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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Sorry that it's been awhile, but I just haven't had any exciting new makeup thoughts to share. And I still don't hahaha! But I didn't want to oblige y'all to wait any longer just because my make-up game has been boring AF! So here ya go!

image of me from mid-chest up, standing in my bathroom, wearing a blue t-shirt and my contacts, with the front of my hair pulled back into a braid, sporting light coverage make-up and metallic red lips

Just the usual basics in this photo, plus some snazzy lipstick: Infallible Paints Metallics Lip Color from L'Oréal in Galactic Foil.

GALACTIC FOIL!!!

Anyway! What's up with you?

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

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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 Dudley the Greyhound standing next to the couch, where a Cubs baseball cap is resting atop a pillow

One of Iain's friends/colleagues left his Cubs hat at our place, so I set it where Iain would see it the next morning and remember to take it to work with him to return it.

Dudley kept standing near the hat like he maybe wanted to put it on? LOL. Who knew Dudz was a Cubbies fan!

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 536

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.

* * *

Earlier today by me: Good Morning! Trump Is the Worst! and Trump's War on Immigrants: The Latest and Briefly, on Trump's SCOTUS Pick.

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

Stephen Miller and Kellyanne Conway are the latest members of the Trump Regime to get harassed in public. Good.


Andrew Jacobs at the New York Times: U.S. Opposition to Breastfeeding Resolution Stuns World Health Officials. "A resolution to encourage breastfeeding was expected to be approved quickly and easily by the hundreds of government delegates who gathered this spring in Geneva for the United Nations-affiliated World Health Assembly. ...American officials sought to water down the resolution by removing language that called on governments to 'protect, promote, and support breastfeeding' and another passage that called on policymakers to restrict the promotion of food products that many experts say can have deleterious effects on young children. When that failed, they turned to threats, according to diplomats and government officials who took part in the discussions. Ecuador, which had planned to introduce the measure, was the first to find itself in the cross hairs. The Americans were blunt: If Ecuador refused to drop the resolution, Washington would unleash punishing trade measures and withdraw crucial military aid. The Ecuadorean government quickly acquiesced." Bullying over breastfeeding. For crying out loud.


Katelyn Burns at Rewire.News: Scott Pruitt Is out as EPA Head; a Coal Lobbyist Takes His Place. "Deputy EPA Director Andrew Wheeler will step in to run the agency. Wheeler has a long history of lobbying for looser regulations on the coal industry. Wheeler, former chief of staff to climate-change denier Sen. James Inhofe (R-OK), has lobbied for the largest coal mining company in the United States... 'Andrew Wheeler is equally unqualified to serve as the nation's chief environmental steward,' Ana Unruh Cohen, managing director for government affairs at the Natural Resources Defense Council, said in a statement. 'Like Pruitt, this veteran coal lobbyist has shown only disdain for the EPA's vital mission to protect Americans' health and our environment.'"


Andy Towle at Towleroad: Trump's Personal Driver Sues Him for 3,300 Hours of Unpaid Overtime. "Donald Trump's personal driver of 25 years sued him on Monday for 3,300 hours of unpaid overtime in a complaint that said he was exploited 'in an utterly callous display of unwarranted privilege and entitlement and without even a minimal sense of noblesse oblige.' Bloomberg reports: 'Trump's personal driver for more than 25 years says the billionaire real estate developer didn't pay him overtime and raised his salary only twice in 15 years, clawing back the second raise by cutting off his health benefits. Noel Cintron, who is listed in public records as a registered Republican, sued the Trump Organization for about 3,300 hours of overtime that he says he worked in the past six years. He's not allowed to sue for overtime prior to that due to the statute of limitations.'"

Tarini Parti and Jeremy Singer-Vine at BuzzFeed: Some Members of Trump's Exclusive Clubs Appear to Have Been Invited to An Air Force One Tour. "Although the names of the individuals are redacted, partially unredacted email addresses show eight of those people were affiliated with Arrigo Automotive Group, a family-owned car dealership in the West Palm Beach area. The leadership of the company — Joe Arrigo and his sons, Jim and John Arrigo, and their wives — have been members of both Mar-a-Lago and Trump International Golf Club in West Palm Beach. Membership records from 2007 obtained by BuzzFeed News list the family as members of both the clubs and specify that Jim Arrigo had been a member of the Trump International Golf Club since 1999, the year it opened."

Luis Martinez at ABC News: Two U.S. Navy Warships Sail Through Taiwan Strait. "Two U.S. Navy ships sailed through the Taiwan Strait this weekend, the body of water separating China and Taiwan. The transit of American warships through the Strait are always sensitive because of China's claims over Taiwan, which it regards as a breakaway province. ...While the U.S. and China cooperate in denculearizing North Korea, there are tensions between the two countries over China's growing military presence on [human]-made islands in the South China Sea. The U.S. Navy has continued to carry out freedom of navigation passages in international waters close to those islands that have the effect of countering China's territorial claims." Everything is fine. (Everything is not fine.)

Jackson Diehl at the Washington Post: Annexing Crimea Was Egregious; Why Does Trump Disagree? (Because he's Putin's puppet, obvs.)
Inside the U.S. government there is virtual unanimity on the question of Crimea, the Ukrainian region invaded and abruptly annexed by Russia in 2014: It was an egregious act of aggression and, as the first forcible transnational seizure of territory in Europe since World War II, should never be accepted by the United States.

There's just one exception to this consensus: [Donald] Trump.

Since his presidential campaign, Trump has repeatedly said — most recently, to the other leaders of the Group of Seven democracies — that Crimea ought to be part of Russia because a majority of its people are Russian-speaking and, as he put it in 2016, "would rather be with Russia." When Trump was asked about reports he might acknowledge Russian sovereignty over Crimea in his upcoming summit with Russian President Vladi­mir Putin, the president teasingly told reporters, "We're going to have to see."
Everything is super fucked. Meanwhile, in Britain...


And in other news... [Content Note: Class warfare; nativism; police brutality; sexual harassment]


Danielle Corcione at Rewire.News: Demonstrators Occupy ICE Building in Philadelphia Amid Police Brutality. "Due to sweeping immigration arrests, the Philadelphia ICE office made more 'at-large' arrests of undocumented people without criminal convictions in 2017 than any other ICE office in the United States, according to ProPublica. Philadelphia is a so-called sanctuary city, meaning it doesn't honor ICE requests to hold an immigrant so the agency might take her into custody. Even so, ICE officers from the Philadelphia regional office have conducted warrantless searches, trespassed, and racially profiled in their pursuit of immigrants, ProPublica reported."


Goddammit.

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

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Briefly, on Trump's SCOTUS Pick

[Content Note: Misogyny.]


Also: I am really despairing as I contemplate how the announcement of Trump's Supreme Court nominee and the ensuing confirmation fight (such as it is, given the odds) will obscure much more important news — like all of this — for the foreseeable future.

It's not that a new SCOTUS justice isn't important; of course it is. Because we already know everything we need to know about his SCOTUS pick, no matter who it is. We knew when he was still a candidate.

And, whoever it is, they're not going to be worse than anyone any other Republican president would have chosen. That's the only headline that matters, really: This isn't about how terrible Trump is, but about how terrible Republicans are.

Sure, Mitt Romney might've chosen someone who looks better on paper, but they would have been just as terrible for reproductive rights, civil rights, LGBTQ rights, immigration law, voting rights, labor rights, the environment, election law, and every other significant social and political issue.

But what's being done to immigrants, what's happening with regard to trade, what's going on with U.S. foreign policy including and especially our relationship with Russia right now, and other domestic and global issues are, though in most cases an inevitable outgrowth of Republican politics, much more specifically about Donald Trump.

That's why they're more important issues, frankly. At least as important.

And I'm going to keep writing and talking about them, because the SCOTUS pick is about facilitating Trump's agenda — which is why it's his agenda that still matters the most.

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Trump's War on Immigrants: The Latest

[Content Note: Nativism; abuse.]

Donald Trump's war on immigrants — migrants, refugees, undocumented, documented, and naturalized citizens — continues to expand in scope with each passing day and is doing untold harm to countless immigrant families. Here is some of the latest news.

1. Mary Papenfuss at the Huffington Post: 1-Year-Old Baby Appears in Immigration Court, Cries Hysterically. "A 1-year-old boy in federal custody who appeared in immigration court without his parents in Phoenix briefly played with a ball, drank from a bottle, then 'cried hysterically' as he was about to leave the courtroom Friday, according to The Associated Press. But he was eventually granted a voluntary departure order so the government can fly him to Honduras, where his father has already been sent. The little boy, identified in court only as Johan, was one of the children who appeared in the Arizona court Friday without parents. One boy held up five fingers when the judge asked him his age. Judge John Richardson said he was 'embarrassed to ask' if Johan understood the proceedings, AP reported. 'I don't know who you would explain it to, unless you think that a 1-year-old could learn immigration law,' he told Johan's attorney."

One boy held up five fingers when the judge asked him his age. Sob.

I've become increasingly concerned about the fact that many people, even progressives who generally follow the news, don't understand that Trump's executive order did not, in fact, stem the tide of abuse at the southern border.

Trump was clearly hoping — and anticipating — that his executive order would generate exactly the sort of headlines that give people permission to stop paying attention, which it did, because our political press is garbage.

Progressives have to get so much savvier about Trump's media strategy. We cannot take anything as permission to check out.

Resistance requires vigilance.

And, unfortunately, reports of tiny children being expected to represent themselves in immigration court is only the beginning of the mountainous evidence that we cannot trust Trump and must stay tuned in.

2. Aura Bogado, Ziva Branstetter, and Vanessa Swales at Reveal: Defense Contractor Detained Migrant Kids in Vacant Phoenix Office Building.

A major U.S. defense contractor quietly detained dozens of immigrant children inside a vacant Phoenix office building with dark windows, no kitchen, and only a few toilets during three weeks of the Trump administration's family separation effort, Reveal from The Center for Investigative Reporting has learned.

Videos shot by an alarmed neighbor show children dressed in sweatsuits being led — one so young she was carried — into the 3,200-square-foot building in early June. The building is not licensed by Arizona to hold children, and the contractor, MVM Inc., has claimed publicly that it does not operate "shelters or any other type of housing" for children.

Defending the administration's policy to separate families at the border in a May interview with NPR, White House chief of staff John Kelly promised: "The children will be taken care of — put into foster care or whatever."

Whether or not these children were taken from their parents, that "whatever" for them was the vacant building tucked away in a midtown Phoenix neighborhood. It is not listed among shelters operating through the federal Office of Refugee Resettlement or on the state child care licensing website.

There are new cameras on the building, extra locks on the doors and a paper shredder bin directly outside the building's side door. Neighbor Lianna Dunlap's videos show workers pulling up in white vans and leading dazed children into the building. When she asked questions, she said the workers responded with silence or terse answers.

"There's been times where I drive by and I just start crying because, you know, it's right behind my house," said Dunlap, her voice wavering. "I don't know and I think that's the worst part — not knowing what's actually going on in there and just hoping that they're okay."
Fortunately, Dunlap did more than just hope. She asked questions; she shot video; she contacted reliable press; she pushed. We can't rely on hope; we need to take action.

3. Adam Peck at ThinkProgress: Trump Administration Admits They've Lost Track of Roughly 20 Percent of Toddlers' Parents. "Friday afternoon, government officials acknowledged that as many as 20 percent of the youngest children ripped from their parents on Donald Trump's orders won't be reunified with their families any time soon. The revelation comes a day after Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar assured the public that the government would meet the court's July 10 deadline to reunite children under the age of 5 with their parents, only to immediately backtrack."

4. Elliot Spagat at the AP: ACLU: Less Than Half of Child Reunions Will Meet Deadline. "The American Civil Liberties Union said it appears the Trump administration will miss a court-ordered deadline to reunite young children who were separated at the border with their parents in more than half of the cases. The ACLU said late Sunday the administration provided it with a list of 102 children under 5 years old and that it 'appears likely that less than half will be reunited' by Tuesday's deadline."

5. Mike Newall at the Philadelphia Inquirer: Philly Kids Collected New Books for Immigrant Children at Berks Detention Center; No Thanks, Officials Told Them.
The idea was as simple as it was compassionate: Donate books. Spanish-language books, for children locked up in immigration detention centers. To let them know they had friends their own age thinking of them. To give them something of their own — to take home with them. A distraction, with a message of hope tucked inside, as they waited for the United States government to release them.

The kids at Mighty Writers' El Futuro branch, on Ninth Street in South Philly, put their plan to work. Mighty Writers is a writing academy and an after-school program; its El Futuro branch is dedicated to the Latino immigrant community that has blossomed in a neighborhood long known for, and strengthened by, its immigrant population. Proof against all of our president's fearmongering about what immigrants do when they come here: They thrive. They contribute. They help others.

The Mighty Writers had heard the stories of children separated from their families at the border. And they knew that children and their families were being detained in places as close as the Berks County Residential Center, 75 miles northwest of Philadelphia.

In the immigration advocacy community, Berks has long been known by a different name: Baby Jail. For a time, as my colleague Jeff Gammage has reported, the prison housed 80 immigrant detainees, mostly mothers and children. Now, about 20 families are housed there, all seeking asylum from unspeakable violence, willing to make the treacherous trek across a continent from El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras.

Now, advocates fear it will become a model for the Trump administration's plan to detain immigrant families. Because that's where we are now — looking for more ways to lock up parents and children. At least they're together this time.

Things came together quickly. Mighty Writers staffers spoke with a teacher at the Berks detention center who said the books would be a welcome gift.

And so they got a grant. They bought 700 books, 100 for Berks and 600 for detention centers around the country. Thirty Latino kids at Mighty Writers drew bookmarks with messages of comfort and solidarity.

The books were to have been delivered Tuesday at 10 a.m. No media, just sealed, unopened boxes of books, as the detention center folks requested. The Mighty Writers packed the bookmarks separately. They wanted everything to go smoothly. This wasn't a political gesture, they said. It was an act of friendship.

On Monday night, with the books packed and ready to go, the detention center abruptly changed its mind. No thanks, they said. We don't need your books.

Whitaker said no one from Berks County, which runs the detention center for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, offered an explanation for the sudden turnaround, other than that they had a full library. Give the books to someone without a library, they were told.
Cruelty, just for cruelty's sake. That is what this is; that is what we're facing. Never lose sight of that. And these kids' instinct for kindness was exactly right, even if it was thwarted. (For now.)

6. David Boddiger at Splinter: Immigration Agents Arrest Grandparents Visiting Their Son-in-Law at Fort Drum on July 4. "A couple of grandparents from Brooklyn who traveled to Fort Drum in upstate New York to visit their son-in-law on the country's Independence Day — before he is shipped to Afghanistan for a third tour of duty — were arrested by immigration authorities and thrown into detention, a report says. According to NBC's New York affiliate, Concepcion and Margarito Silva, who are from Mexico but have lived in New York for two decades with a Department of Labor work permit, used their New York City IDs to enter the military base to visit their family member. But they were stopped by military police, who called Border Protection. Agents quickly arrived to detain the Silvas and take them to a federal ICE detention center 'hundreds of miles away in Buffalo,' according to the report."

7. Rachel Frazin at the Daily Beast: Journalist Held by ICE Speaks: 'Without a Doubt' I Was Targeted for My Work. "[Memphis-based journalist Manuel Duran] was covering a Memphis protest in April when he was arrested on charges of disorderly conduct and obstructing a highway or passageway. In a video taken of the incident, Duran appears to be wearing a press badge and was not the only journalist in the street. After the charges were dropped, Duran was released from the Shelby County jail and ICE agents were there waiting to arrest him, the county sheriff's spokesperson Earle Farrell said. A Memphis Police arrest report claimed that Duran's refusal to get out of the road 'caused a hazard.' It also mentioned that he did not have a U.S. identification. Duran believes his arrest wasn't over a simple hazard, but that he was targeted for his coverage of the Memphis Police Department in Memphis Noticias, the online publication he founded."

Make noise. Make your calls. Make a plan. Please support immigrant families, in whatever way you can.

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Good Morning! Trump Is the Worst!


Everything about his tweet is making my teeth grind already, not least of which that he's treating the announcement of his Supreme Court nominee like a ratings ploy during sweeps week. For fuck's sake.

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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 the exterior of a pub which has been 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 leaves.

Recommended Reading:

Jenn Fang at Reappropriate: [Content Note: Nativism; abuse; internment] Korematsu, Travel Bans, and Resisting History's "Gravely Wrong" Injustices as They Happen

David E. Sanger at the Daily Beast: The Brits Told Us the Russians Were Hacking Our Election

Kristy Puchko at Pajiba: [CN: Anti-choice fuckery] Just When You Thought Nick Loeb's Anti-Abortion Roe v. Wade Was as Bad as It Could Get...

Princess Weekes at the Mary Sue: [CN: Sexual assault; rape apologia] How Satire Made Us Complacent in the Fight Against R. Kelly

Rachel Thompson at Mashable: Unlucky Chap Gets Leg Stuck in Molten Tarmac Because the UK Is Melting Right Now

Maddie Stone at Earther: Science Takes a Baby Step Toward Baby Northern White Rhinos

Sue Kerr at Pgh Lesbian Correspondents: Blog, #AMPLIFY, and Sue Featured in Northside Chronicle

And here's the piece about Sue by Sarah Gross: Sue Kerr Blogs to #AMPLIFY LGBT Experience in Pittsburgh

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

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Cloud Fancier

I love this piece by Paola A. Rosa-Aquino at Earther so, so much: There's a Lot More to Clouds Than Meets the Eye.

Just yesterday, I was waxing philosophical to Iain — again — about my love of clouds, and how I am always amazed and delighted by them.

They individually move and change and create and are filled with their own systems of energy like living beings, except they aren't living beings.

They are so vast, and I am so small — and yet I can contemplate them, and they cannot contemplate me.

They are, on some days, as compelling as any mountain peak, and yet they are not fixed, and can capture my gaze all over again just moments later.

I love looking at the clouds. Always have.

Always will.

[Related Reading: Head in the Clouds.]

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World of Shakescraft

image of colorful yarn
[Via Shirsty Cat Designs. You can buy their beautiful yarn here.]

As you know, I am not a crafty person. I am terrible at crafts! And I'm only slightly better with DIY home projects, with the occasional modest success.

But lots of Shakers are very talented crafters and DIY-ers, and I am happy to read about all of your terrific projects! So here is a thread to talk about your current crafting and/or DIY project(s), completed projects, or future projects; to share ideas; to brag about your successes or lament your setbacks; and to solicit advice from fellow creators!

(As always, make sure you don't offer advice unless it's solicited.)

Have at it in comments!

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Daily Dose of Cute

Just two random faces I snapped yesterday, to give you some idea of the ridiculous cuteness I deal with on a constant basis, lol.

image of Dudley the Greyhound, looking at me with his tongue hanging out the side of his mouth
Note the tongue hanging out.

image of Zelda the Black and Tan Mutt, looking at me with her chin pressed into a pillow
I can't even process this level of cute.

As always, please feel welcome and encouraged to share pix of the fuzzy, feathered, or scaled members of your family in comments.

Open Wide...

We Resist: Day 533

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.

* * *

Earlier today by me: Trump Launches Racist, Sexist Attacks on Maxine Waters and Elizabeth Warren and Trump's War on Immigrants Continues Apace.

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


Kia Morgan-Smith at the Grio: Therese Patricia Okoumou Speaks Out After Arrest for Climbing Statue of Liberty to Protest Trump Immigration Policy.
Therese Patricia Okoumou, the soul sister who defiantly sat at the base of Lady Liberty to protest of Trump's inhumane immigration policies, spoke out for the first time and credited our Forever First Lady Michelle Obama as the inspiration for her Statue of Liberty sit-in.

"Michelle Obama … said when they go low, we go high. And I went as high as I could," Okoumou said.

The heroic Black woman, who is an immigrant herself, rose up in resistance and climbed the Statue of Liberty on the Fourth of July. The 44-year-year old was arrested and charged with trespassing, interference with government agency functions, and disorderly conduct, reports ABC7.

When she emerged from the court, crowds awaited her and cheered for Okoumou.

"Trump has ripped this country apart. It is depressing. It is outrageous," she said at a Thursday press conference. "His draconian zero-tolerance policy on immigration has to go."

...Okoumou is expected back in court August 3 for a status conference. She faces a maximum penalty of six months in prison and a fine.
I sincerely hope that she is not obliged to spend a single day in prison for calling attention to human rights abuses being committed by this administration, while they continue to live high on the taxpayer hog with no accountability in sight.

Speaking of no accountability, this thread by Democratic Senator from Illinois Dick Durbin about the incoming head of the DOJ Criminal Division is something.


And there's more where that came from.

Ana Swanson at the New York Times: Trump's Trade War Against China Is Officially Underway. "A trade war between the world's two largest economies officially began on Friday morning as the Trump administration followed through with its threat to impose tariffs on $34 billion worth of Chinese products, a significant escalation of a fight that could hurt companies and consumers in both the United States and China. ...The escalation of the trade war from threat to reality is expected to ripple through global supply chains, raise costs for businesses and consumers, and roil global stock markets, which have been volatile in anticipation of a prolonged trade fight between the United States and almost everyone else."

Lily Kuo at the Guardian: China Retaliates with Tariffs After U.S. Begins Trade War. "Minutes after the U.S. tariffs went into effect at 12.01am on Friday U.S. time, a spokesperson for China's ministry of commerce said, 'China promised not to fire the first shot, but in order to safeguard the country's core interests as well as that of the people, it is forced to fight back,' according to Xinhua. ...'If what the U.S. wants is to escalate a trade war with China, then so be it. A little fighting may be the only way the Trump administration clears its mind and allows everyone to sober up,' the state-run Global Times said on Friday. 'The Trump administration is behaving like a gang of hoodlums with its shakedown of other countries, particularly China,' said an English-language article in the China Daily. On Thursday, a spokesperson for China's ministry of commerce said the U.S. will be 'opening fire on the whole world and also opening fire on itself.'"

Karoun Demirjian at the Washington Post: Republicans on Russia Trip Face Scorn and Ridicule from Critics at Home.
Republican lawmakers who went to Russia seeking a thaw in relations received an icy reception from Democrats and Kremlin watchers for spending the Fourth of July in a country that interfered in the U.S. presidential election and continues to deny it.

..."Russians wooing with a shopworn song — repugnant as nails on a blackboard," Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) wrote in a Twitter post in response to the delegation's trip. "They are enemies and adversaries, attacking us."

Sen. Richard C. Shelby (R-Ala.) led the eight-member delegation on a multi-day tour of St. Petersburg and Moscow... Joining Shelby were Sens. Steve Daines (R-Mont.), John Hoeven (R-N.D.), Ron Johnson (R-Wis.), John Kennedy (R-La.), Jerry Moran (R-Kan.), John Thune (R-S.D.), and Rep. Kay Granger (R-Tex.).

Members of the delegation set off on their trip late last week promising to be tough with Russian officials ahead of the president's visit, especially on matters of election interference. But they struck a conciliatory tone once there: The point of their visit, Shelby stressed to the Duma leader, was to "strive for a better relationship" with Moscow, not "accuse Russia of this or that or so forth."
Fucking disloyal cowards.

[Content Note: Nativism; child abuse] Jonathan Blitzer at the New Yorker: Parents Are Struggling to Reclaim Their Children from the Office of Refugee Resettlement. "A few days ago, [a Honduran woman named Rosalinda Hernández] learned that it will be several more weeks, at least, before the government can return her [9-year-old son, with whom she'd crossed the border seeking asylum]. In order to regain custody of their children, immigrants like Hernández need to collect documents that prove their fitness as parents and submit their fingerprints — and the fingerprinting alone takes about twenty days to process."

[CN: Nativism; child abuse; rape culture] Rebekah Entralgo and Joshua Eaton at ThinkProgress: Man with History of Sex Crimes Working at Kansas Shelter for Unaccompanied Migrant Children. "A man with a history of serious sex crimes allegations is working at a shelter for unaccompanied immigrant children in Topeka, Kansas, according to public records reviewed by ThinkProgress. ...Alarmed by the 2014 news report, [Myra Gillum, a former case manager at the shelter] sent an email to the Department Health and Human Services, the Department of Homeland Security, and other federal agencies on Aug. 16, 2017, to let them know about his troubling past." And yet he is still working there.

[CN: White supremacy; death; anti-Black slur at link] Breanna Edwards at the Root: White Driver Who Fatally Struck Black Man, Called Him Racial Slur After Death, Cleared of All Fault in Collision. "A white driver who struck and killed a black Louisiana motorist who stopped to pick up debris off the roadway has been cleared of all wrongdoing in the fatal collision, state police said in a news release. This is despite the callousness that 18-year-old Matthew M. Martin allegedly showed after the crash, sending Snapchat messages after hitting and killing 31-year-old Sherell L. Lewis Jr. 'Y'all i just hit a whole guy on the highway,' one message, showing a red vehicle, read." Rage seethe boil.

[CN: White supremacy; anti-Blackness] Kristine Phillips at the Washington Post: A Black Lawmaker Was Canvassing Door to Door in Her District; a Constituent Called 911. "State Rep. Janelle Bynum, an Oregon Democrat, was talking to constituents, typing notes on her cellphone as she knocked on doors in her district just outside Portland. Then a sheriff's deputy pulled up. Bynum — who is black — said a resident in the Clackamas County neighborhood where she was canvassing had called the police on Tuesday, thinking she was 'suspicious' because she was going door to door and 'spending a lot of time typing on her cellphone after each house.'" FOR FUCK'S SAKE.

[CN: White supremacy; anti-Blackness] Sarah Newell and John Hinton at the Winston-Salem Journal: Man Accused of Racism No Longer Employed by Sonoco After Incident at Community Pool in Winston-Salem. "Winston-Salem police were called to a private community pool Wednesday afternoon after a white man asked a black woman to show her ID. ...About 2 p.m. Wednesday, Bloom asked a black woman, who was in the pool area, for identification, Gulkham said. ...In the video posted to Facebook, Bloom can be seen talking to the woman and police officers outside of the gate. The woman tells the two officers that Bloom asked for her address, then asked to see her ID. 'Where does it say that I have to show an ID to use my own pool,' the woman says." What a brave patriot, making sure no interloping babies get to use a pool during a heatwave. Fucking shitwheel.

[CN: Sexual harassment and assault; rape culture] Joshua Eaton at ThinkProgress: Leaked Notes Reveal Buddhist Leader Coerced Female Students into Sex. "A senior official in the Buddhist group Shambhala International admitted Monday that its head, prominent Buddhist teacher and author Sakyong Mipham, had coercive sexual relationships with his female students, according to meeting notes obtained by ThinkProgress. The notes come from a private video call Monday between ground-level Shambhala leaders and its governing body, called the Kalapa Council. They reveal a crisis of leadership, with members calling for Mipham, the council, or both to step down in the wake of a sex scandal that has rocked the organization. ...Last week, the advocacy group Buddhist Project Sunshine published a report detailing allegations of coercive relationships and sexual assault by Mipham — including a second-hand allegation that a woman in Chile accused him of rape."

[CN: Sexual harassment; hostility to consent]


[CN: Sexual assault; racism] Brian Slodysko at the AP: Indiana Governor, Legislative Leaders Call for AG to Resign. "Indiana Gov. Eric Holcomb and the two GOP Statehouse leaders on Thursday called for Republican Attorney General Curtis Hill to resign amid what they called credible claims that Hill drunkenly groped four women, including a lawmaker, at an Indianapolis bar. 'Four women had the courage to step forward to report sexual harassment by the Indiana attorney general,' the Republican governor said in a statement on Thursday night. 'The findings of the recent legislative report are disturbing and, at a minimum, show a violation of the state's zero tolerance sexual harassment policy.'" If it seems unusual that Indiana Republicans would so quickly disavow one of their own for sex abuse, let me assure you that it is and inform you that Curtis Hill is Black.

[CN: Sexual assault] Corky Siemaszko at NBC News: More Ohio State Wrestlers Say Rep. Jim Jordan Knew About Sexual Abuse When He Was Coach. "One of the wrestlers, Shawn Dailey, said he was groped half a dozen times by Dr. Richard Strauss in the mid-1990s, when Jordan was the assistant wrestling coach. Dailey said he was too embarrassed to report the abuse directly to Jordan at the time, but he said Jordan took part in conversations where Strauss' abuse of many other team members came up. 'I participated with Jimmy and the other wrestlers in locker-room talk about Strauss. We all did,' Dailey, 43, told NBC News, referring to Jordan. ...Dailey corroborated the account of one of those wrestlers, Dunyasha Yetts, who told NBC News that Yetts had protested to Jordan and head coach Russ Hellickson after Strauss tried to pull down his wrestling shorts when Yetts went to see him for a thumb injury."

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

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What I'm Reading Now

A thread for sharing what we're currently reading: Fiction, nonfiction, novels, short stories, historical fiction, biographies, romance, fanfic, comic books, graphic novels, longform journalism, research papers, stuff for pleasure, stuff for work, whatever.

I'm still working on the same book I was last thread, Madeleine Albright's Fascism: A Warning, because I'm frankly struggling to get through it. Not because it isn't terrific; it is! It's just, you know, the subject matter is basically the last thing I want to explore in my limited free time at the moment.

What are you reading now?

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Trump's War on Immigrants Continues Apace

[Content Note: Nativism; abuse.]

Donald Trump's war on immigrants — migrants, refugees, undocumented, documented, and naturalized citizens — continues to expand in scope with each passing day and is doing untold harm to countless immigrant families. Here is some of the latest news.

1. Last month, I wrote about the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) "launching an office that will focus on identifying Americans who are suspected of cheating to get their citizenship and seek to strip them of it." That project is now in full swing, with USCIS fixing to "hire dozens of lawyers and immigration officers in the coming weeks to find U.S. citizens they say should not have been naturalized, to revoke their citizenship, and then eventually deport them."

2. Martha Mendoza and Garance Burke at the AP: U.S. Army Quietly Discharging Immigrant Recruits. "Some immigrant U.S. Army reservists and recruits who enlisted in the military with a promised path to citizenship are being abruptly discharged, the Associated Press has learned. The AP was unable to quantify how many men and women who enlisted through the special recruitment program have been booted from the Army, but immigration attorneys say they know of more than 40 who have been discharged or whose status has become questionable, jeopardizing their futures." And, in some cases, their very lives:

An Iranian citizen who came to the U.S. for a graduate degree in engineering told the AP that he enlisted in the program hoping to gain medical training. He said he had felt proud that he was "pursuing everything legally and living an honorable life."

In recent weeks, he said, he learned that he'd been discharged.

"It's terrible because I put my life in the line for this country, but I feel like I'm being treated like trash," he said. "If I am not eligible to become a U.S. citizen, I am really scared to return to my country."

He spoke on condition of anonymity because of those fears.
Some of the most valuable military assets are immigrants whose service risks their lives in their countries of birth. They were promised U.S. citizenship in exchange for their service, and now we're not only breaking that promise, but potentially condemning them to death if they are forced to return to their countries of birth after serving in the U.S. military.

I don't even have adequate words to describe how this makes me feel. I am physically ill at the thought of what this country is doing to immigrants who swore their allegiance to us. I am so filthy angry, and so overwhelmed with grief and shame.

3. Caitlin Dickerson at the New York Times: Trump Administration in Chaotic Scramble to Reunify Migrant Families. "The family separations, part of an aggressive effort by the Trump administration to deter illegal immigration, have produced a chaotic scramble as officials now face political and judicial pressure to reunite families. Records linking children to their parents have disappeared, and in some cases have been destroyed, according to two officials of the Department of Homeland Security, leaving the authorities struggling to identify connections between family members."

Normally, destroying federal records is a crime, which is to say nothing of the aggressive indecency of being so lackadaisical about records keeping when family reunification is at stake.

It's a pretty pointed commentary on the fact that the Trump Regime never, ever, had any intention of reuniting families. And, to be frank, probably still doesn't. I highly doubt they are "scrambling." More like biding their time, waiting for some other atrocity to divert attention away from this one.

4. Samuel Gilbert at the Guardian: The Lasting Impact of Detention on Immigrant Children: 'He Relives It All Again'. This piece confirms what I anticipated would be the primary effect of Trump's executive order to "keep families together" — creating concentration camps to detain entire families indefinitely.
Last month, amid international outcry over his administration's "zero-tolerance" policy, which led to the separation of 2,300 children from their parents, Donald Trump issued an executive order to end family separation. But the move set the stage for another expansion of the U.S. family detention system. On 22 June, immigration authorities asked for 15,000 more beds to be ready for detained migrants in the next couple of weeks. One week later, the Trump administration announced its policy of holding families in detention for extended periods of time.
And the conditions in the existing camps, which were used to beta test family detentions, are awful:
"This is substituting one kind of trauma for another kind," says the 27-year-old Angelina Márquez, who fled El Salvador in 2014 with her six-year-old son and spent two months in the Artesia family detention center in New Mexico.

Márquez said that some of the women she met in Artesia had been there for months: "Nobody knew how long they would be there. Nobody knew to seek asylum. Nobody knew they could see a lawyer."

The detention center has been accused of rights abuses, poor living conditions, deficient medical and mental healthcare, and lack of detainee access to legal counsel.

Márquez described how families would sleep eight to a room. The food was often "raw and inedible," "not fit for humans," she said. The most upsetting thing to the mothers was the cruelty the guards showed to their children. When Márquez arrived, none of the guards spoke Spanish; when the detainees, including the children, asked for water, they would be denied it if they pronounced the English words incorrectly.
Again, this deserves sustained media attention, all day every day. I recall the political press covering Hillary Clinton's fucking email virtually every single day for 600 consecutive days, and I wonder where is that dedicated, tenacious energy when it comes to the horrors being perpetrated at the southern border.

5. Spencer Ackerman at the Daily Beast: Trump Ready to Turn Away Another 20,000 Refugees. "The Trump administration is likely to set the United States' ceiling for admitting refugees at approximately half of what it was last year, according to two knowledgeable former Trump administration officials and several refugee advocates familiar with internal debates. And last year's quota was the lowest level for refugees since 1980 — all while a migration crisis unfolds worldwide."

Although no official number has yet been disclosed by the administration, the expectation is that "next year's cap on refugee admissions will be between 20,000 and 25,000 people," which is "about half of the 45,000-refugee ceiling the Trump administration set last year, and four to five times lower than the Obama administration's final-year refugee ceiling of 110,000."

It is also colossally insufficient, given the scope of the need globally and the United States' capacity to absorb refugees.

This is nothing but white supremacist nativism, denying harbor to people of color, many of whom are Muslim, because the president and his party and their base are putrid scum with scorched ash where their humanity should be.

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Trump Launches Racist, Sexist Attacks on Maxine Waters and Elizabeth Warren

[Content Note: Racism; sexism; rape joke.]

Last night, at another one of his Make America Clap for Me Again rallies in Great Falls, Montana, Donald Trump launched vile attacks against two of his most persistent critics: Rep. Maxine Waters and Senator Elizabeth Warren.

Not for the first time, Trump went after Waters by taking a dig at her intellect:

Transcript: I said it the other day, yes, she is a low IQ individual, Maxine Waters. I said it the other day. High — I mean, honestly, she's somewhere in the mid-60s, I believe.

[The crowd roars with laughter.]
And, also not for the first time, Trump went after Warren by taking a dig at her heritage, then amped it up by making a reference to sexual assault which mocks survivors:

Transcript: [to audience laughter throughout] So who's gonna cover — they're gonna cover Bernie? Hey! They're gonna cover, like, Sleepy Joe Biden? They're gonna cover Pocahontas?! Think of it. Think of it. She of the great tribal heritage. What tribe it is? "Uh, let me think about that one." Meantime, she's based her life on being a minority.

Pocahontas! They always want me to apologize for saying it. And I hereby — oh no, I want to apologize; I'll use tonight. Pocahontas, I apologize to you! I apologize. To you, I apologize. To the fake Pocahontas, I won't apologize.

No, it's causing her problems. You know, that name's good. Because now even the liberals are saying, "Take a test! Take a test!" You know, I'll tell ya — I shouldn't tell ya, 'cause I like not to give away secrets, but this one: Let's say I'm debating Pocahontas, right? I promise you I'll do this. I will take — you know those little kits they sell on television for two dollars? "Learn your heritage!" Guy says, "I was born in Scotland." It turns out he was born in Puerto Rico! That's okay. It's good. You know. Guy says, "I was born in Germany." Well, he wasn't born in Germany; he was born someplace else.

I'm gonna get one of those little kits, and in the middle of the debate, when she proclaims that she's of Indian heritage, because her mother said she has high cheekbones — that's her only evidence; that her mother said she has high cheekbones — we will take that little kit and say — But we have to do it gently. Because we're in the Me Too generation. So we have to be very gentle.

[mimes tossing a DNA kit at Warren] And we will very gently take that kit, and we will slowly toss it, hoping it doesn't hit her and injure her arm. Even though it only weighs probably...two ounces!

And we will say, "I will give you a million dollars, to your favorite charity, paid for by Trump, if you take the test and it shows you're an Indian." You know. [audience cheers] And let's see what she does, right? I have a feeling she will say no. But we'll hold that for the debates.

Do me a favor — keep it within this room? 'Cause I don't want to give away any secrets. And the press is very honorable; they won't — [points at press] Please don't tell her what I just said. [laughter]
I don't have anything to say in response to this vile man and his gross attacks beyond what I already said on Twitter: How about no one lectures me about civility ever the fuck again.

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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

Submitted by Shaker SteffaB: "What would you like me to play on a future radio program? I actually do a weekly radio show at a local college (and you can listen to it online pretty much anywhere), and I would like to do a show of Shaker requests. In the interest of privacy, I won't mention individual names or the name of the community; I'd just say I'm doing requests by members of an online community I belong to. If I can find the song in version I can play on the radio, I will do so."

My request is Nina Simone's "Ain't Got No, I Got Life."

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Throwback Thursdays


I posted this on Twitter yesterday after reading about how Sesame Street has been designated "the world's first autism-friendly theme park." Neat!

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

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Scott Pruitt Resigns; Bill Shine Joins Team Trump

Some cool staffing changes in the Trump Regime this afternoon. EPA Chief Scott Pruitt, one of the most corrupt scumbags in Trump's cabinet, which is really saying something, resigned today. It's notable that he was allowed to resign — and that Donald Trump sent him on his way with effusive praise.


Trump's two-tweet message concluded: "...on Monday assume duties as the acting Administrator of the EPA. I have no doubt that Andy will continue on with our great and lasting EPA agenda. We have made tremendous progress and the future of the EPA is very bright!"

Tremendous progress. Jesus fucking Jones.

A couple of days ago, I made a point about Pruitt still having a job and how our checks and balances were failing. Unfortunately, despite the fact that I'm glad he no longer has a job, I can't say that it gives me any hope regarding meaningful accountability, given the way his tenure has ended.


The only lesson I fear the Trump Regime has learned is that no one can be more corrupt than the president. Pruitt's problem wasn't that he was flagrantly corrupt; it was that he got ahead of the pace car.

Trump is normalizing corruption at an alarming speed, but his minions can only be as corrupt as he is, and no more. That still leaves them a lot of damn room.

Meanwhile, Bill Shine, who left Fox News amid multiple sexual harassment scandals, has joined the administration as White House Deputy Chief of Staff for Communications. Yeah, that tracks.

I don't really have any commentary on that mess, beyond this: Gross.

Gross and entirely unsurprising. As I said a week ago when this hire was first rumored, Fox News and the White House are basically just a rotating shitwheel of highly paid sinecures for abusive men now. Cool.

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