affair, much to my relief. Although there is a common assumption that "everybody" was tuning in for sex gossip, I was dreading those details and was quite glad I didn't have to listen to them in order to watch something I felt obliged to watch for my work.

Instead, she talked about the circumstances of their meeting and sexual encounter, and then the segment rather swiftly moved on to the attempted silencing and attendant threats and corruption.


When the segment came back to Daniels' interview, Cooper asked her to respond to the accusations that she's a liar who's just trying to make a quick buck.


"I have no reason to lie," she told Cooper. "I'm opening myself up for, you know, possible danger and definitely a whole lot of shit."

Cooper pushed further, asking her about the "potential financial upside — maybe somebody will want you to write a book. Maybe, you know, you can go on a bigger tour and make more money dancing."

"That's a lot of ifs," she replied.

Indeed it is.

This is the same road any woman who speaks out against a powerful man must walk: Accused of lying, despite the fact that there is very little upside for her to telling the truth, if any, but there is always a massive downside.

And, like any other women making herself heard, Daniels' truth is the truth irrespective of the public's reaction to it.

She doesn't need me to believe her, but I do.

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Open Thread

image of a purple sofa

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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Friday Links!

This list o' links brought to you by lime.

Recommended Reading:

Paula Young Lee at Dame: Trump's America Is an Oligarchy

Kayleigh Donaldson at Pajiba: What I Learned from Only Watching Women on YouTube

Christina Asquith at Ms.: [Content Note: Misogyny; violence] This Week in Women: We Need More Seats at Tables Around the World

stavvers at Another Angry Woman: [CN: Fat hatred] Following the Money with the Cancer-Obesity Link

Staff at the Transgender Law Center: 2nd Annual Transform Tech Explores Visibility, Challenges, Opportunities for Transgender People in Tech

Jacqueline Woodson at Vanity Fair: Lena Waithe Is Changing the Game

Vivian Kane at the Mary Sue: SNL's Pete Davidson Got Queer Eyed and I Just Want This to Be a Full Episode

Andy Towle at Towleroad: Matt Bomer Bought Out an Entire Screening of Love, Simon and is Inviting the Public

Rae Paoletta at Inverse: Why Dogs Really Do Love You, According to Science

Katie Langin at Science: Exclusive: 'I've Never Seen Anything Like It' — Video of Mating Deep-Sea Anglerfish Stuns Biologists

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

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Repost: Holler at Me, Philly

I'm reposting this for anyone who may have missed it yesterday morning...

Are there any Shakers in the Philadelphia / South Jersey area? Let me know in comments, or, if you'd rather not announce your location publicly, fire me an email.

I'm just curious who's local to me now that I'm here!

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If Only Anything Still Mattered


I literally don't know what to say anymore that I haven't already said dozens — possibly hundreds — of times at this point.

Some days it's really tough to feel like I'm doing anything except collecting receipts that will never matter on people who have the power to do something but won't.

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Daily Dose of Cute

Dudley is a very enthusiastic eater, despite what his virtually two-dimensional physique suggests. He gobbles down his breakfast with gusto, and then spends the rest of his day punctuating naps with increasingly elaborate demands for a variety of treats, until it's time for dinner.

This morning, he got pumpkin mixed in with his dry food, which he loves. (And is very good for finicky greyhound digestive systems.)

image of Dudley the Greyhound eating his breakfast out of a red bowl

Zelda, on the other hand, is an equally unenthusiastic eater, despite what her round belly suggests. Her belly is round in part because that's a feature of Cushing's Disease, the medication she takes for which somewhat suppresses her appetite. But she was never a great eater to begin with — and she absolutely refuses to eat until everyone else (Dudley and the cats) have gotten their breakfast.

She was actually just yawning here, lol, but the photo nonetheless captured her sentiment about breakfast this morning.

image of Zelda the Black and Tan Mutt sitting in front of her red food bowl, making a face with her tongue out

Once every few meals, she stands at her bowl and eats like she hasn't eaten in three million years. Often she simply lies down beside her dish and won't eat at all (which isn't good, since food helps her meds metabolize). And then some days, she lies beside her breakfast watching Dudley and/or the cats eat...

image of Zelda lying beside her bowl, watching Dudley

...and will finally overcome her protest and lazily eat her breakfast from the floor, while I suppress my laughter at her adorable antics.

image of Zelda lying on the floor, eating from her dish

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 428

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 (plus the occasional non-Republican who obliges us to resist their nonsense, too, like we don't have enough to worry about) 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.

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Earlier today by me: McMaster Is Out and John Bolton Is In as National Security Advisor and Rosenstein's Presser on Iran Hacking Is Extremely Concerning and An Observation.

Here are some more things in the news today...

Colin Kahl and Jon Wolfsthal at Foreign Policy: John Bolton Is a National Security Threat. "McMaster was no dove. But Bolton falls into an entirely different category of dangerous uber-hawk. Fifteen years ago, Bolton championed the Iraq war and, to this day, he continues to believe the most disastrous foreign policy decision in a generation was a good idea. Bolton's position on Iraq was no anomaly. Shortly before the 2003 invasion, he reportedly told Israeli officials that once Saddam Hussein was deposed, it would be necessary to deal with Syria, Iran, and North Korea. He has essentially maintained this position ever since. Put plainly: For Bolton, there are few international problems where war is not the answer."

Aaron Rupar at ThinkProgress: GOP Senator Celebrates Bolton's Appointment Because It Might Mean Preemptive War. "During a Fox & Friends interview on Friday, Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) celebrated the appointment of John Bolton as [Donald] Trump's national security adviser... 'He has a worldview that I think will help the president make us safer,' Graham said. 'He's believed stronger than anybody that North Korea having an ICBM nuclear-tipped missile is a non-starter; he believes the Iranian agreement is a terrible deal for the world, the United States, and Israel; he believes in a strong military, going after the terrorists, taking the gloves off.'"


Matthew Rosenberg at the New York Times: Bolton Was Early Beneficiary of Cambridge Analytica's Facebook Data. Of course he was.
The political action committee founded by John R. Bolton, [Donald] Trump's incoming national security adviser, was one of the earliest customers of Cambridge Analytica, which it hired specifically to develop psychological profiles of voters with data harvested from tens of millions of Facebook profiles, according to former Cambridge employees and company documents.

Mr. Bolton's political committee, known as The John Bolton Super PAC, first hired Cambridge in August 2014, months after the political data firm was founded and while it was still harvesting the Facebook data.

In the two years that followed, Mr. Bolton's super PAC spent nearly $1.2 million primarily for "survey research," which is a term that campaigns use for polling, according to campaign finance records.

But the contract between the political action committee and Cambridge, a copy of which was obtained by The New York Times, offers more detail on just what Mr. Bolton was buying. The contract broadly describes the services to be delivered by Cambridge as "behavioral microtargeting with psychographic messaging."
As I said, Bolton wasn't just sitting on his ass in between working for George W. Bush and getting hired by Trump. He has been working diligently to ensure the election of a president who would be amenable to his pro-war advocacy. He didn't end up in this administration by coincidence.

In other Cambridge Analytica news...

Paul Lewis and Paul Hilder at the Guardian: Leaked: Cambridge Analytica's Blueprint for Trump Victory. This piece is really worth your time to read in full, but I want to highlight this section, for reasons I'll explain afterwards:
A former employee explained to the Guardian how it details the techniques used by the Trump campaign to micro-target US voters with carefully tailored messages about the Republican nominee across digital channels.

Intensive survey research, data modelling, and performance-optimizing algorithms were used to target 10,000 different ads to different audiences in the months leading up to the election. The ads were viewed billions of times, according to the presentation.

...One of the most effective ads, according to Kaiser, was a piece of native advertising, which was also profiled in the presentation. The interactive graphic, which looked like a piece of journalism and purported to list "10 inconvenient truths about the Clinton Foundation," appeared for several weeks to people from a list of key swing states when they visited the site. It was produced by the in-house Politico team that creates sponsored content.

The Cambridge Analytica presentation dedicates an entire slide to the ad, which is described as having achieved "an average engagement time of four minutes." Kaiser described the ad as "the most successful thing we pushed out."
Eastsidekate went and found that "sponsor-generated content," which is still available online. Right below the headline, it reads: "PAID ADVERTISEMENT FOR AND CREATED BY DONALD J. TRUMP." Which is pretty interesting, considering Trump's attempted disavowal's of Cambridge Analytica. I wonder if any Politico articles on Trump's attempts to distance himself note that Cambridge Analytica placed sponsored content with them that was credited to his campaign. I'm guessing not! Once upon a time, that would have been considered a profoundly unethical journalistic failure, but, luckily for Politico, nothing matters anymore.

In related news...

Kashmir Hill at Gizmodo: The Other Cambridge Personality Test Has Its Own Database with Millions of Facebook Profiles.
[I]t's a good time to look more closely at the project that inspired Kogan and Cambridge Analytica. This whole thing wasn't their idea, after all; they copied it from the University of Cambridge, where Kogan had been a lecturer. The U.K. university's psychometrics department had its own personality test which had been hoovering up Facebook users' data since 2007, but, as the New York Times reported, and Kogan recently confirmed in an email, it refused to sell the dataset to the entity that became Cambridge Analytica (inspiring them to replicate the experiment).

The University of Cambridge's personality test is still around, though, along with a database with profile information for over 6 million Facebook users. It has those users' psychological profiles, their likes, their music listening, their religious and political views, and their locations, among other information. It says it can predict users' leadership potential, personality, and "satisfaction with life." You are supposed to be an academic to get access to all this, but the project's page says the database has also been used to personalize Hilton's apps; to recommend jobs to people; to target ads; and to create an interactive promo for the video game Watch Dogs 2. (Ironically, that video game is about being surveilled by companies and Big Brother.)
Cool.

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NO COLLUSION!

Nicole Lafond at TPM: Dowd: Trump Approved of Statement Calling for Shutdown of Mueller Probe. "Donald Trump's outgoing lawyer John Dowd told The Wall Street Journal on Thursday that Trump approved of a statement the lawyer released over the weekend, calling for an end to special counsel Robert Mueller's probe into Russian interference in the 2016 election and the Trump campaign. '(Trump) thought it was a good statement. And I still do,' Dowd told the Journal on Thursday, just after he resigned from Trump's personal legal team. ...Initially, Dowd told reporters that he made the statement on behalf of Trump, but later walked that back, saying he was speaking for himself. Later on Saturday, Trump mirrored Dowd's remarks, tweeting that the investigation 'should never have been started.'"


How very helpful to a traitorous president of them.

Zachary Mider and David Voreacos at Bloomberg: Trump Fundraiser Offered to Help Lift Sanctions on Russian Firms. "Elliott Broidy, a top fundraiser for [Donald] Trump, offered last year to help a Moscow-based lawyer get Russian companies removed from a U.S. sanctions list. Broidy made the offer after an inquiry from Andrei Baev, an energy lawyer at Chadbourne & Parke LLP, both men acknowledged in statements to Bloomberg News this week. In a proposal sent to Baev shortly before Trump's January 2017 inauguration, Broidy sketched out a potential campaign to influence top U.S. officials, according to a person with knowledge of the talks who spoke on condition of anonymity. The plan never went forward, Broidy and Baev said, and no such lobbying took place. But the discussions are a striking illustration of how Russians' efforts to escape sanctions led them to seek political allies close to Trump."

* * *


Joe McDonald at the AP: China May Hike Tariffs on U.S. Pork, Aluminum, Other Goods. "China announced a $3 billion list of U.S. goods including pork, apples, and steel pipe on Friday that it said may be hit with higher tariffs in a spiraling trade dispute with [Donald] Trump that companies and investors worry could depress global commerce." So the first casualties of Trump's trade war will be farmers and steelworkers. MAGA Keep America Great, or whatever.

Ayana Byrd at Colorlines: FEMA Ignored Puerto Rico Supermarkets' Requests for Generator Fuel After Hurricane Maria. "For more than a week after Hurricane Maria made landfall in Puerto Rico, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) did not respond to repeated texts and emails asking for generator fuel to refrigerate perishable food at supermarkets and chain stores. As a result, Walmart and other retailers had to throw away tens of thousands of dollars worth of meat, produce, and dairy, as residents of the island stood hungry in lines outside the markets." Goddammit.

[CN: Child trafficking] Annamarya Scaccia at Rewire: The Trump Administration Is Making It Harder to Stop Foster Children from Being Trafficked.
Statistics show that, every year, thousands of children in the U.S. foster care system are sexually exploited by traffickers who prey on their vulnerability. These kids are easily targeted, advocates say, in part because of a flawed child welfare system that often fails to provide them with proper support and protection.

Still, there exists a dearth of available government data tracking foster care youth who've been sexually exploited. That would have changed with the Obama-era Preventing Sex Trafficking and Strengthening Families Act, which reformed state reporting requirements regarding foster youth and sex trafficking. But the Trump administration has recently decided to delay key data collection provisions of the 2014 law for the next two years, meaning that advocates will have to wait even longer for a better sense of how many victims are in the system.

They fear that will only put foster care youth more at risk — especially when they age out of the system. "It blows my mind," Elizabeth Pitman Gretter, senior staff attorney at Children's Rights, a national watch group advocating on behalf of abused and neglected children, told Rewire. "It's such critical information and we are already well-past the time where the states should be able to do it and should be doing it."
[CN: Police brutality; racism] Monique Judge at the Root: Why 'He Should Have Just Complied' Does Not Apply to Stephon Clark. "As the videos show us, not only did the police not identify themselves, but as soon as they yelled out their command, they immediately began operating under the assumption that he had a gun. They began firing their weapons within three seconds of telling him to show his hands. Clark was never given the opportunity to comply." This is an important detail: He was never given the opportunity to comply. It's important to note, even though, as I've written many times before, compliance under duress is simply not always a reasonable expectation in the first place.

[CN: Terrorism; white supremacy; disablist language] Dustin Seibert at the Grio: Dear White Media, Call the Austin Bomber a Sadistic Terrorist Instead of Whitesplaining His Childhood Pain. "We've seen this countless times before: Politicians asked us not to 'politicize' the issue when Las Vegas shooter Stephen Paddock's pasty-white ass massacred a bunch of people and generally dodged the 'terrorist' label. Dylann Roof slaughtered Black people in a church in a clearly a racially-charged attack and we're told not to call him a terrorist. Some deeply disturbed white boy gets his hands on a semi-automatic rifle, enters a school, and shatters the hearts of dozens of parents in the course of a few minutes, and we hear suggestions that we should just be nicer to bullies to avoid this type of thing. Meanwhile, the goddamned FBI labeled 'Black Identity Extremists' (read: n-----s who are actively protest more than 400 years of the bullshit) as domestic terrorists who are a 'growing threat' to cops."

The media failure continues apace:


See also:


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

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Trump Will Sign or Not Sign the Budget Bill

Donald Trump will soon make a statement about whether he will sign or veto the omnibus budget bill. Earlier today, he was threatening to veto it, because Congress didn't give him funding for his tall, beautiful wall. Now reports are that he's likely to sign it.


Also: It's weird that Trump called a presser just to say whether he's signing the omnibus bill, but I've noticed he often uses press avails of various kinds to make comments on something else his advisors have told him not to comment on, so some absurd off-topic shit may be forthcoming.

In any case, here's a thread for discussion, whatever happens!

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An Observation

Sometimes I think about all the people who don't pay attention to the news and only have the vaguest notion about what's happening with the Trump administration, and I wonder what it would be like to be a person who will be completely taken off-guard by whatever bombshell (pun unintended) finally penetrates their consciousness.

Is it better to be surprised than to see what's coming and spend weeks and months and years dreading it?'

On the one hand, I am spending a lot of time and energy being anxious, which is something people who are tuned-out aren't doing. On the other hand, I will never have a moment of regret that I didn't do whatever was in my extremely limited power to try to stop it.

I don't suppose either one is better. When the shit hits the fan, we're all gonna get sprayed.

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Rosenstein's Presser on Iran Hacking Is Extremely Concerning

This morning, Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein gave a press conference announcing the indictment of nine Iranians in a "massive" hacking scheme on behalf of Tehran. It was an unsettling press conference for a number of reasons, starting with the continued absense of an equivalent presser on Russian hacking, even after Guccifer 2.0, the hacker who claimed credit for giving stolen DNC emails to Wikileaks, was revealed this week to be a Russian intelligence officer.

And then there is this:


That is not hyperbole. To the absolute contrary, this appears to be the culmination of groundwork which the administration has been laying for some time.

Recall that, in January, we learned that the draft of the Pentagon's Nuclear Posture Review called for expanded nuclear capacity and further outlined the permitted use of nuclear weapons in response to cyberattacks.

Now, the day after Trump onboards John Bolton as his new National Security Advisor, a man who advocated preemptive strikes on Iran, the Justice Department lays out a case against Iranian hackers.


This is extremely concerning. And I don't think there's a damn thing we can do about it, but, at the very minimum, we need to understand and acknowledge what's going on.

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McMaster Is Out and John Bolton Is In as National Security Advisor

screencap of a Bloomberg video showing an image of John Bolton with the chyron: 'Bolton brings hawkish views on foreign policy to new role'
[Via "Inside Trump's Snap Decision to Oust McMaster"
by Jennifer Jacobs and Margaret Talev.]

Every day, the Trump administration gets worse. There is no bottom to the depths of depravity and indecency. And if there were ever a moment at which you may have fleetingly thought, It can't get worse than this, well, here is the decision to disprove that desperate thought: Donald Trump has ousted National Security Advisor H.R. McMaster and replaced him with John Bolton.

(Note that the position of National Security Advisor does not require a confirmation hearing.)

If you aren't familiar with John Bolton, lucky you. To put it as succinctly as possible: He is our worst fucking nightmare — a sinister warmonger for whom the ubiquitous description of "hawkish" hardly does justice to his role in literally creating war.


If you're wondering if Bolton may have mellowed out in the interceding years, the answer is a resolute no. From last month:


Let us be very clear: Trump selected Bolton because he is a violent warmonger.

In 2015, Bolton penned an op-ed for the New York Times bluntly headlined: "To Stop Iran's Bomb, Bomb Iran." His argument was equally blunt: "The inconvenient truth is that only military action like Israel's 1981 attack on Saddam Hussein's Osirak reactor in Iraq or its 2007 destruction of a Syrian reactor, designed and built by North Korea, can accomplish what is required. Time is terribly short, but a strike can still succeed."

It's a fairly typical example of Bolton's disposition: The United States should preemptively attack any state that is perceived as a threat, using whatever justification necessary.

Just last month, he penned an op-ed for the Wall Street Journal entitled "The Legal Case for Striking North Korea First," in which he argued: "It is perfectly legitimate for the United States to respond to the current 'necessity' posed by North Korea's nuclear weapons by striking first."

This was how Bolton operated during the Bush administration, when he was Under Secretary of State for Arms Control and International Security and then ambassador to the United Nations; it's how he has operated as a Fox News talking head; it's how he will continue to operate as Trump's National Security Advisor, whispering in his ear like a bloodthirsty Wormtongue that there is no choice but to strike first.

This is particularly concerning ahead of Trump's promised meeting with Kim Jong Un: A summit which will reverse decades of established diplomatic protocol and would normally require months of planning, which will now happen instead with a decimated State Department, including key Korean vacancies; no official Secretary of State; and a brand new National Security Advisor who has publicly said he believes negotiations with North Korea are a waste of time.

Naturally, Bolton also sides with Trump on Russian interference: Bolton "has cast doubt on the evidence linking Russia to the Democratic National Committee hack, suggesting that the Obama administration was blaming the Kremlin for political purposes. In December 2016, when Bolton was being floated as the possible deputy secretary of state, the former diplomat suggested that the digital footprints left behind at the DNC may have been a 'false flag.'"

In Bolton, Trump has found an advisor who will tell him what he wants to hear; and, in Trump, Bolton has found a president who will take seriously his most wanton recommendations urging state violence.

It's a dreadful combination. And Trump's choice further indicates that he is going full authoritarian.

Without swift and serious intervention, which doesn't appear to be coming, we are doomed.

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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 ivyceltress: "Do you look forward to meeting extraterrestrial life forms?"

Sure, why not!

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FYI

image of a 1990s Bryan Adams album cover to which I've added text reading: 'A complete list of all the people for whom Bryan Adams does everything that he does: You.'

[Previous FYI: Rick Astley; Eddie Murphy; The Eurythmics; Eddie Rabbit; Sinéad O'Connor; Was (Not Was); Bon Jovi; Kenny Rogers; Bobby McFerrin; Starship; Dead or Alive; Right Said Fred; Edie Brickell and the New Bohemians; Salt n Pepa; Nelson; The Cure; The Soup Dragons; Europe/BushCo; Elton John; Eddie Money; Human League; Glenn Frey; Van Halen; Alanis Morissette; Depeche Mode; The Beatles; The Proclaimers; Bruce Springsteen; Meat Loaf; Cyndi Lauper; Cole Porter; Tina Turner; The Jets; Starland Vocal Band; Kenny Loggins; Gloria Estefan; Martha Reeves & The Vandellas; Rebecca Black; Queen; Rihanna. Hint: They're better if you click 'em!]

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The Media Is Failing Us

I swear to Maude the tone of the coverage of Donald Trump makes me more despondent every goddamned day. It isn't just that the political press is comprehensively failing to adequately cover Trump's authoritarianism; it's that they are seemingly gleefully reveling in the chaos. It's all just a big game starring internationally renowned reality teevee star Donald Trump as the U.S. president.

To wit:

screen

"A Jubilant Trump Prepares for War with Mueller."

Oooooookayyyyyyy.

It's cool how the media just doesn't even talk about Donald Trump like he's president.

To avoid talking about how the president behaving this way HAS CONSEQUENCES FOR THE NATION.

Just...fuck.

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The Makeup Thread

Here is your semi-regular makeup thread, to discuss all things makeup and makeup adjacent.

Do you have a makeup product you'd recommend? Are you looking for the perfect foundation which has remained frustratingly elusive? Need or want to offer makeup tips? Searching for hypoallergenic products? Want to grouse about how you hate makeup? Want to gush about how you love it?

Whatever you like — have at it!

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First of all, I want to offer a huge thank you to Drunk Elephant, whose skincare products I recommended in the last makeup thread, who sent me a new set of Littles to say thanks for giving their amazing products my enthusiastic endorsement!

image of Drunk Elephant's Littles package

And I want to extend an extra thanks for being so thoughtful in their outreach to me, noting that I don't have any affiliate relationships and saying they would only send something if I felt comfortable that it wouldn't compromise my integrity with y'all.

That just made me all the happier — and so I am eager to disclose that they sent me a freebie (with no strings or future obligations) and that they were incredibly sensitive about it. I know I'm not the only one who appreciates when a company has good corporate practices in addition to great products. Take my money!

Now moving on to today's FACE:

image of me in the car with a bold lip look
#NoFilter

To get this look, I used Neutrogena's Healthy Skin Primer all over (including my eyelids; don't forget the eyelids!), followed by Becca's Shimmering Skin Perfector in Rose Gold across my cheekbones, above my temples, down the bridge of my nose, and on my philtral columns (between my nose and top lip).

My lips are outlined with ColourPop's Lippie Pencil in Skimpy, then colored with Nyx's Soft Matte Metallic Lip Cream in Cannes. It was the first time I used the latter product, and I really liked it. It dries quickly without getting too dry or flaky, and feels like there's nothing there.

On my eyes, I used Elf's Molten Liquid Eyeshadow in Brushed Cooper below the crease (the quality of which is as good if not better than much more expensive liquid eyeshadows), and blended it out to the purple in Rimmel's Magnif'eyes Smoke Edition palette.

image of my hand holding the aforementioned eyeshadow palette

I used Nyx's Le Chick Flick waterproof mascara on my lashes, and shaped my brows with Ardell's Brow Sculpting Gel in Clear.

I've never been comfortable doing a bold lip; I tend to strongly favor bold eyes and a muted lip. But I've been playing around more with the opposite, and I'm starting to feel a bit more excited about it!

(As always, I'm not affiliated with any of these companies in any way, nor am I getting anything in exchange for these recommendations. I just like the products!)

Anyway! What's up with you?

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Please note, as always, that advice should be not be offered to an individual person unless they solicit it. Further: This thread is open to everyone — women, men, genderqueer folks. People who are makeup experts, and people who are makeup newbies. Also, because there is a lot of racist language used in discussions of makeup, and in makeup names, please be aware to avoid turns of phrase that are alienating to women of color, like "nude" or "flesh tone" when referring to a peachy or beige color. I realize some recommended products may have names that use these words, so please be considerate about content noting for white supremacist (and/or Orientalist) product naming.

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Zelda the Black and Tan Mutt lying on her back on the couch with her paws in the air
Zelly would like you to know Dudley isn't the only one who can sleep silly!

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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