Iran Shoots Down U.S. Drone

Iran shot down a U.S. drone on Thursday, with Iran saying the drone had entered Iranian airspace and the U.S. saying that the drone was shot down in international airspace over the Strait of Hormuz. Both regimes have a history of lying, and both have a vested interest in their version being true, so there are no good actors in this dispute.

[Content Note: Video may autoplay at link.] Luis Martinez at ABC News reports:

Gen. Hossein Salami, commander of Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, offered a strongly worded threat to the U.S. after the drone was downed.

"Shooting down the American spy drone had a clear, decisive, firm and accurate message," he said, translated from Farsi. "The message is that the guardians of the borders of Islamic Iran will decisively respond to the violation of any stranger to this land. The only solution for the enemies is to respect the territorial integrity and national interests of Iran."

"We do not intend to engage in war with any country, but we are completely ready for the war. Today's incident is a clear sign of this accurate message," Salami added.

..."Iranian reports that the aircraft was over Iran are false," said CENTCOM spokesperson Navy Capt. Bill Urban in a statement on Thursday morning. "This was an unprovoked attack on a U.S. surveillance asset in international airspace."

Urban said the RQ-4A Global Hawk, which "provides real-time intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance missions (ISR) over vast ocean and coastal regions," was shot down by an Iranian surface-to-air missile system while operating in international airspace over the Strait of Hormuz at approximately 11:35 p.m. GMT on June 19.
The piece calls the drone downing "a major provocation," but it's only a "major provocation" if Donald Trump, John Bolton, Mike Pompeo, et. al. allow themselves to be provoked. Which of course they will, because they (at least two of them) want a war.

But the downing of an unmanned drone, even in international airspace, does not need to cause an incident at all, no less a war. We must be clear on that. No matter what the Trump Regime might say otherwise, this does not require a military response.

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Open Thread

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

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Question of the Day

Suggested by Shaker Nitro_mom: "What's a favorite product, brand, recipe, or tip/hack you first learned about at Shakesville? What about a favorite artist or artistic work? Have you taken on a project or craft that was inspired by something you read or linked to from here?"

Omigosh, so many over the last 15 years, I can't even being to recount them all!

When someone mentions something that I end up using/liking/making/etc., I try to remember to mention it on the main page to give credit, like when Shaker catvoncat recommended Downy Wrinkle Releaser, or when Shakers hopefulnebula and DesertRose recommended safety gadgets for keychains, or when Shaker BrianWS recommends great music to me, as he does on a regular basis, like the awesome Amy Shark.

I also just picked up the book The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma, which Shaker wakeuptothemoon recommended in the last What I'm Reading Now thread.

And those are just a few recent ones! I take recommendations from y'all all the time. I mean, you're here, so obviously you have excellent taste! ;)

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Wednesday Links!

This list o' links brought to you by flowers.

Recommended Reading:

Jameelah Nasheed at Teen Vogue: What Is Juneteenth, How Is It Celebrated, and Why Does It Matter?

Casey Newton at the Verge: [Content Note: Descriptions of violence; workplace abuse; trauma] Bodies in Seats: At Facebook's Worst-Performing Content Moderation Site in North America, One Contractor Has Died and Others Say They Fear for Their Lives

Lori Andrews at Our Bodies Ourselves: Congress Wants to Give Companies the Right to Own Our Genes

Lynn Neary and Patrick Jarenwattananon at NPR: Joy Harjo Becomes the First Native American U.S. Poet Laureate

Elanor Broker at Catapult: Son Boy Allowed: A Trans Mother Finds Space for Boyhood

Ryan F. Mandelbaum at Gizmodo: This Could Be the Most Earth-Like Exoplanet Discovered Yet

Johnny Waldman at Colossal: Delicate Miniature Sculptures Made from Dandelion Seeds by Euglena

Carla Lalli Music at Bon Appetit: This Cheesy, Crispy Broccoli Skillet Might Be the Best Thing I've Ever Made

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

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Today in Trump's Vile Nativist Agenda

[Content Note: Nativism; child abuse.]

The Trump Regime is explicitly abusing children, and justifying it by claiming it's a strategy to try to deter migrants and refugees.

A former ICE official spoke to Hamed Aleaziz at Buzzfeed about an upcoming purge, saying: "They have begun utilizing every apparatus available to them to target, separate, and terrify small children in order to claim a 'win' on immigration."

The operation will "target and remove undocumented immigrant families who have received final orders of removal in an attempt to deter future families from making the trek across the border."

Mark Morgan, who was picked to lead Immigration and Customs Enforcement just weeks ago, did not reveal when an operation would occur or the scope of such an action. He maintained that the agency was still targeting its previous priorities, like removing those with criminal convictions, and that there was not a significant shift in operations.

In talking with reporters, however, Morgan focused on a group of 2,000 family units who recently arrived, were part of an expedited court process, ordered removed from the country, and given a notice earlier this year to work with ICE to leave voluntarily. Morgan said no undocumented immigrant was exempt from enforcement, including families.

"It's going to send a strong message to those individuals contemplating coming here illegally not to do so," he said. "Not only will we be enforcing the law, maintaining the integrity of the system, but we're also going to send a powerful message to individuals in the northern triangle countries: Do not come, do not risk it."
This, despite the fact that we know that people are traveling to the U.S. because they are in danger of violence and/or starvation, and at the same time that a U.N. report has found that there are currently 71 million refugees who "have been displaced worldwide by war, persecution, and other violence."

71 million.

That is "an increase of more than 2 million from a year earlier — and an overall total that would amount to the world's 20th most populous country."

It is a risk to stay. It is a risk to leave. There can be no effective "deterrence" when there are no good choices.

This is indefensible child abuse. Nothing more.

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The Makeup Thread

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

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

Whatever you like — have at it!

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Sorry it's been awhile, but I haven't had anything new to talk about! And even now, I only have something makeup adjacent, but I love it a lot: Neutrogena's Oil-Free Acne Stress Control® Triple-Action Toner.

image of Neutrogena's Oil-Free Acne Stress ControlĀ® Triple-Action Toner

I have tried on and off since my teens to effectively work toner into my skincare regimen, but my fussy combination skin has never liked any astringent I've ever used. They either broke out my skin terribly, dried out my skin terribly, or both.

When I saw that Neutrogena had brought out this product, I decided to give it a try, because my skin is changing with perimenopause and I need what toner is supposed to do, lol.

And it is so great! I don't use it every day, as that would be too drying for my skin, but once every couple of days, after I cleanse my face in the morning with Neutrogena's micellar water (which I also adore and cannot live without now). And not only is it working well with my skin, but it smells so refreshing! It's a nice waker-upper.

The thing by which I'm most impressed is that it's not so drying that it entices my pores to overproduce oil, which has been a constant problem for me my whole life. The balance it provides is pretty great.

Anyway! What's up with you?

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

* * *

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

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Zelda the Black and Tan Mutt lying on a dog bed on the dining room floor with a pink plushy toy, licking her nose
Zelda with her squeaky baby, being adorbz as usual.

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 881

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: You Are Not Alone and Trump Is Terrifying. So Are His Followers and Primarily Speaking.

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

[Content Note: Racism; death penalty] Journalist April Ryan, who is a national treasure, asked Donald Trump about that time he took out a full-page ad calling for the death penalty for the Central Park Five, wondering whether he wants to apologize now that they've been exonerated and there are multiple projects about how fucked up that entire case was. His answer was everything you'd expect.

Donald Trump, taking questions from reporters: April.

April Ryan: Mr. President, will you apologize to the Central Park Five? They've been exonerated; there have been videos and movies shown about the case; and you came out with a full-page ad saying that they should die, that they [inaudible] the death penalty—

Trump: Why do you bring that question up now? It's an interesting time to bring it up.

Ryan: Because there are movies out now—

Trump: You have people on both sides of that. They admitted their guilt. If you look at Linda Fairstein and if you look at some of the prosecutors, they think that the city should never have settled that case. So, we'll leave it at that.
What a reprehensible specimen he is.

[CN: White supremacy] Speaking of reprehensible specimens... Luke Barnes at ThinkProgress: Mitch McConnell Says America Made Up for Slavery by Electing Barack Obama.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) scoffed at the idea of reparations during his weekly press conference Tuesday, saying that slavery was part of America's distant past, and pointing as evidence to the election of former President Barack Obama — someone McConnell did his absolute utmost to thwart.

"I don't think reparations for something that happened 150 years ago for whom none of us currently living are responsible is a good idea," McConnell said. "We've tried to deal with our original sin of slavery by fighting a civil war, by passing landmark civil rights legislation. We elected an African American president."

"I think we're always a work in progress in this country, but no one currently alive was responsible for [slavery] and I don't think we should be trying to figure out how to compensate for it," McConnell added. "No, I don't think reparations are a good idea."
Happy fucking Juneteenth, everyone!

[CN: Homophobia; anti-choicery] Jennifer Bendery at the Huffington Post: Senate Advances Trump Court Pick Opposed by Pretty Much Every LGBTQ Rights Group Ever. "The Senate voted Tuesday to move forward with confirming Matthew Kacsmaryk to be a lifetime federal judge, despite strong protests from Democrats ― and one Republican ― over his record of opposition to LGBTQ rights and abortion rights. The Senate voted 52-44 on a procedural step to advance Kacsmaryk's nomination to the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas. Every Democrat present voted no. Every Republican but one, Susan Collins (Maine), voted yes." Another fine piece of Mitch McConnell's handiwork.


Donald Trump's campaign manager, Brad Parscale, says that "the country is 'too complex now' for polls to be reliable." As my pal Leah McElrath notes on Twitter, this is all part of the Trump campaign's game plan to create false narratives that explain a reelection victory no matter how unlikely it may seem: "Parscale is not making excuses. He is laying foundation to provide cover for some kind of dirty tricks by Trump campaign that could result in inexplicable election results. Again. We have to have a candidate who can inspire turnout to OVERWHELM whatever tricks they're planning."

See also.

Relatedly, I noted on Twitter this morning: "A friend messaged me: 'OMG Morning Joe is wall-to-wall clips of Trump's heinous kickoff rally from last night. Free advertising.' Joe has set the example of how to appear as though you're against Trump while actually protecting and empowering him. Keep your eyes peeled for this." We're going to see a lot of it, as part of the 2020 campaign and in general as he pushes his authoritarian takeover.

* * *

Missy Ryan, Greg Jaffe, and John Hudson at the Washington Post: Pompeo Warns Iran About Trigger for U.S. Military Action as Some in Administration Question Aggressive Policy. "Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has privately delivered warnings intended for Iranian leaders that any attack by Tehran or its proxies resulting in the death of even one American service member will generate a military counterattack, U.S. officials said. The potential for a significant military response to even an isolated event has fueled a broader internal debate among top Trump officials about whether the administration's policy exceeds [Donald] Trump's specific goal of preventing Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon, the officials said." No fucking doy it does.

Maxwell Tani, Betsy Woodruff, and Asawin Suebsaeng at the Daily Beast: Tucker Carlson Is Privately Advising Trump on Iran. "In the upper echelons of the Trump administration, hawkish voices on Iran predominate — most notably Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and National Security Adviser John Bolton. But as tensions between the U.S. and Iran have escalated over the last few weeks, there's been another, far different voice in the president's ear: that of Fox News host Tucker Carlson. A source familiar with the conversations told The Daily Beast that, in recent weeks, the Fox News host has privately advised Trump against taking military action against Iran. And a senior administration official said that during the president's recent conversations with the Fox primetime host, Carlson has bashed the more 'hawkish members' of his administration." Terrific. But what does Sean Hannity advise?

[CN: War; violence; displacement] Jamey Keaton at the AP: UN: Nearly 71 Million Now Displaced by War, Violence at Home. "A record 71 million people have been displaced worldwide by war, persecution and other violence, the U.N. refugee agency said Wednesday, an increase of more than 2 million from a year earlier — and an overall total that would amount to the world's 20th most populous country." My god. And meanwhile, the U.S. president is running a campaign of stochastic terrorism against refugees and breaking international law to deny them the opportunity to seek asylum in the U.S.

[CN: Murder] In other news from the United Nations... Nick Hopkins and Stephanie Kirchgaessner at the Guardian: UN: 'Credible Evidence' Saudi Crown Prince Liable for Khashoggi Killing.
The crown prince of Saudi Arabia should be investigated over the murder of the dissident journalist Jamal Khashoggi because there is "credible evidence" that he and other senior officials are liable for the killing, according to a damning and forensic UN report.

In an excoriating 100-page analysis published on Wednesday of what happened to Khashoggi last October, Agnes Callamard, the UN's special rapporteur, says the death of the journalist was "an international crime."

"It is the conclusion of the special rapporteur that Mr Khashoggi has been the victim of a deliberate, premeditated execution, an extrajudicial killing for which the state of Saudi Arabia is responsible under international human rights law," she says.
There is much more at the link.


Emily Holden at the Guardian: Trump Ditches Sole Climate Rule That Aimed to Reduce Coal Plant Pollution. "Donald Trump's administration is finalizing plans to roll back the US government's only direct efforts to curb coal-fired power plant pollution that is heating the planet. Trump's Environmental Protection Agency will replace an Obama-era climate change rule with a regulation that experts warn could help some of America's oldest and dirtiest coal plants to keep running." Swell.

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

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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 plate sitting on my kitchen counter holding a piece of breaded fish, some sauteed zucchini, and polenta

Yesterday's lunch: Baked breaded cod, some zucchini rounds sauteed in olive oil and tossed with a little salt, and polenta. Simple but tasty!

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Primarily Speaking

image of a cartoon version of me standing next to a Magic 8-Ball set to 'NO,' 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, first we found out which candidates had qualified for the first debate, then we found out how those candidates broke down across two nights, and now we know which candidates will be in the coveted center-stage position at each debate: "On Night One, Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts and former Rep. Beto O'Rourke of Texas will be in the middle, while Night Two will feature former Vice President Biden and Sanders, the Vermont senator, standing side-by-side at center stage."

As I noted in comments on Monday, I'm pretty cool with the distribution of the candidates, which was always going to feel a little fucked-up, lolsob, but I really like the sequence of the nights.

I'm glad the Biden/Bernie night is second, because I don't want Warren, Booker, and Castro (in particular) to have to field questions that start with, "Last night, Bernie said..."

They get the night where they won't be required to respond to whatever the others said. And their names are more likely to get a mention the subsequent evening, if they say something worth mentioning. GOOD.

* * *

Senator Cory Booker has written an op-ed for Essence to mark Juneteeth, sharing his thoughts on "how the spirit of the holiday should be celebrated and how he would fulfill the legacies of those who fought for emancipation." Writes Booker: "We should use today to honor our history, recommit to balancing the scales, and confront the bias that persists in the present. We celebrate and remember on this day, because of our ancestors, because of their strength, their indomitable grace, and their relentless hope. On this Juneteenth, we know we cannot pay them back for what they did for us, but we can, and we must pay it forward."

Senator Kamala Harris correctly connects Donald Trump's planned purge of undocumented immigrants with his white supremacy: "Let's call this what it is: an attempt to remake the demographics of our country by cracking down on immigrants. That this threat is coming from the President of the United States is deeply reprehensible and an affront to our values. We will fight this."

I believe I've mentioned once or twice or three dozen times that former HUD Secretary JuliƔn Castro is very good at messaging, and here he is after being asked about Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez designating as "concentration camps" the facilities in which the Trump Regime is detaining migrants and refugees:
"Well look, I think the point she was trying to make is that this is serious, and this is the mistreatment of human beings," Mr. Castro, a former Obama administration official, said on CNN's New Day.

"Of course, I understand that there's a significance to that term, but I agree with the sentiment behind what she said, which is that we can't take this as normal — this is cruelty for these children," he said.

Mr. Castro said experts have said children will be affected for their entire lifetimes.

"And so we can't write it off, and I think we should focus on what she was trying to say, which is that we need to end this and end it now," he said.
He immediately and completely redirects away from the stupid debate about language that's being used to obfuscate the gravity of what's happening and refocuses on the point, which is the malice. He is so good at this.

Senator Bernie Sanders had a very strange response to Trump's disturbing rally last night:


I mean, of course Trump didn't mention any of those things. And Sanders insistence on pretending that this is a competition centered around policy only helps Trump, who has no policy, only malice. Sanders urgently needs to work on his messaging, not only as a presidential candidate but as a sitting senator, because this ain't it.

In other Sanders news, he says we should "definitely take a look at" busting up tech giants, which is something that Senator Elizabeth Warren suggested some time ago and on which Sanders should have a fully formed opinion by now.

Warren is emerging as a consensus candidate, according to Politico, and, I mean, sure, that's one way to put it — that she's not Bernie Sanders. But another, less misogynist way to put it is that she is emerging as an excellent candidate. A better candidate than other candidates, cough.

Here's a cool headline about Joe Biden, care of the New York Times: "Joe Biden, Recalling 'Civility' in Senate, Invokes Two Segregationist Senators." Yeah, I don't think I need to add any commentary to that, lol. Ol' Joe really knows how to speak for himself.

In other Biden news: "Former Vice President Joe Biden told affluent donors Tuesday that he wanted their support and — perhaps unlike some other Democratic presidential candidates — wouldn't be making them political targets because of their wealth. 'Remember, I got in trouble with some of the people on my team, on the Democratic side, because I said, you know, what I've found is rich people are just as patriotic as poor people. Not a joke. I mean, we may not want to demonize anybody who's made money,' Biden told about 100 well-dressed donors at the Carlyle Hotel on New York's Upper East Side, where the hors d'oeuvres included lobster, chicken satay, and crudites." Cool.

Governor Jay Inslee "has bolstered his presidential campaign with a series of new hires experienced in the politics of climate change, which has been the animating focus of Inslee's 2020 run." And they're not even all men! Imagine that!

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 Is Terrifying. So Are His Followers.

Last night, Donald Trump officially launched his 2020 campaign with a rally in Orlando. It went precisely as you'd expect — with Trump running through all his greatest hits, including brazen lies, claiming credit for shit he hasn't done, demonizing his opponents, and basking in the glow of "Lock her up!" chants, while seemingly promising that Attorney General Bill Barr will prosecute Hillary Clinton.

National treasure Aaron Rupar came through as always with a Twitter thread compiling the notable moments from the event, with descriptions and video, including from Mike Pence's chilling introduction.

And one of the things you'll note, if you watched the event live or if you peruse Aaron's thread, is that the story of the night might not be Trump, who was certainly maximum Trump in every familiar way, but his followers in the crowd, some of whom waited for days outside the venue to ensure they'd be in the audience.

They are rabid.

Booing the "fake news" right out of the gate.

And again, for the second time in short order.

Chanting "Drain the swamp."

"Lock her up!"

Just going absolutely wild for their godking.

Trump has tapped into resentments and anger and hatred and bigotries that the Republican Party has spent decades cultivating, nurturing, and stoking. He knows how to inflame it. He knows how to exploit it. And he is eminently willing to do it, no matter the cost to this country or its people who aren't among his cultists.

I am horrified watching his crowds react to him, especially knowing keenly that he can and will provoke them to violence at any moment.

This, too, underlines the urgency of impeaching him.

Because that seething resentment and inflamed bigotry doesn't stay behind in the venue. His followers take it with them, out into the world. They are amped by hate.

And that is tremendously dangerous.

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Open Thread

image of a red couch

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

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Question of the Day

Suggested by Shaker YankeeTransferred: "Cat or dog, or both, or neither? Why?"

Both! Because I loooooooooooove themmmmmmmm!

I am, as you may have noticed, pretty much a fan of any and all animals, even though the only ones I've personally had as pets are cats, dogs, and box turtles.

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Trump Rally Thread

As I mentioned earlier, Donald Trump is officially kicking off his reelection campaign tonight with a big rally in Orlando that he's promised will be "wild." His deplorable cultists are all amped up care of his announcement of a nativist purge, and some of them have been lining up for more than a day now, so they're ready to let loose.

I am not going to be live-tweeting it, because fuck him. But here is a place to discuss it, should you want to do that, as it happens, whatever happens.

You can follow along on Twitter using the hashtag #TrumpRallyOrlando, and the Orlando Sentinel team has a thread of the happenings that begins here.

Like I always say during inflection points during Trump's presidency, I just hope everyone gets through this rally safely.

As horrendous as his campaign was in 2016, it's going to be so much worse now that he has virtually unlimited power and no fear of consequences.

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You Are Not Alone

image of a group of people in silhouette on a beach at dusk, to which I've added text reading 'You are not alone.'
[Background image via Pixabay.]

If you are overwhelmed by the ruthless onslaught of the Trump Regime's malice that permeates the news every day—

If you are seized by sadness or rage at the ferocious sadism of their cruel agenda—

If you are feeling utterly impotent in trying to effectively counter any of the heinous attacks on vulnerable people that are coming ever more swiftly—

If you are disappointed in the people with power who are meant to take action they are refusing to take—

If you are stuck in a place with few like-minded allies, inundated instead with the hateful disgorgements of Republican cultists—

If you ache with heartbreak and indignation at the public celebrations of harm perpetrated on a mass scale—

If you wonder how the people designing and facilitating and defending that harm can live with themselves, and wonder equally how you can live with their actions being done in your name—

If you are drowning in a whirlpool of emotions so impenetrably oppressive that you can hardly tell where one ends and the next begins, as your anguish bleeds into your fury bleeds into your desperation bleeds into your fear—

If you are more frightened than you have ever been—

If you don't know from where your next bit of energy to stay engaged will come—

If you are battling intrusive thoughts that in turn battle each other for your focus, and your mind skips from election integrity to concentration camps to climate change to police violence to the erosion of abortion access to healthcare to this to that like a record spinning ceaselessly on a turntable you can't reach to quiet—

If you need to cry, or if you're already crying a lot—

If you need help—

If you don't know how you're supposed to keep doing the things that life obliges us to do every day when your country, our world, the entire planet seems to be falling into fascism—

If you are feeling hopeless—

If you are hanging on by your fingernails—

— know this: You are not alone.

We live in an era of official and pervasive gaslighting. There are people who want to tell you that you aren't seeing what you're seeing; that you don't have a legitimate reason to feel what you are feeling.

There are people who will insult you, harass you, threaten you for expressing the pain of the wounds being caused by this relentless trauma, in order to silence you. They will tell you that you are hysterical and weak.

There are people who insist, if you express the reverberating grief and anger bouncing around your insides like an unstoppable pinball, that you are overreacting; that you are oversensitive; that you are crazy.

You are none of these things.

You are empathetic and compassionate and willing to keep looking when others look away, because you care about other humans; because their lives matter to you.

You are strong and you are resisting and you are surviving.

And you are not alone.

[Related Reading: Malice Is His Agenda. Compassion Is Mine.]

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It's Delightful, It's Delicious, It's De-Lovely...

...it's De-lurk Day! We haven't had one of these in quite a while, so all you Shaker lurkers who rarely or never pipe up, don't be shy; say hi!

image of me concealing half my face
Cheeky devils!

And, as always, no one should feel obliged to stop lurking. These threads are a meant as a safe and easy space for people who do lurk to pop in if they want to, and some people have used them as a springboard to regular commenting, but that doesn't have to be the case at all.

Lurking is one of many ways to be part of this community, and if lurking feels best to you — lurk away! lurk away! :)

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Daily Dose of Cute

image of Dudley the Greyhound lying on the sofa with his neck craned around, looking at me with a long face while pressing his snout into a blanket
What a look! LOL.

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 880

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: Today in Misogyny. And Every Day. and Trump Announces Massive Sweep of Undocumented Immigrants and Primarily Speaking.

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

[Content Note: Nativism. Covers entire section.]

Hamed Aleaziz at BuzzFeed: USCIS Director Appears to Warn Asylum Officers in an Email to "Do Our Part". "The newly appointed leader of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, Ken Cuccinelli, sent an email to staffers Tuesday in which he appeared to push asylum officers to stop allowing some migrants seeking refuge in the country passage at an initial screening at the border. 'Under our abused immigration system if an alien comes to the United States and claims a fear of return the alien is entitled to a credible fear screening by USCIS and a hearing by an immigration judge,' Cuccinelli wrote to USCIS staffers. ...He told staffers that USCIS needed to do 'our part to help stem the crisis and better secure the homeland.'" The homeland. JFC.

Faith Karimi at CNN: Body of a 6-Year-Old Girl from India Is Found in the Arizona Desert. "The body of a 6-year-old girl believed to be from India was found in a remote desert area in Arizona this week, officials said. U.S. Customs and Border Protection said the girl was trying to cross into the United States with a group of people from her country. Her body was discovered 17 miles west of Lukeville, just over the U.S.-Mexico border. The group was trying to get into the U.S. after human smugglers dropped them off near the Mexico border, the agency said in a statement Thursday. Temperatures in the rugged wilderness where agents found her remains Wednesday hovered around 108 degrees."

Deaths in the desert are going to become more commonplace as the Trump Regime escalates its violation of international law by refusing to allow refugees to seek asylum at the border. That will inevitably force more people to try to cross the border illegally in search of safety.


(If you don't know why that last item was posted in this section, this is why.)

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Devan Cole at CNN: Trump Downplays Tanker Attacks in Contrast to His National Security Team. "Donald Trump, in contrast to statements by his own top aides, downplayed recent attacks on two fuel tankers in the Gulf of Oman that his administration has blamed on Iran, calling them 'very minor.' The disconnect between Trump's comments in an interview with Time magazine — in which he also warned that he would 'certainly' go to war with Iran were the country to develop nuclear weapons — and recent statements by national security adviser John Bolton and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo come at a time of escalating military posturing between the two countries and a heightened risk of confrontation."

Eliana Johnson at Politico: Trump Prepares to Bypass Congress to Take on Iran. "The Trump administration and its domestic political allies are laying the groundwork for a possible confrontation with Iran without the explicit consent of Congress — a public relations campaign that was already well underway before top officials accused the Islamic Republic of attacking a pair of oil tankers last week in the Gulf of Oman. Over the past few months, senior Trump aides have made the case in public and private that the administration already has the legal authority to take military action against Iran, citing a law nearly two decades old that was originally intended to authorize the war in Afghanistan."

Kate Riga at TPM: Pentagon Sending 1,000 More Troops to Middle East as Iran Tensions Escalate. "Acting Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan announced Monday that the Pentagon is dispatching 1,000 more troops to the Middle East in the wake of the blown-up oil tankers in the Gulf of Oman."

They're ramping up for war as fast as they can. Meanwhile...


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[CN: Gun violence; white supremacy; misogyny; death] Kelly Weill and Justin Glawe at the Daily Beast: Dallas Federal Building Shooter Posted Far-Right Memes About Nazis and Confederacy.
A Texas man accused of opening fire outside a Dallas courthouse uploaded right-wing memes to Facebook, including memes about Nazism and the Confederacy.

Authorities said Brian Clyde, 22, attacked the Earle Cabell federal courthouse Monday morning before law enforcement killed him. No one else was reported injured. A Dallas Morning News photograph of Clyde shows him holding a semi-automatic rifle and wearing a belt full of ammunition. He appears to have uploaded to his Facebook page a picture of similar magazines on Saturday. Elsewhere on the page, he shared memes, some of which suggested racist or misogynist views.

...Last week, Clyde uploaded a Facebook video suggesting plans with a gun.

"I don't know how much longer I have, but a storm is coming. However, I'm not without defense," he said in the brief video, pulling out a rifle. "I'm fuckin' ready. Let's do it."

On Saturday, he uploaded a picture of 10 gun magazines. On Sunday, he uploaded a picture of a sword with the caption "A modern gladius to defend the modern Republic."

Clyde served in the Army from 2015 to 2017, though details of his discharge were not available.
[CN: Anti-semitism; violence] Luke Barnes at ThinkProgress: California Man Arrested for Allegedly Plotting to Kill Jews Walks Free After Posting Bail. "A California man who allegedly wanted to carry out a mass shooting of Jews and police officers has been released from custody after he posted $125,000 bail over the weekend. [Redacted], 23, was taken into custody last week after a joint investigation by the FBI and police in Concord, on the outskirts of San Francisco. ...When police searched his home, they allegedly discovered a homemade AR-15 rifle, 13 magazines, a sword, a hunting knife, camouflaged clothing, books about the Hitler youth and Nazi life, as well as additional pistol ammunition. ...In a statement on Monday evening, the Concord Police did not offer any updates as to [redacted]'s bail conditions but noted that they were working to 'keep those threatened apprised of any developments' and urged the public to be vigilant." Oh.

[CN: Gun violence; domestic violence; death]


* * *

[CN: Sexual harassment] Olivia Messer at the Daily Beast: 'This Isn't a Game': Four Women Sue Indiana Attorney General Curtis Hill for Sexual Harassment. "Indiana State Rep. Mara Candelaria Reardon hasn't spoken to her state's attorney general, Curtis Hill, since the night he allegedly grabbed her ass. 'I want him to know how profoundly he's affected all of our lives,' Reardon, a Democrat, told The Daily Beast through tears on Monday. 'This isn't a game.' And so she is suing. Reardon and three other named statehouse employees filed a new federal lawsuit against Hill on Tuesday morning. The 11-count complaint against Hill and the state of Indiana alleges sexual harassment, retaliation, gender discrimination, battery, defamation, and invasion of privacy, according to a draft viewed Monday evening by The Daily Beast."

[CN: Domestic violence] Staff at USA Today: Read the Full Statement from Acting Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan About a 2010 Domestic Case. "Acting Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan released a written statement Monday night, addressing a violent domestic dispute from nine years ago with his then-wife. The 2010 incident is part of an FBI background investigation ahead of his possible confirmation hearing to be [Donald] Trump's permanent defense chief." Shanahan asserts: "I never laid a hand on my then-wife and cooperated fully in a thorough law enforcement investigation that resulted in her being charged with assault against me — charges which I had dropped in the interest of my family."

[CN: Domestic violence and sexual abuse] Amy Zimmerman at the Daily Beast: Eight Women Accuse Hollywood Filmmaker Max Landis of Emotional and Sexual Abuse: 'We're Not People to Him'. "As for secondhand allegations, there were too many to count. 'There's too many voices to ignore,' [actress Anna Akana] insisted. 'And I felt the need to be vocal because Max is intimidating and he's scary. And I've seen, being in that friend group, one of the most frustrating things is that he would lord his power and his money over people and intimidate them into friendship, or into forgiveness.'"

* * *


Kari Paul at the Guardian: Libra: Facebook Launches Cryptocurrency in Bid to Shake Up Global Finance. "Facebook has announced a digital currency called Libra that will allow its billions of users to make financial transactions across the globe, in a move that could potentially shake up the world's banking system. Libra is being touted as a means to connect people who do not have access to traditional banking platforms. With close to 2.4 billion people using Facebook each month, Libra could be a financial game changer, but will face close scrutiny as Facebook continues to reel from a series of privacy scandals."

Let me offer some unsolicited advice: Don't freely offer your financial data to a company who already abuses your personal data for their own profit.

Also: Fuck Facebook. Their pretense that this will help poor people is disgusting. "Disrupting" traditional finance models with no other objective than their own profit will ultimately harm financially vulnerable people the most.

[CN: Class warfare; food insecurity] Aviva Aron-Dine, Matt Broaddus, Zoƫ Neuberger, and Arloc Sherman at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities: Administration's Poverty Line Proposal Would Cut Health, Food Assistance for Millions over Time. "The Trump Administration is considering a change to the federal poverty line that would ultimately cause millions of people to lose eligibility for, or receive less help from, health, food assistance, and other programs that help them meet basic needs. ...While [the Office of Management and Budget (OMB)'s] notice does not discuss how the proposal would affect low-income families, the Census poverty thresholds are the basis for Department of Health and Human Services poverty guidelines, which determine who can get help from Medicaid, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP, formerly food stamps), and many other federal programs. The proposed change would lower the income-eligibility cutoffs for all of these programs, cutting or eliminating assistance for some individuals and families."

[CN: Poverty] Morgan Lee and AP Staff at the Washington Post: Childhood Poverty Persists in Fast-Growing Southwest. "The number of children living in poverty has swelled over the past three decades in fast-growing, ethnically diverse states such as Texas, Arizona, and Nevada as the nation's population center shifts south and west, a report Monday on childhood well-being shows. The annual Kids Count report from the Annie E. Casey Foundation found that 18% of the nation's children live in poverty, down from the Great Recession. But the same advances weren't seen in the Southwest, where many children are Native Americans, Latinx, and immigrants who have long faced disadvantages. 'The nation's racial inequities remain deep, systemic, and stubbornly persistent,' said the annual Kids Count report from the Annie E. Casey Foundation."

And finally... Reuters Staff at the Guardian: Scientists Shocked by Arctic Permafrost Thawing 70 Years Sooner Than Predicted. "Permafrost at outposts in the Canadian Arctic is thawing 70 years earlier than predicted, an expedition has discovered, in the latest sign that the global climate crisis is accelerating even faster than scientists had feared. A team from the University of Alaska Fairbanks said they were astounded by how quickly a succession of unusually hot summers had destabilised the upper layers of giant subterranean ice blocks that had been frozen solid for millennia. 'What we saw was amazing,' Vladimir Romanovsky, a professor of geophysics at the university, told Reuters.

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

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Gentleman Jack Recap: Season 1, Episode 5 ("Let's Have Another Look At Your Past Perfect")

This post continues my recapping of the TV show Gentleman Jack. For those not familiar:

Gentleman Jack is an eight-episode drama series from BAFTA-winning writer Sally Wainwright (To Walk Invisible, Happy Valley).

Set in 1832 West Yorkshire, England, Gentleman Jack is inspired by the true-story and coded journals of Anne Lister (played by Suranne Jones), and follows her attempt to revitalize her inherited home, Shibden Hall. Most notably for the time period, a part of Lister's plan is to help the fate of her own family by taking a wife.
The series is on HBO and runs Monday nights at 10 PM. (Note: Recaps will include spoilers for that episode.)



When we catch up with the gals, Anne is checking in on Ann after the big reveal from last episode. By "checking in on," I mean Anne is sitting at Ann's bedside watching her sleep in a manner that manages to not be creepy, and then when Ann wakes up, they immediately start kissing because no one on TV ever cares about morning breath. I'm not complaining, just to be clear. Anne and Ann should definitely kiss in the majority of their shared scenes.


Meanwhile, Ainsworth (ugh) is in town for his job interview to be the new town reverend or whatever. He's visiting with the Priestlys and, there, Mrs. Priestly invites him to visit Ann. Ann and Ainsworth subsequently do the 1800s rich-person version of texting, which is to basically send a servant between the two estates with a hand-written note. The upshot is that Ann declines his visit. Either 30 minutes or 6 hours later (it's hard to tell how fast this version of texting is), Ainsworth gives the Priestlys a sob story about how he thought Ann would surely take care of him if his wife died, and Mrs. Priestly assures him that "there's no one else" in Ann's life to stand in the way of that happening. UGH.

"But I'm a man! How dare she refuse me!"
Ainsworth then shows up at Ann's house even though she declined his visit, but then, we know he has boundary issues so that's no surprise. Nonetheless, he was shocked — shocked! — that Ann wouldn't just let him in her house anyway. When Ann's servant didn't let him in, Ainsworth literally stood there with his mouth agape and this look on his face like, "She said no? But, I'm a man! Tell her again that I'm a man!"

He eventually left, but not before leaving Ann a scrapbook and "a biographical account of himself" as a "gift." LMFAO! You know what to do with that, Ann: Dracarys.

Later that night, in bed, Anne asks Ann if she will take the sacrament with her and if they could swear oaths to each other "like a wedding," except not in front of people. Now, I know I've kind of joked in previous recaps about how quickly the relationship seems to be moving, but I actually find this proposal sweet.

It's also interesting because while today there's a pop understanding that the concept of same-sex marriage was invented only within the last few decades or so, we have historical evidence that some LGB people considered themselves capable of marrying those of the same sex much earlier, despite the lack of formal recognition of their unions and even if they only had private understanding of the nature of their relationships.

For years, we've endured opponents of same-sex marriage telling us that marriage for all people everywhere since time immemorial has been a union between one man and one woman for the primary purpose of procreation, but many of us have known that was always an ahistorical argument, for both same-sex and different-sex relationships (See also, 19th-century actor Charlotte Cushman, who during her life considered herself married to female partners.) It will never not be incredible to me the way queer people have, throughout history, carved out lives in societies constructed around cisgender heterosexuality and patriarchal gender norms. For this reason, and more, it's important to keep seeing these depictions in TV/film.

The next day, Anne helps Ann write a strongly-worded letter to Ainsworth, returning his stupid biography of himself and basically telling him to eat a shit sandwich, which is just one of the innumerable perks of being in a relationship with a writer, as my wife will tell you, but I might be biased.


The Anns then "text" the message to Ainsworth, and ugh a thing I noticed about Ainsworth is that whenever he's speaking he's also often lying. And, when he's lying he has this habit of delicately bringing his fingers to his mouth. I couldn't place it at first and then I realized it vaguely reminds me of Dr. Evil from Austin Powers, so let's go with that.


Anne then pops over to the Priestlys and Ainsworth is still there. They have a confrontation outside and Anne basically threatens to expose him as an "adulterer" and "fornicator" if he doesn't leave town. When Anne says she knows he raped Ann, he says Ann wanted it, which causes Anne to jab her fancy walking cane into his chest and say, "If you weren't so insignificant, I'd horsewhip you until you're black and blue." Ope, it's official, I stan Anne Lister.


Ainsworth actually does look petrified — mostly, I suspect, because he's worried about his precious reputation as a reverend and Anne probably could beat him up. He promptly returns to the Priestlys and tells them he doesn't think he wants to move to Halifax after all. Well, I should think not, sir.

Back at her estate, however, Ann finds out that Mrs. Priestly has been blabbing about the Anns' relationship and that two men were hanged recently for sodomy. Terrified, Ann breaks things off with Anne, calling their relationship "unnatural" and "queer," which is really the first time we hear her talk like that. Anne gets angry and storms home and, just for good measure I guess, gets beaten up by some thug who tells her to "leave Miss Walker alone." Poor Anne, this was not a great episode for her (I was also curious if this attack happened in real life, and saw that Anne Lister's diary transcriber posted a reference suggesting it happened differently).

Finally, in the guy-who-was-eaten-by-pigs storyline, the servant mom finds the dad's belt buckle in the pig sty and deduces that the son killed him. She's sort of like, "Meh, whatever" about it and they just start telling other people that he must've gone to America and people are like, "Okay, cool." I guess "it turns out Earl was a missing person who nobody missed at all."

Bits and Pieces:

During this episode, Mariam mentions that her and Anne's father, Jeremy Lister, was at the Boston Tea Party. Indeed, he was a Captain in the Revolutionary War, ahem, on the losing side.

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Primarily Speaking

image of a cartoon version of me lying on the floor holding my head beneath letters reading I CAN'T EVEN, 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!

The clusterfuckery of the first debate has people revisiting DNC Chair Tom Perez's garbage decision to dilute the nominating power of party members, and, yep, that was definitely a shitty move. Capitulating to people who weren't Democrats on the future of the party was monumentally stupid.

Speaking of garbage decisions, Donald Trump is reportedly planning to live-tweet the Democratic debate next week, and I can't wait to not pay attention to that shitshow!

Meanwhile, Trump is officially kicking off his reelection campaign tonight with a big rally that he's promised will be "wild," and that sure sends a chill down my spine. His deplorable cultists have been lining up since yesterday to get in, and that is also terrifying.

I'm honestly not sure if any of the Democratic candidates are prepared and capable of holding their ground against the juggernaut that his criminal campaign will be, especially with virtually the entire political press carrying water and setting off fireworks for him. (Or his empty podium.)

I say virtually, because there are still some outlets practicing both reason and decency. Take, for instance, the Orlando Sentinel, which has marked the occasion of Trump's reelection launch by endorsing not him. "Donald Trump is in Orlando to announce the kickoff of his re-election campaign. We're here to announce our endorsement for president in 2020, or, at least, who we're not endorsing: Donald Trump. Some readers will wonder how we could possibly eliminate a candidate so far before an election, and before knowing the identity of his opponent. Because there's no point pretending we would ever recommend that readers vote for Trump. After 2½ years we've seen enough." šŸ”„

* * *

Former HUD Secretary JuliĆ”n Castro has released part one of his "People First Housing" initiative, noting on Twitter: "Today I released part one of my People First Housing platform to solve the affordable housing crisis & end homelessness in the U.S. Housing is a human right—my plan would ensure that all Americans can get access to affordable, safe, and healthy housing." Terrific stuff.

Castro also tweeted about Trump's despicable nativist malice: "Donald Trump is officially kicking off his 2020 campaign today the same as his 2016 campaign: spewing racist lies and fear mongering about immigrants. We must fight back to protect our nation from his cruel agenda."

Senator Amy Klobuchar has published a list of 100-plus executive orders she would sign during her first 100 days in office. She says: "After four years of Donald Trump, a new president can't wait for a bunch of congressional hearings to act. The urgent problems our country is facing require immediate action. That's why in my first 100 days as president I will enact an ambitious, optimistic agenda..."

Um, no. Clearly, I understand the desire for this, especially given Republican obstructionism, but absolutely not. The U.S. president is not a dictator, and I categorically cannot get behind a "first 100 days" agenda that is nothing but executive orders. This is basically throwing one's hands in the air and saying, "Welp, the Republican destroyed our democracy so here's how I will rule by fiat if you give me the chance!" Nope.

I linked this in comments yesterday, but just in case anyone missed it: Here is a very detailed profile of Senator Elizabeth Warren at the New York Times, if you want to read more about her background.

Senator Cory Booker is tweeting about transmisogynoir: "This is a crisis. We need to call it what it is. If we're not talking about how to protect trans women of color and denouncing the targeting and hate they face, then we're contributing to it. Silence in the face of injustice is complicity."

Senator Kamala Harris is tweeting about state-sanctioned homophobia: "The State Department is refusing to allow #Pride flags to fly at American embassies around the world. This is disgraceful — as LGBTQ+ people continue to face discrimination at home & abroad, it's critical that we signal our support internationally. They must reverse this policy."

Governor Jay Inslee is still advocating for a climate debate: "We need a #ClimateDebate. I'm not backing down, and I hope you aren't either. Raise your voice now."

Senator Bernie Sanders hopes that Big Papi feels better: "Hoping for a full recovery for Red Sox great David 'Big Papi' Ortiz, one of the most outstanding and popular baseball players in recent memory."

Joe Biden claims he's raised nearly $20 million, telling "supporters at a Manhattan fundraiser Monday night that his presidential campaign has raised money from 360,000 donors, with an average contribution of $55 — figures that suggest he has amassed nearly $20 million so far. ...It is unclear whether the Biden campaign intended to release his figures publicly." LOL.

Governor Steve Bullock, who didn't qualify for the first debate, will hold "town halls in Iowa and New Hampshire on both nights of the back-to-back debates," so if you're a real Bullock-head who's been despairing about his exclusion from the debate, maybe you can watch his town halls streaming on MySpace or something.

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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