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Friday, September 3, 2010

Friday in Iran

Posted by Brendan Kiley on Fri, Sep 3, 2010 at 12:37 PM

It's Al Quds Day—a day of support for Palestine—and AJ is not happy about the latest Israel/Palestine peace talks, saying the only path for the Palestinians is "resistance." People cheered. But people always cheer for AJ. He pays them to.

And, for a sideshow, please enjoy a moment midway through this interview that seems like a bit from the Daily Show.

Meanwhile, the Basij celebrated Al Quds in their customary fashion:

Meanwhile, pro-government militiamen attacked the home of an Iranian opposition leader with home-made bombs and beat one of his bodyguards unconscious in an apparent attempt to keep him from attending a key rally.

Mahdi Karroubi's guards had to fire gunshots in the air to clear crowds that broke down the door of his home on Thursday night after days of gatherings outside, said the Sahamnews website, which supports Iran's pro-reform movement.

Shine Your Shoes and Get a Haircut

Posted by Bethany Jean Clement on Fri, Sep 3, 2010 at 12:27 PM

Not yet, but soon: Vito's reopens on Thursday, September 16, and the Genius Awards (with Shabazz Palaces) are the very next night (tickets here). Sweet.

Human Rights Commission Says It Has "Serious Concern Regarding the Fatal Shooting of John T. Williams"

Posted by Dominic Holden on Fri, Sep 3, 2010 at 12:16 PM

The Seattle Human Rights Commission expressed grave concern about a police officer fatally shooting John T. Williams on Monday, saying in a letter this morning to Police Chief John Diaz, "Regardless of his economic, physical, or emotional condition, it is a tragedy that John Williams’ life ended in such a violent manner." (The full letter is after the jump.)

"The incident impacts three communities that we do a lot of work on behalf of," says commissioner Chris Stearns, "Native Americans, people with disabilities, and the homeless."

The human rights commission—A 14-member panel appointed by the mayor and city council—is typically soft spoken in controversial matters, always informing discussion instead of stoking debate. But that they are weighing in right now adds to the sense that large movement is brewing to oppose the shooting by officer Ian Birk. Last night, the mayor and city attorney attended a large vigil in Pioneer Square. And rumors are floating that city leaders and city employees are planning a major protest in the coming week.

In its letter, the commission pressed the police department to provide answers about Williams's death. Police have reviewed few details of the incident, but reports have come out that Williams was partially deaf, had a hard time understanding people, was carrying only a three-inch knife he used to carve wood when an officer approached him, and there are questions whether Williams—who may not have been approaching the officer—posed any threat.

"SPD has the responsibility to treat all citizens with fairness, respect and value," the commission wrote. "Please bear in mind that many in the Native community believe that is not an isolated incident."

Continue reading »

SL Letter of the Day: You're Tired Of Porn Fights?

Posted by Dan Savage on Fri, Sep 3, 2010 at 11:30 AM

Ever since discovering two years ago that I look at porn—I'm a guy, shocker, I know—my girlfriend and I have gotten in numerous arguments over the subject. I seldom use porn, maybe once a week when she is not around. My GF and I usually have sex once a day, and I always make sure that she is satisfied. Porn has never gotten in the way of our sex lives, and I always make love to her instead of looking at porn if that is an option. I've tried explaining to her that I think she is the most beautiful girl on the planet, that I only want to make love with her, that I find her incredibly sexy, etc, etc, but nothing seems to be enough. Because she has asked (multiple times), I have also reassured her that I do not desire the women that I watch and that they are simply there as a visual stimulus to facilitate the process of me getting off (men are visual creatures, let's be honest).

She looks at porn too, and says that she feels guilty getting off on someone who is not her SO, and doesn't understand why I don't feel guilty in doing the same. She also says I shouldn't even need to look at porn since I can have sex with her on a regular basis. I made the mistake of lying to her one time about looking at porn—my honesty about doing it was what got me in trouble in the first place, and I wanted to avoid another fight and spare her feelings—and since then she compulsively checks my Internet history to determine if I've been looking at porn. She even goes so far as to inspect the volume of my ejaculate after sex to guess if I've jerked off since she last saw me. After facing this same argument over and over again, we sometimes reach a happy "conclusion" where she says she understands my p.o.v. and it won't be an issue again... but it always is.

We have been dating for almost four years now, and I want to end these fights once and for all. How can I truly reassure this person that I care for so much and make this problem disappear? Is there any good alternative to deleting my internet history and living a life of white lies?

Tired Of Porn Fights

My response—and TOPF's response to my response, and my response to his response—after the jump.

Continue reading »

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Chinese Women: Still Leading the World in Animal and Robot Mimicry

Posted by Wm.™ Steven Humphrey on Fri, Sep 3, 2010 at 11:15 AM

Meet Miss China, a candidate for the Miss Universe pageant, whose talents include dating advice, gift giving, and wildly adorable impersonations of cows, rocket launches, and... robots?

Union Accepts Contract That Evaluates Teachers Based on Student Test Scores, But Votes No Confidence in Superintendent

Posted by Riya Bhattacharjee on Fri, Sep 3, 2010 at 11:03 AM

The Seattle teachers' union voted Thursday to approve a three-year contract following a much publicized and contentious negotiation process that threatened to delay the start of the new school year next week. At issue was whether student test scores had a bearing on teacher pay, evaluation, and termination. In the end, the union compromised and accepted rules—as they tentatively planned to do—that would allow test scores to play a role in evaluations, but would not jeopardize their jobs.

Almost 100 percent of union members at Seattle Pacific University last night also voted “no confidence” in Seattle Superintendent Maria Goodloe-Johnson, a purely symbolic gesture, citing her inability to lead the district. A flyer distributed before the union meeting at Seattle Pacific University listed eight grievances against Goodloe-Johnson, including a state audit which warned that the district lacked control over its finances.

The union had strongly opposed the Seattle Public School's initial contract proposal, which had wanted student test scores to be part of a teacher’s final evaluation. “They wanted to use it for a high stakes evaluation which could have set up people to end up in probation or termination,” said SEA director Glenn Bafia.

Bafia said that both sides eventually arrived at an understanding at the bargaining table "that we could live with."

Under the new system, student test scores would still be used to evaluate teacher performance, just not to the extent that it could put their jobs in danger. “You can still look at test scores, but if test scores are poor it triggers an evaluation of the teacher,” said Bafia. “The administration and teacher have to sit down and discuss what’s happening in the classroom. The principal will give the teacher the support he or she needs. This is a much better approach and it still allows us to use student academic data.”

If things don’t improve after the evaluation period, teachers could be put on probation. “Of course you could eventually get fired if you don’t improve at all,” Bafia warned.

This battle is a microcosm of a national debate. A report by the LA Times which rated nearly 6,000 elementary school teachers online based on standardized test scores recently created a huge controversy, with the Los Angeles teachers union calling for the paper's boycott.

Today The Stranger Suggests

Posted by The Stranger on Fri, Sep 3, 2010 at 11:00 AM

Film

'Cairo Time'

I will say it again: One of the best films you will see this year is Cairo Time. Directed by Arab-Canadian Ruba Nadda, the movie is about an American woman who visits Cairo, meets an Arab man, and falls in love with the city. And the man falls in love with the dreamy way she falls in love with the city that he loves. Very early in the movie, the American woman wakes up in her hotel room. She has just completed her first night in the city, and the light of dawn is filling the sky. She climbs out of bed, walks onto the balcony, and bathes in the view of the great city and the great river. Life has much of its meaning in moments like this. (See Movie Times: thestranger.com/film)

CHARLES MUDEDE

What Are They Doing At St. Mark's Episcopal Cathedral?

Posted by Dan Savage on Fri, Sep 3, 2010 at 10:50 AM

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Whatever they're doing in there, says "thoughtful conservative" Hans Zeiger, it's "hardly Christian." That goes for the people who worship at St. Mark's too. More at HA.

Rat of the Day

Posted by Bethany Jean Clement on Fri, Sep 3, 2010 at 10:41 AM

Awww—he was just hungry!

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See the photo here. (NSF people-who-don't-want-to-look-at-slimy-dead-rats-"entombed-during-tinning." How is it that the British can make even this sound elegiac?)

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Maddow On Brewer

Posted by Dan Savage on Fri, Sep 3, 2010 at 10:39 AM

Reading Tonight: The Unknown Rocker

Posted by Paul Constant on Fri, Sep 3, 2010 at 10:22 AM

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University Book Store hosts Dave Mustaine tonight. Mustaine, who was apparently in some kind of rock band or something, will sign copies of his book Mustaine: A Heavy Metal Memoir. Has anybody heard of this guy?

Pilot Books hosts what looks like a lovely group reading tonight. Alexis Wolf, Craven Rock, and Joshua James are three zine-makers. Wolf is the author of a literary zine titled Ilse Content, which is up to issue #9. The impossibly named Craven Rock has written a zine titled Eaves of Ass, which is better than the title would have you believe. And Joshua James makes a great zine called Basic Paper Airplane. This could possibly wind up being the best reading of the week.

And Ralph Metzner reads at Elliott Bay Book Company tonight. Birth of a Psychedelic Culture: Conversations about the Harvard Experiments, Leary, Millbrook and the Sixties is about how the author was there at the dawning of the psychedelic age. Which means he's kind of responsible for Phish.

The full readings calendar, including the next week or so, is here.

"Rap Against Rape"

Posted by David Schmader on Fri, Sep 3, 2010 at 9:59 AM

For all those still unsure about the morality of rape and/or awesomeness of rap, here's some conclusive evidence from the 1990s.

Thank you, Best Week Ever.

Just in Time For Your '90s Redux Weekend: Pitchfork's Top 20 Tracks of the 1990s

Posted by Eric Grandy on Fri, Sep 3, 2010 at 9:30 AM

This weekend, at Bumbershoot and outside its gates, you've got Weezer, Hole, and Pavement. And now you've got Pitchfork's Top 20 Tracks of the 1990s to get you all riled up/in the mood. No surprise who came in at #1.

Anonymous Potiquette

Posted by David Schmader on Fri, Sep 3, 2010 at 9:22 AM

Submitted last night to I, Anonymous:

To all the stoners out there that give dealers like me paranoia: Please read and follow the following (its only common sense):

1) No texting blatantly explicit text messages. Use a metaphor if necessary. This can be fun, get creative if you need to, but don’t be stupid or overly obvious. Even a simple “Can we hang out?” is perfectly acceptable. If for some reason you cannot fit what you have to say in a small text, or it’s too difficult to say through a text, then simply ask me to call you. We can always talk face-to-face. Nothin’ like good old-fashioned two-way communication.

2) Come over alone. NEVER bring anyone over I don’t know without first talking to me about it first. If you want to introduce me to someone, this is fine, but it must be financially beneficial for me to meet them. I don’t want to meet some “friend” who calls me only once every 10 days from some unknown number for a little 40 sack just because you are sick of them calling YOU for the same measly thing. It’s just completely unnecessary and very stressful for me.

3) When coming over, make sure you know where I live, what to buzz and how to get here. It only takes doing it correctly once to (hopefully) get it down forever. If your memory is as shitty as most people’s who come over, then do yourself a favor and program my apartment number and/or call box number into your phone under my name in whatever category my actual telephone number isn’t. In addition, if you are at all confused about what apartment I live in, then CALL ME. Don’t just try to open some random door you “think” I live in. If you don’t have a cell phone, or your battery is dead, walk your stoner ass back to the front gate and buzz me again. It will ring up to my apartment, I will answer and you can ask whatever questions you need to make sure you get to my place without disturbing any of my already angry neighbors with giant sticks up their asses.

4) Don’t expect to get hooked up if you buy a 20, and don’t expect me to answer your phone call if you ask for a 10 or a 15 or even a 17 for that matter, its just as insulting to me as it is pathetic for you to ask. 20s can be acceptable if handled correctly. I, personally, would take the apologetic approach and maybe bring my dealer a beer or two and explain why I am making him/her get up off his/her ass for a sad $1.50 profit. I understand times are tough but this should not turn into an everyday occurrence.

5) When you leave, put whatever you bought in your pocket and leave it there until you get at least a block away. Don’t pull it out on the elevator to check “how much I hooked you up” or “how chronic” it is, don’t pull it out on the stairwell to pinch a nug out of your best friend's sack, please just be respectful and wait until you are about a block or so away to do whatever you’ve got to do.

Following these 5 simple rules will not only ensure my existence, but also my capabilities to HOOK YOU UP. Thanks.

Live and learn.

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Drama at the Chilean Mine

Posted by Charles Mudede on Fri, Sep 3, 2010 at 8:40 AM

It's going to be a long fourth months:

One of the trapped Chilean miners is going to have some explaining to do after his wife ran into his mistress at the mine's entrance.

Britain's Sun newspaper reports the wife of Yonni Barrios was stunned and upset to find his girlfriend also conducting a vigil for him.

How I love this big story and all of its micro developments. It's like watching a very long and very entertaining HBO show.

Hillary Clinton for President in 2012

Posted by Dan Savage on Fri, Sep 3, 2010 at 8:32 AM

Discuss.

If God's Floods Don't Kill You...

Posted by Charles Mudede on Fri, Sep 3, 2010 at 8:32 AM

Human terror will...

A suicide bomber struck a rally in the Pakistani city of Quetta on Friday, killing up to 43 people in the second major attack this week, piling pressure on a government struggling with a flood crisis.
Pakistan, the country that only knows how to suffer.

In Case You Missed It: Hans Zeiger's Short List of Terrorist Organizations That Are Threatening America

Posted by Dan Savage on Fri, Sep 3, 2010 at 8:25 AM

The National Education Association, the Gay Lesbian Straight Education Network, NARAL, Planned Parenthood, Americans United for Separation of Church and State. The News Tribune calls Zeiger a "thoughtful conservative." Goldy calls Zeiger out—along with the New Tribune, the Bellingham Herald, and the Seattle Times. It's required reading.

Scenes From a Sleepless Night

Posted by Charles Mudede on Fri, Sep 3, 2010 at 8:16 AM

Steven Wienberg:

The universe will go on expanding and cooling, but not much of interest will occur for 700,000 years. At that time the temperature will drop to the point where electrons and nuclei can form stable atoms; the lack of free electrons will make the contents of the universe transparent to radiation; and the decoupling of matter and radiation will allow matter to begin to form into galaxies and stars. After another 10,000 million years or so, living beings will begin to reconstruct this story.

Alexander Oparin:

Thus we see that all the elements which enter into organic compounds are also found in abundance in mineral world. Even this alone gives reason to doubt the existence of any essential difference between the world of the living and that of the dead.

Stephen Jay Gould:

I merely assert that Darwin was justified in analogizing natural selection with animal breeding. In artificial selection, a breeder's desire represents a change of environment for a population. In this new environment, certain traits are superior a priori.


Robert Fludd:

“That most divine and beautiful counterpart visible below in the flowing image of the universe.”
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  • Jakob Montrasio

"A shadow, likeness, or reflection of the insubstantial triangle visible in the image of the universe.”

Take Your Generosity and Shove It, Buddy

Posted by Jonathan Golob on Fri, Sep 3, 2010 at 8:00 AM

Who would you vote off the island: the selfish ass or the generous spirit? The selfish ass, right? Rational.

WSU scientist Craig Parks along with Asako Stone set out to figure out exactly how much loutish behavior a group will tolerate before throwing the selfish out. What they discovered is far more interesting:

...we also observed a completely unanticipated and, we argue, more interesting result: Those who give much to the group effort yet take little of its subsequent reward are not applauded but rather targeted for expulsion. The effect was replicated across three subsequent studies. Two of these studies ruled out some rather mundane explanations for the finding (lack of understanding of the task by the benevolent other, the other behaving unpredictably), and a third suggested that people are motivated to expel the benevolent other either for self-image reasons or because the other is not adhering to common rules of behavior. In this article, we report on this series of studies.

What the hell. The authors go on to attempt to explain why:

These data, then, provide potential explanations for why people want to remove a benevolent individual from the group. In some cases, the individual makes others feel they look bad in comparison, and, in other cases, the person is seen as violating rules of social interaction for mixed-motive situations. As we solicited these explanations after the expulsion preference had been stated, it is certainly possible that they represent not motivations for removing a benevolent other but rather rationalizations for why subjects want the benevolent person removed.

If you were looking for an empiric basis for the "Keep the government's hands off my Medicare" red state, federal subsidy dependent elderly white teapartier, this is a good place to start.

Today In Sarah Palin

Posted by Dan Savage on Fri, Sep 3, 2010 at 7:51 AM

First...

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Second, the must-read Vanity Fair Palin slam is here.

Want Your Kid To Eat Carrots?

Posted by Dan Savage on Fri, Sep 3, 2010 at 7:32 AM

Then you're gonna have to eat carrots yourself, in front of your kid, like you like 'em. Then your kid will eat carrots. Packaging carrots like Doritos isn't going to do it.

Want your kid to eat a balanced diet? Eat one yourself. Don't want your kid to drink soda? Don't drink it yourself (and don't keep that shit in the house). Don't want your kid to watch too much TV? Don't watch too much TV yourself. Want your kid to be active? Be active yourself, etc., etc., etc.

Morning News: The Amish Are Perverts, Too

Posted by Cienna Madrid on Fri, Sep 3, 2010 at 6:00 AM

Keep Your Chin Up: A Vancouver, Washington, woman is the victim of a seemingly random street attack that ends with a cupful of acid in the face. "I have never, ever seen this girl in my entire life," the victim said. "When I first saw her, she had this weirdness about her - like jealousy, rage."

Drain the Milk, Then Pocket the Nipple: A Woodinville financial adviser faces felony theft charges stemming from allegations that she stole over $20,000 from her mother's retirement account.

Keeping Vigilant: Mourners memorialize John T. Williams, the Native American carver shot by a police officer on Monday. (More on the vigil here here.)

KEXP Gets Fluffed: The local public radio station is up against a Chihuly museum for the coveted Fun Forest Pavilion site. The Seattle Times notes that the selection committee will make its recommendation to Seattle Center as early as next week.

Make Your Religion Less Controversial, Please: A New York Times poll shows that two-thirds of New Yorkers want a planned mosque near (approximately two blocks) ground zero to be "relocated to a less controversial site father away." Like Ohio.

Mideast Peace Talks Deemed "Constructive": Two of the issues central to the talks were security for the Israelis and Jewish settlement construction on Palestinian territories.

Amish in Crisis: A 26-year-old Amish man is accused of molesting at least six girls in two states, officials charge. In Wisconsin, he stands accused of incest and the repeated sexual assault of a minor. In Missouri, he's charged with statutory rape, sodomy, and sexual misconduct involving a child.

New Health Law Myths: NPR.org rounds them up and then takes them down, including whether the law "requires people who want public health insurance to be implanted with a microchip," or if it creates a new private army for President Obama.

Tax Breaks for Small Businesses: The Washington Post reports that the White House may unroll business tax breaks - worth hundreds of billions of dollars - to encourage hiring and refute Republican charges that Democratic tax policies hurt small businesses.

Miami Airport Terminals Evacuated: TSA officials reportedly found something suspicious in an item of luggage late Thursday night and have taken one person into custody.

Candlelight Vigil Commemorates Life of John T. Williams

Posted by Cienna Madrid on Fri, Sep 3, 2010 at 12:33 AM

Roughly 200 people spilled into Second Avenue in front of the Chief Seattle Club Thursday night, holding candles, praying, and singing for over two hours to commemorate the life of John T. Williams, a carver from the Nitinaht tribe who was fatally shot on Monday by a Seattle police officer while holding a carving knife.

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"I'm proud to see this large gathering of nations here to celebrate [Williams'] life," said Jenine Grey, executive director of the Chief Seattle Club. Members of tribes in Alaska, Canada, many parts of Washington, and all plains nations were represented. City officials, most notably Mayor Mike McGinn and City Attorney Pete Holmes, stood in solidarity with the crowd. Elk stew and fry bread was served, as one-by-one people stood to eulogize Williams between songs and prayer. One woman spoke of the LOVE tattoo displayed on Williams's hand, and how it reminded him daily to "be a good person and to love everyone." Grey spoke of Williams's carving work—"he was a man who stayed true to his traditions"—which was sold in local stores in the area, such as the Raven's Nest Treasure in Pike Place Market and at Ye Olde Curiosity Shop.


But the peacefulness of the candlelight vigil couldn't mask the growing anger at the Seattle Police Department over Williams' death.

"The police have dehumanized [Williams]," said Real Change Director Tim Harris. "They mention his criminal record but don't mention his name. They paint the situation like we need to reserve judgment. What I see is self-justification and the closing of ranks."

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"We have to stop police brutality—this is 2010," said Leona, Williams' cousin. "He wasn't homeless, he had a home and a family and he shouldn't have been taken from us."

"To see a Native with a piece of wood and a knife and not put that together—that’s culturally ignorant," said Storme Webber, a local writer and performance artist with Aleut heritage.

"Hearing about our club members dying on the streets is a reality," admitted Grey. "But as more details emerged, I got angry, outraged. I have a ton of questions, just like everyone else who's here. Why did this have to happen? Why didn't the officer subdue him? Why take his life?"

At this point, there are few answers to these questions. Grey says SPD has been in contact with the Native American community, that they've been assured the police are running a full investigation, and that "Chief Diaz is interested in meeting with us." However, outbursts of anger throughout the evening showed a lack of faith in the police—specifically, in police accountability—among the Native Americans and homeless people present.

"This is a night of peace, love, and prayer—not demonstration," Grey reiterated to the crowd. "But the demonstration is coming. We can't let something like this happen and not demand to see changes."

Thursday, September 2, 2010

The Vigil for Williams

Posted by Dominic Holden on Thu, Sep 2, 2010 at 11:07 PM

Seattle Police Officer Linda Hill was one of over 200 mourners at a candlelight vigil tonight for John Williams, the man fatally shot by a Seattle police officer on Monday. She was in uniform, but not working, standing in the middle of a crowd that spilled into 2nd Avenue outside the Chief Seattle Club in Pioneer Square.

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"I'm part of the Native American community in Seattle. I'm a Yakima Tribe member," said Hill, asked what prompted her to join the vigil. Did she believe that the officer had erred in shooting Williams, a Native American man who was deaf in one ear and had a hard time understating people? "I'm not going to second-guess another officer's actions," she said. "Officers are responsible for our own actions. He only had two years [on the police force]. He may not have had a lot of experience."

"There is healing that needs to be done on both sides, the community and the police department," Hill continued. As for officerIan Birk, "This will overshadow the rest of his career. There are consequences. There will be an inquisition. Questions from the community will be addressed."

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Among the crowd was City Attorney Pete Holmes and Mayor Mike McGinn. The mayor declined to comment, saying he didn't want to detract from Williams. But it speaks volumes that McGinn and Holmes were there, for the victim.

Cienna will have more later.

 

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