Belly up to the bar,
and be in this space together.
I am tired and I am grieving and I am angry.
Very fucking angry.
I am also, as always, glad for this community, particularly in this moment. Anyone who wants to join me in another enormous virtual group hug is welcome.
And please remember, if you are in need of such a reminder, that it's okay to not feel like everything will be okay.
How are you?
This list o' links brought to you by wasabi.
Recommended Reading:
Kate Marvel at Scientific American: [Content Note: Misogyny; abuse] The People Who Could Have Done Science Didn't
Katie Heaney at the Cut: [CN: Rape culture] Almost No One Is Falsely Accused of Rape
Leah Silvieus at Hyphen: [CN: Racism] Fledging Dreams of Belonging
Michelle Boorstein at the Washington Post: Pastor-Activist William J. Barber Wins $625,000 MacArthur Genius Grant
Jason Burke at the Guardian: [CN: Sexual violence] Nobel Peace Prize Goes to Campaigners Against Sexual Violence: Dr. Denis Mukwege and Nadia Murad
Emma Betuel at Inverse: A Bitter Soccer Rivalry Reveals What Bias Looks Like in the Brain
Sam Anderson at the New York Times: The Ultimate Sitcom: The Good Place
Corey at Celebitchy: Nick Offerman Didn't Want to Be One of Those Men Complaining About Their Wives
Leave your links and recommendations in comments. Self-promotion welcome and encouraged!
New York City officials said on Thursday that they had joined state regulators in examining whether [Donald] Trump and his family underpaid taxes on his father's real estate empire over several decades.Earlier today, in a conversation with the other mods regarding the possibility that Brett Kavanaugh could face state criminal charges after he's seated as a Supreme Court justice, I said: "There's going to be a very long period of time where blue state governments are going to try to hold members of the Trump Regime accountable. And they're going to fail over and over and over. And it's going to be verrrrrrrrry depressing."
The announcement came in response to an investigation published this week in The New York Times that showed how Mr. Trump had participated in dubious tax schemes during the 1990s, including instances of outright fraud, that greatly increased the fortune he received from his parents.
"We are now just starting to pore through the information," said Dean Fuleihan, the city's first deputy mayor.
One type of tax that the city will examine is the real estate transfer tax. Officials said the extremely low valuations the Trump family placed on buildings that passed from Fred C. Trump to his children through trusts could have resulted in underpaid transfer taxes.
The Times reported that through several aggressive and potentially illegal maneuvers, the Trumps claimed that 25 apartment complexes transferred to Donald Trump and his siblings from their father were worth just $41.4 million. The Trumps sold those buildings within a decade for more than 16 times that amount.
...Mr. Fuleihan said city and state agencies are cooperating on the effort. The State Department of Taxation and Finance announced on Wednesday that it was "pursuing all appropriate avenues of investigation."
Interpol's president, Meng Hongwei, has been missing since Sept. 29. https://t.co/QeT6SvlSN9
— NPR (@NPR) October 5, 2018
Nearly two years after [Russia's Internet Research Association (IRA)] helped Donald Trump win the presidency, it's become a cliche to describe the goal of the Russian propaganda campaign as "sow[ing] discord in the U.S. political system," as one of special prosecutor Robert Mueller's court documents put it. True as that assessment may be superficially, it also reflects a conspicuous dodge, the latest in a series of evasions as old as the United States itself. The January 2017 U.S. intelligence assessment, Mueller's indictments and the broader discourse they have inspired neglect to grapple with the underlying message of the Russian propaganda — without which it is impossible to understand why the messaging found such broad purchase.Yessenia Funes at Earther: Thousands of North Carolina Students Are Still Missing School Weeks After Hurricane Florence. "Many schools remain closed due to a lack of access, as roads are impassable due to floodwaters or lingering damage. In some cases, schools themselves are too badly damaged for students to return. Across North Carolina, closures continue to affect more than 50,000 students. While some return to school Monday, the wait continues indefinitely for plenty of others. These kids have not only lost seemingly endless days of school, but they also might've lost their homes and the sense of stability that accompanies their daily trips on the school bus. Two schools in hard-hit eastern North Carolina's Onslow and Pender counties are currently closed for classes and functioning as shelters for now-homeless families."
The cynical brilliance of Vladimir Putin's propaganda campaign is that it exploited America's foundational commitment to white supremacy. The term itself is so raw and so hideous that it inspires an allergy to its usage within mainstream political discourse. But no other term — racism, white privilege, etc. — better captures the dynamic at issue. White supremacy is exactly what it says on the label: a social structure by which whites, a pseudoscientific grouping with a definition that changes over time as is convenient, dominate America's complex and often informal hierarchies of power.
...Russian propaganda expertly grasped that even the most meager challenges to white supremacy prompt a politically powerful and useful white resistance, and that this dynamic is a persistent feature of American life. All Russia — or any foreign power, or no foreign power at all — needs to do is breathe on the embers until they ignite.
Today, I just keep thinking of all the times I was scolded & harassed by conservatives & liberals alike for being too unyielding in my criticism of Republicans as irredeemably hostile to agency and consent; to the times I was called hyperbolic for calling them a party of abusers.
— Melissa McEwan (@Shakestweetz) October 5, 2018
I just keep thinking of all the times, over the last 14 years, that I have been told that I should be more tolerant, when I was arguing that to indulge abusers was to empower their abuse.
— Melissa McEwan (@Shakestweetz) October 5, 2018
I have been writing about politics, and resisting Republicans, at Shakesville for 14 years today. And if I had a dime for every time a misogynistic slur was unleashed at me because I refused to extend Republicans good faith they never earned, I would be a very wealthy woman.
— Melissa McEwan (@Shakestweetz) October 5, 2018
It's really something that the ever-conservative but increasingly disgusting Wall Street Journal gave space to Brett Kavanaugh to write a defense of himself. Under the laughable headline "I Am an Independent, Impartial Judge," Kavanaugh used that opportunity to write one of the most pathetic things I have ever had the mispleasure of reading.
It is, of course, deeply dishonest: He was chosen specifically because he is not and will not be an independent and impartial judge. And it is also just revoltingly self-pitying.
After all those meetings and after my initial hearing concluded, I was subjected to wrongful and sometimes vicious allegations. My time in high school and college, more than 30 years ago, has been ridiculously distorted. My wife and daughters have faced vile and violent threats.FUCK OFF.
Against that backdrop, I testified before the Judiciary Committee last Thursday to defend my family, my good name, and my lifetime of public service. My hearing testimony was forceful and passionate. That is because I forcefully and passionately denied the allegation against me. At times, my testimony — both in my opening statement and in response to questions — reflected my overwhelming frustration at being wrongly accused, without corroboration, of horrible conduct completely contrary to my record and character. My statement and answers also reflected my deep distress at the unfairness of how this allegation has been handled.
I was very emotional last Thursday, more so than I have ever been. I might have been too emotional at times. I know that my tone was sharp, and I said a few things I should not have said. I hope everyone can understand that I was there as a son, husband, and dad. I testified with five people foremost in my mind: my mom, my dad, my wife, and most of all my daughters.
[Shakespeare's sister] lives in you and in me, and in many other women who are not here tonight, for they are washing up the dishes and putting the children to bed. But she lives; for great poets do not die; they are continuing presences; they need only the opportunity to walk among us in the flesh. This opportunity, as I think, is now coming within your power to give her. For my belief is that if we live another century or so—I am talking of the common life which is the real life and not of the little separate lives which we live as individuals—and have five hundred a year each of us and rooms of our own; if we have the habit of freedom and the courage to write exactly what we think; if we escape a little from the common sitting room and see human beings not always in their relation to each other but in relation to reality; and the sky, too, and the trees or whatever it may be in themselves; if we look past Milton's bogey, for no human being should shut out the view; if we face the fact, for it is a fact, that there is no arm to cling to, but that we go alone and that our relation is to the world of reality and not only to the world of men and women, then the opportunity will come and the dead poet who was Shakespeare's sister will put on the body which she has laid down. Drawing her life from the lives of the unknown who were her forerunners, as her brother did before her, she will be born. As for her coming without that preparation, without that effort on our part, without that determination that when she is born again she shall find it possible to live and write her poetry, that we cannot expect, for that would be impossible. But I maintain that she would come if we worked for her, and that so to work, even in poverty and obscurity, is worth while.I haven't been called Shakes in a very long while, but I have been Shakespeare's Sister for 14 years, and I am still.
[I have to wrap up a little early today, but I'll be back first thing tomorrow!]
When people come to you for help, what do they usually want help with?
Usually it's for help understanding politics or the mechanisms of how something related to government works. A very close second is for help with writing and/or copyediting. I have helped write or edit a lot of résumés and cover letters over the years!
John Bolton: Pres. Trump has decided U.S. "will withdraw from the optional protocol and dispute resolution to the Vienna Convention on diplomatic relations."
— ABC News (@ABC) October 3, 2018
Bolton says the move is in connection with case "brought by the so-called state of Palestine" challenging embassy move. pic.twitter.com/9spQojmQen
The U.S. Navy's Pacific Fleet has drawn up a classified proposal to carry out a global show of force as a warning to China and to demonstrate the U.S. is prepared to deter and counter their military actions, according to several U.S. defense officials.Oh.
The draft proposal from the Navy is recommending the U.S. Pacific Fleet conduct a series of operations during a single week in November.
The goal is to carry out a highly focused and concentrated set of exercises involving U.S. warships, combat aircraft, and troops to demonstrate that the U.S. can counter potential adversaries quickly on several fronts.
The plan suggests sailing ships and flying aircraft near China's territorial waters in the South China Sea and Taiwan Strait in freedom of navigation operations to demonstrate the right of free passage in international waters. The proposal means U.S. ships and aircraft would operate close to Chinese forces.
The defense officials emphasized that there is no intention to engage in combat with the Chinese.
Child Health Day, celebrated on Monday, was meant to highlight efforts taken by the nation to protect children's health. As it turned out, Child Health Day, which kicked off Children's Health Month, served as a moment for the nation to come to terms with how the Trump administration has prioritized the removal of industry regulations over health protections for children.Oliver Milman at the Guardian: Scientists Say Halting Deforestation 'Just as Urgent' as Reducing Emissions. "The role of forests in combating climate change risks being overlooked by the world's governments, according to a group of scientists that has warned halting deforestation is 'just as urgent' as eliminating the use of fossil fuels. Razing the world's forests would release more than 3 trillion tons of carbon dioxide, more than the amount locked in identified global reserves of oil, coal, and gas. ...'We must protect and maintain healthy forests to avoid dangerous climate change and to ensure the world's forests continue to provide services critical for the well-being of the planet and ourselves,' the statement reads."
Since [Donald] Trump took office in January 2017, his Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has taken numerous actions that do not bode well for the future health of American children.
And in the past week alone, the administration has introduce plans to rollback back key pollution rules, removed the head of the EPA's children's health office, and was shown to have scrubbed any mention of the impact of climate change on children from a draft document.
..."Every day we see more evidence that this administration is actively working against the health and safety of the most vulnerable Americans — our children," Ken Cook, president of the Environmental Working Group, said Wednesday in a statement. "Tragically, it's not an exaggeration to say that the Trump administration is waging a war on children."
Imagine being the kind of asshole who says it was "a very thorough investigation" when the key eyewitness, i.e. Christine Blasey Ford, was not even interviewed. https://t.co/Fsy6wIlhYF
— Melissa McEwan (@Shakestweetz) October 4, 2018
[Content Note: Nativism.]
In January, the Trump Regime announced that it was ending Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for hundreds of thousands of people from El Salvador, Haiti, Nicaragua, and Sudan, effectively ordering more three hundred thousand U.S. residents to get the fuck out of the country, with no regard for their families, for their communities, for their safety — and with no concern for what it says about this nation that we are willing to expel a quarter of a million people just like that.
Late yesterday, U.S. District Court Judge Edward Chen blocked the move to end TPS:
In a 43-page order, San Francisco-based U.S. District Court Judge Edward Chen concluded the TPS recipients from those countries, along with their children, will "indisputably" suffer irreparable harm and hardship as a result of the decision to sunset their enrollment.Obviously, the Trump Regime is not going to give up, just because some judge appointed by Obama told them they were out of line. Justice Department spokesman Devin O'Malley issued a statement saying the decision "usurps the role of the executive branch" — i.e. reiterated that this authoritarian regime views itself as above the law — and will continue to fight the courts to win this battle in their war on immigrants.
Chen, an appointee of President Barack Obama, wrote that TPS recipients with U.S.-born children could face a difficult choice: Bring their children with them — "tearing them away from the only country and community they have known" — or leave them behind in the U.S.
"The balance of hardships thus tips sharply in favor of TPS beneficiaries and their families," Chen continued.
...In his order Wednesday, Chen added that the plaintiffs — TPS enrollees and their children — "raised serious questions" about whether the administration's decision to terminate the status was based on racial animus against non-white immigrants. The plaintiffs cited numerous actions and statements from [Donald] Trump as evidence of bias against Latino and Haitian immigrants.
In addition, Chen said plaintiffs "established without dispute that local and national economies will be hurt if hundreds of thousands of TPS beneficiaries are uprooted and removed."
[Content Note: Rape culture.]
The FBI has completed its background report on its investigation of allegations against Brett Kavanaugh and handed over said report to the White House, despite having failed to interview dozens of potential witnesses to Kavanaugh's alleged sexual assaults, including Christine Blasey Ford.
If it wasn't already evident that the investigation was a sham with no purpose other than providing Republicans with the ability to say the allegations had not been corroborated, the fact that the investigation into a sexual assault allegation didn't include an interview with the primary eyewitness should leave no doubt.
It's only because of sinister rape culture narratives about women being vengeful liars who routinely invent allegations of sexual assault that it isn't considered absurd in the extreme that an alleged crime could be investigated without even talking to the victim.
Naturally, the White House immediately announced that it "has found no corroboration of the allegations of sexual misconduct against Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh after examining interview reports from the FBI's latest probe into the judge's background."
Raj Shah, spokesman for the White House, said in a statement early Thursday morning: "The White House has received the Federal Bureau of Investigation's supplemental background investigation into Judge Kavanaugh, and it is being transmitted to the Senate."And Republican Senate leadership naturally agrees: Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has already "filed cloture on the Kavanaugh nomination, setting up a Friday cloture vote and a final confirmation vote 30 hours later."
He added that senators "have been given ample time to review this seventh background investigation." Mr. Shah continued: "With this additional information, the White House is fully confident the Senate will vote to confirm Judge Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court."
I'll just quickly observe once again that the Republican Party continues to behave as though they will never have to be accountable to voters ever again. And they're doing it 34 days before the midterms.
— Melissa McEwan (@Shakestweetz) October 3, 2018
When was the last time you threw a frisbee? ("Never" is a perfectly cromulent answer, of course!)
The last time I threw a frisbee was probably around five years ago, when I got a free promotional frisbee from I can't even remember where, and I threw it in the backyard for the dogs, hoping maybe they would be interested in a frisbee in a way they were not in anything else I'd used to try to engage either or both of them in a game of fetch.
No joy, lol. They were as disinterested in retrieving a frisbee as they were in everything else. Ha!
[Got a suggestion for a Question of the Day? Let me know here!]
This list o' links brought to you by butterflies.
Recommended Reading:
Lauren Yapalater at BuzzFeed: IDK What to Do with All the Feelings I Have About Tom Hardy Shaking Hands with a Security Dog at the Venom Premiere
Brian Kahn at Earther: A Volcano Just Erupted in Tsunami-Rattled Indonesia
Kia Morgan-Smith at the Grio: [Content Note: Police brutality; racism; death] Why Won't Dallas Officials Release 911 Call from Police Shooting of Botham Jean in His Apartment?
Ayana Byrd at Colorlines: Indigenous Activists Win Two Legal Battles to Protect Their Land
Tessa Solomon at Bust: Donna Strickland Is the First Woman in 55 Years to Win a Nobel Prize in Physics
Tori Preston at Pajiba: [CN: Moving GIFs at link] Brooklyn Nine-Nine Is Losing a Familiar Face Next Season
Rokas L at Bored Panda: Dog Meets Her "Twin" on the Way to the Market; Owners Adopt Him Immediately
Leave your links and recommendations in comments. Self-promotion welcome and encouraged!
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!
* * *
This is a thread to share all the good things you're watching at the moment, or have recently watched. Serialized shows on broadcast or streaming; films; digital shorts; stand-up; documentaries; performances — whatever! Tell us what you're watching and enjoying these days.
Three things in particular about which I'm really excited this week...
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