Showing posts with label Transgender. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Transgender. Show all posts

Desperate and Ill Johana Medina León Asked to Be Deported; ICE Killed Her

[Content Note: Nativism; death.]

On June 3, I wrote about the death of Johana Medina León, a 25-year-old asylum seeker from El Salvador who died at a medical center after falling gravely ill following her stay in Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) custody in New Mexico.

As I previously noted, she was paroled from custody the day she went to the hospital, which I suspected was because ICE was trying to skirt mandated reporting about deaths of people in their custody.

That they paroled her the day of her death is even more unfathomably cruel because, as Sam Levin reports at the Guardian, Medina León begged to be released from custody, even asking to be deported despite seeking asylum from harm in El Salvador, because she feared she was dying.

The family of Johana Medina León, a 25-year-old asylum seeker from El Salvador who died this month, filed a civil rights claim against the U.S. government this week, alleging that officials ignored her numerous requests for treatment as her health "rapidly deteriorated."

Medina León, who worked as a nurse in El Salvador, recognized that she needed IV fluids, but was denied. When she asked for water, sugar, and salt so she could make her own IV, ICE also refused, the claim said. The treatment in ICE custody was so bad that Medina León, who was fleeing violence in her home country, requested to be deported so she could get medical attention, lawyers said. That request was also denied.

"She came to the U.S. because she thought it was a great country and that she would be safe there," her 22-year-old sister, Gabriela León, said in an email to the Guardian, sent by her lawyer. "She did everything right but was treated as a criminal …She shouldn't have died. She went to the U.S. seeking protection and now she is coming home to us dead."

Christopher Dolan, an attorney who filed the claim, added: "She was desperate, because the government would not provide her with assistance of any kind for her medical needs."
Medina León died of pneumonia.

It must have been actual torture for Medina León to sit in detention, where she was housed with men, getting increasingly ill and knowing she needed urgent treatment, and being denied any medical care — then denied the opportunity to leave when she was willing to risk physical harm at home just to try to access the medical care she desperately needed.

I am so sad and so goddamn angry. My condolences to her family and friends.

Medina León is one of at least four adults who have died "shortly after being released from ICE custody" during the Trump administration, in addition to twenty-four adults who have died while still in ICE custody. And: "The tally does not include migrants, including five children, who have died in the custody of other federal agencies." Which doesn't include the still-unidentified 2-year-old boy who died in U.S. custody and was, like Medina León, released from custody immediately before he died.

We have no idea the actual number of people who have died in Trump's concentration camps. We only know as much as we do about Medina León and the circumstances of her death because she has a family who loves her and wants justice.

I can tell you this: Whatever the official number is, it is not the actual number. That number is higher. And any number higher than zero is intolerable.

Open Wide...

A Second Migrant Woman Has Died in U.S. Custody

[Content Note: Nativism; death.]

There is a lot about Donald Trump and his filthy administration in the news this morning: Donald Trump insulting Meghan, Duchess of Sussex and London Mayor Sadiq Khan ahead of his state trip to the UK; Jared Kushner's soft spot for the murderous Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman; Secretary of State Mike Pompeo playing down expectations (which shouldn't even exist) of Trump's promised "deal of the century" for Middle East peace; Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao's breathtaking corruption; and Trump's threat to levy tariffs on Australia, just for a start.

All of it is terrible. And there are plenty of places where those items will be covered in detail. The story I want to talk about this morning is this one: One year after Roxsana Hernandez Rodriguez died in U.S. custody, a second transgender woman has died in U.S. custody at the southern border.

Robert Moore at the Washington Post reports:

A transgender woman from El Salvador died after falling ill at a private Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention center in New Mexico, officials said Sunday, drawing new scrutiny to a facility that has faced allegations of mistreatment of gay and transgender detainees.

Johana Medina Leon, 25, died on Saturday at Del Sol Medical Center in El Paso, ICE officials said. She had been taken to the hospital complaining of chest pains on Tuesday at the Otero County Processing Center. Earlier that day, she had requested an HIV test, which came back positive, officials said.

...In March, the American Civil Liberties Union and other groups sent a letter to ICE and the Department of Homeland Security complaining about the treatment of gay and transgender detainees at the Otero County Processing Center, the southern New Mexico facility where Leon was held.

"ICE's practices at Otero have created an unsafe environment for transgender women and gay men who are detained there," the letter said. One of the complaints in the letter was that requests for medical care often didn't get responses for days or weeks.
Leon was in custody for one month and one week, according to ICE officials, who say she was taken into custody "after presenting herself April 11 at the Paso del Norte Port of Entry in El Paso. On May 18, she passed an interview to determine whether she had a credible fear of persecution if returned to El Salvador. She was paroled from custody the day she went to the hospital, ICE officials said."

If that sounds familiar, perhaps it's because the still-unidentified 2-year-old boy who died in U.S. custody was also released from custody immediately before he died.

As I noted at the time: "It certainly appears that CBP quickly processed the family out of the system in order to avoid mandated reporting if the child died. Which he did. And now we must wonder how many other families are expedited out of detention because they have sick children for whom CBP doesn't want to be accountable, despite repeated reports of squalid conditions that may facilitate the spread of disease among detainees, a situation in which children are particularly vulnerable."

As are people with compromised immune systems, like people with HIV, which includes both Johana Medina Leon and Roxsana Hernandez Rodriguez.

Two women and six children have now died in U.S. custody that we know of. More will die if the Trump Regime is not disempowered. That is a certainty.

Impeach him now. Lives literally depend on it.

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Dispatches From the Queer Resistance #8 — A Pete Buttigieg Special

[Content Note: Transphobia; hate crimes; homophobia.]

Here's my regular reminder that 77% of LGBTQ voters chose Hillary Clinton over any other contender in the 2016 US presidential election and that Republicans, generally, are pretty terrible when it comes to acknowledging the rights, let alone dignity, of LGBT people.

1. On Pete Buttigieg

Mayor of South Bend, Indiana, Pete Buttigieg officially launched a 2020 presidential campaign over the weekend. Buttigieg is the first openly-gay Democratic presidential candidate in U.S. history.

His reception among Democratic voters and the mainstream press has largely been positive. Via a recent piece in The New York Times:

Mr. Buttigieg, the 37-year-old mayor of South Bend, Ind., drew large, enthusiastic crowds in his first campaign visit to the early-voting state over the weekend. That followed a series of well-received appearances on national TV, which have helped fuel his new popularity: An Iowa poll on Monday showed him jumping to third place in the 2020 caucus race, and a Quinnipiac national poll on Thursday showed him rising to fifth and tied with Senator Elizabeth Warren.
As a lesbian, I want to be more excited about his candidacy, but it's been difficult because it's hard not to perceive his success thus far as a function of him being white, cis, and male. That he appears on the verge of running an "insurgent" campaign similar to Bernie Sanders' campaign in 2016 says almost nothing about whether someone who is queer and also female, trans, non-binary, and/or a person of color could do so with the same mainstream appeal and while being given gratuitous benefits of the doubt about their intelligence, competence, and demeanor.

But, it's not just that I harbor resentment about this. Although yes, there's a fair amount of that. It's 2019 and about fucking time for a female President of the United States. It's time. And I refuse to silence that sentiment in myself ever again.

It's also that he seems prone to adopting rightwing frames of social and political issues, which I think is counterproductive to progress. In addition to Liss's ongoing coverage of Buttigieg and his gentlemen's quarrel with Mike Pence about gay rights, I agree with her that it's a strategic mistake to try to have a conversation about LGBT people on the terms set by anti-LGBT Christians.

For several years in the pre-Obergefell era, I was a progressive lesbian contributor to a group blog that regularly ran contentious debates about LGBT rights, often with prominent "marriage defenders" participating. From that experience, one of my big take-aways was that those who opposed LGBT rights, and marriage equality in particular, had a very strong fear of being thought of as bigoted. They wanted to oppose our equality while also still being widely seen, even by gay people, as nice. Yet, the marriage equality movement had successfully cast the denial of marriage equality as a denial of love between two people.

Because of that frame, I really think that, to many heterosexual allies, the prominent opponents of equality began to symbolize hateful barriers to their loved ones' happiness. I think many people simply didn't want to be associated with the bigotry of that, and that's especially true in a post-marriage-equality world where so much of the opposition in hindsight looks like bigoted fear-mongering that has yet to be atoned for or acknowledged by those who used to peddle it:


More recently, the religious right, with the blessing of Trump-Pence, is trying to carve out special rights to discriminate against LGBT people under the auspice of "religious freedom."  Anti-LGBT Christians have long tried to claim that they are the ones truly persecuted in society, for having to live in a society that is relatively pro-LGBT, and now they once again have the backing of the Executive (and likely, the Judiciary). It is a mistake to backtrack and allow the culture narrative to once again become that LGBT rights is an abstract matter about which reasonable, nice people can disagree and still be friends.

The correct response to Mike Pence is to tell him that his views on marriage are indecent and bigoted, and that neither his religion, nor anyone else's, should serve as a pretext for denying LGBT people full equality under law.

Actually, an even better conversation would be for Buttigieg, who is ostensibly running for president, to direct his comments toward Donald Trump, both for being a bigot himself and for selecting the bigot Mike Pence as his vice president. By publicly feuding with Trump's vice president, rather than Trump himself, Buttigieg is feuding with someone beneath the position he wants the public to believe he's qualified to hold.

For these reasons, and others, I have concerns about Buttigieg as a candidate. I am inherently skeptical of how he would handle Donald Trump, Fox News, and the rightwing/Russian meme machines when he is vastly untested and unvetted on the national stage. In my experience, a Democratic politician can either stand up for the full dignity of marginalized people or they can care about being seen as "civil" and "electable" by a large chunk of Republican voters who will never vote for them anyway, but they usually can't do both. My concern is that Buttigieg sees his path forward as the latter, even as his run would be historic for cis white gay men.

2. Donald Trump and Mike Pence Are Not Our Friends

Hey, has anyone determined yet if the current vice president of the United States actually wants to hang queers, or whether the Donald Trump was "just joking" when he claimed as much? Har har har, what funny times we're living in, huh?

3. Matthew Shepard's Ashes Interred

In case you missed it, at the end of last year Matthew Shepard's ashes were finally, 20 years after his death, laid to rest at the Washington National Cathedral. I hope this brings at least some measure of peace to his family.

4. Billy Jack Gaither

Pete Buttigieg's presidential run is bound to invoke (and yes, revive) many national conversations about LGBT people, intersectionality, and our rights.  As such, it's going to be vitally important for progressives to acknowledge that people within LGBT communities can be more and less privileged than one another, depending on a wide variety of characteristics such as race, gender, age, disability, religion, income, body size, appearance, and more.

See, for instance, this thread, which I think is an important reminder that we have to collectively get better at talking about people who are marginalized within marginalized communities, while also doing justice to the reality that even those "at the top" so to speak, are still marginalized by the mainstream:


As we saw in 2016, bigotry is a national security vulnerability that can easily be manipulated for the benefit of Republican politicians. With multiple white women, women of color, men of color, a Jewish candidate, and a gay candidate vying for the Democratic nomination, we can count on that happening again in 2020. We have to remain vigilant and it's a really good thing those with the largest media platforms in the U.S. are representative of the full diversity of our nation! (har har har)

5. Massachusetts Bans "Gay Conversion Therapy"

Massachusetts Governor Charlie Baker signed a law making the state the 16th in the nation to ban gay conversion therapy on minors.

6. Trump's Ban on Transgender Troops Goes Into Effect

The Trump Administration's policy of banning transgender people from joining the military went into effect last Friday. This policy is a reversal of the Obama-era policy from 2016 that initially lifted the ban.

Elections have consequences.


7. Lightfoot Makes History in Chicago

Earlier this month, Lori Lightfoot, a former federal prosecutor, won Chicago's runoff mayoral election.  Scheduled to take office in May 2019, Chicago will be the largest city in the U.S. headed by an openly-gay person and Black woman.

The local LGBT rag, The Windy City Times, ran an article of reactions to her win from those in Chicago's African-American and/or LGBT communities.

Open Wide...

We Resist: Day 733

a black bar with the word RESIST in white text

One of the difficulties in resisting the Trump administration, the Republican Congressional majority, and Republican state legislatures (plus the occasional non-Republican who obliges us to resist their nonsense, too, like we don't have enough to worry about) is keeping on top of the sheer number of horrors, indignities, and normalization of the aggressively abnormal that they unleash every single day.

So here is a daily thread for all of us to share all the things that are going on, thus crowdsourcing a daily compendium of the onslaught of conservative erosion of our rights and our very democracy.

Stay engaged. Stay vigilant. Resist.

* * *

Earlier today by me: MAGA Teen Harasser Force and Kamala Harris Announces Candidacy for President and I'm with Leslie.

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

Catherine Rampell at the Washington Post: The GOP Has Become the Soviet Party. "Once upon a time, Ayn Rand-reading, red-baiting Republicans denounced Soviet Russia as an evil superpower intent on destroying the American way of life. My, how things have changed. The Grand Old Party has quietly become the pro-Russia party — and not only because the party's standard-bearer seems peculiarly enamored of Russian President Vladimir Putin. Under Republican leadership, the United States is starting to look an awful lot like the failed Soviet system the party once stood unified against." Damn. Say it, Catherine!

Catherine Garcia at the Week: Sanctions Deal Actually Boosts Russian Oligarch Oleg Deripaska. "The Times reviewed a confidential document, signed by a Treasury official and representatives of Deripaska's companies, which shows that under the deal, he will have the opportunity to wipe out hundreds of millions of dollars in debt by transferring some of his shares to the Russian government-owned bank VTB, which has lent him a substantial amount of money. At the same time, Deripaska's allies — who are also close to the Kremlin — will still have major stakes in his companies." How utterly not shocking.

Staff at the Daily Beast: Leaked Audio Suggests Oleg Deripaska Planned Anastasia Vashukevich's Arrest. "A leaked audio tape allegedly shows that Russian aluminum oligarch Oleg Deripaska and his associates planned the arrest of Anastasia Vashukevich — the Belarusian model who claimed to have evidence of Kremlin interference in Donald Trump's election. ...Vashukevich insists she is being framed for a crime she didn't commit and apologized to Deripaska in court last week, saying: 'Please forgive me. I was just a tool and people used me.' Deripaska reportedly loaned Paul Manafort in excess of $10 million before the U.S. political adviser became Donald Trump's campaign chairman in 2016." Goddammit.

[Content Note: Video may autoplay at link] Matthew Mosk, Katherine Faulders, and John Santucci at ABC News: U.S. Banker with Ties to Putin's Inner Circle Sought Access to Trump Transition. "Nine days after Donald Trump won the presidency, as scores of supporters clamored for meetings with his transition team, the Hollywood producer of The Apprentice, Mark Burnett, reached out to one of Trump's closest advisers to see if he would sit down with a banker who has long held ties to Russia. The banker, Robert Foresman, never got the role he was seeking with the fledgling Trump administration. But he has recently attracted the attention of congressional investigators as one more name on an expanding list of Americans with established ties inside the Kremlin who appears to have been seeking access to the newly elected president's inner circle, according to three sources familiar with the matter."

Andy Towle at Towleroad: Donald Trump Jr. on Buzzfeed and Trump Tower Moscow: 'The Media Is Trying to Subvert This Democracy'. "Donald Trump Jr. claimed to know nothing about the Trump Tower Moscow project in an astonishing interview with FOX News' Laura Ingraham on Monday night... Said Trump Jr., placing all the onus for the Trump Tower Moscow project on former Trump lawyer Michael Cohen: '…the reality is this wasn't a deal — we don't know the developer. We don't know the site. We don't know anything about it. Ultimately, it was Michael Cohen essentially trying to get a deal done.' ...Of the media's (and in reaction to Buzzfeed's) continued scrutiny of the Trump campaign's ties to Russia, Donald Jr. added: '...And the media right now is really trying to subvert this democracy. They've done more to hurt the credibility of this country's institution as a democracy than anything in history.'" The chutzpah of this traitor! OMG.


In other foreign policy news, the AFP reports that Mike Pence has told the Venezuelan opposition: "We are with you."


Pence in the Oval Office would not be an improvement. You can take that to the bank. Unfortunately.

* * *

Let's take a break for a good piece of resistance news, which is really more of a reminder, that Terry Crews is awesome.


* * *

[CN: Trans hatred] Robert Barnes and Dan Lamothe at the Washington Post: Supreme Court Allows Trump Restrictions on Transgender Troops in Military to Go into Effect as Legal Battle Continues. "The Supreme Court on Tuesday allowed [Donald] Trump's broad restrictions on transgender people serving in the military to go into effect while the legal battle continues in lower courts. The justices lifted nationwide injunctions that had kept the administration's policy from being implemented. ...The court's five conservatives — Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. and Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel A. Alito Jr., Neil M. Gorsuch, and Brett M. Kavanaugh — allowed the restrictions to go into effect while the court decides to whether to consider the merits of the case. The liberal justices — Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Stephen G. Breyer, Sonia Sotomayor, and Elena Kagan — would have kept the injunctions in place." This decision is both indecent and terrible law.

[CN: Guns] Ian Millhiser at ThinkProgress: Supreme Court Will Hear the First Big Second Amendment Case of the Kavanaugh Era. "In an ominous sign for potential victims of gun violence, the Supreme Court announced on Tuesday that it will hear New York State Rifle & Pistol Association Inc. v. City of New York, a challenge to New York City's gun licensing regime. It's the first Second Amendment case the Supreme Court will hear since 2010, and only the second such case since 2008's District of Columbia v. Heller, which held for the first time in American history that the Second Amendment protects an individual right to bear arms. ...The case involves such a minor and incidental burden on gun rights that it is unclear why the Court would pick this case as their first foray into Second Amendment litigation in nearly a decade. If the Court sides with the plaintiffs in this case, that would suggest that many gun laws must fall in this decision's wake."

[CN: Nativism; misogyny; video may autoplay at link] Chantal da Silva at Newsweek: ICE Agents Detain Woman Despite High-Risk Pregnancy and Deny Her Medication for Days, Immigration Lawyers Say. "The U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency (ICE) has come under fire after its agents arrested a woman who was five and a half months into a high-risk pregnancy during a green card interview with her husband, a U.S. citizen, according to immigration lawyers. They then allegedly detained her for days and denied her access to the medication she needed to ensure a safe pregnancy. ...[Immigration lawyer Greg Siskind] said that the situation only began to turn around after his law firm called on social media users to put pressure on ICE, flooding the LaSalle Detention Center with phone calls demanding [Carmen Puerto Diaz]'s release. After facing pressure from immigration advocates, as well as from at least one member of Congress, Siskind said ICE finally allowed Puerto Diaz to take her medication late on Friday evening and eventually released her the following day."


[CN: Violent misogyny; toxic masculinity] Adam Forgie at KUTV: Provo Man Facing Terrorism Charge After Making Mass Shooting Threat Targeting Women. "According to a probable cause statement,27-year-old Provo resident Christopher Cleary posted the following threat on Facebook: 'All I wanted was a girlfriend, not 1000 not a bunch of hoes not money none of that. All I wanted was to be loved, yet no one cares about me I'm 27 years old and I've never had a girlfriend before and I'm still a virgin, this is why I'm planning on shooting up a public place soon and being the next mass shooter cause I'm ready to die and all the girls the turned me down is going to make it right by killing as many girls as I see. There's nothing more dangerous than man ready to die.' ...The arresting officer spoke with Cleary's probation office who said Cleary has a history of making threats of killing women as well as felony stalking."

[CN: Police brutality; racism] Kenrya Rankin at Colorlines: Jason Van Dyke Sentenced to 6 Years, 9 Months for Murdering Laquan McDonald. "On October 5, a jury found former Chicago Police Department officer Jason Van Dyke guilty of second-degree murder and aggravated battery. [On January 18], Van Dyke was sentenced to six years and nine months for killing 17-year-old Laquan McDonald. The decision comes more than four years after Van Dyke, who is White, shot the Black teenager 16 times, prompting protests against the department and a government that worked overtime to hide details of the shooting. ...[Judge Vincent Gaughan's decision to use the single murder charge as his guide, rather than 16 counts of aggravated battery — one for each shot Van Dyke fired into McDonald's body — which could have drawn a sentence of 96 years] means that Van Dyke could be out of prison in less than three-and-a-half years, as the sentence allows for a 50 percent reduction for good behavior."

* * *

[CN: Climate change. Covers entire section.]

Robinson Meyer at the Atlantic: There's Snow on TV, So Trump's Tweeting About Climate Change.
It's something of an annual tradition for the president. On Sunday morning, as the eastern half of the country endured driving snow and frigid winter winds, Donald Trump asked on Twitter how climate change could be real if it was so cold outside.

"Be careful and try staying in your house," he said. "Large parts of the Country are suffering from tremendous amounts of snow and near record setting cold. Amazing how big this system is. Wouldn't be bad to have a little of that good old fashioned Global Warming right now!"

Trump has raised similar concerns about that "good old fashioned Global Warming" nearly every year since 2012. If it snows near Manhattan, the president says he isn't sure about climate change.

Unfortunately, even as New York has occasionally been blasted with frozen precipitation, the world has kept warming. The past four years have been the four warmest years on record — a fact that nasa and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration were due to announce this past week, were the government not shut down. Earlier this winter, Washington, D.C., experienced a shocking 22 days of above-average temperatures, and the Northeast as a whole saw a balmy January. [Donald] Trump did not seize that opportunity to affirm that global warming was real.

The simple, tedious fact is that two things can be true at the same time: The world's average temperature can be clearly and dangerously increasing, and it can still snow sometimes in the northeastern United States.
Yessenia Funes at Earther: Australia Just Experienced Its Hottest Night Ever. "Thursday night set a new minimum temperature record of nearly 97 degrees Fahrenheit in New South Wales. This is the highest daily low temperature Australia has ever seen. And it's just latest in a string of brutally hot days for the country. Victoria and New South Wales, which sit on Australia's southeast corner, have seen temperatures soar above 107 degrees Fahrenheit for five days in a row. The capital of Canberra is set to see temperatures reach 104 degrees Fahrenheit four days in a row, which hasn't happened since 1939 when the country started keeping records."

Oliver Milman at the Guardian: Greenland's Ice Melting Faster Than Scientists Previously Thought. "Greenland's ice is melting faster than scientists previously thought, with the pace of ice loss increasing fourfold since 2003, new research has found. Enormous glaciers in Greenland are depositing ever larger chunks of ice into the Atlantic Ocean, where it melts. But scientists have found that the largest ice loss in the decade from 2003 actually occurred in the southwest region of the island, which is largely glacier-free. This suggests surface ice is simply melting as global temperatures rise, causing gushing rivers of meltwater to flow into the ocean and push up sea levels. Southwest Greenland, not previously thought of as a source of woe for coastal cities, is set to 'become a major future contributor to sea level rise,' the research states."

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

Open Wide...

We Resist: Day 648

a black bar with the word RESIST in white text

One of the difficulties in resisting the Trump administration, the Republican Congressional majority, and Republican state legislatures (plus the occasional non-Republican who obliges us to resist their nonsense, too, like we don't have enough to worry about) is keeping on top of the sheer number of horrors, indignities, and normalization of the aggressively abnormal that they unleash every single day.

So here is a daily thread for all of us to share all the things that are going on, thus crowdsourcing a daily compendium of the onslaught of conservative erosion of our rights and our very democracy.

Stay engaged. Stay vigilant. Resist.

* * *

Earlier today by me: Tree of Life Synagogue Shooting and Bolsonaro Wins in Brazil and Trump Regime Now Says It Will Deploy 5,000 Troops to Southern Border.

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

This is a brilliant act of resistance! Andy Towle at Towleroad: Massive 'Trans People Deserve to Live' Banner Unfurled During Game 5 of World Series. Right on!


* * *

[Content Note: Violence; stochastic terrorism. Covers entire section.]

Robert Costa and Felicia Sonmez at the Washington Post: Trump, GOP Defiant Amid Allegations That Incendiary Rhetoric Contributed to Climate of Violence.
Trump and his Republican allies remained defiant Sunday amid allegations from critics that Trump's incendiary attacks on political rivals and racially charged rhetoric on the campaign trail bear some culpability for the climate surrounding a spate of violence in the United States.

Trump, who has faced calls to tone down his public statements, signaled that he would do no such thing — berating billionaire liberal activist Tom Steyer, a target of a mail bomb sent by a Trump supporter, as a "crazed & stumbling lunatic" on Twitter, after Steyer said on CNN that Trump and the Republican Party have created an atmosphere of "political violence."

Later Sunday, Trump lashed out again on Twitter, this time at the media: "The Fake News is doing everything in their power to blame Republicans, Conservatives and me for the division and hatred that has been going on for so long in our Country."

The GOP's defensive posture, following Saturday's deadliest attack on Jews in U.S. history, came as some Trump allies sought to shift blame to others, including media figures and Democratic leaders, arguing that recent attempts by liberal protesters to challenge GOP officials in public were perhaps more responsible for the national unrest than the president's combative politics or the rise of conspiracy theories on the right.
Trump and other Republicans will use any excuse to distance themselves from accountability. And it will work, because their cultists don't care (except insomuch as they covertly or openly cheer acts of violence against their "enemies") and because the media continually allow them to get away with distancing themselves from accountability — or even shamelessly assist them with vile bothsideserism.

For instance:


Erin Durkin at the Guardian: Another Suspicious Package Addressed to CNN Intercepted. "Another suspicious package bound for CNN was discovered on Monday morning, the network said. The package was intercepted at a post office in Atlanta, where the network is headquartered, according to a statement from CNN president Jeff Zucker. ...Two of the pipe bombs sent last week to prominent political figures were addressed to CNN. Cesar Sayoc, a Donald Trump supporter from Florida, was arrested and charged with sending the devices. It was unclear if the latest package was part of the same pattern. Authorities said last week that even after Sayoc was arrested, additional devices might be found that had already been placed in the mail."

[CN: Homophobic slur; white supremacy; anti-Semitism] Luke Barnes at ThinkProgress: We're Witnessing a Massive Surge in Far-Right Violence; It's Unlikely to End Soon. "A far-right mob brutally beating counter-protesters while yelling 'faggot.' A series of pipe bombs mailed to the prominent liberals who are most featured in right-wing conspiracies. A white supremacist murder of two black senior citizens in a Kentucky grocery store. The mass shooting of eleven worshipers at a synagogue in what is described as the worst anti-Semitic attack in U.S. history. All these events have happened in just over a fortnight. More crucially, they all bear hallmarks of violent, far-right bigotry, which [Donald] Trump still refuses to call out and denounce."

He's never going to "call out and denounce" this trash, because he revels in it — and relentlessly exploits it to increase his own power and consolidate the power of his party.

[CN: Disablism] What he'll do — and what his fellow party members and their cultists will do — is continue to say that people like Cesar Sayoc, Gregory Bush, and Robert Bowers are "mentally unstable," implying that their actions are irrational.

But whether any or all of these men have mental illness, none of them behaved irrationally. It's utterly vile, unethical, and illegal behavior, but it also completely logical behavior to respond to decades (or more) of incendiary rhetoric that casts a population as a present threat with eliminationist violence.

That's why there has been no let-up (despite sustained press inattention) in anti-choice terrorism in decades. Killing abortion doctors and bombing or otherwise attacking clinics is an aggressively indecent but logical response to hearing that people who provide and get abortions are committing mass murder.

This isn't "senseless" crime. It's a sense that makes a perfect, devastating sense by obscene standards.

The fact that someone will see violence as a rational and necessary response to demonizing people as existential threats to you is exactly why and how stochastic terrorism works.

Casting the people who act on incendiary rhetoric as "crazy" is one of the key ways in which purveyors of that rhetoric distance themselves from responsibility.

And always remember that if they actually believe that the people who commit these acts are "crazy," then they are working very hard to keep those "crazy" people as "crazy" as possible and with access to deadly weapons.


* * *

Arne Delfs and Patrick Donahue at Bloomberg: Merkel Steps Down as Party Leader as Election Setbacks Take Toll. "Germany's Angela Merkel will quit as head of her Christian Democratic party and won't run for another term as chancellor, taking personal responsibility for the decline in support for the governing coalition. ...The shock decision signals the beginning of the end for a chancellor who put her stamp on Europe and beyond defending moderation and liberal values that have increasingly come under attack. ...Merkel insisted she intends to remain in power until the end of her term in 2021. But how long she's able to hang on as chancellor will depend on who wins the race to succeed her as party leader." Another stunning setback for democracy.


Josh Lederman at NBC News: Evacuated After 'Health Attacks' in Cuba and China, Diplomats Face New Ordeals in U.S. "For the past 18 months, more than two dozen U.S. diplomatic staffers once stationed in Cuba and China have endured an ordeal that is equal parts medical mystery, political stand-off, and bureaucratic muddle. ...Physicians enlisted by the State Department have identified what they call a 'Brain Network Disorder' acquired by U.S. personnel serving abroad, say U.S. officials, that includes structural changes to the brain not found in any previously known disorder. ...Equally unsettling to the diplomatic evacuees: Suspected incidents of harassment and break-ins they say have occurred since returning to the States. Four U.S. officials tell NBC that the FBI has investigated."


Luke Harding at the Guardian: Czechoslovakia Ramped Up Spying on Trump in Late 1980s, Seeking U.S. Intel. "The communist intelligence service in Prague stepped up its spying campaign against Donald Trump in the late 1980s, targeting him to gain information about the 'upper echelons of the U.S. government,' archive files and testimony from former cold war spies reveal. Czechoslovakia's Státní bezpečnost (StB) carried out a long-term spying mission against Trump following his marriage in 1977 to his first wife, Ivana Zelníčková. The operation was run out of Zlín, the provincial town in south-west Czechoslovakia where Zelníčková was born and grew up."

That's some coincidence. Unless it isn't. Especially given this bit at the very end of the piece: "[KGB chief Vladimir Kryuchkov] circulated a confidential personality questionnaire to KGB heads of station abroad, setting out the qualities wanted from a potential asset. According to instructions leaked to British intelligence by the KGB defector Oleg Gordievsky, they included corruption, vanity, narcissism, marital infidelity, and poor analytical skills. The KGB should focus on personalities who were upwardly mobile in business and politics, especially Americans, the document said." Welp.

* * *

[CN: Reproductive coercion] Auditi Guha at Rewire.News: Reproductive Coercion 'Much More Prevalent' Than Once Thought. "Four in ten survivors of intimate partner violence report that a partner has tried to get them pregnant against their will or stopped them from using birth control. Eighty-four percent of these survivors of reproductive coercion became pregnant. This is one of the findings from a survey of 164 survivors in domestic violence programs and shelters conducted by the Institute for Women's Policy Research (IWPR). The survey, which was administered to survivors in 11 states and D.C., explores how abuse affects their abilities to secure and keep jobs, choose when to start families, and maintain good credit."

[CN: Class warfare] Monica Potts at TPM: Americans Are More Vulnerable Than Ever, and the Gig Economy Isn't Helping. "By 2010, according to the Government Accountability Office, 40.4 percent of the workforce was in 'alternative work arrangements' — up from 30.6 percent in 2005. These statistics include a range of workers who, like Milland, piece together work through short-term gigs, contract work, part-time work, or temporary positions. Some of these jobs are those where people have traditionally worked for themselves, like real estate agents or freelance writers, but there was some alarm in the wake of the Great Recession that the number of people in such arrangements was rising sharply. Some surveys found that almost all of the jobs created after the Great Recession were in this type of nontraditional, insecure job, and many were part time. Many took a second, part-time job to cover their bills. In this era, these types of jobs have taken on a new name: the gig economy."

[CN: Environmental racism] Yessenia Funes at Earther: Alaska Natives Call on Banks to Protect the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge from Drilling. "Tiliisia Sisto, a 23-year-old mother of two, became a hunter this year. Sisto lives in Venetie, Alaska, a Gwich'in Alaska Native village, and if she wants to eat affordably while also preserving her culture, hunting is key. So are the Porcupine caribou she and her people rely on. Now, a federal proposal to open the Arctic lands on which these caribou calve to oil and gas drilling threatens the Gwich'in's primary food source and their way of life. That's why Sisto traveled all the way to New York City this week to ask major banks to withhold funding for projects seeking to develop the Coastal Plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR). The Trump administration has been trying to fast-track an environmental impact statement to get extraction going here since the beginning of the year."

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

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Trump Regime Continues Attack on Transgender People

[Content Note: Trans hatred.]

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

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

Chris Opfer at Bloomberg Law reports:

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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Trans People Exist, Elections Matter, and Identity Politics Are Here to Stay

[Content note: Transphobia. Relatedly, by Liss: Trump Regime May Legislatively Obliterate the Definition of "Transgender".]

Per the New York Times:

"The [D]epartment [of Health and Human Services] argued in its memo that key government agencies needed to adopt an explicit and uniform definition of gender as determined 'on a biological basis that is clear, grounded in science, objective and administrable.' The agency’s proposed definition would define sex as either male or female, unchangeable, and determined by the genitals that a person is born with, according to a draft reviewed by The Times. Any dispute about one’s sex would have to be clarified using genetic testing.'"
What this move tangibly means is that the Trump Administration is seeking to establish a federal, legal definition of gender that excludes trans and non-binary individuals, effectively eliminating HHS's, and possibly additional federal agencies', recognition and legal protection of trans and non-binary individuals.

I have three main takeaways:

(1) Transgender and non-binary people exist. For as much as the "non-politically-correct and proud of it" crowd likes to stake a monopoly on "facts," this Trump definition of "gender" is counter to reality.

(2) If I could relay anything to posterity about the importance of presidential elections, I would want to stress the following. Put aside the big, sweeping promises and slogans. "Revolution" in the U.S. isn't going to happen by simply electing a charismatic person in a presidential election, after which, the revolution will *jazz hands* have arrived.

Even with the disastrous Trump, his erosion of norms, liberties, and morals has occurred over a period of two years now. None of what we're seeing has happened overnight, even his "election" itself, which had a historical trajectory and context long in the making.

For those of us paying attention, the changes the Republicans have made since Trump was inaugurated are drastic and alarming. But, what have we become accustomed to as "just the way things are now"? What are we missing because it's being done behind the scenes, because it's not widely covered by the media, or because there's just so much all the time?

Take, for instance, how it's a critical role for presidents in our political system to make judicial and federal nominations and appointments. The recent Kavanaugh proceedings aside, these nominations and appointments, are often low-profile but just as insidious.

For instance, back in March 2017, the National Center for Transgender Equality noted that Trump had appointed Roger Severino to lead the Office of Civil Righs at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. At the time, they and a handful of other human rights organizations expressed grave concern over the appointment of Severino, "whose extreme views opposing women’s rights and transgender people brought him to prominence on the far right." And yet now, Severino is leading the charge to impose false sex and gender definitions across multiple federal agencies.

(3) Republicans know they can get away with attacking trans people partly because they know that many people on the moderate-to-left side of the political spectrum, particularly cishet white men, will give them sufficient cover.

Remember the spate of articles right after the 2016 election, those high-and-mighty "I told you so" taunts of marginalized people: You people had this coming for obsessing about identity politics!

I think about Mark Lilla's version of this genre often. His piece was called, "The End of Identity Liberalism."  Wishful thinking, there? It was also published at The New York Times. For sufficient balance to all those "trans people are people" pieces, I suppose.

Even as Lilla suggests that people with (unlike himself?) identities are narcissists for wanting to be treated decently, his own piece is the height of self-centered lack of self-awareness. As you'll see, the pieces prove not that ordinary (read: white cishet men) Americans just want to focus on Issues Common to All Peoples, but that Hillary Clinton was right about them.

For, what else does one make of a mass of people who, by their own admission, simply don't care that their fellow human beings are treated inhumanely? For instance, Lilla snarked, "America is sick and tired of hearing about liberals' damn bathrooms," and gloated, "One of the many lessons of the recent presidential election campaign and its repugnant outcome is that the age of identity liberalism must be brought to an end."

There's also this opinion:


Pollan's "sage advice" is really an admission that a large portion of Trump's base will revel in the "liberal tears" over this matter, which will energize them straight to the polls! Which is deplorable for them to do. But, one of our current "just the way things are" things is that we don't, no matter what, call Trump fans deplorable, because Hillary said it first and gods forbid we collectively admit she was right about a good goddamned thing.

That fact aside, it continues to strike me as an especially inapt time to ditch identity politics right at the moment a rightwing regime has been targeting people precisely because of their identities. The thing is, you give this sadistic, rage-entitled incarnation of the Republican Party an inch and they'll take a mile. I simply don't have confidence that its leaders see much moral and practical distance between ending the age of "identity liberalism" and ending people of particular identities.

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Trump Regime May Legislatively Obliterate the Definition of "Transgender"

[Content Note: Trans hatred.]

Erica L. Green, Katie Benner, and Robert Pear at the New York Times report: "The Trump administration is considering narrowly defining gender as a biological, immutable condition determined by genitalia at birth, the most drastic move yet in a governmentwide effort to roll back recognition and protections of transgender people under federal civil rights law. ...The new definition would essentially eradicate federal recognition of the estimated 1.4 million Americans who have opted to recognize themselves — surgically or otherwise — as a gender other than the one they were [assigned at birth]."

There is much more at the link, but that's the basic gist.

Two points:

1. This has Mike Pence's filthy, Christian Supremacist fingerprints all over it.

2. There has already been an enormous amount of digital ink spilled in thinkpieces deconstructing the motivations behind this move, and I'm just going to be really blunt about my feelings on that: The why doesn't matter.

Every moment trying to assign rational (if heinous) explanations for this flaming garbage mound of undiluted hatred is a moment wasted, because it's a moment conceding the vile pretense that there is some reason for this proposed policy other than deliberate harm.

The object is malice.

Whatever transparent bullshit they offer as the thinnest veneer of legitimacy should never, ever, be treated as a principled position. It should be treated with naught but contempt.

Malice is the agenda. The rest is farce.

I will not engage with that farce, because it only benefits this sickening regime. This is wrong. It is cruel. There is zero justification for it. Denying people's identity and humanity is not "a difference of opinion." It's eliminationist trash.

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Dispatches From the Queer Resistance (No. 7)

[Content note: Gun violence; homophobia; racism; transphobia.]

Here's my regular reminder that 77% of LGBTQ voters chose Hillary Clinton over any other contender in the 2016 US presidential election and that Republicans, generally, are pretty terrible when it comes to acknowledging the rights, let alone dignity, of LGBT people.

1) Two-Year Anniversary of Pulse Nightclub Shooting
Today marks the two-year anniversary of the deadliest act of violence against LGBT people in US history, in which a gunman killed 49 and injured 53 people attending "Latin Night" at an Orlando gay bar.

I stand in solidarity with all who are grieving today, or who may feel scared, uncertain, and/or angry because of this attack.

2) US Supreme Court Issues Decision in Masterpiece Cakeshop
Last week, in a majority opinion written by Justice Anthony Kennedy, the US Supreme Court held that the Colorado Civil Rights Commission's treatment of a baker who refuses to bake cakes for same-sex weddings "violated the State's duty under the First Amendment not to base laws or regulations on hostility to a religion or religious viewpoint."

I've seen many analyses suggesting that this case wasn't actually a big win for the anti-LGBT side. Yet, cases like Masterpiece Cakeshop very much look to me like part of a broader strategy to normalize the notion that it's acceptable, moral, and legal for Christians to discriminate against LGBT people in the public sphere.

And, while some anti-LGBT groups are banking on, first, an eventual change in the composition of the Supreme Court and, second, a sweeping ruling that would overturn Obergefell, it's important to note that the erosion of marriage equality won't actually require the big dramatic Supreme Court ruling that many people seem to think it will.

Melissa has noted before that anti-LGBT advocates are already chipping away at marriage equality in a manner much like anti-choice advocates have been chipping away at Roe for decades. In fact, I strongly recommend reading this piece that she wrote in 2011, while keeping in mind the parallels with respect to marriage equality, trans rights, and adoption by same-sex couples, all of which are under constant attack from the right.

I continue to fear that segments of the progressive left have become complacent with respect to LGBT rights in our post-Obergefell world, just as many have become with respect to reproductive rights. We must remain vigilant about the reality that conservatives can and will erode our rights piece-by-piece so that one day a bunch of people might wake up, look around, and wonder what the fuck happened.

3) Bigots React to Ruling
Sarah Huckabee Sanders has said that Donald Trump is "pleased" with the Masterpiece Cakeshop outcome. And by Trump, I'm sure she means Pence. Although, sure, Trump, too. Because he's obviously so religious.

Meanwhile, in response to the ruling, South Dakota lawmaker Michael Clark (Republican) indicated in a Facebook comment that businessowners should be able to "turn away people of color" if they choose. After he received pushback, he later wrote, "I am apologizing for some of my Facebook comments. I would never advocate discriminating against people based on their color or race."

Oh.

4) Indiana Teacher Says Calling Trans Students by Their Names Violates His Religion
A teacher at Brownsburg High School, "said the school district's requirement that teachers call transgender students by their preferred names, rather than those given at birth, goes against his religious beliefs." He has said that he has been forced to resign for failing to comply with the school's policy and of course the conservative Indiana Family Institute is backing him.

5) Republican Lawmaker Says Housing Discrimination Is Fine
In a statement to a group of realtors last month, US Rep. Dana Rohrabacher (R) said, "Every homeowner should be able to make a decision not to sell their home to someone (if) they don't agree with their lifestyle."

He later clarified that, "We've drawn a line on racism, but I don't think we should extend that line. A homeowner should not be required to be in business with someone they think is doing something that is immoral.”

Rohrabacher is up for re-election and faces 15 challengers. I wish him the worst of luck in his efforts.

6) Sexual Minority Young Women at Heightened Risk for Teen Pregnancy
An April 2018 study in Pediatrics found that lesbians had approximately two times the risk of teen pregnancy as heterosexual participants, and bisexual young women had nearly five times the risk. From the article:

"The higher teen pregnancy prevalence among sexual minorities was partially explained by childhood maltreatment and bullying. One additional variable, the earlier age of sexual minority developmental milestones, was a significant risk factor for teen pregnancy among sexual minorities."
The researchers also referenced previous results from a qualitative study in which participants engaged in sex with a different gender in order to "prove" their heterosexuality or hide their sexual orientation.

7) Republican Candidate Films Herself Harassing Trans Woman
Proving once again that creepy, bigoted cis people are far bigger threats to trans people's safety than the other way around, Jazmina Saavedra, a Republican candidate for Congress in California, filmed herself yelling at a trans woman who used a bathroom at a Denny's restaurant. What the actual fuck.

Saavedra lost the election.

8) Lambda Legal Issues Criminal Justice Report
Lambda Legal has issued a report that offers, "an overview of the wide-ranging impacts of the Trump Administration's federal criminal justice initiatives on lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) people and communities, with a particular focus on impacts on LGBTQ people of color and immigrants." The report is worth reading in its entirety, and it ends with a call for "LGBTQ organizations not already on the front lines of struggles to challenge profiling, discriminatory policing, police violence, mass criminalization and incarceration, and intensified immigration enforcement will join in and support efforts to resist and limit the harms of these federal initiatives at the local level."

9) Better Things
To end on a more upbeat note. However you might celebrate or honor it, Happy Pride Month, y'all! 

Personally, and in addition to some more organized events, I'm looking forward to watching Ocean's 8 (and Sarah Paulson and Cate Blanchett, obvs) on the big screen in the very near future. In addition, one of my favorite TV shows of the moment, Supergirl, has announced plans for a trans character next season (the casting notice seeks a trans actress).

Finally, Maryland State Senator Richard Madaleno is openly gay and is running for governor in Maryland. He aired an ad earlier this month listing the things he's done to stand up to, and anger, Trump. These included standing up for Planned Parenthood, helping ban assault weapons in Maryland, supporting public schools, and kissing his husband. The ad ends with him kissing his husband, LOL.

I know some people say Democrats "have to do more than be against Trump," but all of the issues Senator Madeleno has stood for, in opposition to Trump, are actually a pretty big fucking deal. Once some people understand that women, schoolchildren, and queers are people too, I think it becomes easier to comprehend that maybe it is enough to be against Trump.

Open Wide...

We Resist: Day 335

a black bar with the word RESIST in white text

One of the difficulties in resisting the Trump administration, the Republican Congressional majority, and Republican state legislatures (plus the occasional non-Republican who obliges us to resist their nonsense, too, like we don't have enough to worry about) is keeping on top of the sheer number of horrors, indignities, and normalization of the aggressively abnormal that they unleash every single day.

So here is a daily thread for all of us to share all the things that are going on, thus crowdsourcing a daily compendium of the onslaught of conservative erosion of our rights and our very democracy.

Stay engaged. Stay vigilant. Resist.

* * *

Here are some things in the news today:

Earlier today by me: Thieves Came in the Night.

So, here's where we are: The GOP doesn't care at all about passing a historically unpopular piece of legislation, right after losing a Senate seat in Alabama and control of the Virginia legislature. They are truly governing like they know they will never face voters in free and fair elections again.

And Mike Pence's "prayer" for Trump sounded like a benediction or a eulogy. They don't care if he goes. The coup is well under way, and Pence is ready to step in and play pretend (small-d) democratic president while actually being a vicious, aggressive autocrat.

The $1.5 trillion the GOP and their donor class is stealing with this bill will be used to enact austerity programs that will turn this country into a Social Darwinian hellscape. Good luck to all of us finding ways to organize dissent now that Net Neutrality is no more.

And meanwhile our foreign policy is a garbage disaster: We've got no functional diplomatic system anymore; the president is a reckless provocateur; and the Republican Party is a bunch of sickening traitors who don't give a fuck that Russia continues to meddle in our business and subvert our democracy, and will probably mount a major attack on our infrastructure in the near future.

And I don't know how we're going to mount a meaningful resistance to this onslaught, but I will promise you that I'll be here resisting as mightily as I can for as long as I'm able.

Anyway...

Casey Quinlan at ThinkProgress: The GOP Tax Bill Hurts K-12 Schools and the Quality of Higher Education. "Experts on K-12 and higher education policy say the tax bill is a giveaway to corporations and could hamper public investment in K-12 schools and public universities. The finally bill doesn't include a change to teacher tax deductions — which was eliminated in a House bill last month — so teachers can still deduct $250 for supplies they buy out of their own pockets. The provision on a tax on tuition waivers for graduate students was also removed. But the overall picture for students is grim, said Ben Miller, senior director for Postsecondary Education at the Center for American Progress. 'You're definitely seeing folks breathe a sigh of relief because these narrow provisions are gone,' Miller said. 'But it's like saying, 'Thank god my paper cut healed while someone cut off my arm.' The long-term damage of the overall bill is quite bad.'"

Akiba Solomon at Colorlines: Patrisse Cullors Discusses How the Tax Bill May Impact the Reproductive Health of Women of Color, Particularly Black Women. "Paul Ryan has blatantly said that he will make cuts to entitlements after the tax bill passes. This tax bill will add more than a trillion dollars to the national deficit, and we can guess that they're going to use that to justify these cuts to entitlements. We know that the first thing to cut — by both parties — are programs for poor and working class people, particularly those [identified with] people of color. So the first cuts will likely be from programs like Medicaid, Medicare, and SNAP. Women's reproductive health care will be among the first to be cut."


Sarah O'Brien at CNBC: These Changes Under the GOP Tax Plan Affect Homeowners. "After the many twists and turns that the Republican tax-overhaul legislation has taken thus far, it might be unclear to homeowners what's in store for them. In a nutshell, not much that will help them save more on taxes. ...On top of making modifications to the mortgage interest deduction, the bill limits the deductibility of property taxes and state and local income taxes to a combined $10,000. In states such as New York and California where home prices and property taxes are high, this change means some homeowners could face bigger tax bills beginning next year. And if you were thinking about prepaying some of your 2018 state and local income taxes to take advantage of current law, which is more generous, forget about it. The bill specifically disallows it."

Tim Fernholz at Quartz: The GOP Tax Bill Is a Massive Victory for Globalization. "Critics, even those who favor lower corporate rates, fear this bill will increase existing incentives for companies to employ tax havens. Under the new law, companies pay a minimum tax on global income, designed to prevent them from shifting intellectual property (and profits) to low-tax jurisdictions overseas. But the hastily written new rules create a loophole for companies to skirt that minimum tax by investing in factories and other routine operations outside the United States. ...Even if the loopholes can be fixed, many experts expect the move to empower multinationals to demand new tax concessions in other jurisdictions, driving a global race to the bottom."

Will Wilkinson at the New York Times: The Tax Bill Shows the G.O.P.'s Contempt for Democracy. "[T]he open contempt for democracy displayed in the Senate's slapdash rush to pass the tax bill ought to trouble us as much as, if not more than, what's in it. In its great haste, the 'world's greatest deliberative body' held no hearings or debate on tax reform. The Senate's Republicans made sloppy math mistakes, crossed out and rewrote whole sections of the bill by hand at the 11th hour, and forced a vote on it before anyone could conceivably read it. ...At a time when America's faith in democracy is flagging, the Republicans elected to treat the United States Senate, and the citizens it represents, with all the respect college guys accord public restrooms."

* * *

[Content Note: Sexual assault; child abuse. Covers entire section.]

Jason Wilson at the Guardian: The Texas Boys Were Beaten, Abused, Raped; Now All They Want Is an Apology. "Rick, Steve, and six other men the Guardian spoke to named staff members responsible for the abuse, which lasted from the 1950s until at least the early 1990s. They say the abuse went beyond them, and was systemic, affecting hundreds of others who went through the ranch. They say Lamont Waldrip, a long-serving superintendent, was one of the worst abusers. Last month, at the behest of a wealthy donor who wrote a cheque for $1m to build a new dormitory, the ranch named the new building Waldrip House. ...For the survivors who want to make the ranch accountable for the abuse — and have been encouraged to break their silence after Steve Smith brought them together in a Facebook group — this is an unbearable affront."

Dawn C. Chmielewski at Deadline: Gary Goddard Accused of Sexual Misconduct by 8 Former Child Actors. "Eight former child actors from a Santa Barbara theater group have come forward to accuse their former mentor, Broadway producer and theme park designer Gary Goddard, of molestation or attempted molestation in the 1970s. Since actor Anthony Edwards wrote a painful first-person account of his abuse on Medium, describing how Goddard allegedly preyed on him and other young aspiring actors in the theater troupe, others have came forward to support his account, including Mark Driscoll and Bret Nighman. A total of eight people described Goddard's advances — straying hands on thighs, fondling on darkened Disneyland rides, sexual abuse during overnight stays — and the psychological aftermath."

Melanie Schmitz at ThinkProgress: Paul Ryan Was Asked If Trump's Accusers Are Liars; His Response Was Abysmal. "'Look, I don't even know what all these accusations are,' Ryan said, when asked whether he agreed with the White House's claim that all the women were liars. 'I'm focused on fixing Congress. I'm focused on my job, where I work, making this institution safe. I want my daughter to be able to grow up in an economy, to go into work — public or private sector work — she's not being harassed, she's being empowered. That's what I'm focused on, I'm not focused on this other stuff.'" There's more at the link, and it's just as shitty.

* * *

Ed O'Keefe at the Washington Post: Democrats Unlikely to Force DACA Vote This Week, Probably Averting Shutdown.
Democrats are backing away from a pledge to force a vote this month over the fate of thousands of undocumented immigrants brought to this country as children, angering activists but probably averting the threat of a government shutdown at a critical moment in spending negotiations with Republicans and President Trump.

With a deadline of midnight Friday to pass spending legislation, dozens of Democrats had vowed to withhold support if Republicans refused to allow a vote on a measure, known as the Dream Act, that would allow roughly 1.2 million immigrants to stay legally in the United States.

But a group of vulnerable Democratic senators facing reelection in conservative states next year aren't willing to go that far — meaning the party is unlikely to muster the votes to block the spending bill.

"We've got to get it done, but I'm not drawing a line in the sand that it has to be this week versus two weeks from now," said Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.), who faces reelection next year in a state that Trump won by more than 18 points. Other Democrats facing similar head winds echoed that sentiment, including Sens. Joe Manchin III (D-W.Va.) and Joe Donnelly (D-Ind.). Trump won those states by 42 and 19 percentage points, respectively.
Okay, but the point of it being this week is that the threat of a shutdown provided immense leverage to Democrats, who are the minority party. In a week when the Republicans can put aside all their differences to universally pass their grotesque tax bill, Democrats should be more inclined than ever to do the same to protect millions of the nation's most vulnerable members. Fuck this.

Bob Dreyfuss at the Nation: Maxine Waters Connects the Dots on Trump, Deutsche Bank, and Russia. "For Waters, and perhaps for Mueller, too, the question is: Are these two things related? Did Trump, Kushner, and their partners — along with others in Trump World, including Paul Manafort, Gen. Michael Flynn, and Wilbur Ross, the billionaire who serves as Trump's commerce secretary — benefit from illegal Russian money that flowed through Deutsche Bank? If so, does [Donald] Trump have a hidden obligation to Russia or to Russian oligarchs? And why did the official US investigation of Deutsche Bank's illegal transactions, conducted under the auspices of Jeff Sessions's Justice Department, go 'dormant' earlier this year? Those questions are especially relevant because of two major, recent transactions between Deutsche Bank, Trump, and Kushner."

Peter Beaumont at the Guardian: U.S. Will 'Take Names of Those Who Vote to Reject Jerusalem Recognition'. "The U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, Nikki Haley, has warned UN members she will be 'taking names' of countries that vote to reject Donald Trump's recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel. In a letter seen by the Guardian, Haley told countries — including European delegations — that she will report back to the US president with the names of those who support a draft resolution rejecting the US move at the UN general assembly on Thursday, adding that Trump took the issue personally. Haley writes: 'As you consider your vote, I encourage you to know the president and the U.S. take this vote personally. The president will be watching this vote carefully and has requested I report back on those who voted against us,' she continued."

Jonathan Capehart at the Washington Post: 'Trump's Benghazi': Frederica Wilson Wants the Truth About What Happened to La David Johnson in Niger. "'The American people need to know what happened to Sgt. La David Johnson. And I think that his family needs to know what happened to Sgt. La David Johnson.' Two months after Johnson was killed during a mission in Niger, Rep. Frederica Wilson (D-Fla.) still has questions. 'It's sort of like a coverup,' she said in the latest episode of 'Cape Up.' 'And from the very beginning, I was calling it 'Mr. Trump's Benghazi.'' This episode with Wilson comes just before Johnson's mother complained about not being properly briefed by the Pentagon during a CNN interview on Monday. Wilson told me the family is being given information 'that's not matching' information being reported in the press, which has led to many questions."


[CN: Trans hatred; child abuse] Amy Littlefield at Rewire: 'Medical Malpractice': Catholic Bishops Urge Parents, Doctors to Withhold Care for Transgender Kids.
Acceptance can be a matter of life and death for transgender people. When they are accepted by their families, trans people are less likely to face a range of negative experiences, including attempting suicide. That hasn't stopped the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and other religious leaders from issuing an open letter that effectively encourages parents to reject their transgender children, and deny them access to gender-affirming care.

The letter, entitled "Created Male and Female: An Open Letter from Religious Leaders," denies the existence of transgender people, claiming that "human beings are male or female and that the socio-cultural reality of gender cannot be separated from one's sex as male or female."

It appears to urge medical institutions to withhold gender-affirming care for children.

"Children especially are harmed when they are told that they can 'change' their sex or, further, given hormones that will affect their development and possibly render them infertile as adults," the letter claims. "Parents deserve better guidance on these important decisions, and we urge our medical institutions to honor the basic medical principle of 'first, do no harm.'"

Harper Jean Tobin, director of policy for the National Center for Transgender Equality, criticized the intrusion of religious judgment in medical care.

"They are urging parents and medical providers to withhold affirming psychological and medical care and to put off limits even the consideration of affirming psychological or medical care," Tobin told Rewire. "That is medical malpractice."
Samantha Cooney at Time: Model Lauren Wasser Faces Another Leg Amputation Because of Toxic Shock Syndrome. "Model Lauren Wasser will likely lose both of her legs to toxic shock syndrome — and she wants other women to be more aware of what they're putting in their bodies. ...Now, the model is advocating for legislation, introduced in May by Democratic Rep. Carolyn Maloney, that will require the National Institutes of Health to conduct or support research to determine the safety of ingredients in feminine hygiene products. ...New York University microbiology professor Philip Tierno told TIME last year that there's little scientific research on the health risks related to tampon use." Because misogyny.

Sarah Roberts, Ashish Premkumar, and Monica McLemore at Rewire: The CDC's Language Ban Is More Than an Attack on Words — It's an Attack on Basic Public Health Values. "Last Friday, the Washington Post reported that senior members of the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) counseled analysts to avoid using seven words in future budget and supporting documents that would be disseminated to CDC partners and to Congress: 'evidence-based,' 'science-based,' 'vulnerable,' 'entitlement,' 'diversity,' 'transgender,' and 'fetus.' Two days later, CDC Director Brenda Fitzgerald and a spokesperson from the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) — which oversees the CDC — both argued that no bans on words existed and that the entire story was a 'mischaracterization of discussions regarding the budget formulation process.' Despite the seeming about-face from both the HHS and CDC, the concern among the medical and public health community still remains..."

In a terrific act of resistance... Andy Towle at Towleroad: Human Rights Campaign Projects CDC's Banned Word List on Facade of Trump Hotel. LOL ROCK THE FUCK ON.


I'm gonna end it on a high note!

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

Open Wide...