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Racism and Nationalism in Europe Newslinks

18 November 2011

Two posts in one day OMFG.  Don’t count on it ever happening again.

Today’s linkdrop is Racialicious’s Race and Europe Link Round Up – 11-18-2011 by Flavia Dzodan.  I want to draw particular attention to the Guardian’s interactive map, Europe’s ‘nationalist populists’ and far right.  Some countries have two nationalist parties!  How lovely!  Hilarious how a few of the parties are called ‘freedom’ something-or-other.  Yawn, nationalists.  All of the parties are anti-immigration to some extent, particularly for Muslims and suspected* Muslims.  I’m not familiar with many specific parties in Europe beyond the UK, but certainly the map isn’t all-inclusive.  From 15 grueling minutes of Wiki research, other racist/anti-immigrant nationalist parties include Portugal’s Partido Nacional Renovador, Poland’s (particularly anti-Semitic) Narodowe Odrodzenie Polski, and Switzerland’s SVP/UDC.  The first two have gained only a tiny percentage of votes, but that’s also the case with some of the parties included on the Guardian’s map, so I’m not sure why they were excluded.  Not that there would be room in the graphic for all the nationalist parties and movements in Europe.

Anyway, fellow USians, I implore y’all to keep up with racist trends in other white-dominated countries and adjust your scope of anti-racist ideology accordingly.  Decenter the US!

* If it’s not clear, by ‘suspected,’ I mean people racists assume to be Muslim based on skin, language, etc.

When I Began to Quit the Church

18 November 2011
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Out of curiosity, I’ve been reading through comments on Greta Christina’s What Convinced You? A Survey for Non-Believers post.  (I haven’t shared my story there.  I’m not sure if I will, mainly because I like to keep my comments at smaller blogs and I have this thing about reading all comments before adding my own.)  I figure since Jeff posted something similar here and I can blab on and on forever on my own blog, I might as well share one of my stories.  Note that the story is presented as I recall experiencing it at the time (with possible changes to irrelevant details in order to protect those discussed, blah blah) and doesn’t necessarily reflect my views now.  In other words, there’s no point in arguing with the me that existed in the 1990s.  

Some background, because historians and sociologists know that it matters: Every Sunday of my life for the time period in question, my mom took me to her Lutheran church. My appraisal of that particular church is that it’s fairly center right–a bit of old-school brimstone here, a dash of nice Jesus there–and generally ‘traditional’ in presentation. My mom has been heavily involved with that church for decades, and despite her ideological problems with churches, pushed her kids into it with vigor.  My dad never went; I was an adult before I learned that he can’t stand church, hates religious ‘arguments’ against science, and is probably a straight up atheist.  Between my parents and siblings, I am the tie-breaker, meaning whichever side I pick wins, forever.  Anyway, on to the confession!

I remember parts of the incident vividly, which is notable given how few long-term memories I’ve retained.  I was nine years old. Within the last year or three I’d read 67 Ways to Save the Animals.  (That book was one of the things that began to Change Everything in more realms than religion, but I digress.)  My mom and I were at the church’s post-adult/pre-child indoctrination coffee-and-cakes break.  In one form or another and to no one in particular, I asked how it’s moral to kill and eat animals when we don’t have to.  A middle-aged woman I barely knew, one of the brash and impatient inner circle types, leaned toward me and snapped, “Because God put them here for us to eat.”  There was a smug vitriol to her response that hit my typically shy and reticent kid self in the gut.  The feeling of the words echoing in my head blurred the memory of what happened next.  I vaguely recall my (meat-eating) mom challenging her on her harshness and Biblical literacy.  After that, I knew on some level that I was supposed to keep my questions and opinions to myself.

I don’t know if I knew at the time that that incident would be the beginning of my escape from religion.  As I put on a few more years, I kept drudging up the memory, unpacking another level of significance, and putting together the ways in which one exchange was a perfect example of many massive problems with church culture and religion: Incorrect facts.  Cherry-picking and misreading.  Appeals to authority.  Intolerance of challenging questions.  Aggression and closed-mindedness behind all that loving-kindness talk.  Cliquey behavior.  Hypocrisy.  For one reason or another, I didn’t have the word ‘atheist’ in my brain until long after I stopped going to church–but I don’t think I ever really had the word ‘faith’ either.  I went from too young for real understanding to uncertainty and doubt to extreme discomfort before I was finally able to leave at 14 (after Confirmation: my mom’s weird plan to get me to like the church was to force me to stay with it despite weekly protests).  Though I liked science and there was probably some scientific thought influencing me, too, it was Christians that initially drove me away from Christianity.

So there’s my story.  It wasn’t hard to leave that community.  The other kids who were still around had never cared much for me anyway.  Public school friends who were religious didn’t really bother me about it.  Maybe they didn’t know about my apostasy either way.  We shared other interests.  The only difficult thing has been the paranoia.  That’s how they get you.  They get some part of you to believe you’re damned for all time even when you realize that you aren’t.  Over a decade later, I still feel these flecks of paranoia landing on me at random times like so much gull poop on Brighton Pier.  But my anti-theist stance has been expanded and refined so significantly over the years that there is no evidence that could convince me to reconvert.  It’s not hidden faith that causes this paranoia.  It’s the lingering effects of ongoing emotional abuse during developmentally vital years.  I don’t use the word ‘abuse’ lightly or metaphorically.  Constantly reminding kids of their inevitable fiery damnation if they fail to believe in something they can’t see is abusive, even when done with the best of intentions by otherwise gentle and compassionate people.

Parents, teachers, folks of all sorts, please keep that in mind.

 

Slavery Footprint Test

20 October 2011

Just dropping off another link today: Slavery Footprint.

I’m not going to be the arbiter of whether it’s accurate or not, but it’s certainly something worth consideration and passing around.  The results page provides a map of where many of our possibly slave-obtained products come from.  You can go into the adjustment sidebar on most pages and get really specific, which is a useful aspect of the test.  (The visuals and different interactive features are quite nice, not that that’s terribly relevant.)  Two things off the top of my head that would have improved it are more precision in the living arrangement options (living in a shared space where many items are split between multiple people, for example) and differentiating between buying ‘standard’ or locally sourced produce.

My slave tally was 28, mostly due to cotton and bathroom products (though many of the medical and food items aren’t exclusively mine).  I’m surprised that it wasn’t even higher.  What I’m really surprised about, though–and by surprised I mean skeptical–is that the average ‘score’ at the time I took the test was only 24.  I can’t check out the comparison page because I haven’t signed up with the site, but I would guess that the participants so far have either been skewed politically/economically toward a less consumerist lifestyle, or that many people aren’t being entirely honest.  Which is sort of silly when the test is supposed to tell you about your footprint.  Be honest, people!

That is all.  Check out the test and pass it round!

 

[Site found via A Radical Profeminist]

 

Down with Columbus, Down with Dynasticism!

10 October 2011
Protest banner reading "Christopher Columbus - The Americas' First Terrorist - www.UnitedNativeAmerica.com"
Pictured: Two men holding a large banner that says, “Christopher Columbus – The Americas’ First Terrorist – http://www.UnitedNativeAmerica.com”  Photo from Indian Country Today Media Network – Native Film Tackles Columbus Day Issues: http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2011/03/native-film-tackles-columbus-day-issues/

 

Usually we don’t do holidays around here.  However, there are some so vile, so nauseatingly pervasive and sanitized, that we would be failing in our responsibility as allies if we ignored them.  One of these is Thankstaking.  Another is ‘Columbus Day.’

It shouldn’t be necessary to explain why Columbus Day is a bullshit holiday celebrating a horrible legacy of exploitation, genocide, and total non-discoveries, but here are some links just in case.  (Note: some of those links contain links of their own that are definitely worth following through.  Just sayin’.)

"We Are Still Here" poster from honorthetreaties.org
Pictured: A Turtle Islander in a t-shirt and jeans with his eyes lowered and his arm around a white horse. Text above reads, “We Are Still Here.” Text below reads, “www.honorthetreaties.org”

(Turtle Island.)

ETA: Feminist Activism – Day 5- Native American Women’s Activism (via Shakesville)

 

In happier news, today is also the centennial of the Wuchang Uprising (celebrated on a national level as Shuāng Shí Jié in Taiwan, but also remembered in the PRC).  This uprising is typically used to mark the end of China’s dynastic era, though the actual Qīng Dynasty hung on for a few more months.  The end of dynastic rule is certainly a good thing!

 

That’s Not What a Revolution Looks Like: IHOP e-Club Edition

1 October 2011

The language and imagery of revolution–particularly of communist revolution–is frequently appropriated and adulterated by corporations and capitalists in order to sell us shit.  Duh, right?  Well, today I saw an example of this, and it informed me that it’s time for a new feature here at TFFP: That’s Not What a Revolution Looks Like!  It’s easy enough to find examples of capitalized-upon communism online, so these posts will come from stuff we find in the analog world.  Also, we tend to be pretty Serious and depressing around here, so this feature will mainly be about lighthearted mockery.

On to the material:

 

IHOP "Pancake Revolution" Table Display

Pictured: IHOP table display sign with the words, "Join our e-club and receive free meals & exclusive offers! IHOP Restaurant® Pancake Revolution™ Pancakes to the People™" and a picture of various animal parts and byproducts patrons can purchase and cram into their maw

 

As Rosa Luxemburg always said, “The pancakes are the decisive element, they are the rock on which the buttery victory of the revolution will be spread.”

 

Linkspamming How to be an Ally

19 September 2011

Today on Fannie’s Room I left the following comment:

One of the more important things Internet Feminism has reinforced for me is that if an idea is correct, I’m obligated to agree with it no matter how much the author has hurt my ego or my worldview.  This has helped me argue with more strength and conviction, but just as importantly, has made me be less of a jerk in spaces where I’m the one with privilege.

Though this comment was left in the context of a particular string of tone arguments on a feminist blog, it’s not really about that.  Rather, it’s something I always try to keep in mind when I’m out and about in activist spaces.  It works when I need to encourage myself not to mince words about oppression.  It works when I need to remind myself that other marginalized folks are doing the same thing.  I don’t get to have my own reality.  I’m not entitled to coddling when the truth hurts.  I’m also not obligated to stick around a second longer than I want to.  Knowing all of these things has done nothing but benefit me and the activist stuff I do.  

One more comment, then on to the links.  Privileged people seem to have an especially hard time dealing with spaces that aren’t intended for us/them.  (I’m not referring to blogs that have an explicit ban on male or white participants, for example, but general spaces that are geared toward marginalized folks.)  The main thing to really digest is that, unless otherwise stated, these spaces do not exist for the benefit of privileged points of view.  They aren’t arenas for testing out rhetorical prowess.  They aren’t staffed by friendly folks just itching to be of 101-level assistance to every passerby.  They don’t need an Official Delegate from Privilegeland to weigh in on the subject.  (If only we had a United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples for every “As a straight man, I’m ok with gay people, but” or “It makes me sad, as a white woman, to hear about racism in feminist history.”)  Take the opportunity to quiet your wordmakers and learn.  Marginalized folks will get by without you.  Really.

Anyway, I’m not interested in writing my own ally manifesto or aspiring to be the Number One Internet Resource on the matter, so on with the links.  Most of them have overlapping material and mainly cover 101 stuff, but this is a 101 subject for a lot of people, and a little brushing up won’t hurt the rest of us.  (Disclaimer: I read each link, but as I found a lot of them through simple Googling, I can’t guarantee that the parent sites are free from problems.)

Finally, as I often do, I have to suggest that wannabe allies familiarize themselves with Derailing for Dummies.  If you find yourself about to make one of those arguments, just don’t.  Close mouth, put fingers in mittens, play Angry Birds if absolutely necessary.

Happy justicemaking!

A Year’s Worth of Search Terms

25 August 2011
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I’ve been meaning to do a search term roundup for a while, as I always enjoy them on other sites. Some notable ones, presented as is and in no particular order:

 

  • liberals are dumb (variations: dumb shit liberals, liberals are dumb as shit, liberals are crooks, ammunition against liberals–what’s up, violent conservative rhetoric?)

This is the most frequent search we get. It’s probably the case that most people’s brains break when they realize that we’re criticizing liberals from the left.

  • american women are the worst 2011

American women are the worst: 2011 edition? Or American women are the worst at being the year 2011? I think these thoughts so that I can spare my eyes from rolling straight out of their sockets.

  • is racism still privilent in south africa today?yes/no and why

Hey this blog isn’t going to write obviously answerable high school essays for you!

  • hmong vietnam fuck in laos

We get a lot of hits for Hmong history with the US in Viet Nam.  I’ve decided to be optimistic about why people are looking it up, so it’s heartening to see those searches.  Except for this one.  Because I have no idea what issue it’s trying to get at.

  • patriotism begets victory

I imagine that this person was having an argument on the internet and was desperately looking for evidence to confirm their bias.  You’re not gonna find it here, lol!

  • they [the marxists] maintain that only a dictatorship—their dictatorship, of course—can create the will of the people, while our answer to this is: no dictatorship can have any other aim but that of self-perpetuation, and it can beget only slavery in the peop

Someone has mistaken google for a machine that forwards emails to their grandkids or something.

  • similarity between evolutionary psychology and stargazing

Oh, hell no! Also, what?

  • jesus sleeps in a boat during storm

It’s not this search itself that’s so weird, but why it would ever send someone here.

  • mom amateurs pornporn and oh yes harder deeper

Oh thank god. You can’t be sure you’re running a feminist blog until at least a couple of porn searches roll in.

  • crapus ganglion

This is my all-time favorite. We like to say it out loud for no reason sometimes. I, uhh, guess it could send someone here, as I wrote ‘sacral ganglia’ once. They were probably looking for Scarpa’s ganglion, though.

 

Well, that’s it until next year or whenever I do this again!

Jumping on the South Sudan Bandwagon

9 July 2011

As of today (well, 9 July in Sudan, which has now passed), South Sudan has officially gained independence [via Al Jazeera]:

Independence comes six months after a January referendum in which nearly 99 per cent of South Sudanese voted to separate from the north. The ballot was mandated by the Comprehensive Peace Agreement, the 2005 deal aimed at ending decades of civil war.

Some 2.5 million people were killed during the conflict between southern rebels and the government in Khartoum.

Most South Sudanese say they’re now tired of war and focused on economic development. The new state of South Sudan is one of the poorest and most underdeveloped in the world, but many seem optimistic that independence from the north will mean a better standard of living.

“This [independence] also means the beginning of development for this country,” said Thon Jacob, who celebrated independence at a packed Friday-night worship service at the Emmanuel Church. “Because the resources of the south have always been used for the north. Now the government will be able to develop the south.”

I am by no means an expert on Sudanese history or politics, but I do know that it’s A Good Thing when people who are neglected, abused, or exploited by ‘their’ governments are able to gain freedom from their oppressors.  Good luck to the South Sudanese people in improving their national infrastructure, respect for the personal bodily integrity of women, medical access, and general quality of life stuff.

Oh, and hey, Global North?  Let’s try to be good neighbors this time, okay?

Seven (or more) Links in Sunny June

27 June 2011

No, we’re not dead.  I’ve been working on a couple of new posts, but due to life and stuff, it’s been taking longer than anticipated to get through the source material.  Have some links in the meantime:

Vegan Animal Liberation Alliance, which I just stumbled upon (but not StumbleUponed) recently, has an old post up called “If you start a debate with ‘I fight for animal rights, but I’m no vegan’ don’t expect applause.”  We at tFFP agree.  VALA also linked to this article about veganism being essential but insufficient at Negotiation is Over.

Al Jazeera English reports on “Criminalising Palestinian solidarity” among US supporters.  From the article (sorry for not blockquoting, but it would bust up my flow): “Travel for [educational and activist] purposes should be protected by the First Amendment of the US Constitution.  But a year ago the US Supreme Court decided in Holder vs. Humanitarian Law Project to dramatically expand the government’s definition of what constitutes material support for a foreign terrorist organisation.  Now the government considers travel to places like the West Bank and Colombia to be a predicate or justification for opening up an investigation and issuing search warrants to raid activists’ homes and seize their belongings. Political speech if made in a ‘coordinated way’ can be construed as material support.”  In addition to being fucking depressing and awful in general, the broad-brush bullshit of going after activists and dissenters reminds me of the Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act (some analysis of the AETA at Green is the New Red for those who are curious).  Doing effective activist work sure skeers the US government.

– Via RacialiciousAustralian Minister Penny Wong calls out David Bushby for actually meowing at her IRL.  According to one of the commenters, Wong has some pretty problematic stances, but this particular thing she did was A Good Thing.  Bushby’s bullshit fauxpology can be found in the related videos on twitvid.

Mujeres Libres has posted a list of articles by and on Zapatista women.  Really, really worth the read.  If you can’t decide where to start, I went with “EZLN: The Women’s Revolutionary Law” listing demands for women’s rights and “What Price is Dignity?“, an open letter from Subcomandante Marcos to Cecilia Rodriguez after men gang raped her because she did activist work while being a woman.

American Indians in Children’s Literature calls out an NYT interactive mapping feature that counts all indigenous/NA/First Nations people as “other.”  Even when that ‘other’ is 96% of the population.  I’m fucking verklemmt of an angry sort.

– In On whiteness, “radical” identities, and the consciousness of bloggers, white pro-radfem Julian Real addresses white privilege/supremacy within feminist blogs and how white women can oppress POC just as men of all races can oppress women of all races.

– For those of y’all with your fingers on the pulse of today (what the hell is a radio?), Crunk Feminist Collective has a discussion going about Rihanna’s “Man Down” video, in which a woman shoots her rapist and ponders on that course of action.

– At Invertebrate Party, which I also just found via something or other, is an anecdatal post about how women aren’t supposed to take up space.  I can totally relate, except that I’ve never been remotely tall or fat ‘enough’ to be policed for that in addition to having the gall to be female in the presence of others.  Being five-foot-nothing results in its own special collection of bullshit, though.

Cordelia Fine, whose book Delusions of Gender was featured here a couple of months ago, made a post on science and straw feminists.  And for once, the comments are mostly readable. Like this one: “In 1910 Helen Thompson Woolley reviewed research into psychological differences between gender groups, and suggested: ‘There is perhaps no field aspiring to be scientific where flagrant personal bias, logic martyred in the cause of supporting a prejudice, unfounded assertions, and even sentimental rot and drivel, have run riot to such an extent as here.'”
– Via the last link, have the Bem Sex Role Inventory, lol.  See how well you conform to early 1970s gender regulations, for science or something!  (I scored 62.5 masculine points, 33.3 feminine points, and 52.5 androgynous points out of 100 each.  Whoops!)

Barney Frank and Ron Paul shock the shit out of people by coming together to take cannabis off the US’s controlled substances list.  This is one of the most reasonable and legitimate ideas to pass through the US government in like forever, and will therefore crash and burn.  But it’s still pretty cool.

I wanted to pick a post from Angry Marxists to share, but there are too many good ones, so just go and browse!

Feminism and Definitions

14 May 2011

As part of a Saturday morning Twitter fest, I posted this to the official TFFP Twitter feed:

Men can be allies of the feminist revolution but it’s disingenuous for us to call ourselves feminists. “Pro-feminist” is preferable I think.

I believe this to be a fairly uncontroversial statement among internet feminism discussions. We’ll get to that in a bit. In a reply to that tweet, UK leftist and all-around amiable chap @RedNaylor asked (edited for de-Twittered grammar):

How would you define feminist? I agree with you mostly, I’m just always torn between men calling themselves feminist or pro-feminist. Although I’m always pretty vocal in making sure that men dont Tim Wise-ify feminist struggle as Wise has done race struggles.

I think these are excellent questions, both the first direct one and the general question about the labels we (men) take on in describing ourselves and our place in these struggles. Some caveats before I jump into this: I’m hardly representative of all feminists, or even pro-feminist men. Also, to me there is no feminism but radical feminism, and this places me into a small, but not insignificant minority among leftists. Even more obvious, I’m a guy, so my viewpoint is tainted by male privilege. That said, I think everyone’s input on revolutionary struggles is valuable in building an all-encompassing framework.

So how would I define feminist, or feminism? I’ve had a quote from Chairman Mao in my head for the past view days that can lend a proper framework for answering this.  Concerning Marxism, he said:

Marxism comprises many principles, but in the final analysis they can all be brought back to a single sentence: it is right to rebel against the reactionaries.[1]

I think a similar statement could be made for feminism. I believe feminism, however multifaceted, however many principles may be included, is simply the struggle for the eradication of the Patriarchy.  The temptation then is to go a step further and define a feminist as anyone who takes up this cause, anyone who dedicates their life to furthering the struggle against the Patriarchy. It would be easy to leave it at that, but I think we–meaning men who wish to advance this cause–would be remiss if we simply slapped on the label as if it were a cheap armband we might wear during a solidarity march.

Revolutionary struggles throughout history have always faced the danger of being co-opted by those who don’t understand, who can never Get It when it comes to experiencing life through the lens of the oppressed group who is now forming a revolutionary body. It doesn’t mean that outsiders can’t help, it just means that you should recognise when you are an outsider, and not try to take the movement away from the people who stand to benefit the most. Malcolm X (peace be upon him) realised, perhaps far too late in his struggles, that white folks could be allies in the movement for black liberation. However, it would not befit the movement to be led by white folks, and understandably so. It’s their revolution, not ours. The same holds true for the American desire to have interventionist escapades throughout the MENA region’s current uprisings. There are ways in which the West could properly assist the people struggling to be free from the tyrannical despotisms created often by the West (chiefly, stop supporting the dictators). But what we should not do is drop bombs on their cities in the name of humanitarian intervention. Men can be allies in the feminist struggle for the freedom of the sex class from the tyranny of the Patriarchy, but men cannot lead this revolution, because it’s not our revolution. The unfortunate and possibly upsetting truth of the struggle is that men, even men who identify as feminists, are part of the class that must be rebelled against.

For further reading: http://faultline.org/index.php/site/comments/why_i_am_not_a_feminist/

[1] Tried to find a citation for this, but couldn’t. Possibly from Mao Papers. Apologies.

Space is fun, yay!

11 May 2011

We love science here at TFFP, particularly the space part.  (We also like taking an occasional break from the constant onslaught of terrible news we know we can’t and shouldn’t ignore.)  So here’s some cool space-related stuff I/we like!

Carl Sagan’s Cosmos: Originally run in 1980, we declare that this is still the best space and earth science show ever made.  The material is presented in a way that’s easy for most laypeople to understand without talking down to the audience or having an episode titled “TOP 10 MOST EXXXTREME WAYS TO BLOW UP THE SUN,” which is all basically nonexistent in more current shows.  Some of the information has since been improved upon, of course, but the majority of it is still solid.  The message was political (in a good way) when it needed to be.  Sagan himself had gravitas and lightheartedness in equal measure, and an oft-remarked-upon, quirky way of speaking that make Cosmos all the better.  I can’t read his books or essays without hearing him recite every word (they take a long time to read).  Watch this series.  Watch it once a year.  Share it with everyone you know, forever.  Actually buy it if you can.  I’m serious.

Powers of 10: This Eames clip may be a few decades old and have creepy music, but it’s still awesome.  The narrator takes us from human scale out to 100 million light years, then back in and all the way down through human cells to the sub-ångstrom level.  I love how the most massive realms in the universe kind of mirror some of the smallest stuff we can detect–‘orbiting’ bits in extensive empty space.

Galaxy Zoo: Help identify and classify galaxies photographed by the Hubble, FOR SCIENCE.  You can register and save your results and favorite images.

Photopic Sky Survey: Interactive panoramic 5,000 megapixel photo assembled from 37,440 images (apparently all done by an amateur astronomer, too, holy crap).  Objects click through to their wiki articles.

Google Earth users can also access Google Sky (and Mars) or its Maps counterpart.  I love some Google Earth.

Astronomy Picture of the Day: Like it says, a cool image with a description of what you’re looking at, where it is, and where it was taken.  RSS and archives available!

Dark-Sky Parks: There are only a few of these parks in the world, and most of them are ridiculously remote (duh).  However, if you’re into camping and visiting national parks/forests, some of the sites have other parks within a couple hours’ drive.  We’re considering a trip to Natural Bridges in Utah, which, along with southwestern Colorado, is basically entirely composed of parkland.

Clear Sky Chart: Forecast conditions for stargazing in parts of the US, Canada, and Mexico.  The charts themselves show weather and visibility.  The regional lists also shows a Bortle Scale light pollution rating for each site so you can find the darkest spot in your area.

Stellarium: This 3-platform program (free, yay) lets you track the night sky as it would be seen from (almost?) any area of the earth.  There are non-Western zodiac overlays available in the program.  You can go to set times and dates and speed up/reverse time, as well.  Paired with a clear sky chart, this is a good resource for planning the right time to go find some stars.

Universe Sandbox: If you ultimately just want to smash space stuff together, there’s this simulator.  Unfortunately the full version isn’t free and crashes sometimes.  Still, it’s pretty fun.

And finally, because it’s always awesome, this:

this, basically

13 April 2011

Shakesville: Meet the Candidates!  Tronald Dump

Now, I’ve skimmed (tl;dr) some of your complaints about how the Democrats are using abortion rights as a bargaining chip with the Republicans, and about how the Democratic executive and Democratic Senate majority aren’t doing bupkis to create a counter-narrative to the national onslaught of anti-abortion bills in state legislatures, and about how the Democrats throw women’s rights under the bus every time it’s politically expedient, and about how the current Democratic president uses language that plays to rightwing frames on abortion rights, and all the rest of that gobbledygook, and, frankly, I don’t find your arguments very compelling.

Partly that’s because I didn’t really bother reading them (hysterical), but mostly it’s because I’m mad that you’re going to ruin everything for the rest of us with your principles (wtf).

I need to get elected to protect your rights, ladies, and if that means I have to occasionally undermine your rights to do it, that’s just how the game is played. You just don’t understand politics, is all. It’s very sophisticated stuff.

Cross-Posted: More on Races, Genders, and Brains

1 April 2011

The following essay has been cross-posted with permission from its author, our friend at Notes & Commentaries.  Apologies for any formatting errors in transition.

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Reading Cordelia Fine’s most excellent work of popular neuroscience, Delusions of Gender, reminds me once again of the importance of opposing the reactionary scientism that has taken hold in increasingly large sections of the population.(1) This way of thinking manifests itself in a revival of many old stereotypes, clichés and damaging rigidities of cultural and social roles that once seemed on the verge of eradication, but are now back in vogue. What has given them a new lease on life is the supposed support they have in intuitive appeals to scientific knowledge and the bamboozling use of neurology, sophisticated statistical testing, and social psychology in order to underpin them. In the New Left period of Western politics it was seen as obvious that we would soon not only do away with racist and sexist structures and beliefs in our society, but overcome gender and race as parts of our conceptual apparatus altogether. Now very few indeed seem still to be interested in such a proposition of politics or even to deem it feasible. This is because the great counterrevolution in the West from the 1980s to now has been accompanied not only by a new pseudoscientific orthodoxy in economics and statecraft, but also in ideas about cultural norms and roles. ‘Scientific racism’, once seemingly utterly banished, is now making a creeping revival, and ‘scientific’ sexism is sold everywhere in mass market paperbacks. Few on the left, even in the radical parties and groups, make any real attempt at countering this or even providing a serious analysis of the arguments at hand. Instead, the focus is all too often on the outward sexist appearances of certain religious or cultural practices. This is justified enough of itself, but we must win the battle on all fronts, and that includes dispelling certain important ‘intuitions’ many people, even the middle class intelligentsia, now (again) have about gender and race.

There are several kinds and versions of this. The most noxious and probably still the least publicly accepted one is ‘scientific racism’, in which differences (particularly in intelligence) are argued to inhere in races as we know them, which in turn is supposed to explain certain political and economic patterns prevailing worldwide. I have dealt with this at some length in an earlier post, Races and Brains, but it may be worth doing a brief summary of why such conceptions are inane and damaging. Firstly, the intelligence measures used tend to be based on IQ tests, which are not actually tests of intelligence, but designed as tests for relative performance along a standard of mental ability in order to make differentiations in the mentally handicapped. Since they are ratios, the average is always 100; this is regardless of the performance of individuals or the entire population over time, which, as shown in my article, has gone up considerably over longer periods of time. It is therefore worthless as an absolute measure, let alone one of intelligence. Secondly, most of the tests done by the leading ‘scientific racist’, J.P. Rushton, were done on utterly spurious samples that had no relation whatever to the populations they were supposed to sample. But much more importantly, there is no intuitive reason to believe that intelligence or other such differences would inhere in racial distinctions in the first place. Our idea of who belongs to what race may seem at first glance to be immediate and obvious, but this is far from the case. As Noel Ignatiev has so well chronicled in his book How The Irish Became White, (Catholic) Irish in both the UK and the US were for the most part of the 19th century not considered to belong to the white race, the race of the Anglo (and French and German) peoples.(2) Neither, for that matter, were Finns and Lithuanians for a considerable amount of time. Only when these ‘races’ decided to participate in the suppression of the most oppressed ‘race’, the blacks, were they allowed to take up the lowest rungs on the ‘white’ racial ladder. Hence the Irish in particular have a nasty history in the US of racism against blacks, including the rebellion in New York City in 1863, during the Civil War, of conscripts refusing to fight to save black slaves (as they saw it). But indeed most people would agree that if it were solely a matter of judging the relative paleness of one’s skin color, the Irish and the Finns would be the most white of all the white race one could think of! Similarly, by such a paleness measure it is by no means clear why Italians and Greeks should be ‘white’ and yet, at times, light-skinned Arabs or Indians should not.

It has also often been argued that since there are physical differences that do seem to inhere in certain groups of people, this makes intelligence or other brain differences expressed in culture and society plausible. But this does not necessarily follow. Indeed certain subgroups of our species are more vulnerable to certain hereditary diseases than others. Indeed also certain subgroups have different physical structures, to some degree, than others; there is a clear overrepresentation of highly successful long-distance runners from Kenya and Ethiopia, and this may well have to do among other things with their seemingly relatively long legs and skinny build. But so what? When you think about it, it is not at all obvious why all manner of social and political and cultural conclusions should follow from this. After all, brown-eyed and blue-eyed people also have inherent physical differences in their genes, ones that are strongly hereditary; namely their eye color! Yet nobody has of yet divided up whole categories of races by this standard, or claimed that it must be ‘intuitive’ that if we differ by the color of our eyes, we probably differ by the content of our brains as well. It is this kind of ‘intuition’ that is created by racist patterns in our society and a history of oppression on the basis of racial categories, and it is this ‘intuition’ that we need to destroy and dispel. There is nothing intuitive about it: the Belgians, when they conquered Rwanda, split up the country into a ‘race’ of shepherds (Tutsi) and a ‘race’ of peasants (Hutus), on the kind of spurious physical characteristics so beloved of 19th century scientists. It hardly mattered whether one even was a shepherd or not. They then proceeded to place the Tutsi minority at the top of the hierarchy and the Hutus below (and the pygmy Twa people out of bounds entirely); the result is now familiar to all. Yet initially, there was virtually nothing in language, characteristics, or affiliation that differentiated them.(3) Even now, however, it has become a literal matter of life and death for the people of Rwanda whether or not they believe in such racial categories. This is how important it is to resist the logic of such ‘intuitions’.

For gender, too, many similar things have been argued. Eminent scientists like the Pinkers frère et soeur, Simon Baron-Cohen, and the economist Lawrence Summers have gotten into public controversy over claims as to innate differences between men and women’s brains that express themselves immediately in society. These differences would then conveniently explain why there is such underrepresentation of women in positions of power or in natural sciences (possibly overlapping categories in any case), and various folk psychological ideas, e.g. why men are bad at reading minds and women bad at reading maps. In the 1970s, such things would have been unequivocally seen as vulgarities from fossilized patriarchs by all educated people. Today, the situation is different, and this may have real consequences for the struggle against sexism. Cordelia Fine’s book is a long and in-depth chronicle of all the misrepresentations, shoddy studies, and inanities produced in order to find neurological origins for the differences between men and women. It goes too far to summarize the book entirely here; it is heartily recommended to read it instead. But I can summarize a number of the general themes of argument that again refute the apparent ‘intuition’ regarding these matters, even among the literati.

The first is that whatever the real neurological causes in the popular literature, and even some of the scientific literature, for the differences between men and women are deemed to be, they always conveniently happen to be those that suit whatever preconceived notions about gender roles people already have. The actual cause for the difference is sometimes seen in the size of the brain, then again in different hormonal quantities in utero, sometimes in the development of the frontal lobe, then again the parietal lobe, and so on and so forth; but invariably the scientific conclusion is inexorably that it follows from this that men are better at things that men dominate at that particular point in culture and time, and women good at whatever women’s roles are at the time. This itself varies as much as the supposed scientific explanations do. So while in 1900 science unfortunately proved that due to women’s underdeveloped brain size they would never be able to vote or hold intellectual positions without risk of real insanity, in 2011 science has unfortunately proved that due to different activity of the right premotor area of the brain, women are excellently suited to be professors of literature, but not at all to be engineers or do computer science. In the 1960s, of course, science knew just as strongly that women, with their aptitude for precision in secretarial work, would make great programmers (which were majority female at the time), but could not possibly be politicians. And so forth. This alone, completely aside from the technical merits of this or that study, should give any objective observer some serious pause. The intuition here, when understood rightly, is not that women are by genes or hormones inherently suited for this or that, but that researchers are looking for physical differences, any difference at all however small and insignificant, to hang on them the entirety of a very temporary and politically determined set of gender roles, as if they were some tiny coathanger holding a great many heavy robes of learning.

But what then of the observed lesser participation of women in such fields as maths and engineering, even with attempts made to recruit them? Here, the case is fairly simply answered, and in fact the parallels with the race-based argument are very strong. In both cases, it can first of all be demonstrably proven that the attempts to involve more women or minority ‘races’ into particular fields does work. While for example in the 1980s the ratio of boys to girls on the Study of Mathematically Precocious Youth was 13:1, by 2005, after a long period of attempts by the US government (and many others) to draw more women into math and similar subjects, the ratio had plummeted to 2.8:1.(4) This is still bad, but a pretty significant change for something considered so innate and non-malleable! But what then of the remainder? Indeed with such transformations, it should become less plausible that they could not be reduced further, but what if we have reached the supposedly hardwired biological limits of female ability or interest? Much of this is explained by the fact of what social psychologists call ‘priming’. Many studies have shown that when women are asked to take part in a test together with men, and they are told that the test tests some field traditionally associated with male aptitude, when they are first reminded in some way of their womanhood – whether this be by having them check a box for gender on the test, or by mentioning women do worse than men on the test usually, or simply by having them be the only woman in the room – they will do significantly worse on the test than a control group that is not reminded of gender at all.(5) The same obtains for race, where black children perform worse on tests when in some way reminded of their identity as black than a control group not so ‘primed’ for blackness.(6) In fact, sometimes such oppressed identity categories, when primed as something other than those categories (for example instead being reminded of being students at a high-ranking college), perform much better than a control group.

The same has also been shown to hold for expressions of interest: when a computer science course recruiting room was dressed up in traditional male, ‘geeky’ attributes, such as junk food, male-oriented magazines, and a Star Trek poster, men with high previous interest were much more likely to want to take part in the course than women with high previous interest; but for the control group, with much more neutral dressing up of the room, there was no gender difference.(7) There are countless more such studies one could name, and yet these rarely make it into popular journalism, due to the revival of patriarchal ideology. In other words, how inviting a society is towards certain traditionally oppressed identities or groups for a particular role makes literally all the difference in their ‘free choice’ to choose to participate or even how they perform in ‘neutral’ standardized tests of merit. It should be clear that the intuition should always be that major differences in performance or participation by traditionally oppressed groups are not in ‘inherent’ aspects of brain or gene, but in how we as a society choose to structure, consciously or by subtle and implicit signs, the way in which we assign people certain roles and test them for it (the IQ test being no exception at all). Yet this is not the way it is often portrayed in the current counterrevolutionary period.

But what do we make then of evolutionary psychology? Doesn’t this show that the brain is hardwired in a certain way from our caveman period? Don’t our genes tell us that women want to be nurturers seeking out high-status men for their offspring, and men are competitive and therefore suited for aggressive tasks and roles? Again, often an appeal is made to our ‘intuition’ in this regard, in that because these are patterns we see sometimes in our current society, they must be innate. Not only is this itself an invalid maneouvre, but the scientific ideas behind it also do not hold up. The problem with this manner of thinking is, in fact, that it vastly underestimates humanity as a species. The sheer diversity alone of different roles and norms regarding gender, and even of the number of genders, in different societies should make us think again about what roles and patterns of behavior are ‘natural’ and to be expected of people of a particular one. Secondly, we should think about the difference between genetics and gene expression. The brain is not, as it is sometimes portrayed, a set of hardwired functions that we add new hardwired patterns to as we grow and experience things, with the oldest ‘core’ bits being there from the start and undeviatingly forcing us into certain instinctive behavior. While the brain may well come pre-equipped to some extent with certain functions, those are generally of a broad and flexible behavioral kind. When you think about it in an evolutionary way, this makes much more sense than the caveman story: even if we knew what gender patterns were in the caveman period, which we do not and no evolutionary psychologist does either, evolution always favors flexibility and adaptability to changing circumstances over rigidity. What we find therefore, when it comes to gender, is that for example among some ape species the brain is ‘hardwired’ to do whatever it needs to do for parenting depending on the role the animal is given; so that within the same species, with the same genes and the same hormones, in some tribes of a particular primate species the men did nurture and parent the children, whereas in others they did not. When the alpha male had decided, the lower males in the hierarchy of course soon followed, fitting themselves to the new gender role patterns.(8) The ability was always there, but whether it was exercised depended on something perilously close to primate culture.

More generally, the brain itself is powerfully capable of adaptation and is constantly in a state of flux and change. Like our societies themselves consist of our interactions with each other and the changes we make in it through these interactions and the contradictions they produce, so too with our brains. Our brains are not Platonists, that have given functions frozen forever in time and space from the moment of our birth. Our brains are rather Aristotelians; the brain has capacities which it can learn, and which exist as potentials, realized at particular times under particular circumstances. It is well known in biology that when one part of the human brain is damaged, over time other parts of the brain take over its functionings; there seems to be barely any limit to the brain’s ability to do this, given it has enough time to recover and the damage is not lethal in the first instance. This puts paid powerfully to the idea of the ‘modular brain’, on which all evolutionary psychological explanations of our ‘inherent’ roles rely: namely the idea that the brain comes with pre-set modules where part A of the brain corresponds with the ability to do X or the instinct to desire Y. Generally, our ever-increasing knowledge in neuroscience of the way in which the very physical matter and structure of the brain constantly changes and is changed by our environment, to which it adapts itself through learning and experience, shows that the idea of the ‘innate’, ‘natural’ brain freely interacting with an artificial environment is far off the mark. As Bruce Wexler has stated:

In addition to having the longest period [of all species] during which brain growth is shaped by the environment, human beings also alter the environment that shapes their brains to a degree without precedent among animals.(…) It is this ability to shape the environment that in turn shapes our brains that has allowed human adaptability and capability to develop at a much faster rate than is possible through alteration of the genetic code itself. This transgenerational shaping of brain function through culture also means that processes that govern the evolution of societies and cultures have great influence on how our individual brains and minds work.

(9)

To understand this precisely, it is important to note here the difference between the truism that environment and genes interact, with the genetic predisposition towards this or that gender role (or racial role) being triggered by a particular external cue, and the real way in which the brain works. The former is completely compatible with the modular mind view of evolutionary psychology, since one can see it simply as an innate aspect of the brain that is triggered at a particular time in the developmental cycle; a time-bomb, as it were. Yet it is not so, because the brain is constantly sculpting and resculpting itself, focusing particular parts of the brain on particular tasks at a given time, and killing off neurons not used to replace them with others. As one undergoes new experiences, new roles and new challenges, the brain will as it were re-sculpt itself and give itself a new structure and a new ‘hardwiring’ to match these challenges. It is in this flexibility, the evolution of the brain within the individual during his or her lifetime, that the great power of our brains rests. As David Buller summarizes it:

Environmental inputs do not ‘trigger’ the addition or ‘appearance’ of various information-processing structures or ‘cue’ the development of their properties. Instead, during cortical development we find a diffuse proliferation of neural connections, which later brain activity, guided by interaction with the environment, sculpts into its ‘final’ form. Brain functions in infants are widely distributed across a variey of cortical areas, and as children mature some of these same functions become localized to particular structures. In this process, neurons compete with one another for the sort of information-processing structure they are going to be, and brain activity, guided by environmental inputs, determines which neurons win this competition(…). The processing roles of neurons are not laid down in advance by a ‘developmental program’ encoded in our genes.

(10) This is the real nature of our brains: not massive modularity, but neural plasticity. Our brains are not evolved to fulfill rigid roles from the Pleistocene, but are flexibly evolved to respond to new challenges that our labor and the structure of our societies throw up, and our individual brains have been adjusting themselves throughout the lifetimes of our generations to the changes that civilization has brought to them with little regard to the prejudices of patriarchal science. The environment has moulded, at all times moulds, and will continue to mould our brains as a response to the works of our own hand and mind. Or, as Friedrich Engels put it:

Mastery over nature began with the development of the hand, with labour, and widened man’s horizon at every new advance. He was continually discovering new, hitherto unknown properties in natural objects. On the other hand, the development of labour necessarily helped to bring the members of society closer together by increasing cases of mutual support and joint activity, and by making clear the advantage of this joint activity to each individual. In short, men in the making arrived at the point where they had something to say to each other. (…) First labour, after it and then with it speech – these were the two most essential stimuli under the influence of which the brain of the ape gradually changed into that of man, which, for all its similarity is far larger and more perfect. Hand in hand with the development of the brain went the development of its most immediate instruments – the senses. Just as the gradual development of speech is inevitably accompanied by a corresponding refinement of the organ of hearing, so the development of the brain as a whole is accompanied by a refinement of all the senses. The eagle sees much farther than man, but the human eye discerns considerably more in things than does the eye of the eagle. The dog has a far keener sense of smell than man, but it does not distinguish a hundredth part of the odours that for man are definite signs denoting different things. And the sense of touch, which the ape hardly possesses in its crudest initial form, has been developed only side by side with the development of the human hand itself, through the medium of labour.

(11)

What does all of this matter? It matters for a number of reasons, that must now be clearly outlined. The first is that, as shown by the evidence on the exclusionary and performance-inhibiting effects of certain conscious and non-conscious priming, the degree of racism and sexism institutionally and structurally present in our societies has a real, measurable effect on the equality or lack thereof of such traditionally oppressed groups. The second is that for us to overcome this, it is clearly necessary to reject the ‘intuitive’ and pseudoscientific appeals to neurology, evolutionary psychology, and IQ tests to justify exclusions and existing exclusionary patterns for such groups. With the long history of attempts at finding differences that make a difference, always against an already oppressed group and always in favor of an already favored group, there is no reason to believe that neurosexism and Evo Psych will fare any better in hindsight than did phrenology, the study of facial angles, the study of brain weights, and so forth. Thirdly, and this is perhaps the most important point, a true overcoming of these obstacles in society requires more than a mere culture of so-called political correctness, important as it is. ‘Political correctness’ is exactly that, politically correct: not being denigrating or exclusionary to oppressed groups, as said before, is measurably significant in terms of their performance and such behavior therefore not only is morally undesirable in a society of free and equal citizens, but also robs society of (some of) the potential and talents of often a majority of its members. This is in the interests of no-one.

But this of itself is not enough. The failed attempts at raising children in a ‘gender-free’ way, whereby the boys would inevitably sooner or later start associating with boy-associated toys and games etc., and girls with girl-associated ones, do not prove the inherent desires and abilities of boys and girls. What they prove is that gender roles are in fact so strongly ingrained in our society that children have been proven to be able to distinguish gender roles, even without explicit verbal indication of them by their parents or other adults, by their second birthday. However, when in experiments such gender indicators were reversed, children behaved according to the reverse roles; girls would play with pink hammers, boys with spiky Barbie dolls, and so forth.(12) It is therefore not enough to have an individualist, liberal approach to the matter. Neither individual good behavior, e.g. political correctness, nor individual attempts at parenting against the tide of gender roles will achieve much; it is precisely in the nature of these things, and what makes them so powerful that they seem innate, that such roles are constituted in and through society. What we require therefore is a societal approach that attempts to not just correct for existing racial and gender roles, but that at a social level overcomes the existence of such roles. Very often in science when we are presented with seemingly intractable dichotomies, the answer is not to choose to favor the one alternative over the other, but to recognize the contradictions inherent in both and to overcome the dichotomy by a synthesis at a higher level. This has sometimes been called dialectics, or to quote Engels again:

And, in fact, with every day that passes we are acquiring a better understanding of these laws and getting to perceive both the more immediate and the more remote consequences of our interference with the traditional course of nature. In particular, after the mighty advances made by the natural sciences in the present century, we are more than ever in a position to realise, and hence to control, also the more remote natural consequences of at least our day-to-day production activities. But the more this progresses the more will men not only feel but also know their oneness with nature, and the more impossible will become the senseless and unnatural idea of a contrast between mind and matter, man and nature, soul and body, such as arose after the decline of classical antiquity in Europe and obtained its highest elaboration in Christianity.

(13)

Whatever the case may be, this must be the right approach in the case of gender and race; until we abandon the new liberal counterrevolution and again take up the fight to abolish gender and race altogether, we will be faced with the virtually impossible task of having a few well-wishing individuals change a socio-cultural pattern as strong as the ages by their individual actions. We can do better than that. We need a revolution against race and gender, and against the fraud of patriarchy and racism masquerading as science.

1) Cordelia Fine, Delusions of Gender (London 2011).
2) Noel Ignatiev, How The Irish Became White (New York, NY 1995).
3) http://academic.udayton.edu/race/06hrights/GeoRegions/Africa/Rwanda01.htm
4) Fine, p. 181.
5) Fine, p. 30-31 and passim.
6) Christopher Jencks & Meredith Phillips, The Black-White Test Score Gap (New York, NY 1998), p. 419.
7) Fine, p. 46.
8) Fine, p. 126-128.
9) Bruce Wexler, Brain and Culture: Neurobiology, Ideology, and Social Change (Cambridge, MA 2006), p. 3-4.
10) David J. Buller & Valerie Gray Hardcastle, Adapting Minds: Evolutionary Psychology and the Persistent Quest for Human Nature (Cambridge, MA 2005), p. 135. Emphases in original removed.
11) Friedrich Engels, “The Part played by Labour in the Transition from Ape to Man”. http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1876/part-played-labour/index.htm
12) Fine, p. 226-231.
13) Engels, op. cit.

Abortion Post Reminder

24 March 2011
by

Just leaving a note that I’ve updated my abortion bills by state post for the first time in a few weeks, but it’s moved some way down the front page since then, making updates easy to miss.  The current states with bills this year are Alabama, Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Iowa, Nebraska, Ohio, South Dakota, Texas, and Virginia.  Lovely, huh?

Liberals are Dumb: Bill Clinton, “Obamabots”

14 March 2011

Howdy howdy, today we’ve got a doubleshot of LaD for you, featuring idiotic Obama apologists and Slick Willy himself.  I’ve been struggling to figure out a good post just for the O-bots for a while, but when I saw a post about Clinton on Sunday, I couldn’t resist throwing him in as well.  Let’s take a loot at the Obama supporters first.

Leading up to the 2010 elections, many progressives and even some moderate Democrats had been taking Obama to task for what they saw as political miscalculations, or outright terrible policy decisions.  Things like the abandonment of the public option during the healthcare act debate (and the decision not to pursue single-payer at all), his embrace of Bush-era stances on civil liberties, and a total lack of backbone when it comes to negotiating with Republicans were among the reasons why Obama and the rest of the Democratic leadership, especially the Blue Dogs, were getting their feet held to the fire by these (rather small) groups of progressive.  Glenn Greenwald and Jane Hamsher in particular were quite vociferous in their disdain for Obama’s politics and policies.

“Good for them!” you might say, right?  No political party should swear fealty to their leadership, and they should feel free to open fire with both barrels on their own party should they see that leadership abandoning the party’s ideals.  Well, as always, the Democratic Party was quick to disappoint.  The 2010 elections came, and Democrats took a shellacking. Was the Democrats Party’s response to look back, analyze their positions, and figure out why their base had been so demoralized?  No, of course not.  They adopted the time honored tradition in American politics when something doesn’t go your way: find a Dirty Fucking Hippie, and punchem in the face.

All that is the backdrop for this incredibly terrible post, where Obama supporters warn people to the left of them that if they stay home in 2012, the new Republican government will be all their fault.

http://www.balloon-juice.com/2011/03/10/liberals-its-time-to-stop-bitching-and-start-organizing-just-shut-up-and-get-to-work

I like comment number #374 quite a bit:

…anybody who makes the decision not to vote puts people like Rick Scott and Scott Walker in charge of making decisions. That does not hurt Obama ..it hurts US

Wisconsin Gubernatorial Election Results, 2010:

Walker , Scott   GOP   1,128,159   52%

Barrett , Tom   Dem   1,005,008  47%

Some folks want to blame the 123,152 people who didn’t turn out for Tom Barrett.  I think the bigger share of the blame should go to the 1,128,159 who voted for Scott Walker, but that’s just me.  The same argument was made in the 2000 presidential election, that liberal/leftist folks who voted for Nader were responsible for Gore “losing”.  Nader isn’t the reason why Bush won, Bush is.  But hey, let’s not let a little fact like that get in the way of Democrats throwing a hissy fit and punching hippies because they can’t figure out how to win elections.  If you want to engage in bandwagon politics, feel free, but fuck you for having the temerity to get mad at me because I don’t want to vote for this.

Oh yeah, I said something about Bill Clinton up there.  http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0311/51150.html

Former President Bill Clinton said Friday that delays in offshore oil and gas drilling permits are “ridiculous” at a time when the economy is still rebuilding, according to attendees at the IHS CERAWeek conference.

Forgive me the ad hominem, but you know what’s ridiculous, Bill?  NAFTA, DADT, and DOMA.  Shut the fuck up, you old fart.

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