Shaker Gourmet

Whatcha been cooking up in your kitchen lately, Shakers?

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

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

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image of a cheesecake fresh out of the oven, sitting in a sheet pan on my stovetop, still in a springform pan, the bottom of which is wrapped in tinfoil

Above is a cheesecake I made the other night, when I was teaching Iain how to make cheesecake! It's my favorite cheesecake recipe, using my favorite baking technique. And it's delicious.

Ingredients:

Crust:

1 and 3/4 cups finely crumbed graham crackers
1/4 cup granulated sugar
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/3 cup melted butter

Filling:

4 8-oz packages of room temp. cream cheese (regular or whipped)
1/2 cup room temp. sour cream
3 room temp. eggs
1 cup granulated sugar
2 teaspoons vanilla extract

Instructions:

Preheat the oven to 350. Mix the graham cracker crumbs, sugar, and salt in a large bowl, then add the melted butter. Work the butter through the dry ingredients until they are well-mixed. Press the mixture into a thin layer across the bottom and partially up the sides of a 9-inch springform pan. Bake for 8-10 minutes until golden. Set aside.

(For the next step, you can either do this in a stand mixer or use a hand mixer. I prefer to use a hand mixer, because I can better keep an eye on the consistency of the batter to make sure I don't overmix it. If you opt to use a stand mixer, instead of beating all the eggs first, add them last, one at a time, incorporating them on a low setting.)

Beat eggs in a large bowl, then add sour cream, sugar, and vanilla. Gently mix with spatula, breaking up any large chunks of sour cream. Add the cream cheese, and break up loosely with spatula. Mix with hand mixer on low to medium and be careful not to overmix. Once the batter is smooth and starts to glisten, transfer into the springform pan.

Double-wrap the bottom of the springform pan with foil (as pictured above). Then place the springform pan into a larger pan surrounded by hot water, at least 3/4 of an inch and no higher than the top of the foil.

(Note: I recommend against using boiling water, because the water tends to slosh as you're putting it into the oven and you don't want to burn yourself! Hot tap water is fine.)

Bake for 60-70 minutes until the top is starting to brown and the edges are set, but the center remains slightly jiggly.

As soon as it's out of the oven, run a spatula or knife around the rim to loosen the cake away from the pan. Let the cake cool at room temperature for an hour, then chill in refrigerator for at least six hours (still in pan).

Serve and enjoy!

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The Latest on Explosive Devices Sent to Trump's "Enemies"

[Content Note: Terrorism; eliminationism.]

After "suspicious packages" were sent to George Soros, Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, Maxine Waters (D.C. and L.A.), Eric Holder, John Brennan (at CNN headquarters), Joe Biden (New Castle and Wilmington), and Robert De Niro, two more "suspicious packages" have been intercepted by law enforcement this morning: One to Senator Cory Booker and anther to former Director of National Intelligence James Clapper.

That's 12 devices in 5 days. Chilling.

And here is what Donald Trump tweeted early this morning: "Funny how lowly rated CNN, and others, can criticize me at will, even blaming me for the current spate of Bombs and ridiculously comparing this to September 11th and the Oklahoma City bombing, yet when I criticize them they go wild and scream, 'it's just not Presidential!'"

Then later: "Republicans are doing so well in early voting, and at the polls, and now this 'Bomb' stuff happens and the momentum greatly slows — news not talking politics. Very unfortunate, what is going on. Republicans, go out and vote!"

Note the quote marks he puts around the word bomb.

He is as revolting as he is dangerous.

UPDATE: MSNBC's Kyle Griffin tweets: "NBC's Pete Williams just reported on MSNBC that a man in Florida has been taken into custody for questioning in the mail bomb case, according to two law enforcement officials."

UPDATE 2: Sarah Isgur Flores, Director of Public Affairs at the Department of Justice, tweets that the DoJ will hold a press conference to discuss the arrest at 2:30pm ET. Please note that I will not be posting a separate thread. Use this thread for discussion of the presser and any additional news items regarding the arrest.

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Trump Considers Executive Order to Shut Down Southern Border

[Content Note: Nativism.]

There is no urgent crisis threatening the United States because of undocumented immigration — not an employment crisis, not a crime and violence crisis, not a health crisis. The Trump Regime's vile nativism is policy of malice built around invented threats used to justify white supremacy and fear-mongering to rally their deplorable base (and to funnel taxpayer dollars to private prison profiteers).

Further, it is both federal and international law that asylum-seekers must be allowed to seek refuge at the border. Even if it were not a legal requirement, basic decency suggests that desperate people fleeing violence and/or abject poverty should be given an opportunity to apply for residency in a country that can absolutely accommodate them.

Nonetheless, Donald Trump is both exploiting and threatening the refugee caravan on its way to the southern border.

Ted Hesson, Nancy Cook, and Andrew Restuccia at Politico: White House Weighs Executive Actions to Block Migrant Caravan at the Border.

The White House is weighing an executive action and regulatory change to block a caravan of Central American migrants from entering the United States, according to a DHS official, an administration official and three people familiar with the move.

Under the plan, the Trump administration would publish fast-track regulation that would restrict certain migrants' ability to seek asylum. The regulation would be paired with a related proclamation from [Donald] Trump.

The executive actions would follow the playbook of Trump's most sensational immigration moves and test the bounds of public approval and legality, according to those familiar with it.

..."The administration is considering a wide range of administrative, legal and legislative options to address the Democrat-created crisis of mass illegal immigration," a White House official said. "No decisions have been made at this time. Nor will we forecast to smugglers or caravans what precise strategies will or will not be deployed."

...The actions appear to lean on the same statute behind Trump's travel ban, according to those familiar with it. The statute states that the president can suspend entry of foreigners deemed “detrimental to the interests of the United States."

The Supreme Court ultimately upheld the third version of the travel ban in June. In a 5-4 decision, the justices ruled the president has vast powers in the realm of national security.

...Eleanor Acer, a director with the pro-immigrant Human Rights First, said in a written statement that the plan amounted to a "Latino ban" and would not be judged constitutional in court.

"Any attempt to block from the United States the vulnerable men, women, and children who come here seeking safety is a shameful new low for this administration," she said.
This news, of course, comes one day after the announcement that Trump will deploy "additional U.S. troops to assist in security operations at the southern border in response to a caravan of migrants traveling north on foot through Mexico."

This is ugly. And it's going to get uglier.

Trump warned from Day One that this is what he was going to do if elected president. And far too many people spent far too much time treating him like a joke instead of taking him seriously and taking his threats seriously, including most of the political press. And now here we are. Sob.

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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 embees: "Pet nicknames — do yours (current or past) have them? How many? Are they meaningful or silly?"

I've mentioned many times that Iain has an endless reservoir of silly and adorable nicknames for me — Tschoobs, Bables, Honsey, Chubbs, Chunkles, Boobles, Bawheed, Wifel-nifle, Dushtels, Specs, Funhead, Funball McGee, Apple Cheeks — so you can only imagine how many nicknames each of our pets has, lol!

Between the two of us giving them ridiculous nicknames, it's a wonder any of them know their names at all.

Some highlights:

Olivia — Livs, Livsy, Large, Baby, Wrex, Mouth of a Thousand Screams

Sophie — Sophs, Sophie-Sophs, Little, Titch, Titchels, Torbie Bizness

Dudley — Dudz, Lord Dudlington, Doodletoots, Dumpster Mouth, Trots, Horks

Zelda — Zelly, Zelly-Belly, Zuzubean, Zooz, Dorito Ears, Stinks

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Throwback Thursdays

image of Deeky and me sitting together in a bar and smiling

Deeks and me at the Signature Room at the 95th in the Hancock Building, Chicago, January 2009. Shared with Deeks' permission.

[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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And Ballyhoo

[Content Note: References to Holocaust.]

Comedian Gary Gulman, onstage: My friend recommended a documentary to me recently about Hitler. It was about Hitler's atrocities. But my friend, god love her, she couldn't think of the word atrocities. She tried to cover for a second; she went "ahhh—" while she searched for a synonym, but it didn't come out right.

She said, "Gary, I saw this very interesting documentary about Hitler's shenanigans." [audience laughter] Shenanigans! [he chuckles] Not even close!

And, as a Jew, I'm obviously not oversensitive, but when people trivialize Hitler's monkey-business... [audience laughter] When the Nazis' hijinks, tomfoolery, and ballyhoo is understated, I feel it does a disservice to the millions who were, ahhh, inconvenienced by Hitler's mischief! [audience laughter]

Tomato, tomahto. Shenanigans, genocide. [shakes his head]
An important reminder in this moment from our president a political leader a preeminent social commentator the press a comedian that language matters.

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Yup, Still Worried About the Midterms

[Previously: Trump Suggests the Midterms Will Be Compromised, I Am Very Worried About the Midterms, I Am (Still) Very Worried About the Midterms, and I Remain Very Worried About the Midterms.]

As I have noted many times now, the midterm election won't be fair, regardless of foreign interference, because of the Republican Party's vast and long-term voter suppression scheme, including but not limited to gerrymandering, voter purges, felon restrictions, Election Day disenfranchisement, and various erosions of voting rights.

Add to that list their total failure to securing the machines on which we vote in our elections.

(This, to be clear, is not just the fault of Republicans. Plenty of Democrats are aggressively indifferent to this urgent election integrity issue, too. But, right now, the GOP is controlling all three branches of the federal government and a majority of state legislatures, so they are the primary focus of my ire at the moment.)

Shaker GoldFishy passed along this terrifying article by Brian Varner at Wired: "I Bought Used Voting Machines on eBay for $100 Apiece; What I Found Was Alarming." Varner is "a security researcher at Symantec who started buying the machines as part of an ongoing effort to identify their vulnerabilities and strengthen election security," and his full piece is worth your time to read. I strongly encourage you to read it in its entirety, but here is an extended excerpt:

If getting voting machines delivered to my door was shockingly easy, getting inside them proved to be simpler still. The tamper-proof screws didn't work, all the computing equipment was still intact, and the hard drives had not been wiped. The information I found on the drives, including candidates, precincts, and the number of votes cast on the machine, were not encrypted.

...I reverse-engineered the machines to understand how they could be manipulated. After removing the internal hard drive, I was able to access the file structure and operating system. Since the machines were not wiped after they were used in the 2012 presidential election, I got a great deal of insight into how the machines store the votes that were cast on them. Within hours, I was able to change the candidates' names to be that of anyone I wanted. When the machine printed out the official record for the votes that were cast, it showed that the candidate's name I invented had received the most votes on that particular machine.

...By using a $15 palm-sized device, my team was able to exploit a smart chip card, allowing us to vote multiple times.

In most parts of the public and private sector, it would be unthinkable that such a sensitive process would be so insecure. Try to imagine a major bank leaving ATMs with known vulnerabilities in service nationwide, or a healthcare provider identifying a problem in how it stores patient data, then leaving it unpatched after public outcry. It just doesn't fit with our understanding of cyber security in 2018.

Those industries are governed by regulations that outline how sensitive information and equipment must be handled. The same common-sense regulations don't exist for election systems. PCI and HIPAA are great successes that have gone a long way in protecting personally identifiable information and patient health conditions. Somehow, there is no corollary for the security of voters, their information and, most importantly, the votes they cast.

...The fact that information is stored unencrypted on hard drives simply makes no sense in the current threat environment. That they can be left on devices, unencrypted, that are then sold on the open market is malpractice.
Varner further notes that privacy is one concern among many. Like, for instance, the fact that proof of one tampered machine is all it might take to undermine faith in the entire election.
Since these machines are for sale online, individuals, precincts, or adversaries could buy them, modify them, and put them back online for sale. Envision a scenario in which foreign actors purchased these voting machines. By reverse engineering the machine like I did to exploit its weaknesses, they could compromise a small number of ballot boxes in a particular precinct.

That's the greatest fear of election security researchers: not wholesale flipping of millions of votes, which would be easy to detect, but a small, public breach of security that would sow massive distrust throughout the entire election ecosystem. If anyone can prove that the electoral process can be subverted, even in a small way, repairing the public's trust will be far costlier than implementing security measures.
This is not a new worry, but an old one, which has become even more concerning in the current environment. And I don't even know what to recommend in terms of what we can do about it, because the people in charge are as likely as anyone else to exploit these weaknesses.

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Olivia the White Farm Cat, in 3/4 profile, as she's sitting on my lap
Ms. Olivia Twist. ♥

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 644

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: Explosive Devices Sent to Liberals: The Latest and Trump Regime Continues Attack on Transgender People.

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

In good news, Florida gubernatorial candidate Andrew Gillum handed Ron DeSantis his ass in their debate last night!

[Content Note: White supremacy and spelled-out racist slur.]

Debate Moderator: Mr. Gillum, I'll give you a chance to respond now.

Gillum: Well, let me first say: My grandmother used to say, "A hit dog will holler." [crowd cheers and applauds] And it hollered through this room. Mr. DeSantis has spoken. First of all, he's got neo-Nazis helping him out in this state; he has spoken at racist conferences; he accepted a contribution — and would not return it — from someone who referred to the former President of the United States as a Muslim n-i-g-g-e-r. When asked to return that money, he said no! He's using that money to now fund negative ads. Now, I'm not calling Mr. DeSantis a racist; I'm simply saying the racists believe he's a racist.
BOOM.

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[CN: Nativism; border militarization] Dan Lamothe and David Nakamura at the Washington Post: Pentagon Plans to Dispatch 800 More Troops to U.S.-Mexico Border in Response to Migrant Caravan. "The Trump administration is expected to deploy additional U.S. troops to assist in security operations at the southern border in response to a caravan of migrants traveling north on foot through Mexico, three U.S. officials confirmed Thursday. The plan calls for about 800 more troops, including some active-duty forces primarily from the Army, to join a growing border mission called for by [Donald] Trump, one official said, speaking on the condition of anonymity because an official announcement had not been made."

Like I keep saying: When a president talks about closing and militarizing a border, it's not just to keep people out; it's to keep people in.

[CN: Fascism; terrorism] Andy Towle at Towleroad: Rather Than Unite Against Political Violence, Trump Attacks 'Fake News' Media Hours After CNN Pipe Bomb Mailings. "Donald Trump blamed the 'mainstream media fake news' for the 'anger in our society' hours after White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders admonished CNN President Jeff Zucker for 'attacking and dividing' by criticizing Trump's attacks on the media. The exchange came in the wake of a series of suspicious pipe bomb devices were sent to CNN and prominent Democrats around the country."

Michael Tomasky at the Daily Beast: A President Who Hates Half the Country Doesn't Get to Call for 'Unity'. "I've cringed in these last few hours to hear journalists on TV or radio discussing Trump's appeal for magnanimity last night in Wisconsin as if we're supposed to take it seriously. Are they kidding? Yes, they are words the president spoke, and so they have to be reported. But they don't have to be discussed earnestly. They need and deserve to be discussed derisively and placed in the real-life context they merit." Correct.

Kate Riga at TPM: Gingrich: Media Has 'Earned' Label of Enemy of the People. Former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich said at a Thursday Axios event that while [Donald] Trump's calling the press the 'enemy of the people' drives partisanship, news outlets have 'earned it.'" Just as a reminder, Newt Gingrich hates citizen journalism, too. One presumes his delicate constitution can only tolerate rank propaganda.

[CN: Murder] Tamer El-Ghobashy and Kareem Fahim at the Washington Post: Saudi Arabia, in Latest Reversal, Says Khashoggi's Killing Was Premeditated.
Saudi Arabia's public prosecutor said on Thursday that Jamal Khashoggi was killed in a planned operation, citing information it received from Turkish investigators in Istanbul, according to a statement from the kingdom's Foreign Ministry.

It is the latest reversal by Saudi authorities, who last week said Khashoggi was killed accidentally in a fistfight at the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul by "rogue" agents. [Donald] Trump had initially said that explanation was credible, but in recent days expressed doubts, calling it "the worst cover-up ever."

According to the statement, a joint Saudi-Turkish investigative team "indicates that the suspects in the incident had committed their act with a premeditated intention."
No shit.


Meanwhile... Frank Dale at ThinkProgress: Trump Claims 'I Rarely Use a Cellphone' in Tweet Sent from iPhone. "Donald Trump responded to a New York Times report that Russia and China are spying on calls made from his personal cell phones in a pair of tweets on Thursday morning. Despite claiming 'I rarely use a cellphone,' CBS News' Sara Cook noticed that both of Trump's tweets were sent from his iPhone. All eight of Wednesday's tweets from Trump's account were also sent via the Twitter app on his iPhone."

Jennifer Bendery at the Huffington Post: Senate's Out? Nobody's Around? Perfect Time to Advance Trump's Court Picks, Says GOP. "Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), the chairman of the Judiciary Committee, has held two hearings in the past week, despite virtually every senator being back home ahead of the Nov. 6 elections. Even Grassley wasn't at his hearings: Sen. John Kennedy (R-La.) chaired the first one, last week, and Sen. Mike Crapo (R-Idaho) chaired Wednesday's hearing. Not a single Democrat could attend either hearing. Only one other Republican, Sen. Orrin Hatch (Utah), was present. That means, between those two hearings, that three of Trump's circuit court nominees and seven of his district court nominees sailed through without any real questions."

Ken Dilanian and Anna Schecter at NBC News: Mueller Has Evidence Suggesting Stone Associate Knew Clinton Emails Would Be Leaked. "Special counsel Robert Mueller's office has obtained communications suggesting that a right-wing conspiracy theorist might have had advance knowledge that the emails of Hillary Clinton's campaign chairman had been stolen and handed to WikiLeaks, a source familiar with the investigation told NBC News. Mueller's team has spent months investigating whether the conspiracy theorist, Jerome Corsi, learned before the public did that WikiLeaks had obtained emails hacked by Russian intelligence officers — and whether he passed information about the stolen emails to Donald Trump associate Roger Stone, multiple sources said."

Dan Friedman at Mother Jones: Text Messages Show Roger Stone Was Working to Get a Pardon for Julian Assange. "In early January, Roger Stone, the longtime Republican operative and adviser to Donald Trump, sent a text message to an associate stating that he was actively seeking a presidential pardon for WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange — and felt optimistic about his chances. 'I am working with others to get JA a blanket pardon,' Stone wrote, in a January 6 exchange of text messages obtained by Mother Jones. 'It's very real and very possible. Don't fuck it up.' Thirty-five minutes later Stone added: 'Something very big about to go down.' ...As Mueller's team zeroes in on Stone, they have examined his push for an Assange pardon — which could be seen as an attempt to interfere with the Russia probe — and have questioned at least one of Stone's associates about the effort."

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[CN: Climate change; extreme weather. Covers entire section.]

Brian Kahn at Earther: U.S. Pacific Territories Took a Major Beating from Super Typhoon Yutu.
Super Typhoon Yutu continues to tear across the western Pacific after striking the tiny Northern Mariana Islands on Thursday local time. The U.S. commonwealth now faces a major cleanup after a direct hit from one of the strongest storms on record to make landfall anywhere in the world.

Super Typhoon Yutu struck the two islands of Tinian and Saipan, home to most of the tiny commonwealth's roughly 53,000 residents. It brought maximum sustained winds of up to 180 mph with gusts above 200 mph. That made it the equivalent of an extremely strong Category 5 hurricane, which is classified as any storm with winds in excess of 156 mph.

"We just went through one of the worst storms I've seen in all my experience in emergency management," Homeland Security and Emergency Management special assistant Gerald Deleon Guerrero said in a statement.

As it moved away from shore and day broke, the damage has become clear. The islands have been transformed by the storm as infrastructure was ripped to shreds by Yutu's powerful winds.

"We do not have power, and many, if not most, telephone poles were blown down," Ashley Beck, a resident of Saipan, told Earther. "Even concrete poles were damaged. I just drove along the two major roads in Saipan, and there are long stretches of road where every single telephone pole is down. It took months for some parts of the island to get power after the last major typhoon, Soudelor, so that is the concern now."

Yessenia Funes at Earther: A Pacific Hurricane Completely Washed Away This Hawaiian Island. "The days of islands vanishing under the waves are here. Hurricane Walaka, a monster storm that roared through the Pacific Ocean earlier this month, wiped out a tiny Hawaiian island known for harboring green sea turtles and endangered monk seals. Scientists with the Fish and Wildlife Service confirmed the disappearance of East Island Monday, according to the Honolulu Civil Beat, and the realization has been unsettling. The 11-acre island located more than 500 miles from O'ahu is nearly all underwater after Walaka swept right over it."

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.

image of a copy of the cookbook 'Pies & Puds' sitting on my kitchen counter, next to a glass of ice water

I'm currently immersed in the amazingly titled Pies & Puds by the amazingly named Paul Hollywood. The man knows his pies. And his puds.

What are you reading now?

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Trump Regime Continues Attack on Transgender People

[Content Note: Trans hatred.]

The Justice Department has petitioned the Supreme Court to take up the question of workplace transgender bias, arguing that employers are allowed under federal law to discriminate against employees based on their gender identity.

Their argument is based on asserting that the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit was wrong in concluding that Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 — which prohibits worker discrimination on the basis of sex, race, color, national origin, and religion — includes discrimination on the basis of gender identity.

Chris Opfer at Bloomberg Law reports:

Solicitor General Noel Francisco told the high court that a civil rights law banning sex discrimination on the job doesn't cover transgender bias. That approach already has created a rift within the Trump administration, contradicting the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission's view of the law it's tasked with enforcing.

A Michigan funeral home wants the high court to overturn a U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit decision finding that the company violated federal workplace discrimination law when it fired Aimee Stephens, a transgender worker. The EEOC successfully sued on behalf of Stephens in that case, but the Justice Department has the sole authority to represent the government before the Supreme Court. The DOJ told the high court that the Sixth Circuit got the case wrong.

"The court of appeals misread the statute and this Court's decisions in concluding that Title VII encompasses discrimination on the basis of gender identity," Francisco said in a brief filed with the court.
The crux of the case is that Harris Funeral Homes fired Stephens after she told the business owner that she was transitioning. Harris Funeral Homes essentially argued that it fired Stephens for being transgender, not for being a woman. (Oh.)

In the Sixth Circuit's ruling, which decided that Harris Funeral Homes' position was horseshit, Judge Karen Nelson Moore wrote: "It is analytically impossible to fire an employee based on that employee's status as a transgender person without being motivated, at least in part, by the employee's sex." Which is, of course, exactly right.

But the Trump administration is incredibly asserting that misogyny has nothing to do with discrimination against a transgender woman, and thus a transgender woman is not entitled to workplace protections conferred by Title VII.

Worryingly: "The Supreme Court is expected to decide in the coming months whether to take up the case. It's also been asked [by the Justice Department] to consider two other cases testing whether sexual orientation bias is a form of sex discrimination banned under the existing law."

In related news, Julian Borger at the Guardian reports that the United States "is seeking to eliminate the word 'gender' from UN human rights documents, most often replacing it with 'woman,' apparently as part of the Trump administration's campaign to define transgender people out of existence. ...For example, in a draft paper on trafficking in women and girls introduced by Germany and Philippines earlier this month, the U.S. wants to remove phrases like 'gender-based violence' would be replaced by violence against women.'"

This is rage-making for its rank eliminationist intent toward transgender people, and it is rage-making that the Trump administration is engaging this eliminationist strategy under the auspices of concern about decentering (cis) women and girls.

The Trump administration doesn't give a single fuck about preventing violence against (cis) women and girls, and I am outraged that they would pretend that they do in order to harm trans people.

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Explosive Devices Sent to Liberals: The Latest

[Content Note: Terrorism; eliminationism.]

At the end of yesterday's chaos, during which there were a number of incendiary devices sent to prominent liberals and several "suspicious packages" ruled safe by law enforcement, this is where things stood: George Soros (days earlier), Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, Maxine Waters, Eric Holder, John Brennan, and Joe Biden were all sent packages known or suspected to be IEDs, with Debbie Wasserman Schultz's name and address used as the return information to implicate her.

This morning, a package said by law enforcement sources to be identical to the other packages was sent to actor (and prominent Trump critic) Robert DeNiro at the address of his Tribeca Productions office.


Unfortunately, it doesn't look like the person behind this terrorist act is yet finished.

Meanwhile, far from taking stock of their own role in fomenting this nightmare, the Trump cultists have decided that this is a "false flag operation" by liberals. And the messaging was sure coordinated quickly: Last night in Florida, protesters outside the gubernatorial debate were already carrying signs reading "Democrats Fake News Fake Bombs."

And in Wisconsin, where Donald Trump was holding forth at another Make America Clap for Me Again rally, the crowd immediately erupted into a "Lock her up!" chant — the same day an IED was sent to Hillary Clinton.

During his speech, Trump laughably told the same crowd: "No nation can succeed that tolerates violence or the threat of violence as a method of political intimidation, coercion, or control. We all know that. We want all sides to come together in peace and harmony."

National reconciliation would definitely be great, but that's simply not possible when one side is being terrorized and the other side is whining that getting heckled at restaurants for being fascist is the same as getting bombs in the mail for being critics of fascism.

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Open Thread

image of a yellow couch

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

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Question of the Day

Suggested by Shaker Secjwick: "If you could pick any song to be your personal anthem, what would it be?"

Forever and always my answer to this question: Joan Jett's "Bad Reputation."


[Lyrics here.]

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Wednesday Links!

This list o' links brought to you by ice water.

Recommended Reading:

Andrés Manuel López Obrador at Lit Hub: [Content Note: Nativism; exploitation] Dear Donald Trump: No Wall Will Stand Forever

Lydia Wang at Bust: [CN: Domestic violence; murder] Murdered Utah Student Previously Reported Her Killer to the Police, But Nothing Was Done

Akanksha Singh at Bon Appetit: [CN: Discussion of depression and eating] I Was Alone, Depressed, and Spending All My Money on Delivery Pizza; Then I Learned to Cook

Kitty Sheehan at Longreads: [CN: Cancer; death] The Strongest Woman in the Room

Sheetal Sheth at Thrive Global: [CN: Bullying; racism] "But What If the Bully Is a Grown-Up?"

Megh Wright at Vulture: Tiffany Haddish Goes on Billy on the Street to Hunt for Woke Witches

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

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Get Your $hit Together, Conservatives

[Content Note: Stochastic terrorism; violent rhetoric.]

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Discussion Thread: Self-Care

What are you doing to do to take care of yourself today, or in the near future, as soon as you can?

If you are someone who has a hard time engaging in self-care, or figuring out easy, fast, and/or inexpensive ways to treat yourself, and you would like to solicit suggestions, please feel welcome. And, as always, no one should offer advice unless it is solicited.

* * *

Right now, all I can think of is that I need to get up from this desk and walk into the kitchen and make myself some lunch. So I'm going to do that. Nourishing myself is necessary, immediate self-care, and it's also all the self-care I can manage at the moment.

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Sophie the Torbie Cat in close-up, grooming herself, with her little pink tongue sticking out and curled upward
Wee Sophs. ♥

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 643

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: I Remain Very Worried About the Midterms and More "Suspicious Packages" Sent to Clintons, Obamas, and Possibly Others.

The political press is, quite rightly, consumed by the still-unfolding story about explosive devices being sent in attempted assassinations to multiple prominent Democrats. Regrettably, they are not talking about this story in partisan terms, despite the fact that it's clearly a partisan attack, nor as attempted assassinations, despite the fact that they are, nor as the responsibility of Donald Trump, despite the fact that the targets so far are like his own personal hit-list.

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

In good news, Georgia gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams handed Brian Kemp his ass in their debate last night! Jennifer Brett at the Atlanta Journal-Constitution: Stacey Abrams, Brian Kemp Clash in First Debate. "Abrams hit Kemp repeatedly over voting, an issue that's attracted national attention. 'The right to vote is a right. My father was arrested helping people to register,' she said."

In less good news from other states...

[Content Note: Terrorism] Dana Branham at the Dallas News: Campaign Signs for Beto O'Rourke and Colin Allred Set Ablaze. "Five yard signs for Democratic candidates were set on fire in a Richardson neighborhood Monday night, officials said. Police received three calls in a 30-minute span — one at 11 p.m., another at 11:06, and the third at 11:28 — reporting that yard signs for Beto O'Rourke and Colin Allred had been lit on fire in the Arapaho Heights neighborhood west of Heights Park, Sgt. Kevin Perlich said."

[CN: Homophobia] Andy Towle at Towleroad: Governor Bruce Rauner Pronounces Illinois F***ed in Ad Mocking Gay Marriage. "A new ad from Illinois' Republican Governor Bruce Rauner depicts his challenger J.B. Pritzker getting married to House Speaker Mike Madigan. 'Repeat after me: I Mike Madigan, take you, JB Pritzker, as my unlawful partner in destruction,' starts the ad, which predicts corruption and higher taxes for the state should Pritzker win. 'By the power vested in me I now pronounce Illinois f**ked,' says the ad's minister."

Kyla Mandel at ThinkProgress: Early Voter Turnout Is Down in Some North Carolina Counties Hit by Florence. "Among the 28 counties receiving federal assistance for Hurricane Florence recovery, New Hanover has thus far seen the biggest increase in early voting, with more than double the number of ballots cast compared to the 2014 midterm elections. But this isn't the case for other counties still struggling to recover from the hurricane. 'Voting is not a premier issue right now with them,' Courtney Patterson, a local organizer with the North Carolina Hurricane Relief Effort and Community Rapid Response Network, told ThinkProgress. 'Survival is…everything.'"

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Kathleen McLaughlin at the Guardian: I Paid $7,348 for Healthcare Last Week — So Trump's Law Changes Are Personal. "While the illness itself dictates some of the terms of my life, the looming threat of losing insurance has always been for me the bigger obstacle. Throughout my 30s, every major decision — whether to change jobs, whether to move, where to live — revolved around not losing health insurance. Losing my insurance, even in the years when the disease goes into remission, would mean eventual ruin for my health and finances. I am a living, breathing, expensive pre-existing condition, the one who jacks up other people's insurance rates, the one who makes it difficult for insurance companies to profit on healthcare. Yet profit they do."

Speaking of preexisting conditions, this was part of a must-read Twitter thread by former head of Medicare/aid Andy Slavitt:


In case you can't see the list embedded in the tweet, here are just some of the many preexisting conditions listed that may not be covered under the new healthcare bill: AIDS, Alzheimer's, anxiety, asthma, cancer, cerebral palsy, cirrhosis, congestive heart failure, cystic fibrosis, depression, diabetes, menstrual irregularities, multiple sclerosis, obesity, organ transplants, Parkinson's, pregnancy, sleep apnea, transsexualism, and tuberculosis.

[CN: Fat hatred] By way of reminder, in 2013, the American Medical Association made the reprehensible decision to declare obesity a disease. As has been extensively- and long-documented by fat activists, myself included, accessing healthcare as a fat person is a challenge, because it's often impossible to find healthcare providers who will see you as a complete human being whose health is more complicated than "fat." Far too many healthcare providers are inclined to attribute any and every healthcare concern to fatness, even at the expense of our very lives, telling us to "lose weight" to fix problems like, for instance, shortness of breath which is actually being caused by blood clots in the lungs or cancer.

In May of 2017, during a previous round of GOP attacks on healthcare access, I noted that reinstating insurers' ability to deny care on the basis of preexisting conditions takes on a whole new urgency following the AMA classification of obesity as a disease, since anything attributed to fat can subsequently be denied.

If the GOP goes through with this, it will also be a death sentence for many fat people who would otherwise be healthy with basic healthcare.

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[CN: Fascism] Kelly Weill and Spencer Ackerman at the Daily Beast: Army Parrots Racist Right's Talking Points on Antifa. "Internal U.S. Army documents in 2017 on anti-fascists (antifa) parroted a fascist talking point about the far-right's supposedly non-racist creds, according to newly released material reviewed by The Daily Beast. ...'With the newly released documents, we again find a U.S. agency targeting anti-fascists as security threats while downplaying the menace posed by white nationalists,' said Ryan Shapiro, Property of the People's executive director."

[CN: White supremacy] Lisa Rein at the Washington Post: 'I Thought It Was Very Nice': Veterans Affairs Official Showcased Portrait of KKK's First Grand Wizard. "David J. Thomas Sr. is deputy executive director of VA's Office of Small and Disadvantaged Business Utilization, which certifies veteran-owned businesses seeking government contracts. His senior staff is mostly African American. Thomas said he took down the painting Monday after a Washington Post reporter explained that its subject, Nathan Bedford Forrest, was a Confederate general and slave trader who became the KKK's first figure­head in 1868. He said he was unaware of Forrest's affiliation with the hate group." The fuck he was.

Jordan Weissmann at Slate: The Actual Tax Bill Didn't Do Much for the Middle Class So Trump Wants Congress to Vote on a Make-Believe One.
Donald Trump has spent the last few days telling anyone who will listen that Republicans are about to introduce a brand new tax cut for middle class families.

...As far as anybody can tell, Trump appears to have made all of this up from scratch. White House staffers are baffled. There is no tax plan. They don't even seem to know where Trump got the idea. ...And the Washington Post reports that the White House may ask congressional Republicans to take a symbolic vote on Trump's idea.
Advisers have discussed the idea of having Congress vote on a symbolic "resolution" for a future 10 percent tax cut for the middle class, people familiar with discussions said, part of their scramble to meet Trump's demand for rapid action to blunt Democrats' economic messaging ahead of the midterm elections.

The resolution would not be binding but would attempt to send a signal to the public that Republicans are focused on helping middle-class families.
...I want to set down a prediction: If Congress does take this vote, Trump will claim they actually passed a tax cut. Because we are that far through the looking glass.
[CN: Nativism] Aaron Rupar at ThinkProgress: Trump Tries to Own Libs by Tweeting Obama Video; Ends up Accidentally Owning Himself. "While Trump seems to think Obama's video highlights how Democrats have become supportive of 'open borders' over the last 13 years, what it really does is illustrate the dishonesty of his own messaging on immigration."

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

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