Hey ladies!
posted by bitchphd
In a surprise move expected to send shock waves through the world of TV journalism, CNN, the original cable news network, and NBC, which owns cable channels MSNBC and CNBC, announced a deal to consolidate their news divisions into a single giant network. The new network, to be called Where the White Women At or WWWA, is set to debut this week. CNN spokesman Jack Little explained the deal at a press conference Monday.
JACK LITTLE: For most of history, journalists could afford to spend their time covering wars, famines, politics and business. The reason for this is that everyone knew where the white women were at - at home, probably in the kitchen, minding the kids. Sometimes they were out shopping or knitting at a friend's house or, or even working as elementary school teachers, but by and large, the location of all white women was known. However, society has changed, and the business of journalism has changed with it. These days, with the increased opportunities available to white women, as a nation we are losing track. . . .
Zachary W. Carter, a former United States attorney in Brooklyn, said that media companies and their reporters have different obligations. "I don't believe that a company has the right to put the assets of it shareholders at risk in an act of civil disobedience," he said. "On the other hand, the reporters are only faced with the consequences to them personally. They have the absolute right to put their liberty and fortunes at risk."Why is this a big deal? Because we have the force of the state, which is very powerful, threatening individuals who are adhering to a fundamental democratic principle: the public right to information abou the functioning of the government. A reporter who finds evidence of lawbreaking in the course of her work is not acting as a private citizen; she is acting as an instrument for the public interest. By threatening to jail reporters for doing their jobs, the state is attempting to intimidate them in order to suppress public information; at the moment, the only thing protecting the public's right to know is a professional code that most (not all) journalists believe in, which is that if necessary, they will go to jail to protect their sources.
soldiers ran out, saw some people running, opened up fire. It was a bunch of boys playing soccer. And in the digital videos you see everybody standing around, they pull the bodies together. This is last summer. They pull the bodies together. You see the body parts, the legs and boots of the Americans pulling bodies together. Young kids, I don’t know how old, 13, 15, I guess. And then you see soldiers dropping R.P.G.'s, which are rocket-launched grenades around them. And then they're called in as an insurgent kill. It's a kill of, you know, would-be insurgents or resistance and it goes into the computers, and I'm sure it's briefed.Update: in the comments, Ed links to a letter, purportedly by the Lieutenant who led that attack, explaining the circumstances of it and refuting the claim that the people killed were soccer-playing kids rather than actual insurgents firing on his platoon. Obvoiusly I have no idea which version of the story is true, but I have to admit the letter sounds genuine to me. Hersh may be wrong on this one.
[You for] the fragrant-blossomed Muses’ lovely gifts
[be zealous,] girls, [and the] clear melodious lyre:
[but my once tender] body old age now
[has seized;] my hair’s turned [white] instead of dark;
my heart’s grown heavy, my knees will not support me,
that once on a time were fleet for the dance as fawns.
This state I oft bemoan; but what’s to do?
Not to grow old, being human, there’s no way.
Tithonus once, the tale was, rose-armed Dawn,
love-smitten, carried off to the world’s end,
handsome and young then, yet in time grey age
o’ertook him, husband of immortal wife.
Adam: Dear Bitch,
Something to blog about:
"A Reframing I’d Like to See: Government-Enforced Childbirth
For all the talk about “reframing” the abortion debate, the reframing I’d like to see never seems to come up. The issue is government-enforced childbirth. Right-wingers want government-enforced childbirth; lefties don’t.
The issue is not whether we favor or oppose abortion. Plenty of people who are personally opposed to abortion are still pro-choice. You can’t tell the difference between pro-choicers and pro-lifers by asking, “do you favor abortion?” You can tell the difference by asking, “should there be government-enforced childbirth for pregnant women?” Government-enforced childbirth is the defining issue; wanting government-enforced childbirth, not wanting abortion, is the difference between the opposition and us."
IT'S on Alas, a Blog.
Me: Thanks.
I dunno about this particular framework, though. Because that question they ask--"should women who get pregnant be forced by the government to bear children"--is one that's pretty easy to just answer "yes" to, by saying, "it isn't the government forcing them... it's nature/god."
But this "government enforced" thing, yes. There's something in that. Ideally, of course, one simply wouldn't have laws regulating abortion...
Adam: Yep, but you could say god or nature wants them to bear the child, but the gummint shouldn't force them. They should stay out of that particular decision, the way they should stay out of Terri Schiavo matters. It becomes almost a privacy issue.
Me: Right, but the argument would be, it isn't the *government* forcing them--the government didn't knock them up. It's "just the way things are."
The problem with the "privacy" argument is similar: like property law, private decision-making is always subject to the argument that there's a state interest in limiting it. More and more, I think the argument is just, either you think that (the vast majority) of women are smart and responsible human beings, and know what's best for their own particular lives (and their children's)--or you don't. If you do, then the privacy/government arguments follow; if you don't, then those arguments aren't going to work, either. Because it really does boil down to the simple fact that men don't have abortions.
Adam: Are you saying there is no legal argument for abortion; no legal reason to legislate in favor of pro-choice or against government-enforced childbirth?
Hmm.
Could be there are things -- maybe porn is another -- that exist not to be made laws about: and the fact that we still make laws about them, proves not that the law is wrong, but that we still live in some pre-age-of-reason Unenlightenment. We're socially behind ourselves, so we look to laws to protect us. Today, for example, having moved on a bit, we don't need laws for or against slavery.
Me: Yeah, maybe I am. At least, I think I'm starting to believe that any argument about legislating abortion implies the reasonableness of an argument for legislating *against* it. When more and more I fundamentally think it's just not something you can legislate. People will do it, regardless--because, like I said once, women "get" that having children is a Really Big Deal, and we're not going to do it under circumstances where we think we aren't up to the task.
Although I'd say that that position is a post-Enlightenment position, not a pre-Enlightenment one; after all, a big part of the enlightenment was the invention of the importance of the rule of law.
BTW, do you mind if I post this exchange on the blog? I think it's interesting.
Adam: I wonder what other things there are -- besides abortion, slavery, smoking pot, maybe porn -- that will one day be extra-legal, because they've passed beyond the rule of the rule of law; they've become so socially acceptable/unacceptable, they don't need laws. Eating meat or not, for example, is extra-legal, even though people have strong views about it. Perhaps if animal rights become important, we'll make laws against eating the poor creatures, on the way to there not having to be laws about it -- because maybe in the end no one would think of doing what would be regarded as such a horrible thing.
Perhaps all laws are an intermediate stage to morality, and eventually we won't need any laws at all. Paradise is a world without laws. Didn't Marx stay the state would wither away?
P.S. Sure, post this exchange.
....
Adam again: Dear Bitch,
Some reframing options besides "government-enforced childbirth" --
1. Mandatory motherhood
2. State-controlled childbirth
3. Parent-controlled childbirth (i.e. State-controlled vs.
Parent-controlled childbirth)
4. Government-controlled childbirth
5. Government-controlled breeding
6. Nationalized childbirth
7. Nationalized breeding
8. Nationalized breeding industry
9. Government womb control
10. State-controlled wombs
11. Womb oppression
12. Womb rights
13. Womb liberty
14. Womb freedom
15. Womb ownership
16. Womb ownership rights
17. Body liberty
18. Body rights
19. Body ownership
20. Full body freedom
21. Forced full-term fetal evolution
22. Government womb take-over
23. Uterus colonialization
24. Uterus usury
25. Embryo imperialism
Some work better than others. No doubt your readers could think of more. I wish I could stop thinking about this. Mind too pregnant. Need a thought abortion.
"Think about the women you know in your life. Your mom, your sister, your wife. Or, if you're a woman, think about yourself. Do the women you know take children seriously? Are they responsible people? If they have children, are they good mothers?
I bet most of you are thinking, yes. Yes, the women I know are good mothers, yes they are responsible people, yes I respect them.
But when we talk about abortion, we talk about it as if we didn't think that women were responsible people, as if we didn't think that women take abortion seriously. We talk about it as if women get abortions for "convenience," as if women didn't think any more about it than they do whether to call for pizza delivery on a busy school night. We talk about the things that concern us when women consider abortion--how far along is the pregnancy? Is the fetus human? Is it a baby or not? Was she using birth control? Shouldn't she have tried not to get pregnant in the first place?--as if we didn't think that women, when they're forced with that choice, think of those very same things.
But if you think about it, that's not how the women we know think about these decisions. When the women we know are thinking about whether to have or not to have a child, to try to get pregnant or to try to avoid pregnancy, they think long and hard. If the women in your life are anything like the women I know, they're pretty smart, and they're pretty good at decision-making, and they take these questions about pregnancy and children very seriously indeed. Most women do. Including women who have abortions.
Let me tell you a few stories...."
"You cannot understand American history without understanding the African-American experience; I don't care what anybody says," said Paul G. Vallas, the school system's chief executive, who is white. "It benefits African-American children who need a more comprehensive understanding of their own culture, and it also benefits non-African-Americans to understand the full totality of the American experience."
A friend of Mr. Budnick, Arbi Ferko, also 16, said, "It's not our history to learn."
I've been an adjunct slave this year at a couple of local schools. . . . The thing I've found most difficult about it is grading (I can do the classroom part OK). What intrigues me about this is WHY I find grading difficult. Yeah, it's boring and time consuming and repetitive and one's students write asinine things in illiterate ways, but what really bugs me is the intimacy. I find it really embarrassing, invasive almost, to read my students' work and tell them what they should think. I can just about do what's necessary in my lit course, but I suspect that I would never make a decent comp teacher, however long I tried, because I find it so painful to rip up other people's writing. (I found it embarrassing to have my own writing ripped up in college, and maybe those memories are just a bit too close.) Even at the end of my second semester, I still dread sitting down and confronting the students' writing.
. . . . I'd be interested in your readers' responses to my attitude to grading, and what they feel about grading. Do they actually enjoy it (which I would not find weird at all, if teaching IS their vocation)? Is it an emotionless chore? Or are there those who feel as I do?
The acknowledgement was made in a report submitted to the UN Committee against Torture, said a member of the ten-person panel, speaking on on condition of anonymity.
UN sources said it was the first time the world body has received such a frank statement on torture from US authorities.
The document from Washington will not be formally made public until the hearings.
"They said it was a question of isolated cases, that there was nothing systematic and that the guilty were in the process of being punished."
The US report said that those involved were low-ranking members of the military and that their acts were not approved by their superiors, the member added.
I have never raped anyone. I don't think that's somethig to be proud of. It's the default fucking setting that every goddamned man on this stupid fucking planet ought to have. You can't be proud of not raping anymore than you can be proud of not shitting on yourself whenever you laugh. Most men*, as far as I know, have never raped anyone, and in a normal world you'd think that not being an evil, violent monster would make one more sympathetic to one's fellow human beings, IE women, who are also not monsters.
Apparently, that's not the case, as tons of male bloggers are stepping over themselves to equivocate and fiddle back and forth on the subject of rape. Sure, they lazily toss in 'tributes' to women who have been assaulted before lecturing thse women on how they ought to behave, but the truth is that they seem more worried about giving some kind of cover, understanding, to the victimizer.
These sad douchebags seem to think men can't control themselves. They seem to think that it's somehow the woman's responsibility not to get raped, rather than society's responsibilty to punish and prevent rape in the first place.
While I'm ranting, sexually liberated women are the best women on earth. God bless 'em. They ought to be praised, not blamed for a culture that seems to think that sexual openess somehow justifies assault.
The old "unlocked car/flashy jewelry/running naked" in a violent neighborhood at night argument is a common tactic in favor of shaming the victim. The idea seems to be that by somehow giving temptation to rapists, the victims of rape, while not actually to blame per se for their predicament, ought to endure greater responsibility for their situation.
It's also completely wrong.
The thing people (mostly male, though occasionally females as well) who make this argument are forgetting is that women, simply by being women, are on display at all times.
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia -- A 12-year-old girl who was abducted and beaten by men trying to force her into a marriage was found being guarded by three lions who apparently had chased off her captors, a policeman said Tuesday.Of course, the real "news" in the story comes at the end: according to the U.N., seventy percent of marriages in Ethiopia begin when the husband and/or his friends kidnaps a woman.
'To radically accept and defend a woman's right to choose, we must acknowledge the multiple ways that women come to make reproductive choices. By marginalizing teenage mothers, even within the feminist community, we are failing to recognize the realities of countless women and their children.'
Kelli Gabriel, a Washington financial consultant, hired Myrna Alphonse in 2002, not just to take care of her five children but to run her household while she and her husband, also a financial consultant, were working 10-hour days with long commutes. Ms. Gabriel had employed nannies before, but she had never considered paying anything close to the $75,000 annual salary Ms. Alphonse asked for. But on meeting Ms. Alphonse, who is taking a master's degree in psychology and who presented herself as capable of a lot more than baby-sitting, Ms. Gabriel began to think that the price might be reasonable.I absolutely love this article. It's like the feminist dream: women getting paid for doing wifely duties. It amuses me no end that it took women getting "men's" jobs--notice that in this anecdote, the woman who hired the nanny does the exact same job her husband does--to start getting (other) women paid to do the household work. And it's funny, too, that it's the "working" women (not the men) who are hiring the "wives." It's also kind of funny that the employer in this scenario is separating from her husband:
"After I listened to her," she said, "I thought, 'Can we afford not to hire her?' "
"I feel very blessed to have her in my life right now. She's the one constant we do have."Doesn't that sound exactly like the traditional things one says about wives and mothers? It's impossible to resist the temptation to say that it takes a woman to appreciate the worth of a wife.
Challenging earlier findings, two studies from the Heritage Foundation reported yesterday that young people who took virginity pledges had lower rates of acquiring sexually transmitted diseases and engaged in fewer risky sexual behaviors. The new findings were based on the same national survey used by earlier studies and conducted by the Department of Health and Human Services...
The earlier study found that a majority of teenagers who took the pledge did not live up to their promises and developed sexually transmitted diseases about the same rate as adolescents who had not made such pledges... The new study, reported at a meeting in Arlington, Va., sponsored by the Department of Health and Human Services, found that over all, adolescents who made virginity pledges were less likely to engage in any form of sexual activity. If those who made promises did become sexually active, their array of sexual behaviors was likely to be more restricted than those of adolescents who did not make a pledge, Dr. Rector's team said.
Independent experts called the new findings provocative, but criticized the Heritage team's analysis as flawed and lacking the statistical evidence to back its conclusions. The new findings have not been submitted to a journal for publication, an author said.But they don't even mention for the reader that this study was conducted by a self-described "conservative think tank", whose "mission is to formulate and promote conservative public policies... based on traditional American values". Might be a useful factoid for those trying to draw their own conclusions about how seriously to take the new un-peer-reviewed study.
We complain about the far right trying to amend the Constitution to ban gays, about Bush lying his way into a war, about the GOP trying to take over and usurp the entire federal judiciary, yet 27% of Republican Senators are still holding out on the wisdom and morality of lynching black people. Think about that. And then ask yourself is it any wonder all these other legislative crimes happen when these bastards can't even agree about lynching? And you thought we had it bad.
Jackson "is a guy that's like a 10-year-old child. And, you know, he's doing what a 10-year-old would do with his little buddies. You know, they're gonna jack off, watch movies, drink wine, you know. And, you know, he doesn't even really qualify as a pedophile. He's really just this regressed 10-year-old."
Perhaps no one has ever concretely, and theoretically explained strategically, why abortion, and abortion providers, and women who have abortions must be stood beside and actively supported if you have any intention of living anywhere other than a fascist snitch culture of State-ist and vigilante control.
Ellen Saracini lost her husband, United Airlines Capt. Victor J. Saracini, when his Flight 175 crashed into the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001. Now she stands to lose more than half of her widow's pension in a very different kind of crash -- United's default of its $9 billion pension obligations.
the He-Man Woman-Hater's Club that is The Daily Kos. What a shame I can't de-link him. Wouldn't it be nice if all women stopped reading Daily Kos. He seems stats-conscious, and that would give him, finally, a reason to ask where all the women bloggers are at.
"When I finally went, it was in a hospital, and I had a nice doctor who explained the procedure to me, and plenty of counseling beforehand," she said. "I was so grateful for the positive medical experience, despite my ambivalence."A couple of weeks ago, when I was reading The Story of Jane, one thing that really stood out was the author's description of how respectful the service was, how it involved women in the process of their abortions, explained to them what was happening, increasingly came to understand abortion (and by extension all women's health care) as something that not only ought to be, but is, within women's power. As a consequence, Kaplan explains, many women who went through the service said it was one of the most positive and empowering experiences of their lives. There's an interesting anecdote, toward the end, of one of the service members who, after Roe v. Wade, went to work in an abortion clinic where she ran into a woman who'd gone through the service; the patient asked her, "how can you stand to work here, when Jane was so much better?" and she quit.
She assumed that at some point, though, someone at the clinic was going to tell her how to get follow-up counseling. But no one did. "I didn't bring it up myself because if it's not something that they do, then I figured that my feelings were abnormal and would go away," she said.
They didn't. In fact, her confusion and sadness only increased.
"Every woman who is pregnant wonders if she has a bedroom for that child; can she afford to take off the time to raise that child? Why flatten the decisions around abortion to just abortion? When women don't have jobs or health care, where is the choice? There is nothing worse than a woman aborting a baby she wanted because she couldn't support it."
Ross notes that black women were the first to resist the pro-choice/anti-choice dichotomy. "A very large percentage of [black] women are personally opposed to abortion but are pro-choice," said Ross. "Women of color agree with not giving unborn children more rights than grown women, but even when they're terminating a pregnancy, they call it a baby. This has been going on as long as we have had the debate. What women of color mostly say is that we have the right to . . . decide what children are born or not--that is part of women's power."
Nineteen-year-old Gerardo Flores of Lufkin was sentenced to life in prison Monday in a landmark test case of a state fetal protection law. An Angelina County jury deliberated just under four hours, finding him guilty on two counts of capital murder for his part in killing his unborn twins.
...
Flores' girlfriend, Erica Basoria, 17, was led sobbing from the Angelina County Courthouse by her mother and older sister. While her family testified against Flores, Basoria stood by his side, maintaining she was involved in causing the at-home miscarriage.
...
Under state law, a woman cannot be charged for causing the deaths of her own fetuses for any reason. A similar federal law went into effect in April 2004. . . .
...
Basoria, then 16, was five months pregnant when Flores stepped on her bulging belly more than once the week before she gave birth prematurely in a bathroom at Flores' house the night of May 6, 2004.
...
His girlfriend coerced him into it, Flores said in a taped police interview. . . . [The defense argued that] it was Basoria's fault for egging Flores on, he said.
"She invited violence into their relationship," he told jurors.
The Herald-Leader article quoted Kerr as saying that he used cross-dressing to illustrate shifts in gender in which women dress in some clothing (such as jeans) that was once considered male, but that men do not enjoy the same options to dress in clothing that was considered female. “I’m turning it around. What’s good for the girls is good for the guys,” he said.
Slosberg had asked his students to write their names and Social Security numbers on a sign-in sheet, students said. "We all signed it," Amanda Bracewell said. "We figured, 'He's a teacher, what is he going to do with it?"'
I remembered the first time I had had a sabbatical at three-quarter's pay, back when I was a frugal assistant professor living alone in an apartment. Back then I didn't end up in debt at all. I had decided to take the spring off, so I sublet my apartment for the year, moved in with a pal for the fall, while I was teaching, and then hopped on a plane to Europe for the spring semester. I lived on lentils, took public transportation, and stayed within my budget.
Eleven years, a partner, a child, and a dog later, it's a whole different story. I can't spend the semester at the overseas archives I used to use, can't leave my partner with all the child care, and can't find any way to cut our expenses. My research takes place in my own study or in the libraries of neighboring research institutions. And even without international travel, the debt rises, despite my best efforts to economize.
[If] the job does not pay enough for you to live on, use a credit card to get by, and work like hell to advance in your career. Soon you will be promoted, your salary will rise, and you'll be able to pay off your credit cards systematically over the next year or two. Think of it, she said, as an investment in yourself.
That sounded good to me. I'm using the semester to work like hell to advance my career, and I can pay back the credit cards when I get back onto full pay. In fact, I'll even be getting a good raise this year. The interest on $8,000? It's an investment in myself.
Actually Mr. President, "dissemble" means not to tell the truth. "Disassemble" is what we did to Iraq.And this, after a serious of clips of W, Cheney & Rumsfeld talking about progress in Iraq:
It's not that they live in a world that doesn't really exist, it's that they really don't know what the word "progress" means. They think it's something bad.He also nicely ponts out that Rumfeld, who now says that Amnesty International has lost "any claim to objectivity or seriousness", used human rights reports by Amnesty International on Iraq as pretext for war. Anyways, the whole clip is great, and they actually posted it this time. Check it out...
Middlebury College sits squarely in the middle of the most homogeneous state in the USA (according to the census figures, Vermont is 96.8% "white"). I know (cannot say how, but suffice to say, I know) that this has been a problem with recruiting faculty of color to the College.
The efforts to bring minority students (and faculty) to campus might be about to get much more difficult. This article in the Village Voice discusses the case of one O'Neil Walker. Walker was due to graduate this spring when he was punished with an "indefinite suspension" from the College. The case is pretty complex, and I'm afraid it is going to escape my attempts to summarize. I strongly recommend you read the article before reading my summary (or commenting).
The atmosphere at Middlebury was ripe for an event of this kind:
According to school records obtained from Addison County court files, paranoia started building last November, when a male student in the large dorm complex Ross Commons woke up to find a figure crouched on the floor at the foot of his bed. It was dark, but the student could see that the intruder had close-cropped hair. The alleged intruder said nothing as he crept from the room and disappeared, leaving only a calling card—a pair of Tootsie Roll lollipops—on the floor, sticks crossed, like some sort of symbol.
About a week later, in the same dorm, another student reported waking up after a night of partying to find a strange man "rubbing his penis." The victim reported that he tried to grab the intruder but the man—described as a black man with long "nappy" hair sticking out of a dark hoodie—ran from the dorm.
A campus alert went out, warning students to be on the lookout for a college-age man of that description. The rumor mill went into overdrive.
Middlebury Senior David Hawkins switched dorms from where the incidents had taken place, and then...
The first night in his new room was January 30, according to documents, and Hawkins had had "six or seven" drinks—he originally told investigators that he had had only two drinks—before he crashed in his room at 2:30. Hours later he awoke to find a kid he didn't know lying, possibly sleeping, on his floor. The two argued, according to Hawkins. The crasher said it was just a mistake, that he'd crashed there because he thought it was still the room of his friends from the previous semester. But Hawkins didn't believe him and later told the college's director of public safety, Elizabeth Boudah, that he wanted his uninvited guest caught. Hawkins pointed to three black students from the Middlebury face book who he said resembled the intruder. Fortunately for each of them, none were on campus that weekend. That might have been the end of it, but two weeks later Hawkins spied Walker and his friends on a beer run. Hawkins later told campus police, according to records, that he was "95 percent sure" Walker was the intruder.
But O'Neil Walker looks nothing like the description Hawkins gave Boudah. Hawkins reported that the intruder had high cheekbones and a light complexion, while Walker's cheeks are rounded and his skin is a rich, dark-brown color. Hawkins also said the intruder had an "African" accent, while Walker's diction is crisp and unaccented. Nevertheless, it was decided that Walker was not only a serious suspect in this case but in the others. He was absolved of all but the Hawkins incident.
This case involves a lot of issues. There are many obvious racial ones. Interestingly, Walker was a Posse Foundation scholar. The Posse Foundation is a terrific program, well known for effective college prep in the New England area. There are, of course, class issues that should not be ignored as well.
I'm particularly interested in the fact that Middlebury, as a private college, can legally conduct the judicial proceedings in absolute secrecy. While I understand the benefits of secrecy (it serves to protect the innocent from baseless accusations and can be helpful in bringing forward reluctant witnesses or victims), in such a high-profile case it exacerbates the existing underlying tensions. The secrecy makes everyone involved look bad, and serves to feed rampant rumors and speculation.
As Jim Booth (?) posted on his blog (SirPaulsBuddy):
This is certainly a racial problem, but it's also an academy problem. Until colleges, whether public or private, learn to act in such cases as these in transparent ways that reasssure both victims and suspects that their aim is fairness and not expediency, we can only look forward to more O'Neil Walkers.
The [Village Voice] article does not mention other facts that have come up since this case broke, such as the fact that O'Neil's dorm entry card was used to open doors in the dorms where the incidents occured in the middle of the night. Or that the accuser had a 5-minute conversation/argument with the accused before he fled. I don't know about you, but if I woke up in the middle of the night, found someone in my room and argued with them for 5 minutes, I would trust a positive ID.

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