It's Still Early, But This Is Definitely a Contender for Most 2019 Story of the Year

Listen, things are super fucked up. This entire timeline is the worst, not just because of reemergent fascism care of a global collection of authoritarian fuckclowns, but because most of humanity is utterly failing to meet the challenge with earnestness, bravery, or dignity — if they're even aware that it's happening at all.

So there are lots of news(ish) stories I read every day that I think are strong contenders for Most 2019 Story of the Year, but Justin Bieber randomly (?) challenging Tom Cruise to a cage match on Twitter is now in the lead by a country mile.


Whut? No really. WHUT? What is even happening.

Despite being keenly aware that we are through the looking glass, living in a cuckoo clock that always strikes thirteen, I still have no idea what or whyyyyyyyyy or how any of us are supposed to make sense of literally anything that has happened after November 8, 2016.

Including an aging teen star taking to social media to challenge a fully 56-year-old movie star to a UFC fight.

This is normal now, I guess.

Donald Trump is president and Justin Bieber wants to get kickboxed in the face by Tom Cruise. Sure.

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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.

(And don't forget to tip your bartender!)

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Friday Links!

This list o' links brought to you by the weekend.

Recommended Reading:

Erin Matson at Reproaction: [Content Note: War on agency] Stop Lying, Congressman Ron Wright: You Told Us You Think Women Should Go to Jail for Abortion

Yessenia Funes at Earther: Keystone XL Pipeline Is Back on After Court Sides with Donald Trump

Eva Bloom at Teen Vogue: I Came Out as Bisexual to My Grandmother and Her Reaction Shocked Me: "Good Luck with All the Girls and the Guys"

Paula Pell at Glamour: [CN: Fat hatred] People Used to Tell Me "You Could Be a Knockout" — My Mistake Was Listening to Them

Gracie Western at Bust: Nike's "Dream Further" Shows Just How Empowering Women's Soccer Can Be

Cornelia Hesse-Honegger at Nautilus: Why I Traveled the World Hunting for Mutant Bugs

Ryan F. Mandelbaum at Gizmodo: Large Hadron Collider Experiment Reveals Alien Structure of a 'Pentaquark'

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

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#365feministselfie: Week 23

I am participating once again in the #365feministselfie project, now in its sixth year. Here is a thread for others to share selfies and/or talk about the project, visibility generally, self-appreciation, and related topics. And also because I always just love seeing your splendid faces!

A few of my selfies over the last two weeks:

image of me from the shoulders up standing in my garden in front of a rose bush with large pink blooms, with my hair down and blowing in the breeze, wearing grey-framed glasses and a grey tank top
Stopping to smell the roses. (They smell amazing, btw.)

image of me from the shoulders up sitting in a restaurant smiling, with my hair pulled up into a bun, wearing sunglasses and a ringer tee with a white torso and grey arms
At lunch with Iain. As is evident, care of my specs!

image of me standing in a full-length mirror, wearing a purple flowered dress and a lilac cardigan with brown and navy oxford shoes, with my contacts in and hair pulled back in a ponytail
One of my favorite dinner-with-friends ensembles.

image of the top of the back of my head, as I sit in my living room
I was trying to take a picture of my fancy hair twist,
but I missed. I like this picture, though!

image of me from the shoulders up, standing in a parking lot at dusk, smiling, my hair pulled back into a bun, wearing grey-framed glasses, a ringer tee, and denim overalls
Date night!

image of me standing in my bathroom mirror, seen from the waist up, with my hair down, wearing grey-framed glasses and a tie-waist burgundy blouse with a floral pattern
Oh hello.

image of me from the neck up, sitting in my living room with a slightly scheming look on my face, wearing grey-framed glasses and a grey tank top, with my hair pulled up into a top knot on the top of my head
A ruthless reality show competition called Top Knot.

image of me standing in a full-length mirror, wearing a light aquamarine top with a red and white floral pattern on the bottom and back, blue jeans, and red loafers
A take-the-dogs-to-the-vet look.

Please feel welcome and encouraged to share your own selfies in comments, or share your thoughts on the project, or solicit encouragement or advice, or do whatever else feels best for you to participate, if you are inclined to do so!

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Dudley the Greyhound standing in the backyard on a sunny day
A very good boy.

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 869

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 Administration to Open Mass Detention Facility for Migrant Children in Texas and Primarily Speaking.

Let's start with a whole bunch of GOOD resistance news today!

Auditi Guha at Rewire.News: There's a New Standard for Paid Family Leave Policy in the United States. "Starting in July 2021, workers in Connecticut can get up to 12 weeks off to care for themselves, their family, or a loved one. ...It has the most generous wage-replacement policy and would cover 95 percent of low-wage workers' pay, up to $900 a week for up to 12 weeks, and includes a broad definition of a loved one covered under the policy, including siblings, grandparents, or anyone 'equivalent of a family member,' even if the person is not of blood relation. This is a boon for single parents and LGBTQ people, who often have non-traditional support networks, advocates say." Yay!

Jessica Glenza at the Guardian: Why the Guardian Is Changing the Language It Uses to Describe Abortion Bans. "The Guardian will no longer use the term 'heartbeat bill' in reference to the restrictive abortion bans that are moving through state legislatures in the U.S. ...'We want to avoid medically inaccurate, misleading language when covering women's reproductive rights,' the Guardian's U.S. editor-in-chief, John Mulholland, said. 'These are arbitrary bans that don't reflect fetal development — and the language around them is often motivated by politics, not science.' The Guardian style guide already encourages editors to use 'anti-abortion' over 'pro-life' for clarity, and 'pro-choice' over 'pro-abortion.'" Terrific!

Kate Riga at TPM: Nadler Pushes Impeachment to Centralize Investigations into Trump. "Nadler crafted his pitch around two central points. One, that impeachment proceedings would centralize the investigations into [Donald] Trump and his administration currently sprawled across multiple committees, keeping it all contained within Judiciary. Second, Nadler argued that, procedurally, it's easy to get information and ask questions during impeachment proceedings than in regular House committee sessions." Excellent arguments. Keep pushing, Jerry!

And that's not all he's up to:


[Content Note: Video may autoplay at link] Ryan J. Reilly at the Huffington Post: House Democrats to Make It Easier to Find Trump Aides in Contempt, Bring Them to Court. "House Democrats are set to vote next week on a resolution that would make it easier for the House of Representatives to drag members of the Trump administration to court ― and to find them in contempt ― for failing to comply with congressional subpoenas. The resolution will also declare Attorney General William Barr and former White House counsel Don McGahn in contempt of Congress, and authorize the civil enforcement of subpoenas in federal court. The House Rules Committee is expected to take up the resolution on Monday evening, and the full House could take it up on Tuesday."

Erin Banco and Asawin Suebsaeng at the Daily Beast: House Dems Preparing Investigation of Rudy Giuliani for Ukraine Shenanigans. "Top congressional Democrats are actively discussing opening a probe into Rudy Giuliani for his overseas political and consulting work, including a recent attempt to uncover dirt on former Vice President Joe Biden, a source with direct knowledge tells The Daily Beast. The contours of a potential probe are still under consideration. But it would likely look at whether Giuliani's relationships with foreign politicos interfered or intersected with American foreign-policy efforts." (Spoiler Alert: They did!)

We all know that the Trump Regime is going to continue ignoring Democrats' authority, but I am nonetheless very glad that the Democrats continue to try to hold them accountable.

* * *

And now onto the not-good news...

[CN: Video may autoplay at link] Lee Moran at the Huffington Post: Donald Trump Uses D-Day Ceremony Interview to Rant About Nancy Pelosi. "With the graves of U.S. troops who sacrificed their lives in World War II behind him, [Donald] Trump gave an interview to Fox News and tore into House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.). 'I think she's a disgrace,' Trump told Laura Ingraham in a sit-down pre-recorded at the Normandy American Cemetery and Memorial on the 75th anniversary of the D-Day landings. 'I actually don't think she's a talented person. I've tried to be nice to her because I would have liked to have gotten some deals done,' Trump added. 'She's incapable of doing deals; she's a nasty, vindictive, horrible person.'" Fucking hell.

On Twitter, someone suggested that those troops died in part so that Trump would have the freedom to say even horrible things near their graves, but, as I noted in reply: Trump is not a private citizen. As president, he is both the head of government and the head of state. The rules and norms about what he can/should say are very different, and free speech laws do not apply.


Diana Ohlbaum and Rachel Stohl at Just Security: An 'Emergency' Arms Deal: Will Congress Acquiesce in Another Blow to Its Authority? "What exactly has changed to warrant an emergency declaration for additional arms sales to Saudi Arabia and the UAE? It is not as if the Trump administration has been unable to make arms deals with the Middle East up until now. Since taking office, the Trump administration has approved more than $20 billion worth of arms sales to Saudi Arabia and approximately $5 billion worth of sales to the UAE."


Ian Millhiser at ThinkProgress: Two Cases Show the Astounding Breadth of the Supreme Court's War on Democracy. "These two cases, Kisor v. Wilkie and Gundy v. United States, are early stages of a much broader effort to transfer power from the executive branch — whose leader is elected, at least most of the time — to a judiciary that is unaccountable to voters and that is now controlled by the Republican Party. It is unclear whether the Supreme Court's right flank has the votes it needs to prevail in both cases, but both are bellwethers for an agenda that could leave the next Democratic president powerless to govern."

[CN: War on agency; hostility to consent; sexual assault; covers next two paragraphs] Jamie Ross at the Daily Beast: Missouri Forcing Women to Have Pelvic Exams 72 Hours Before Abortions, Says Doctor. "Missouri state officials are forcing physicians to perform pelvic exams on women ahead of abortions, according to a doctor who works at the last abortion clinic left in the state. David Eisenberg told the Los Angeles Times that, since the state's governor signed a law banning abortions after eight weeks of pregnancy, he's been forced to carry out the exams. ...'What I realized was I effectively have become an instrument of state abuse of power,' said Eisenberg. 'As a licensed physician, I am compelled by the state of Missouri to put my fingers in a woman's vagina when it's not medically necessary.'"

As I have noted previously, regarding state laws mandating medically unnecessary vaginal ultrasound probes, the state is victimizing abortion providers by coercing them into being their tools of sexual violence, and I am glad that Dr. Eisenberg is stating this plainly and also profoundly upset that he is being put in that position, along with abortion providers all over the country obliged to perform similarly invasive procedures with no purpose but to deter women from seeking abortions.

[CN: Queer hatred; white supremacy] Casey Quinlan at ThinkProgress: The Organizers Behind Boston's Straight Pride Parade Should Concern You. "The three men organizing the parade, planned for August 31 [in Boston], are John Hugo, Mark Sahady, and Chris Bartley, who is called the 'gay ambassador' on the event website. Sahady has ties to groups like the Proud Boys, the New Hampshire American Guard, and the Massachusetts Patriot Front. Hugo unsuccessfully ran for the Massachusetts' 5th Congressional District in 2018 with support and endorsement from Resist Marxism, a group that is considered to be 'alt-lite' and holds anti-Semitic, misogynist, and anti-LGBTQ views."

[CN: Terrorism]


Jeff Cox at CNBC: Jobs Creation Slows Dramatically with Payrolls Up Just 75,000 in May, Much Worse Than Expected. "Job creation decelerated strongly in May, with nonfarm payrolls up by just 75,000 even as the unemployment rate remained at a 50-year low, the Labor Department reported Friday. The decline was the second in four months that payrolls increased by less than 100,000 as the labor market continues to show signs of weakening. Economists surveyed by Dow Jones had been looking for a gain of 180,000. In addition to the weak total for May, the previous two months' reports saw substantial downward revisions. March's count fell from 189,000 to 153,000 and the April total was taken down to 224,000 from 263,000, for a total reduction of 75,000 jobs."

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

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Keep Shakesville Gallopin' Along

image of a mini horse galloping in a field, to which I've added large text reading LOOK AT THIS MINI HORSE!
[Image via Pixabay.]

Now that I have your attention: This is, for those who have requested it, your bi-monthly reminder to donate to Shakesville and an important fundraiser to keep Shakesville gallopin' along.

(I know. Galloping along. I AM SORRY! But I wanted to post a picture of a mini horse BECAUSE THEY ARE FUCKING ADORABLE and "pony up!" felt a little aggressive, lol.)

Anyway! Y'all know all the reasons I have to request donations on the regular, all of which essentially come down to this: If you don't donate, I don't make money, and I can't do a full-time job for less than a liveable wage.

So, if you value the content and/or community in this space, please consider setting up a subscription or making a single end-of-year contribution.

Please click the button below to make a one-time donation:



Or use the below dropdown menu to choose set up a recurring monthly donation:

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As I mentioned on Wednesday, I have also set up a Venmo account, and you can make a donation via their mobile app. There's also a link in the sidebar. My transactions are set to private, so no one will ever be able to see any information about any donations you make.

As always: Please note that I don't want anyone to feel obliged to contribute financially, especially if money is tight. There is a big enough readership that no one needs to donate if it would be a hardship.

One of the things I hate most about fundraising is knowing that it might make some people feel bad, if they want to donate but aren't able. I would never presume to tell you how to feel, but please know that I don't want you to feel bad.

Your kind words and gestures sustain me, too — and your encouragement makes doing this easier. Y'all support me in many ways, and I am immensely thankful for them all. ♥

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Primarily Speaking

image of a cartoon version of me surrounded by flames while I smile and give two thumbs up, pictured in front of a patriotic stars-and-stripes graphic, to which I've added text reading: 'The Democratic Primary 2020: Let's do this thing.'

Welcome to another edition of Primarily Speaking, because presidential primaries now begin fully one million years before the election!

Well well well. After Joe Biden's reprehensible support for the Hyde Amendment was roundly criticized by his opponents and everyone else with a shred of decency, he announced last night that he has changed his position, saying: "I want to be clear: I make no apologies for my last position. I make no apologies for what I'm about to say," but "circumstances have changed."

First of all, he should be apologizing for his last position, because it was garbage. Secondly, no, circumstances have not changed. As @magi_jay noted on Twitter: "Hyde is no worse right now than it was a few years ago. There's no new evidence. It's always been bad."

Biden should have admitted that he's just straight-up been wrong on Hyde. Instead, he is spinning some horseshit about "changing circumstances" in the hopes that voters who don't understand the basics of Hyde will think there might have been a time when it was reasonable.

Biden also claimed his reversal was prompted by a new level of anti-choice Republican aggression: "Folks, the times have changed. I don't think these guys are going to let up." No shit, Joe. They haven't let up since Roe was decided in 1973. He knows that, of course. He isn't ignorant. He just doesn't care.

Look, I'm glad that Biden changed his position, but, as I noted on Twitter, it's a problem that I can't trust he'll stick to it: I want progressive politicians to progress — but I do find it hard to trust them when their progress is so evidently motivated by political expediency. I don't want my autonomy to rest on an ambitious man's unprincipled whims.

* * *

In other Biden news, after skipping the California Democratic Party convention, he'll now also be a no-show at the traditional Iowa Democrats' Hall of Fame dinner this weekend. Nineteen other candidates will attend. Despite still leading in the polls, it doesn't sound like Biden will be missed: "'After I hear from 19 different people, I'll probably be okay without the 20th,' said Steve Drahozal, chair of the Dubuque County Democrats." LOL ouch.

This is a very good piece about Senator Elizabeth Warren by Dahlia Lithwick at Slate:
At the Fairfax campaign stop, Warren tells some thousand people who have shown up to hear her, a crowd visibly dominated by women, that her lifelong dream was to be a teacher — a dream she lived up to as a special education teacher and a law professor before becoming a United States senator and, now, a candidate for president. This is something some of the Warren think pieces tend to miss: Warren is an extraordinary educator. We misread her as a detached wonk when she's actually a brilliant translator of complex ideas. Watching her on the stump, you come to realize that it's not so much the fact that she knows a lot of technical and complicated things that truly excites her fans, it's that she can explain them to you.

...[T]he women who come to these early Warren rallies like being addressed by an adult as adults. At a time when America has devalued teachers, empathy, expertise, and planning for the future, Elizabeth Warren serves as one reminder of what we have lost. It doesn't mean the voters will necessarily throng to her side. It just means that the women I spoke to, and more and more of the women I know, don't mind being educated about how everything went so terribly wrong in their political lifetimes. Elizabeth Warren can explain it, and has a plan for it, and believes she can fix it.

This is a very good piece about Senator Kamala Harris' sister and campaign chair Maya Harris by Christopher Cadelago and Carla Marinucci at Politico:
A no-nonsense boss who became a single mom at 17 and earned a law degree from Stanford before embarking on a long career in progressive activism, she's emerged as a primary attraction in her own right. Aside from standing in for Kamala at fundraisers, Maya can be seen at campaign stops posing for pictures with selfie seekers who recognize her from social media and her time as an MSNBC talking head — a gig she landed after advising Hillary Clinton's 2016 presidential campaign.

...The 52-year-old — who holds the post that John Podesta had for the Clinton campaign, and has been aspirationally referred to by political types as Kamala's Bobby Kennedy — would almost certainly be serving in a Clinton administration had she won.

..."I think most people who know Maya will tell you she's one of the smartest people they know," Kamala said. "The fact that she has volunteered to work on this campaign at such a high level, and she's exactly who she's always been — she works around the clock and she's probably the hardest, if not one of the hardest working people on the campaign — I feel very blessed."
Julián Castro will be the first 2020 candidate to visit Flint, Michigan, when he travels there this weekend: "It's been more than five years since the #FlintWaterCrisis and some folks are still reeling from its effects. I saw the impact firsthand when I visited as HUD Secretary in 2016. I look forward to returning this weekend to meet with residents about the progress still to come."

On Twitter, @TrinityMustache wonders why Levi Sanders, Senator Bernie Sanders' son and "senior campaign advisor," is tweeting Kremlin propaganda. GOOD QUESTION!

In other Sanders news, he looks like a 1950's nuclear scientist gazing up at a New Mexico desert test blast in the distance on the cover of Time magazine. The cover story itself, by the way, is fucking ridiculous — and the fanboy who wrote it says on Twitter that he hasn't "really done much campaign reporting before," so I don't feel remotely obliged to link to what is basically garbage penned by an amateur whose primary qualification was apparently fawning sycophancy.

Mayor Pete Buttigieg says that Stacey Abrams was robbed of the Georgia governorship, and he is right, and I'm glad he said this: "Stacey Abrams ought to be the governor of Georgia. When racially motivated voter suppression is permitted, when districts are drawn so that politicians get to choose their voters instead of the other way around, when money is allowed to outvote people in this country, we cannot truly say we live in a democracy." YES!

Senator Cory Booker is charming in a 20 Questions segment for Now This. My favorite quote (at 5:47): "Someone who's nice to you but not nice to the waiter is not a nice person."

John Hickenlooper is still definitely running for president.

Talk about these things! Or don't. Whatever makes you happy. Life is short.

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Trump Administration to Open Mass Detention Facility for Migrant Children in Texas

[Content Note: Nativism; child abuse; carcerality.]

Days after the Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) decided to stop funding education, recreation, and legal services for migrant children in their custody, the ORR has confirmed plans to open a new mass detention facility to hold migrant children in Texas and is "considering detaining hundreds more youths on three military bases around the country, adding up to 3,000 new beds."

Garance Burke at the AP reports:

The new emergency facility in Carrizo Springs, Texas, will hold as many as 1,600 teens in a complex that once housed oil field workers on government-leased land near the border, said Mark Weber, a spokesman for Office of Refugee Resettlement.

The agency is also weighing using Army and Air Force bases in Georgia, Montana, and Oklahoma to house an additional 1,400 kids in the coming weeks, amid the influx of children traveling to the U.S. alone. Most of the children crossed the border without their parents, escaping violence and corruption in Central America, and are held in government custody while authorities determine if they can be released to relatives or family friends.

All the new facilities will be considered temporary emergency shelters, so they won't be subject to state child welfare licensing requirements, Weber said.

..."It is our legal requirement to take care of these children so that they are not in Border Patrol facilities," Weber said. "They will have the services that ORR always provides, which is food, shelter, and water."
So, to be very clear: The ORR will be detaining children on a mass scale; will not be subject to child welfare licensing guidelines; will provide the detained children with no education, recreational services, or legal aid; and will give them nothing but food, shelter, and water.

Healthcare is not even mentioned. The ORR is required by federal law to provide healthcare to people in their custody, but the Flores settlement stipulates that the government is required to provide education and recreational activities to migrant children in its custody, among other things, and release them from custody within 20 days, and the Trump administration has decided to ignore that law.

Further, there is an emergent pattern of simply releasing compromised people from custody before they die, to skirt reporting mandates.

So we cannot trust that even emergency healthcare will be provided to the children who are being kept in mass detention facilities.

Understand: The Trump administration is breaking the law by declaring these "temporary emergency shelters" and saying they are not subject to either child welfare licensing guidelines or the provisions of the Flores settlement.

They are ignoring established federal law in order to detain children in prison camps en masse.

U.S. residents: Find your representative here. Find your senators here.

MAKE YOUR CALLS.

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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 YankeeTransferred: "Name one historical figure with whom you would like to have dinner, and why that person?"

Nellie Bly. Because of all the women in history with whom I'd like to have dinner, and there are so many, she seems like she'd be the most fun — and the person most likely to enjoy my company, too.

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Throwback Thursdays

image of me at 10 years old, with braided pigtails and oversized glasses, wearing a purple one-piece bathing suit featuring a cheetah across the midsection, posing in a 'bubble bath' next to Ernie at Sesame Place

With my good friend Ernie at Sesame Place in Pennsylvania, summer of 1984. I loved that purple and cheetah bathing suit so much. [Content Note: Fat hatred] And I remember, even at the age of 10, that I nonetheless felt self-conscious wearing it because I was "so fat." For crying out loud.

I had so much fun at Sesame Place. That was a really fun trip!

[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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image of thumbs up & thumbs down Shaker Thumbs

Shaker Thumbs is your opportunity to give a thumbs-up or thumbs-down to a product or service you have used and that you'd recommend to other Shakers or warn them away from.

Today, I'm going to give a big ol' thumbs-up to Wet Brush's Pro Shine Enhancer Brush:

image of a pink and purple hairbrush

Wet Brush produces some of the best cheapo dupes of the absurdly expensive but reportedly brilliant Mason Pearson boar bristle brushes, which sell for $175 and up.

This $14 brush is widely recommended, so I figured I'd give it a try, since I wasn't about to shell out close to $200 for a hairbrush.

And it is pretty terrific! I have no idea how much better a Mason Pearson brush is, and, luckily for my Wet Brush, I'm unlikely to ever know, lol.

I needed a good new brush, since my hair is very long again after being short-short-short for years, and this is fitting the bill nicely!

I also picked up their mini detangling brush for wet hair straight out of the shower, and I like that, too.

Anyway! Give us your thumbs-up or thumbs-down in comments!

(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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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

image of Zelda the Black and Tan Mutt lying in the backyard, studying something in the grass
Studying a spider crawling through the grass.

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 868

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.

* * *

Late yesterday and earlier today by me: Malice Is His Agenda. Compassion Is Mine. and Today Is the 75th Anniversary of D-Day and Primarily Speaking and Pelosi Still Won't Budge on Impeachment.

Let's start with some GOOD news today...

Tierney Sneed at TPM: North Carolina Republicans Fail to Overturn Governor's Veto of Anti-Abortion Bill. "North Carolina's legislature upheld Gov. Roy Cooper’s (D) veto of an anti-abortion bill Wednesday afternoon. Only this year — after the 2018 midterms — did Democrats have enough seats in the legislature to end the GOP's supermajority in the statehouse, which had previously given Republicans the votes to override Cooper's vetoes."

The Republicans will keep fighting, especially their fight to keep gerrymandering the state so that Democrats can't even get a majority in the legislature anymore, but this is very good news for the moment. Yay!

And the battle continues nationally...

Dr. Leana Wen at Rewire.News: A State of Emergency in Missouri and Across the Country. "We are in a state of emergency for reproductive health in America, and it requires a true emergency response. Over the past few months, we've seen just how vulnerable access to safe, legal abortion is across the country. Anti-abortion politicians in states across the country have enacted extreme, dangerous, and unconstitutional abortion bans that will endanger lives. ...As an emergency physician, I don't use the words 'emergency' lightly. But I know one when I see it, and there is no denying that the United States is facing a state of emergency that must be addressed." This is a public health crisis.

Elham Khatami at ThinkProgress: Trump's Decision to End Federal Fetal Tissue Research Is Dangerous. "The Trump administration on Wednesday announced that it would end fetal tissue research by federal scientists, despite strong evidence of the benefits of using fetal tissue to research treatments and diseases that affect millions of people, including HIV, human development disorders, and various cancers. Ironically, the administration positioned the move as a way to protect the 'dignity of human life.'"


* * *

Mark Hosenball at Reuters: Still No Briefing for Senate Intel Panel on Mueller Report. "The only committee of the U.S. Congress running a genuinely bipartisan probe of Russian meddling in U.S. politics has still had no word from the Trump administration on briefing the panel about the Mueller report's counterintelligence findings, congressional sources said on Wednesday. ...Since the mid-April release of the redacted report, the Senate Intelligence Committee has been stonewalled in much the same way the administration has refused to cooperate with other committees, two congressional sources said."

[CN: Nativism] Camilo Montoya-Galvez at CBS News: Military to Spend a Month Painting Border Barriers to "Improve Aesthetic Appearance". "In its notification to Congress, DHS said [assigning members of the military to spend a month painting a mile-long stretch of barriers to improve their 'aesthetic appearance'] in Tucson, Arizona had allowed Border Patrol to combat the 'camouflaging tactics of illegal border crossers' who sought to evade detection. The agency said migrants also appeared to have 'greater difficulty' scaling painted bollards along the border. On Twitter, Illinois Sen. Dick Durbin, the second-highest Democrat in the Senate, denounced the task as a 'disgraceful misuse' of taxpayer money. 'Our military has more important work to do than making Trump's wall beautiful,' he added."

[CN: Nativism; white supremacy; trans hatred; death]


Barbie Latza Nadeau at the Daily Beast: No Disciplinary Action for Top Military Brass Involved in Botched Niger Mission. "Acting Defense Secretary Pat Shanahan said Thursday that he agreed with an independent investigation that cleared top military brass in a 2017 special-forces mission in Niger that left four U.S. soldiers dead. The Wall Street Journal reports Shanahan said none of the officers in charge of the mission that led to a deadly ambush of Green Berets by militants should be disciplined. The Pentagon inquiry recommended administrative discipline for 'mistakes and oversights' by nine of those involved in the fatal mission, but stopped short of further action that might have included dismissals from service."

My condolences once more to Myeshia Johnson.

I can't believe that was less than two years ago. It feels like sixteen eternities.

* * *

Melanie Schmitz at ThinkProgress: Trump Says He'll Decide New China Tariffs Following G20, Amid Trade Battle with Republicans. "Donald Trump said Thursday that he would decide whether to impose a new round of tariffs on $325 billion worth of Chinese goods following the G20 summit in Osaka at the end of June. Trump's comments came during a joint appearance with French President Emmanuel Macron, not long after the U.S. president announced he might ratchet up his trade war with China to 'at least $300 billion' on Chinese goods."

[CN: Video may autoplay at link] Alexander Nazaryan at Yahoo News: Trump Admits His Cabinet Had 'Some Clinkers'.
Raised on Norman Vincent Peale's "power positive thinking" quasi-philosophy, the president was attempting to convince both of us that his people really were the best people, even as evidence to the contrary presented itself daily in the form of damning news reports, mystifying congressional testimony, and ethics reports that read like treatments for Mafia movies.

"There are those that say we have one of the finest Cabinets," Trump claimed. That is not a commonly held view. In fact, it is difficult to think of anyone even halfway credible — Republican or Democrat — who has said anything approaching that.

...Trump did allow that there had been "some clinkers," by which he presumably meant people like EPA administrator Pruitt and HHS head Price, both of whom left the administration in disgrace, as did several other of their colleagues.

"But that's okay," he said of hiring men and women who turned out to be less than they seemed and less than he'd hoped. "Who doesn't?" True enough. But there's a difference between a clinker and a charlatan, a man who is no good at his job and a man who sets out to do that job poorly.
And there is a difference between someone who falls out of the president's favor because of incompetency and someone who falls out of the president's favor because of insufficient fealty.

Joshua Partlow, David A. Fahrenthold, and Taylor Luck at the Washington Post: A Wealthy Iraqi Sheikh Who Urges a Hardline U.S. Approach to Iran Spent 26 Nights at Trump's D.C. Hotel. "In July, a wealthy Iraqi sheikh named Nahro al-Kasnazan wrote letters to national security adviser John Bolton and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo urging them to forge closer ties with those seeking to overthrow the government of Iran. Kasnazan wrote of his desire 'to achieve our mutual interest to weaken the Iranian Mullahs regime and end its hegemony.' Four months later, he checked into the Trump International Hotel in Washington and spent 26 nights in a suite on the eighth floor — a visit estimated to have cost tens of thousands of dollars."

And finally, in possibly but probably still unlikely good news... Elizabeth Lopatto at the Verge: Bowing to Pressure, YouTube Will Reconsider Its Harassment Policies. "YouTube will reconsider its harassment policies and may update them, the company said in a new blog post. The statement was apparently prompted by public pressure on the company after a conflict between two YouTubers: Carlos Maza, who hosts for Vox, and Stephen Crowder, a conservative media personality. In response to backlash, YouTube has convened a blue-ribbon commission and appears to be hoping everyone will stop screaming." Lolsob.

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

Open Wide...

Pelosi Still Won't Budge on Impeachment

It isn't just Democratic voters who are calling on Speaker Nancy Pelosi to shift her stubbornly held opposition to impeachment; it's also a growing number of members of the Democratic House caucus. And her responses to their pleas are getting increasingly incomprehensible:

Pelosi met with Nadler (D-N.Y.) and several other top Democrats who are aggressively pursuing investigations against the president, according to multiple sources. Nadler and other committee leaders have been embroiled in a behind-the-scenes turf battle for weeks over ownership of the Democrats' sprawling investigation into Trump.

Nadler pressed Pelosi to allow his committee to launch an impeachment inquiry against Trump — the second such request he's made in recent weeks only to be rebuffed by the California Democrat and other senior leaders. Pelosi stood firm, reiterating that she isn't open to the idea of impeaching Trump at this time.

"I don't want to see him impeached, I want to see him in prison," Pelosi said, according to multiple Democratic sources familiar with the meeting.
What in blazes is she even talking about?! There is a diminishing likelihood that Donald Trump will ever face consequences for anything, no less end up incarcerated, so long as Democrats refuse to use every tool in the box to try to hold him accountable.

Nancy Pelosi is not a stupid person. She knows this.

Which is why she has nothing but an argle-bargled mess of an argument to try to defend this absurd position: "Instead of impeachment, Pelosi still prefers to see Trump defeated at the ballot box and then prosecuted for his alleged crimes, according to the sources."

Okay. Sure. Except we're almost certainly not going to have free and fair elections, and Mitch McConnell and the Republican Senate majority are busily stacking the courts with conservative sycophants who will never allow Trump to be convicted of anything.

I don't know what on earth has happened to Pelosi, and it is, bluntly, terrifying to contemplate what is driving her detestably obdurate refusal to budge from her irrational position.

Her position is indefensible. Her justifications are unconvincing. Her alternate vision is comprehensively unreasonable.

This is unfathomable.

If she cannot be convinced, she must be removed.

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Primarily Speaking

image of a cartoon version of me sitting in a giant cocktail glass and using a cocktail umbrella as a parasol, waving and smiling, pictured in front of a patriotic stars-and-stripes graphic, to which I've added text reading: 'The Democratic Primary 2020: Let's do this thing.'

Welcome to another edition of Primarily Speaking, because presidential primaries now begin fully one million years before the election!

So, as I'm sure you're positively shocked to hear, Joe Biden's indefensible support for the Hyde Amendment didn't go over well with Democratic voters! Such a surprise that espousing support for a misogynist, classist, abortion-stigmatizing, piece-of-shit law didn't impress people are who desperately fighting to keep abortion legal (and who got to vote for a presidential candidate in the last election who promised its end, had she been inaugurated).

After a massive wave of criticism, Team Biden further covered themselves in disgrace trying to backpedal: "Now his campaign is suggesting he didn't understand the question and never meant to favor repeal of Hyde (the campaign said Biden thought he was being asked about the 'global gag rule'). This isn't getting any better for him." Yikes.

Biden's competitors weren't any more impressed with his bullshit than voters.

Senator Kirsten Gillibrand tweeted: "Repealing the Hyde Amendment is critical so that low-income women in particular can have access to the reproductive care they need and deserve. Reproductive rights are human rights, period. They should be nonnegotiable for all Democrats."

Senator Cory Booker tweeted video of himself talking about what trash the Hyde Amendment is (I'm paraphrasing lol), accompanied by text reading: "The Hyde Amendment is a threat to reproductive rights that punishes women and families who already struggle with access to adequate health care services."

Julián Castro tweeted: "All women should have access to reproductive care, regardless of their income or the state they live in. Abortion care is health care — it's time to repeal the #HydeAmendment."

Senator Kamala Harris tweeted: "No woman's access to reproductive health care should be based on how much money she has. We must repeal the Hyde Amendment."

Even Rep. Tim Ryan, who was anti-choice until a couple of years ago, tweeted his opposition to Hyde! "The Hyde Amendment is a tax on millions of Americans seeking abortion. It's wrong and should be repealed. Access to abortion care shouldn't be limited by your zip code, income, or health care provider. It is a RIGHT." (Hey, Joe Biden: When you find yourself to the right of Tim Ryan on abortion, you have derailed.)

[Content Note: Video may autoplay at link] Beto O'Rourke came right for Biden: "He's absolutely wrong on this one. ...I hope that Joe Biden rethinks his position on this issue. Perhaps he doesn't have all the facts. Perhaps he doesn't understand who the Hyde Amendment hurts most — lower income communities, communities of color. I would ask that he rethink his position on this."

And, naturally, Senator Elizabeth Warren had a message for Biden, too:

MSNBC's Chris Hayes: There was an interesting thing that happened today — the former vice-president, Joe Biden, came out and said that he would not support repealing the Hyde Amendment. That is a provision of federal law that bars the federal government from funding abortion services through Medicare and Medicaid and others. You disagree with that position?

Warren: Yes I do.

Hayes: Is Joe Biden wrong?

Warren: Yes!

Hayes: Why is he wrong?

Warren: Here's how I look at this: I've lived in an America where abortions were illegal.

Hayes: Yep.

Warren: And understand this: Women still got abortions. Now, some got lucky on what happened, and some got really unlucky on what happened. But the bottom line is they were there. And under the Hyde Amendment, under every one of these efforts to try to chip away, or to push back, or to get rid of Roe v. Wade, understand this: Women of means will still have access to abortions. Who won't will be poor women; will be working women; will be women who can't afford to take off three days from work; will be very young women; will be women who've been raped; will be women who have been molested by someone in their own family. We do not pass laws that take away that freedom from the women who are most vulnerable.
TELL HIM, LIZ.

At the same town hall appearance, Warren also had a message for Nancy Pelosi: "Warren said she read the full 448-page report from former special counsel Robert Muller and concluded impeachment was necessary, putting her at odds with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and other leaders in the House. 'I get that this is politically tough,' Warren said. 'But some things are bigger than politics. This matters for our democracy — not just now, but under the next president, and the next president, and the next president.' And pointing to instances of Trump's potential obstruction of justice detailed in the report, Warren said, 'If he were any other person in the United States, based on what is documented in that report, he would be carried out in handcuffs.'"

* * *

The DNC has informed climate change warrior Governor Jay Inslee that they will not dedicate a debate to climate change. That is a very stupid decision, and none other than Al Gore himself has weighed in, tweeting: "It's a mistake for the @DNC to refuse to hold a #ClimateDebate, on the most critical issue of this election. Why wouldn't the party listen to its voters and give a platform to Dem candidates' ideas on the #1 issue, to contrast with this President's denial?" GOOD QUESTION.

[CN: Lost pet] This is a sad story about a lost dog (which I sure hope will have a happy ending!), but, again, seeing the candidates giving each other this kind of support is so great:


Former Georgia governor candidate Stacey Abrams may still run for president, but she's not making any quick decisions (and frankly she doesn't have to): "Abrams is leaning into her indecision, seeing it as an opportunity to more fully and intelligently explore her possible paths forward after her dramatic run for the governorship of Georgia last year ended in defeat — but catapulted her on to the national stage. 'We often push ourselves to make quick choices simply for the expediency of either ourselves or whoever is asking the question,' she said in a private side room of the Renaissance Hotel in downtown Washington DC, where she's just off-stage from a speech at a liberal thinktank conference. 'If you haven't fully investigated, you can decide in haste and repent at leisure,' she said." Love her.

John Hickenlooper is still definitely running for president.

Talk about these things! Or don't. Whatever makes you happy. Life is short.

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Today Is the 75th Anniversary of D-Day

On Tuesday, June 6, 1944, the Allied troop landed at Normandy after years of planning. It was the largest seaborne invasion in recorded history, and it was the beginning of the end for the Nazis on the Western Front.

There are lots of ways that D-Day is being marked in the U.S., U.K., and France. It is both a somber occasion, as thousands of Allied troops lost their lives in the siege. It is also a celebratory occasion, as it marks the start of liberation from Nazi occupation.

I can't find precisely the right words to articulate what I am feeling on this day. This particular anniversary of D-Day in this particular year.

I feel frightened by rising authoritarians mark this day as though they are continuing the tradition of liberators.

I feel angry that fascism is once again ascendent, but most of us aren't brave enough to have honest conversations about it.

I feel overwhelmed by grief that humans never seem able to move beyond our basest cruelty toward each other, because we keep empowering power-hungry men with sadistic urges to other and destroy.

I feel determined to persist despite them.

I feel sad that not all everyone who is equally determined to persist, will.

When I was a child learning about WWII in school, they told me never again. They told me never forget.

I have not.

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