Showing posts with label This shit doesn't happen in a void.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label This shit doesn't happen in a void.. Show all posts

Mike Pence Suddenly Doesn't Know How Culture Works When It Comes to Donald Trump's Campaign of Stochastic Terrorism

Conservatives are hypocrites about a whole lot of things, but one of the most infuriating and cynical iterations of their rank hypocrisy is how the ultimate culture warriors who have spent decades exploiting social bigotries to defend and entrench their privilege suddenly pretend they don't know how the fuck culture works when it comes to being accountable for the inevitable violence that results from their othering, scapegoating, and eliminationist rhetoric.

In a perfect and terrible example of this gross dynamic, here is our profoundly mendacious Vice-President Mike Pence defending his boss' obscene campaign of stochastic terrorism, which is underwriting acts of public violence against marginalized people and vocal critics of the regime:

"We condemn political violence in the strongest possible terms. It will not be allowed. It will not be tolerated," he said. "We saw that last summer with the attack on the Republican baseball practice, of course, we saw the suspect mailing pipe bombs to prominent political figures this week, [and] the horrific and anti-Semitic attack that took place in Pittsburgh grieves our hearts. We need to continue to work as a nation to bring these senseless acts of violence to an end, and we will."

"But," he added, "I think we need to be very careful…about associating acts of violence with strong political debate in America. Throughout our history, we've always had strong political debate, and then we settle those things at the ballot box. I think what the president is determined to do is continue in the days that remain in this election and going forward to make sure that we preserve the freedom of speech, and the ability of Americans to have those debates, to work out our issues in the public domain, and then carry that into the ballot box and resolve our differences there."
Fuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuck youuuuuuuuuuuuuuu.

There is a meaningful, significant difference between "strong political debate" and incendiary rhetoric designed to dehumanize entire classes of people on their basis of their (our) identities and to put targets on the backs of one's political opponents.

And the distinction is not at all difficult to make.

Pence is deliberately refusing to make it, because he is a piece of a shit and malice is the agenda.

Open Wide...

The Trump Effect: It's "Okay to Grab Women"

[Content Note: Sexual assault.]

Speaking of behavior that doesn't happen in a vacuum: A 49-year-old Florida man is facing a federal charge of abusive sexual contact after he groped a female passenger on a flight.

He later told authorities that the president "says it's okay to grab women by their private parts."

It is not okay.

None of this is okay.

Open Wide...

Trump Boasts That He's a "Nationalist" at Nativist Rally; Attacks Liberal Women

[Content Note: White supremacy; anti-Semitism; nativism; misogyny.]

Last night, at another Make America Clap for Me Again rally in Houston, Texas, Donald Trump went on another incredible rant, during which he told more spectacular lies about his own record and claimed popularity; his political opponents and critics; undocumented immigrants crossing the border to commit voter fraud; and more.

He also boasted about being a "nationalist," in what was less a dogwhistle than a bullhorn.

"You know, they have a word, it sort of became old-fashioned. It's called a nationalist," Trump said at a campaign event in Houston, where he rallied voters to support Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Tex.) in November's midterm elections.

"And I say, 'Really? We're not supposed to use that word,'" Trump continued. "You know what I am? I'm a nationalist. Okay? I'm a nationalist."

As the crowd in the Houston Toyota Center roared with applause, the president continued: "Use that word. Use that word."
The crowd not only roared with applause, but broke out into a "USA! USA!" chant, just to drive home the point.

Again, I will note that Trump is a sophisticated media manipulator who did not become president by accident, and additionally knows how to play his cultists like a fiddle. He gives them talking points, and they repeat them. He sanitizes vile ideas, and they embrace them. He normalizes extreme language, and they use it.

He is getting more brazen in identifying himself as a white supremacist — and identifying himself as a "nationalist" and urging the deplorables to "use that word" is part of a strategy. One that becomes even clearer in context:
Trump's remarks followed a rebuke of "globalists" whom he accused of putting other nations' interests ahead of those of the United States.

"Radical Democrats want to turn back the clock. Restore the rule of corrupt, power-hungry globalists," Trump said. "You know what a globalist is, right?"

He explained: "A globalist is a person that wants the globe to do well, frankly not caring about our country so much. And, you know what? We can't have that."
The term "globalist" is used by white supremacists to describe the global cabal of Jewish people who conspire to control the world economy. It's a whitewashed modern term used to express ancient anti-Semitism.

In addition to attacking refugees and Jews, Trump also launched jeremiads against his favorite female Democratic targets, to chants of "Lock her up!" from the crowd: Hillary Clinton, insisting that she must be investigated; Rep. Maxine Waters, again calling her a "low-IQ individual"; Sen. Elizabeth Warren, vowing he'll still call her Pocahontas; and Sen. Dianne Feinstein, mocking her over her role in the Kavanaugh hearing.

All of this has consequences. Trump's public behavior is hideously appalling on its own, but it also doesn't exist in a vacuum. As I have been saying about conservative bigotry and violent hyperbole for many, many years: This shit doesn't happen in a void.

To that end:

Sarah Mervosh, William K. Rashbaum, and Andrew R. Chow at the New York Times: At George Soros's Home in N.Y. Suburb, Explosive Device Found in Mailbox. "An explosive device was found on Monday in a mailbox at a home of George Soros, the billionaire philanthropist who is a favorite target of right-wing groups, in a suburb north of New York City, the authorities said. ...[J]ust this month, Representative Matt Gaetz, Republican of Florida, falsely speculated that Mr. Soros had funded a caravan of migrants moving north toward Mexico. There is no evidence that Mr. Soros paid thousands of migrants to storm the border. Nor is there evidence that Democrats support the effort, as [Trump] has said."

Fortunately, Soros was not home at the time, the bomb did not explode on its own, and the device was safely "proactively detonated" by bomb squad technicians.

But people are getting hurt and are going to keep getting hurt, because Trump's incendiary language against refugees, Jews, women, and other marginalized people is part of a sinisters strategy of stochastic terrorism.

Malice is the agenda, and Trump is encouraging his audiences to enact cruelties on his behalf against the people he designates as "enemies."

This is going to get a lot scarier.

Open Wide...

Five Dead in Shooting at Capital Gazette in Annapolis

[Content Note: Gun violence; death and injury; misogynistic violence.]

Yesterday, a man with a "long-standing grudge against the paper," a history of misogynistic abuse, and access to a shotgun killed five people at the Capital Gazette newspaper in Annapolis, Maryland.

Journalists dived under their desks and pleaded for help on social media. One reporter described the scene as a "war zone." A photographer said he jumped over a dead colleague and fled for his life.

The victims were identified as Rob Hiaasen, 59, a former feature writer for The Baltimore Sun who joined the Capital Gazette in 2010 as an assistant editor and columnist; Wendi Winters, 65, a community correspondent who headed special publications; Gerald Fischman, 61, the editorial page editor; John McNamara, 56, a staff writer who had covered high school, college, and professional sports for decades; and Rebecca Smith, 34, a sales assistant hired in November.

Two others were injured in the attack that began about 2:40 p.m. at the Capital Gazette offices at 888 Bestgate Road in Annapolis.

Police took a suspect into custody soon after the shootings. He was identified as Jarrod W. Ramos, a 38-year-old Laurel man with a long-standing grudge against the paper.

Ramos was charged with five counts of first-degree murder, according to online court records.
The Baltimore Sun has obituarities for each of the victims: Gerald Fischman; Rob Hiaasen; John McNamara; Rebecca Smith; and Wendi Winters. My condolences to their families, friends, and colleagues. I am so sorry.

Ramos' motive may have been his grievance with the paper, but the deadly action he decided to take only now did not happen in a vacuum. It happened two days after a prominent rightwing provocateur said: "I can't wait for the vigilante squads to start gunning journalists down on sight." It happened in the midst of the sitting president's years-long war on the press.

Thoughts and prayers aren't going to cut it. Accountability for and a willingness to change a culture of violence is where we have to start.

Maybe Ramos was not directly influenced by anything he heard from Trump, M1lo, or other press-demonizing endorsers of violence, but the incendiary trash they disgorge creates a toxic culture in which we all swim.

Conservatives can't keep pretending that the only culture which exists is the progressive culture they want to attack and destroy.

Related Reading: Their Bootstraps Made Them Do It and Every. Damn. Time.

Open Wide...

The "Lone Madman"

[Content Note: Anti-choice terrorism; disablism; misogynist apologism.]

When news first broke about Robert Dear killing three people at a Planned Parenthood facility in Colorado Springs last year, there was an effort, as is there always, to cast him first as a "gentle" man and then, when that failed, to cast him as a "lone madman."

In the days following his arrest, I wrote:

The coverage of the man, since the earliest moments when his name was released, has been troubling. Despite the fact that he made it clear what his motive was, by muttering about "baby parts," the media has played the most appalling game of Occam's Big Paisley Tie ever, treating his motive like a fucking mystery.

Early reports on who Robert Dear is looked more like dating profiles than they did profiles of a domestic terrorist. The New York Times reported that acquaintances described him as "a gentle itinerant loner who occasionally unleashed violent acts toward neighbors and women he knew."

...Soon we learned that Dear had been reported for at least one incident of domestic violence, and that he was known to abuse animals. Less and less "gentle," it seemed.

Dear was also married three times, and his second wife has described him as someone who "erupts into fury in a matter of seconds," saying she "lived in fear and dread of his emotional and physical abuse."

Further, it has now emerged that Dear was "charged with rape in South Carolina more than 20 years ago." After harassing and stalking a married woman who was not interested in his advances, he went to her house and then beat and sexually assaulted her at knifepoint.

Not so much a "gentle loner," then.
The next day, we learned Dear had a history of anti-choice interference, including having "put glue in the locks of a Planned Parenthood location in Charleston."

He was not gentle, and he was not a loner. And he was explicitly motivated by anti-choice ideology.

Now, as a hearing to determine whether he is competent to stand trial approaches, the AP reports that Dear "told police he admired Paul Hill, a former minister who was executed in 2003 for the 1994 shootings of abortion provider Dr. John Bayard Britton and his bodyguard, a retired U.S. Air Force officer named James Herman Barrett, outside the Ladies Center in Pensacola, Florida."
Dear often talked about Hill, including once when he drove past a North Carolina abortion clinic and again when he learned that Colorado Springs had a clinic, his girlfriend told police. Dear's comments after the gunbattle even seemed to echo Hill, who spoke of being rewarded in heaven for his actions.

During an interview in which he repeatedly recited Bible passages, Dear told police he dreamed he would be "met by all the aborted fetuses at the gates of heaven and they would thank him for what he did because his actions saved lives of other unborn fetuses," the documents say. "He was happy with what he had done because his actions ... ensured that no more abortions would be conducted at the Planned Parenthood facility in Colorado Springs," which has since reopened.

Before the shooting, Dear frequently posted messages online about his anti-abortion views, he told police. In 2009, he emailed his son a link to a website that has the stated purpose of "honoring heroes who stood up for the unborn," with links to information about Hill and others who had targeted abortion clinics.
Robert Dear was a not a loner, in any sense of the word. He saw himself as part a movement. He saw that he could be a hero of that movement.

This heinous act of anti-choice terrorism didn't emerge from a vacuum. Dear is the precise opposite of a "lone madman." He is a calculating killer who was inspired by, and hoped to inspire, people who share his ideology.

This flagrant, shameless, decades-long campaign of intimidation, harassment, and threats and acts of violence against healthcare providers who offer abortion services to pregnant people (or are even presumed to offer abortion services), and the spaces in which they offer them, in defense of an inherently violent ideology, is a comprehensive terrorist movement which, from just 1977 to 2011, included multiple assassinations, multiple attempted assassinations, and over 200 arsons and bombings.

Robert Dear could only be said to be "acting alone" if one ignores this vast terrorist network and its unifying ideology, which is so central to public life in the US that it's a centerpiece of the platform of one of the nation's two major political parties.

This didn't happen in a void, and it will happen again and again, until we stop pretending that acts of anti-choice terrorism are disconnected acts committed by lone madmen.

Open Wide...

This Must Stop

[Content Note: Islamophobia; violence; eliminationism.]

At Buzzfeed, Alicia Melville-Smith and David Mack have documented seven acts of of anti-Muslim vandalism and/or threats in the US just since the IS attacks in Paris. This list does not, of course, include the personal assaults and countless acts of microaggressions perpetrated against Muslims—or people wrongly perceived to be Muslim, like Sikhs—in the same period.

This violence and harassment does not exist in a vacuum. It exists in a climate of fearmongering, scapegoating, and horrendous othering, led by the presidential candidates in one of the two major political parties in the country.

[Video may autoplay at link] Republican Ohio Governor John Kasich, the moderate in the group, proposed "creating a new government agency to push Judeo-Christian values around the world."

Which is heinous, and yet is nonetheless one of the least offensive proposals to come out of Republican leaders, whose House caucus last night approved legislation, sure to be vetoed by President Obama if it even makes it through the Senate, "that would make it even more difficult for refugees from Syria and Iraq to enter the United States," despite the fact that Syrian refugees "tend to provide extensive documents involving their day-to-day lives. They often arrive with family histories, military records and other information that can be useful for American authorities investigating them."

[Video may autoplay at first link] On the even more extreme end of the spectrum, Donald Trump said he would "absolutely implement" a database tracking Muslims in the US, and even entertained a proposal to require Muslims to carry a special form of identification.

(Apart from the fact that this is cruel, othering, and profoundly hostile to the ideals of the pluralistic society the US professes to be, what the fuck purpose does Donald Trump et. al. even imagine this would serve? Any human being who commits criminal violence isn't a criminal until the day that they are. Tracking people isn't effective prevention, even if it weren't colossally indecent.)

Ben Carson just went right for the most appalling dehumanization, and compared Syrian refugees to rabid dogs:

"For instance, you know, if there is a rabid dog running around your neighborhood, you're probably not going to assume something good about that dog, and you're probably gonna put your children out of the way," Carson told reporters during a campaign stop in Alabama on Thursday. "Doesn't mean that you hate all dogs by any stretch of the imagination."

"By the same token, we have to have in place screening mechanisms that allow us to determine who the mad dogs are, quite frankly," he continued, according to Politico. "Who are the people who wanna come in here and hurt us and wanna destroy us? Until we know how to do that, just like it would be foolish to put your child out in the neighborhood knowing that that was going on, it's foolish for us to accept people if we cannot have the appropriate type of screening."
I cannot say this any more plainly: Comparing human beings to rabid dogs, which are put down, is eliminationist rhetoric. There is a long history of comparing people to vermin, to insects, to other creatures we "get rid of," and it is rightly recognized as eliminationism. What Carson is saying here is no different.

This inflammatory rhetoric and legislative hostility is fostering a climate of hatred, intolerance, threats, and violence. It is irresponsible, it is gross, and it is harmful.

And it must stop.

Open Wide...

Terrorist Attack on Black Church in Charleston

[Content Note: Terrorism; racism; death; white supremacy; guns. Video autoplays at first link.]

Last night, a young white man went to a service, a Bible study group, at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church, a historic black church in Charleston, South Carolina. He asked for the church's pastor, the Reverend Clementa C. Pinckney, and sat next to him during the study.

Once it had ended, the white man opened fire on the black attendees, killing six women and three men, including Rev. Pinckney. Three others survived. A female survivor reports the man reloaded five times, and that he told them: "You rape our women and you're taking over our country. And you have to go."

The shooter fled, and still remains at large. Charleston is not on lockdown, despite a mass shooting that was the an act of a terrorist, who took more lives than the Boston Bombing.

Police are investigating the shooting as a hate crime. The Department of Justice has launched a federal civil rights investigation.

In a statement, Republican South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley said: "We'll never understand what motivates anyone to enter one of our places of worship and take the life of another."

Oh, Governor Haley. I think you and every member of your party understands what motivates violent hatred very well indeed.

This was not an incomprehensible act, nor was it a "senseless crime." It is a crime that makes a perfect, terrible sense inside of a system of white supremacy upheld by and aggressively defended with violence.

Its perpetrator was not a lone gunman; he was a gunman with the companionship of white supremacy.

He is not a poor lost soul with mental illness; he is a terrorist.

This shit does not happen in a vacuum.

It happens in a white supremacist culture in which black people gunned down by police are thugs and white men who kill black women and men en masse are troubled boys whose mysterious motivations who can't possibly be discerned.

It happens in a culture of anti-blackness in which #BlackLivesMatter is a plea, and in which white people are privileged and exhorted to believe that our lives matter more.

It happens in a culture in which there is more mainstream news coverage of black protesters demonstrating for their very lives, deliberately misrepresenting those protesters as rioting criminals, than there is mainstream news coverage of nine people being slaughtered in an act of racism terrorism by a deliberative white killer who was welcomed into their midst.

It happens in a culture in which a confederate flag is flying at half-mast over the state capitol.

It happens in a culture with a long history of racially-motivated attacks on black churches and the black people who attend them, a culture in which shots were fired into a church in Memphis just this morning.

This shit does not happen in a vacuum.

Unknowable motivations. Senseless crime. Lone gunman. Mentally ill. Isolated incident. Watch for these weasel words and the weasel narratives they serve, urging us to shake our heads instead of our fists.

We should be angry. We all need to be angry.

* * *

My sincerest condolences to the friends, family, neighbors, colleagues, and fellow congregants of the people who were killed.

The names of the victims, aside from Rev. Pinckney, have not yet been released. I will update this post with their names when they have been made public.

UPDATE: Four of the victims have been identified as South Carolina State Senator Reverend Clementa Pinckney, Sharonda Coleman-Singleton, Cynthia Hurd, and Tywanza Sanders.

A fifth victim has been identified as Ethel Lee Lance.

A sixth victim has been identified as Myra Thompson.

A seventh victim has been identified as Rev. Daniel L. Simmons.

An eighth victim has been identified as Susie Jackson. She and Ethel Lee Lance were cousins.

The ninth victim has been identified as Rev. Depayne Middleton.

* * *

Commenting Guidelines: Anything even resembling apologia for this act of white supremacist terrorism will be deleted. Anything even resembling policing of black people's emotions will be deleted. Further, this is not the space to work out your white privilege. White people need to be doing that right now, as ever, but that is work to be done with other white people, not in a public forum where people of color who don't have the luxury of ignorance afforded by privilege are obliged to encounter and navigate it as a cost of participation.

Open Wide...

Chapel Hill Shooting: Update

[Content Note: Terrorism; guns; death; Islamophobia; anti-religiousness.]

Background here.

So, as you have probably seen, because it is fucking inescapable, lots of people are very insistent on disappearing any racial and/or religious motivation for Craig Stephen Hicks killing Deah Barakat, Yusor Mohammad Abu-Salha, and Razan Mohammad Abu-Salha. It's all just a parking dispute!

The "parking dispute" refrain is absolutely incredible and absurd: My pal Ashon Crawley pointed to a video posted on Facebook by Fatima Rahimi of Inside Edition doing a segment that is utterly jawdropping: "—shooting over, of all things, police say, a parking space. Three college students are dead; their neighbor has been charged. Now, initially, some said it was a hate crime, but police say the dispute was over parking at the apartment complex. Now, finding a parking space is one of those things that can push some people over the edge, but there is a way to always find a spot at the mall." Segue to a piece on finding parking. Seriously.

Yesterday afternoon in comments, Shaker Timberwraith linked an article in which the two women's father, Dr. Mohammad Abu-Salha, was quoted as saying the "parking dispute" claim hardly tells the whole story:

"This was not a dispute over a parking space; this was a hate crime. This man had picked on my daughter and her husband a couple of times before, and he talked with them with his gun in his belt. And they were uncomfortable with him, but they did not know he would go this far."
And today, Dr. Abu-Salha told the crowd gathered ahead of his daughters' burial "that he wants federal authorities to investigate the shooting as a hate crime."
Chapel Hill police said their initial investigation indicated that the shooting grew out of a simmering dispute over a parking space with the alleged killer, Craig Stephen Hicks, but they were also exploring the possibility that it was a hate crime and had asked the FBI for help. Federal prosecutors in the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Middle District of North Carolina are monitoring the local investigation.

Dr. Mohammad Abu-Salha, the father of the two slain women, spoke before thousands of people gathered at a prayer service in Raleigh. He urged the federal government to get involved to determining what motivated the shooting.

"I call on the president of the United States, Barack Obama, and the U.S. [Department of Justice] and law enforcement: Please involve the FBI. Please investigate. Please look carefully. I have talked to lawyers, I have talked to law professors—this has hate crime written all over it," Abu-Salha said.

...He insisted that the shooting did not arise out of a parking dispute. "We don't want revenge. We don't care about punishment. We care about acknowledging this the way it is and protecting every other child—black or white, comes from Asia or Arabia or wherever they come from," he said. "I trust law enforcement and the government to do their duty."
I hope law enforcement appreciates what that trust means, and honors it. But this is not reassuring:
Ripley Rand, the U.S. prosecutor for the Middle District, which includes Chapel Hill and Durham, said...that from the early details of the Chapel Hill investigation, he did not think the killings were part of a targeted campaign against Muslims.

"This appears at this time to be an isolated incident," Rand said.
So what. Something does not have to be "part of a targeted campaign" to be a hate crime. And it beggars belief that anyone can say with a straight face that the murder of Muslims by someone who hated Muslims is "an isolated incident." Sure. Everything happens in a vacuum. Culture doesn't exist.

Until the next time we want to talk about Muslims as a faceless monolith, of course.

Open Wide...

Quote of the Day

[Content Note: Racism; guns; death.]

"Surely [Michael Brown and Tamir Rice] must have done something to invite their deaths at the hands of law enforcement? Meanwhile, a white Christian man plans and executes a terrorist attack in Texas' capital and he's just a nice guy who lost his way, a Renaissance Faire enthusiast in a tricorn hat who enjoyed tubing and trying to blow up government buildings. This response accomplishes two things: It obfuscates the role of racism and white supremacy in the construction of the 'victim' in our discourse, and it excuses white-perpetrated violence as a fluke, rather than as the not-illogical result of pro-gun, anti-government, and anti-immigrant rhetoric."—Andrea Grimes, in a must-read piece for the Texas Observer, "The Mental Gymnastics of Excusing White Men's Violence."

Open Wide...

Not Good Enough

[Content Note: Fat hatred.]

After a number of complaints, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has temporarily shelved a website called "Lean Works!" which "offered an 'obesity cost calculator' to help American bosses tally financial losses linked to their overweight employees."

The federal program drew recent criticism from some nutritionists and advocates for [fat] Americans who claimed the site and its obesity calculator fueled workplace discrimination and perhaps even led some companies to fire fat people.

...[CDC spokesperson Brittany Behm] said via email that content once posted at Lean Works! "is under review," adding: "The calculator is also under review and will be potentially updated with new information, technology."

"The recent attention to the LEAN Works! program caused us to put this part of the website at the top of the list for review, hence why it is currently down," Behm wrote. "…The potential misuse of this information is something we will certainly consider in our upcoming content review."
Not good enough. This website needs to be blown the fuck up and never even proposed as a serious policy measure ever again.

There is no sound justification for the argument that fat people are costing their employers more money, in actual dollars or productivity. (Though, coincidentally, there sure are persistent stereotypes of fat people being unhealthy and lazy!) But here is the CDC using tax dollars—the same precious tax dollars that fat people are supposedly wasting with our very existence—to build a website in order to calculate something that isn't actually happening, in order to underwrite a prejudice that will only create more barriers to employment and equal pay for fat people.

This shit doesn't exist in a vacuum. This is part of a sustained eliminationist campaign against fat people in the United States, which has seen the American Medical Association declare obesity a disease and the First Lady writing in the pages of the Wall Street Journal that fat people are a "problem is solved once and for all" for American businesses.

We are continually and dishonestly identified as a drain on society, a threat, a problem that needs to be solved. This is the language of eliminationism that has been used by privileged classes against marginalized groups for as long as such political, social, and cultural scapegoating has been documented.

There is an abundance of evidence that most fat people will never be able to achieve and/or permanently maintain a not-fat body. There is an abundance of evidence that the stress of being incessantly shamed and policed negatively affects fat people's health. There is an abundance of evidence that fat hatred kills.

And the insistent refusal of policymakers to acknowledge that evidence tells me that they're pretty much fine with that.

[H/T to Shaker MMC.]

Open Wide...

A Culture of Violent Entitlement

[Content Note: Guns; death; misogyny.]

This is what happens when we allow a culture of violent entitlement to go unchallenged; when we think it's okay for men to believe that they own women and are entitled to our time, our bodies, our attention:

Twenty-seven year old Mary "Unique" Spears was attending a family event [in Detriot] following the funeral of a relative when a stranger reportedly approached her inside the venue, asking for her name and phone number.
Spears repeatedly told the man that she was not interested, and that she was with someone else. The man continued to hit on Spears until 2am, when Spears and her family were leaving.
The stranger then allegedly approached the woman one final time, and soon a scuffle broke out between the man and Spears' fiancée.

Suddenly the stranger opened fire, shooting Spears once as she ran away and then twice in the head, WJBK reported.

The man then began to fire at other members of the family, injuring five of them. WJBK reported that four were subsequently hospitalized.

Detroit police arrested the man after he allegedly tried to flee the scene.
Spears' aunt asks: "What was on your mind that you could be so evil, because she said no to you?"

That is, of course, a rhetorical question. Because we all know the answer: What's on his mind was that he was entitled to her, and that she didn't have the right to tell him no.

My sincerest condolences to Unique Spears' family and friends. I am so sorry for your loss.

[Related Reading: You Don't Own Women; On Elliot Rodger.]

Open Wide...

Proving the Point

[Content Note: Police brutality; racism; injury. Please note that video showing altercation may begin playing automatically at link.]

Just down the road from me in Hammond, Indiana, a black family has filed a lawsuit alleging excessive force, false arrest, and battery after two police officers pulled over their vehicle and the situation escalated from there.

In the car were Lisa Mahone, who was driving the family on the way to visit her mother in the hospital, her boyfriend Jamal Jones, who was in the passenger seat, Joseph Ivy, their 14-year-old son, who recorded the altercation from the backseat, and his little sister Janiya, who was seated beside him.

Hammond Police Officers Patrick Vicari and Charles Turner, who both appear to be white, pulled over the vehicle under the auspices of a seatbelt violation. The officers requested information from Mahone and Jones, and, at some point, "put spike strips in front of the vehicle" so they could not leave, which the officers later said was because Mahone "shifted her car into drive and moved her vehicle in a forward motion." Further, the officers pulled a gun on the family, which the officers later said was because they "feared for their own safety because one officer said he saw Jones drop his hands behind the center console of the vehicle."

Mahone and Jones say they did not understand why anyone but the driver was being questioned for a seatbelt violation, nor why Jones was presumed to be reaching for a weapon when asked for his ID. They were scared when an officer pulled his weapon on them, which seems pretty fucking reasonable.

At that point, Mahone called 911 and reported that they were afraid to get out of the car and didn't understand what was happening. And not for lack of asking the cops, who continued to just order Jones to get out of the car, with a gun drawn on him. While Mahone speaks to a 911 dispatcher, Jones speaks with the cops through his cracked car window, trying to understand why he is being asked to get out of the car.

And then one of the officers shatters Jones' passenger side window, sending glass throughout the car. The officer reaches in and tases him, then they drag him from the vehicle, as Mahone exclaims and the children make shocked and terrified sounds. Jones is then thrown to the ground, tased a second time, cuffed, and taken away. He has been charged with resisting arrest.

Despite the fact that the officers did not tell him he was under arrest nor even explain to him for what reason he was being asked to exit the vehicle in the first place.

According to the lawsuit, Officer Vicari has been named as a defendant in three other cases alleging excessive force, and Officer Turner has been named as a defendant in one other case involving excessive force.

Meanwhile, Hammond Police Lt. Richard Hoyda is defending the officers' actions: "In general, police officers who make legal traffic stops are allowed to ask passengers inside of a stopped vehicle for identification and to request that they exit a stopped vehicle for the officer's safety without a requirement of reasonable suspicion."

Okay. Sure. But officers cannot continue to pretend that they exist in a vacuum. In a nation in which police brutality against black people has a long history, and during a time in which multiple incidents of deadly police shootings of black men have been prominently in the news, it's bullshit to pretend that it's entirely reasonable to order an unarmed black man who has done nothing wrong to get out of the car while an officer is aiming a gun at him.

The police keep saying that this is all about keeping officers safe. But I can't just be expected to forgive all manner of fuckery because I want officers to be safe. I want people who interact with officers to be safe, too.

And we have seen that there is no guarantee that complying with officers' orders will necessarily ensure someone's safety. Black men have been shot with their hands in the air. Black men have been shot while lying on the ground. Black men have been shot while handcuffed.

Police cannot keep pretending this doesn't matter.

And let's be real about what happened here: Mahone and Jones were afraid that the police were going to use excessive force. And then the police used excessive force. Their fears were entirely justified.

Police officers cannot keep proving the point, and then blaming people for a failure to comply. If it isn't safe for people to comply, don't be fucking surprised when they don't.

And, for fuck's sake, stop using that as a justification for harming people.

Open Wide...

Again and Again and Again

[Content Note: Police brutality; guns; death; racism.]

In Ferguson, Missouri, a suburb of St. Louis, 18-year-old Michael Brown, an unarmed black teenager, was shot and killed by a police officer. Preliminary reports are that the officer shot Brown eight times.

And, as in every other case we've discussed that has similarities to this one, the police's account of the shooting looks very different from witness accounts. The police account asserts Brown assaulted the officer and reached into his car and tried to take the officer's gun; witness accounts say the officer grabbed Brown, and that Brown was running away with his hands up showing he had no weapon when he was shot.

The confrontation began when the officer told Brown and his friend to stop walking in the street and walk on the sidewalk. There is no reason that should have turned deadly.

And, as in several other cases we've discussed, there was a protest which turned violent, which has subsequently been reported as a riot, though some of what's been reported is not in evidence based on social media coverage of the protest. For example:

Whether residents were indeed chanting "Kill the police," however, has been called into question; video from a demonstration outside the Ferguson Police Department shows residents chanting "Killer cops have got to go."
What we know for certain is that an unarmed black teenager was shot multiple times by a police officer, after an interaction that began because that teen and his friend were walking on the road instead of the sidewalk.

That doesn't seem like it could have a reasonable explanation.

And what we know for certain is that the media coverage of the protests, at which most of the protesters were black people, are highlighting incidents of looting and possibly misrepresenting chants calling for justice as calls to violence.

We're meant to pretend that it doesn't matter when black communities are demonized as inherently violent and lawbreaking, that this isn't connected to young black people being killed by police or fearful white gun owners or stalking vigilantes.

It matters.

Open Wide...

This Is How Culture Works

[Content Note: Violent rhetoric; guns; racism; misogyny; homophobia; antisemitism; eliminationism.]

This morning, at the Plum Line, Paul Waldman asks, in the wake of the shooting in Las Vegas: "How much does right-wing rhetoric contribute to right-wing terrorism?"

Yesterday, a man and a woman shot two police officers in a Las Vegas restaurant after saying, "this is a revolution." Then they draped their bodies in a Gadsden flag. According to reports now coming in, the couple (who later killed themselves) appear to have been white supremacists and told neighbors they had gone to join the protests in support of anti-government rancher Cliven Bundy. It was one more incident of right-wing terrorism that, while not exactly an epidemic, has become enough of a trend to raise some troubling questions.

What I'm about to say will raise some hackles, but we need to talk about it. It's long past time for prominent conservatives and Republicans to do some introspection and ask whether they're contributing to outbreaks of right-wing violence.
Waldman goes on to do a very gentle examination of how right-wing rhetoric creates and facilitates a culture of violence.

I am not inclined to be so gentle.

In the wake of the assassination attempt against then-Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords, many cultural and political observers quite rightly pointed out that former Republican vice-presidential nominee Sarah Palin had included Rep. Giffords on her infamous "target map," not to lay exclusive blame at Palin's feet, but to urge a conversation about responsible—and irresponsible—rhetoric.

It was met by conservatives with the usual deflective refrain of "both sides are just as bad!" As evidence, they offered comments from leftist websites, in which anonymous commenters had exhorted violence against Republican candidates and/or conservatives.

At that time, I wrote a piece taking this bullshit equivalency head-on, not because I want to "win" some ideological battle, but because I want the culture of violence to be dismantled. And that begins with all of us taking account of how we uphold it.

That piece, with relevant updates about conservatives appearances in media, is reprinted below...

Both sides are, in fact, not "just as bad," when it comes to institutionally sanctioned violent and eliminationist rhetoric.

An anonymous commenter at Daily Kos and the last Republican vice presidential nominee are not equivalent, no matter how many ridiculously irresponsible members of the media would have us believe otherwise.

There is, demonstrably, no leftist equivalent to Sarah Palin, former veep candidate and presumed future presidential candidate, who uses gun imagery (rifle sights) and language ("Don't Retreat, RELOAD") to exhort her followers to action.

There is no leftist equivalent to the Council of Conservative Citizens (CCC), a group which was created from the mailing list of the old white supremacist White Citizens Councils and has been noted as becoming increasingly "radical and racist" by the Southern Poverty Law Center, which classifies the CCC as a hate group—and is nonetheless considered an acceptable association by prominent members of the Republican Party, including a a former senator and the last Republican presidential nominee.

There is no leftist equivalent to Glenn Beck, host of a long-running nationally syndicated radio show, former host of both a CNN "news" show and a Fox "news" show, current host of an internet series, best-selling author, DC rally organizer, and longtime user of eliminationist rhetoric, including equating universal healthcare to rape, joking about victims of forest fires being America-hating liberals, comparing Al Gore to Hitler, condoning the murder of Michael Moore, accusing Holocaust survivor George Soros of being a Nazi collaborator, joking about poisoning Nancy Pelosi, equating immigration reform with burning US citizens alive, publicly endorsing violent revolution, and winkingly telling his viewers not to get violent, all of which amounts to a speck on the tip of a very big iceberg.

There is no leftist equivalent to Ann Coulter, best-selling author and syndicated columnist, who has been a panelist on Fox's Hannity 77 times and was on Hannity & Colmes an additional 18 times, who has appeared on Fox's Red Eye 32 times, who has been a guest multiple times on The O'Reilly Factor, Piers Morgan Tonight, Fox and Friends, Geraldo at Large, Larry King Live, Huckabee, Your World with Neil Cavuto, Hardball, and other cable news shows, has made appearances on The Tonight Show, The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson, The Daily Show, and Real Time with Bill Maher, and has co-hosted The View, and has also said that a baseball bat is "the most effective way" to talk to liberals, as well as: "We need to execute people like John Walker in order to physically intimidate liberals, by making them realize that they can be killed, too." And: "My only regret with Timothy McVeigh is he did not go to the New York Times Building." And: "In [Clinton's] recurring nightmare of a presidency, we have a national debate about whether he 'did it,' even though all sentient people know he did. Otherwise there would be debates only about whether to impeach or assassinate."

There is no leftist equivalent to Bill O'Reilly, Fox News television show host, nationally syndicated radio show host, and best-selling author, who has appeared on The Tonight Show 17 times, The Late Show with David Letterman 13 times, The Daily Show 11 times, The View seven times, Live with Kelly and Michael five times, Good Morning America five times, the Today show five times, and Real Time with Bill Maher twice, among other national shows, and has lied about and stalked his critics, said that progressive bloggers should be dealt with "with a hand grenade," said Air America hosts were traitors and should be "put in chains," as well as: "And if Al Qaeda comes [to San Francisco] and blows you up, we're not going to do anything about it. We're going to say, look, every other place in America is off limits to you, except San Francisco. You want to blow up the Coit Tower? Go ahead."

There is no leftist equivalent to Rush "I tell people don't kill all the liberals. Leave enough so we can have two on every campus—living fossils—so we will never forget what these people stood for" Limbaugh, nationally syndicated radio show host and invitee to the Bush White House.

There is no leftist equivalent to Pat "Hitler's success was not based on his extraordinary gifts alone. His genius was an intuitive sense of the mushiness, the character flaws, the weakness masquerading as morality that was in the hearts of the statesmen who stood in his path" Buchanan, a regular MSNBC contributor and syndicated columnist.

There is no leftist equivalent to Michelle "In Defense of Internment: The Case for 'Racial Profiling' in World War II and the War on Terror" Malkin, a regular Fox panelist, best-selling author, and prominent conservative blogger.

There is no leftist equivalent to Pat "The feminist agenda is not about equal rights for women. It is about a socialist, anti-family political movement that encourages women to leave their husbands, kill their children, practice witchcraft, destroy capitalism, and become lesbians" Robertson, host of The 700 Club, who was a guest on Fox's Hannity & Colmes five times.

There is no leftist equivalent to Michael "Howard Dean should be arrested and hung for treason or put in a hole until the end of the Iraq war" Reagan, or Michael "Smallpox in a blanket, which the U.S. Army gave to the Cherokee Indians on their long march to the West, was nothing compared to what I'd like to see done to these people" Savage, both nationally syndicated radio show hosts.

There is no leftist equivalent to the Minutemen and other radical and eliminationist-spewing anti-immigration groups, some of whom have been subcontracted to work the border by the US government.

There is no leftist equivalent to radical and eliminationist-spewing anti-choice groups, who openly target doctors and call for their assassinations—and claimed a success in 2009 with the murder of Dr. George Tiller—and whose leaders get featured in whitewashing profiles in the Washington Post.

Et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.

This is not an argument there is no hatred, no inappropriate and even violent rhetoric, among US leftists. There is.

This is evidence that, although violent rhetoric exists among US leftists, it is not remotely on the same scale, and, more importantly, not an institutionally endorsed tactic, as it is among US rightwingers.

This is a fact. It is not debatable.

And there is observably precious little integrity among conservatives in addressing this fact, in the wake of the attempted assassination of Rep. Gabrielle Giffords.

Palin takes the absolute cake for audaciously asserting that her rifle sight imagery was really "a surveyor's symbol," and not even having the decency to sheepishly acquiesce that, even if that were true (and not evident bullshit), it's understandable how a reasonable person could look at her "surveyor's symbol" alongside the word "target" and get the wrong, ahem, idea. No, it's all just a wall of total denial in the Palin camp, when she's not whining about being a victim herself of people who have the temerity to actually hold her accountable for her carelessly casual violent rhetoric. It's all fun and games until someone gets hurt. And then it's deny and play the martyr.

But it's not like Palin's ideological allies are covering themselves in glory, either. There's no call for accountability, no call for reflection, not among conservatives. Just the usual game of deflection and projection, as they desperately try to find a way to make this liberals' fault.

Bill Kristol took to the airwaves this morning to call criticism of Palin "a disgrace" and accuse liberals of "McCarthyism." Commentators on Fox News, meanwhile, blame President Obama for not changing the tone in Washington, like he promised. Which would be hilarious, were that redirection of blame not a key part of conservatives' strategy to dodge responsibility for the eliminationist rhetoric that certainly contributed to the tragic events of this weekend.

When, a few months ago, there was a spate of widely-publicized suicides of bullied teens, we had, briefly, a national conversation about the dangers of bullying. But in the wake of an ideologically-motivated assassination attempt of a sitting member of Congress, we aren't having a national conversation about the dangers of violent rhetoric—because the conversation about bullying children was started by adults, and there are seemingly no responsible grown-ups to be found among conservatives anymore.

Faced with the overwhelming evidence of the violent rhetoric absolutely permeating the discourse emanating from their side of the aisle, conservatives adopt the approach of a petulant child—deny, obfuscate, and lash out defensively.

And engage in the most breathtaking disingenuous hypocrisy: Conservatives, who vociferously argue against the language and legislation of social justice, on the basis that it all "normalizes" marginalized people and their lives and cultures (it does!), are suddenly nothing but blinking, wide-eyed naïveté when it comes to their own violent rhetoric.

They have a great grasp of cultural anthropology when they want to complain about progressive ideas, inclusion, diversity, and equality. But when it comes to being accountable for their own ideas, their anthropological prowess magically disappears.

Only progressives "infect" the culture, but conservative hate speech exists in a void.

That's what we're meant to believe, anyway. But we know it is not true. This culture, this habit, of eliminationist rhetoric is not happening in a vacuum. It's happening in a culture of widely-available guns (thanks to conservative policies), of underfunded and unavailable medical care, especially mental health care (thanks to conservative policies), of a widespread belief that government is the enemy of the people (thanks to conservative rhetoric), and of millions of increasingly desperate people (thanks to an economy totally fucked by conservative governance).

The shooting in Tucson was not an anomaly. It was an inevitability.

And as long as we continue to play this foolish game of "both sides are just as bad," and rely on trusty old ablism to dismiss Jared Lee Loughner as a crackpot—dutifully ignoring that people with mental illness are more likely to be victims of violence than perpetrators; carefully pretending that the existence of people with mental illness who are potentially dangerous somehow absolves us of responsibility for violent rhetoric, as opposed to serving to underline precisely why it's irresponsible—it will be inevitable again.

Let's get this straight: This shit doesn't happen in a void. It happens in a culture rife with violent political rhetoric, and it's time for conservatives to pull up their goddamn bootstraps and get to work doing the hard business of self-reflection.

This is one problem the invisible hand of the market can't fix for them—unless, perhaps, it's holding a mirror.

Open Wide...

Film Corner: Disney's Big Hero 6

[Content Note: Fat hatred; racism.]

This is the description of Disney's upcoming animated film Big Hero 6, based on the Marvel comic of the same name: "With all the heart and humour audiences expect from Walt Disney Animation Studios, Big Hero 6 is an action-packed comedy-adventure about robotics prodigy Hiro Hamada, who learns to harness his genius—thanks to his brilliant brother Tadashi and their like-minded friends: adrenaline junkie Go Go Tamago, neatnik Wasabi, chemistry whiz Honey Lemon and fanboy Fred. When a devastating turn of events catapults them into the midst of a dangerous plot unfolding in the streets of San Fransokyo, Hiro turns to his closest companion—a robot named Baymax—and transforms the group into a band of high-tech heroes determined to solve the mystery."

And here is the teaser trailer currently playing in cinemas, which actually seems to be a trailer for a movie called Stupid Fat Robot Is Stupid and Fat:

Video Description: A young boy, who from the description of the film is meant to be Japanese but does not look Japanese in the animation, works intently on a robotics design program on his laptop. Dramatic action music. He designs a big, muscular, red robot. "Yes!" he says excitedly.

He looks up, and into his lab walks a fat white blobby figure, with nondescript and expressionless eyes, very long arms, very short legs, and a long torso with a huge wobbling belly. The dynamic music comes to a screeching halt. The creature squeaks like the rubber sole of a running shoe against a basketball court as it walks. Zie stands and blinks at him. He looks back with a vaguely horrified expression.

He looks down at his laptop screen, on which appears his shiny red strong robot design. He flips down the screen, revealing the creature, then flips it back up and down several more times, to really drive home the disappointment of the juxtaposition between his design and the creature standing in front of him.

The creature spies a soccer ball resting on the floor beside hir. Zie reaches down for it, but hir belly knocks it out of the way. Zie squeals and chases after it, hir belly knocking it ever just out of reach, like a fat version of Buster Keaton kicking and chasing his hat down the street.

The boy scowls and looks back at his laptop screen. He hits a button that puts his robot's metal exterior into production. Dramatic action music. Once the first massive robot hand has been fabricated, he grabs it and tries to put it on the creature's hand. The music ends, as the hand comes to a halt up against the creature's fat wrist.

The boy jams the hand onto the creature by backing the creature up against a wall. Then he jams on the rest of the metal exterior, forcing each piece over the creature's fat, which moves like the air getting redistributed in a balloon.

The creature blinks its emotionless eyes as it's jammed into each piece. The boy is breathless from the effort.

Finally, the creature stands in nearly the entirety of its costume, with just its big exposed belly showing. The boy holds the piece that is meant to cover the belly, takes a breath, then runs at the creature with the piece, forcing it into place with grunting struggle. He falls over, then looks up at his creation with awe. Dramatic action music.

The camera pans back so we can see his creation in all its glory. The boy flexes his arms. The creature mimics him as the music swells, then just at the zenith of his flex, all of his armor pops off.

The boy puts his head in his hands. The creature spies the soccer ball and begins to chase it again.
Two quick thoughts:

1. This shit doesn't exist in a void: It exists in a culture of rank fat hatred, in which fat bodies are considered weak and useless and bad. And it further exists in a specific context of Disney animated films, which have a documented history of using fat as shorthand to convey "evil" or "weak" or "stupid" or otherwise bad.

2. I couldn't give less of a shit what the rest of the film is about, in terms of placing this scene into a particular context, because this clip is what the studio chose as its marketing launch. Even if the rest of the film ends up communicating to us that the creature is really a hero after all, that's just another example of what I call Deathbed Confession Cinema. You don't get points for realizing fat people (or humanoids, or whatever) are not garbage after treating them like garbage for audience laughs.

Anyway. There's a lot to talk about. Have at it in comments.

[H/T to Shaker Hallelujah_Hippo.]

Open Wide...

A Culture of Violent Entitlement

[Content Note: Guns; threats.]

A young white man in Rosemount, Minnesota, was teaching his daughter to ride a bike along their residential street when one of their neighbors, an older white man, started shouting at him that he was doing it wrong. And then:

The father told Fox 9 News he's still shaken by the encounter. He explained that when he and his daughter got down to the cul de sac, [Gary Drake, 61] began yelling from his porch. When the father responded to say, "I've got it," Drake allegedly said, "If you don't like my advice, get off the street."

At that point, Drake appeared to get angrier -- but as the father and daughter prepared to leave the area, Drake allegedly went inside his home, grabbed a Remington 870 shotgun, pointed it at the father and threatened to kill him.

Drake's wife eventually came out and pulled the gun away, but police said he didn't appear repentant when he was booked. In fact, he allegedly told officers, "Maybe next time. I should have shot him."
Naturally, Drake is being described as having "snapped."

But this—If you don't like my advice, get off the street—doesn't come from nowhere. And the idea that people you see as your inferior (via age, or race, or gender, etc.) need to disappear if they refuse to take your instruction is not a concept created by mental illness, but by a culture of violent entitlement.

We cannot keep pretending that every single one of these incidents, of threats of violence and/or actual violence, that are clearly underwritten by a sense of ownership of other people and the spaces in which those people move, is an isolated incident, unconnected from all the rest.

We have a very serious problem of armed men, white or white-identified, who think they own "the streets" and are empowered to violently control the people who inhabit them.

This isn't madness. It's undiluted, unexamined, toxic privilege.

[H/T to Shaker GoldFishy.]

Open Wide...

On Elliot Rodger

[Content Note: Violence; misogyny; privilege; disablism; racism.]

Friday night, Elliot Rodger, a 22-year-old man went on a shooting spree, killing six people: Katie Cooper, 22; Veronika Weiss, 19; Weihan Wang, 20; George Chen, 19; Cheng Yuan Hong, 20; and Christopher Michael-Martinez, 20. Rodger was also killed, reportedly by his own hand. An additional 13 people were injured.

Despite the fact that Rodger left behind a manifesto detailing his hatred of and contempt for women, who he felt owed him sexual gratification, and a video expressing the same sentiments, immediately the narrative became that Rodger was "crazy," and/or that the Asperger's with which he'd been diagnosed as a child was responsible for his murder spree.

tweet authored by me reading: 'Dismissing violent misogynists as 'crazy' is a neat way of saying that violent misogyny is an individual problem, not a cultural one.'

Over the last four days, I have pushed back on this idea. A Storify of my tweets is below the fold.

Or, you can just read my timeline here. I also strongly recommend reading the timelines of the following people: Amadi, Imani Gandy, Amanda Levitt, Jessica Luther, Sydette, Liza Sabater, Dr. Jane Chi, Lauren Chief Elk, Tina Vasquez, Angus Johnston, Elon James White, and Jordan Banks. Please feel welcome to leave links to other recommended commentators and/or articles in comments.

I don't have much more to say than I've already said on Twitter, but I do want to make the point (again) that mentally ill people are more likely themselves to be victims of violence than perpetrators of it.

Yes, we do need better mental healthcare access. But Rodger, a highly privileged man from a wealthy family, had access to great mental healthcare—his family could afford it, and he was getting treatment—but one of the things about which we have to be honest is that most mental health professionals are not equipped to address entitled misogyny as a psychological or behavioral concern.

And the reason for that is because we don't culturally regard entitled misogyny as a psychological or behavioral concern. Rodger was, after all, merely taking the basic precept of a patriarchal system—that men have ownership of and are entitled to women—to its extreme.

(Which is to say nothing of the fact that mental health professionals are not mind-readers. They can only address that of which they're aware.)

He holds the ultimate accountability for his actions, but we need to not pretend that these murders happened in a vacuum. It's no way to honor victims to refuse to acknowledge the cultural failures in the shadow of which their lives were taken.

My sincerest condolences to the survivors of Rodger's victims. My fervent hopes to the injured survivors that they have access to the care that they need to heal.

Open Wide...

Congrats?

[Content Note: Gender essentialism.]

Hey, remember the lady who decided to earn a marriage proposal from her boyfriend by making him 300 sandwiches? Well, you'll be happy to hear she's now engaged. And has a book deal! Because of course she does.

And it only took 257 sandwiches.

As for those of us who didn't find it charming that a woman was publicly documenting winning her boyfriend's promise of marriage by making him sandwiches, well, we can LEARN TO HUMOR sheesh: "If he wasn't the kind of guy that was worth one sandwich, I wouldn't be making 300 sandwiches. And plus it was a joke. It was light, it's funny. Come on, it's a sandwich. It's supposed to be just lighthearted."


It's not my fault that I'm the Most Humorless Feminist in all of Nofunnington. Take it up with the assholes who tell me to STFU and make them a sandwich.

[Video Description: A clip from the film Bridesmaids in which Kristen Wiig is riding in the passenger seat of a car driven by Jon Hamm, who tells her: "It's called humor. Learn about it!"]

Open Wide...

Quote of the Day

[Content Note: Rape culture.]

"In the last few years, there has been an unfortunate trend towards blaming 'rape culture' for the extensive problem of sexual violence on campuses. While it is helpful to point out the systemic barriers to addressing the problem, it is important to not lose sight of a simple fact: Rape is caused not by cultural factors but by the conscious decisions, of a small percentage of the community, to commit a violent crime."—RAINN, the Rape, Abuse, & Incest National Network, which bills itself as "The nation's largest anti-sexual violence organization," in recommendations to the White House task force charged with creating a plan to reduce rape on college campuses.

This is unbelievable.

Advocates who are invested in dismantling the rape culture (no scare quotes) don't blame the rape culture and fail to acknowledge the personal accountability of perpetrators of sexual violence.

Rape culture is the description of the context in which sex predators operate; in which their crimes are abetted and normalized; in which they are routinely absolved of harm and their actions are rationalized and they escape justice and consequences.

Rape culture defines the narratives that are used to facilitate rape by blaming victims, and by inuring us all to the violence and ubiquity of rape, and by undermining legal pursuit and conviction of predators, leaving them free to continue to prey.

Rape culture is the reason that the cost of disbelieving victims is more victims.

Yes, it is crucially important to say, again and again, that rapists are exclusively responsible for the rapes they commit, but it is absurd to think that it's "an unfortunate trend" to identify how a culture of minimizing rape abets those rapists.

The people who make the choice to commit a violent crime don't make that choice in a fucking vacuum.

It is eminently possible—and, indeed, I would argue necessary—to acknowledge both the existence and function of the rape culture, and our own roles in perpetuating it, while simultaneously holding predators individually responsible for their individual crimes.

Not to get all meta and shit, but the failure of supposed anti-rape advocates to walk and chew gum at the same time? Is rape culture.

This is not the only problem with the RAINN's recommendations to the White House task force. Please read Wagatwe Wanjuki's excellent piece "RAINN's recommendations ignore needs of campus survivors of all identities."

And it is not the only group whose influence over the task force is profoundly discouraging. Please see my piece on No More, as but another example.

[H/T to Shakesville contributor and mod Misty Clifton for the White House link.]

Open Wide...

This Shit Doesn't Happen in a Void: Anti-Semitism

[Content Note: Anti-Semitism, Holocaust denialism]

Yesterday, a group of conservative Catholics interrupted a Buenos Aires interfaith observation of Kristallnacht being held at the Metropolitan Cathedral. The ceremony had a long history under the current pope who, as Buenos Aires Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio, co-celebrated the observance with Rabbi Abraham Skorka every year. Skorka was there again this year, and described the appalling scene:

“The cathedral was full, with people standing, prepared for a profound act of introspection, when a group of about 40 people began to recite from the Christian liturgy, the ‘Our Father,’ and began to hand out little pieces of paper saying that Jews were blaspheming the place,” Skorka said.

Skorka said protesters made cutting comments like “the Jews killed Jesus.” He said one Jew confronted them, saying, “My grandmother died in Auschwitz,” to which an activist replied, “Do you believe that lie?”

The leader of the South American branch of the Society of Pope Pius X, Christian Bouchacourt, has identified the protestors as members of his organization, and offered this explanation for their actions:

“This wasn’t a desire to make a rebellion, but to show our love to the Catholic Church, which was made for the Catholic faith,” Bouchacourt said. “A Mass isn’t celebrated in a synagogue, nor in a mosque. The Muslims don’t accept it. In the same way, we who are Catholics cannot accept the presence of another faith in our church.”

Oooookay then! Please overlook the hate, folks! We're just trying to show our love!

Ugh.

First and foremost, my deepest sympathies to the Jewish participants in this ceremony. There are no words to fully describe the hurt and betrayal, the trauma, of being welcomed into a space intended to be a safe one, and then have it shattered by violent assholes who replicate the very prejudices that you and your allies are trying so hard to combat. I cannot even imagine the pain of Holocaust denialism and ancient anti-Semitic slurs in the midst of a Kristallnacht-related gathering.

Secondly, it's not a coincidence that (as Melissa noted last Friday) antisemitic incidents are quickly rising in Europe. That in New York, two separate investigations into antisemitic bullying and antisemitic hate crimes were announced this week. That a Very Serious politician like Ron Paul can participate in an antisemitic conference without the slightest concern about negative repercussions.

I don't care if you believe in god/dess/(s/es) or not-god, if your worldview is informed by science, rational philosophy, religion, magic, or some other factor(s). I do care if you think your worldview justifies (or necessitates) oppression of the marginalized. This shit doesn't happen in a void. And neither did Kristallnacht.

[Commenting note: Comments debating or discussing the orthodoxy of the attackers' religious beliefs make the space unsafe, and are off-topic. This is not a post about whether or not they are good Catholics/Christians.]

Open Wide...