I just had to ruin the rest of your day (or night if you’re 8 time zones east).
https://twitter.com/LabelFreeBrands/status/1343116320171122689… Read the restAll entries by this author
The specter of Karen persisted
Dec 27th, 2020 1:08 pm | By Ophelia BensonNumber 9473381 in the series “Why we really really need to call racist white women ‘Karens’.”
There was no direct connection between the “Central Park Karen” incident in New York City and the police killing of 46-year-old George Floyd in Minneapolis, Minnesota, beyond the coincidence of timing.
But let’s plant the idea anyway.
The specter of Karen persisted as Black Lives Matter protests and civil unrest spread around the country following Floyd’s murder and reckonings with racism began to roil institutions, toppling careers as well as statues. More than just an amusing meme, Karen allowed for a new kind of discourse about racism to gain credence in the US.
Actually it’s a very old kind of discourse: the misogynist kind.… Read the rest
Guest post: A patriarchal hierarchy of normative worth
Dec 27th, 2020 11:42 am | By Ophelia BensonOriginally a comment by Nullius in Verba on How things actually are in the world.
Shannon @ #20:
Let’s tackle these in reverse order.
3) Multi-gender social orders do not entail what you think they do. Whether we examine the Navajo or the Indian “genders”, what we find is not a system of biological classification, but instead a patriarchal hierarchy of normative worth stinking with misogyny and homophobia. The function of these systems is to exalt the masculine and crush the feminine. In those systems where the additional gender or genders are categories of male people, those genders are for males whose masculinity is perceived as deficient or corrupt in some way. Masculine deficiency can be such things as … Read the rest
Mental health
Dec 27th, 2020 11:38 am | By Ophelia BensonPandemics are not good for mental health.
The coronavirus crisis poses the greatest threat to mental health since the second world war, with the impact to be felt for years after the virus has been brought under control, the country’s leading psychiatrist has said.
Dr Adrian James, the president of the Royal College of Psychiatrists, said a combination of the disease, its social consequences, and the economic fallout were having a profound effect on mental health that would continue long after the epidemic is reined in.
Bad things are happening and they’re making people anxious and sad.
… Read the restModelling by the Centre for Mental Health forecasts that as many as 10 million people will need new or additional mental health
Objective evidence
Dec 27th, 2020 10:35 am | By Ophelia BensonLegal feminist gets to the core of it, as good legal minds are so skilled at doing.
The question I find interesting here isn’t really a legal question. It is this: what is it that’s special about treatment with puberty blockers that makes the Tavistock think that parental consent isn’t good enough? If a child needs a vaccination to reduce the risk of a potentially serious childhood disease, parental consent is good enough. If a child needs a filling to deal with tooth decay, or an extraction to deal with an overcrowded mouth, the same. If a child needs surgery to pin a broken bone, the same again.
I remember strongly dissenting to treatments of that kind as a … Read the rest
People don’t want to hear it
Dec 26th, 2020 5:42 pm | By Ophelia Benson… Read the restEven prior to the pandemic, the United States lagged other developed nations in child poverty levels. More than one out of every five American children lives in poverty, according to Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development data. As the pandemic continues to exacerbate the underlying crisis of American poverty, 45 percent of all children now live in households that have recently struggled with routine expenses, according to a report out this month from the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, or CBPP. Black and Latino households have been especially impacted by the economic starvation that the mishandling of this pandemic has wrought, and these populations were already disproportionately likely to grow up poor.
Street food
Dec 26th, 2020 4:41 pm | By Ophelia BensonArchaeologists in Pompeii have found an ancient fast food shop.
Known as a termopolium, Latin for hot drinks counter, the shop was discovered in the archaeological park’s Regio V site, which is not yet open the public, and unveiled on Saturday.
Traces of nearly 2,000-year-old food were found in some of the deep terra cotta jars containing hot food which the shop keeper lowered into a counter with circular holes.
Like the big metal pots you have on steam tables now.
The front of the counter was decorated with brightly coloured frescoes, some depicting animals that were part of the ingredients in the food sold, such as a chicken and two ducks hanging upside down.
The golden arches of … Read the rest
Stains on the CV
Dec 26th, 2020 12:11 pm | By Ophelia BensonWe at least have some hope that the people who worked for Trump won’t be able to land the usual hotshot jobs.
… Read the restCondoleezza Rice, former secretary of state under President George W Bush, is now director of the Hoover Institution at Stanford University in Palo Alto, California, which also gave safe harbour to Trump alumni Jim Mattis and HR McMaster.
White House press secretaries can prosper in the media or corporate world. Jay Carney, who was Barack Obama’s spokesman from 2011 to 2014, is a senior vice-president and head of public relations for Amazon. His successor, Josh Earnest, who had a spell as an NBC News and MSNBC analyst, is now senior vice-president and chief communications officer at United
Two every hour
Dec 26th, 2020 11:35 am | By Ophelia BensonLos Angeles is being hammered the way New York was last spring.
… Read the restLA county has faced an onslaught of terrifying Covid developments in recent days, including a surge in deaths, dire shortages of hospital resources, and fears that doctors will have to make agonizing choices to ration care.
…
Heading into the darkest holiday season some have ever endured, there were grim reminders across the LA region that the virus is spreading uncontrolled. The city’s mayor briefed the public while in quarantine after his daughter became infected. Hospitals were setting up triage tents. Residents waited in line for hours for Covid tests at Dodger stadium. The region recently ordered more body bags.
Outbreaks were afflicting grocery
Precisely at the time
Dec 26th, 2020 9:55 am | By Ophelia BensonAnd justify the ways of God to men…
Fuz Rana wrote, “The COVID-19 outbreak happened precisely at the time that advances in mRNA vaccines would allow for a rapid response” & that this is “a reflection of God’s providential timing and faithful provision to humanity.” You can read more here: https://t.co/MtwHdwc3hJ
— Hugh Ross (@RTB_HRoss) December 26, 2020
Ah yes, very excellent integration of science and faith. What a kind and careful and scientifically alert god it is, to wait to inflict a new virus on us until…um…there were plenty of ICUs to handle the cases? No. There were enough hospitals everywhere in the world to handle the cases? No. There were responsible governments everywhere in the world that knew … Read the rest
It was the patriotism
Dec 25th, 2020 5:34 pm | By Ophelia BensonHey about that whole pardons thing.
https://twitter.com/rauchway/status/1342191004883939328Funny how it’s always Republicans. Clinton’s pardon of Marc Rich was disgusting, but it didn’t open all the doors to criminality the way Ford’s and Bush’s did, let alone the way Trump’s are.
https://twitter.com/rauchway/status/1342191361827606529Upon discovering this secret aid, Congress outlawed it, in amendments attached to annual defense appropriations bills and therefore known after their sponsor as the Boland Amendments.
So haha, Reagan wasn’t having that.
https://twitter.com/rauchway/status/1342192119218282496 https://twitter.com/rauchway/status/1342192617153425413… Read the restNorth was convicted of obstruction instead; an appeals court threw out the conviction 2-1 because the jury might have been influenced by North’s televised testimony to Congress. Walsh prosecuted former national security adviser John Poindexter for similar offenses next, obtaining a conviction that was thrown
Time to go
Dec 25th, 2020 4:54 pm | By Ophelia BensonDonald Trump’s longtime banker at Deutsche Bank AG will be stepping down from the German lender, with the move coming as the bank looks for ways to cut its relations with the U.S. president.
Cut its relations and maybe get its money back? He’s stiffed them for millions.
Rosemary Vrablic, a managing director and senior banker in the lender’s wealth management division, recently handed in her resignation, which the bank accepted effective as of year-end, Deutsche Bank spokesman Dan Hunter said in an emailed statement.
According to the New York Times, which first reported Vrablic’s resignation, she arranged for the lender to grant hundreds of millions of dollars of loans to Trump’s company.
Well you can see why … Read the rest
It’s in the framing
Dec 25th, 2020 11:55 am | By Ophelia BensonMaya makes an important point about all this.
There is so much wrong with this article by Grace Lavery.
Jesse Singal gets at much of the detail
The biggest point for me though is captured in the framing by @ForeignPolicy
Their headline: https://t.co/ly9SSsgYXy pic.twitter.com/SGjbstvGps
— Maya Forstater (@MForstater) December 18, 2020
The case of Bell v Tavistock is a judicial review about the welfare and rights of children under 18 with gender dysphoria in England
– is it right that they can consent to take puberty blockers?
(I.e. the Q of Gillick competence)
— Maya Forstater (@MForstater) December 18, 2020
I’ll just quote the rest (with Twitter shortcuts and formatting removed).
… Read the restYou could argue that the court got it wrong;
Congratulations Dharavi
Dec 25th, 2020 11:00 am | By Ophelia BensonA bit of good news.
This is honestly a miracle. Stopping Covid-19 in the confines of Dharavi is literally one of the most difficult things in the world. Salute to all the doctors, health workers & administration. And most importantly, the people of Dharavi! https://t.co/KnbdfYZdHU
— Joy Bhattacharjya (@joybhattacharj) December 25, 2020
… Read the restDharavi slum colony in Mumbai did not report a single Covid-19 case in the last 24 hours.
This is the first time since April 1, when the first coronavirus case was reported in Dharavi, that Asia’s largest slum has reported no new case in a single day.
According to Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) data, so far Dharavi has reported 3,788 cases of which
True north
Dec 25th, 2020 6:23 am | By Ophelia BensonIf you've never seen a reindeer posing under an aurora before, today is your day. https://t.co/QGzgIW34oi pic.twitter.com/XxAtvAQHG0
— Meredith Frost (@MeredithFrost) December 24, 2020
It didn’t work
Dec 24th, 2020 3:57 pm | By Ophelia BensonI see I’m not the only one.
How predictably tacky.
Posting your own promo of doing charity work is really gross.
"Look daddy, I'm charitying."
— BrooklynDad_Defiant!☮️ (@mmpadellan) December 24, 2020
She’s shared it like 5 different times between yesterday and today. Truly an inspiration!
— Andrew Kimmel (@andrewkimmel) December 24, 2020
One that is posturing for ron desantis' job and a 2024 run at the whitehouse
— DmMartin (@DmMarti00585674) December 24, 2020
There are a lot more like that. A lot more.… Read the rest
Downhill
Dec 24th, 2020 11:14 am | By Ophelia BensonRemember: Pence thinks, and says, that it’s a bad thing that Democrats (or the left more broadly) “want to make poverty comfortable.”
Meanwhile…
Pence’s Colorado vacation — defying the national pandemic he was assigned to help thwart — is your tax dollars at work.
— Michael Beschloss (@BeschlossDC) December 24, 2020
Uncomfortable poverty for them, publicly funded flights to Vail for him. Lockdown for them, vacations in Vail for him.
54,000,000 Americans are going hungry right now and Mike Pence is scandalized by the very concept of "making poor people more comfortable." https://t.co/Ej1sCjAgC6
— Public Citizen (@Public_Citizen) December 22, 2020
Stripped
Dec 24th, 2020 10:58 am | By Ophelia BensonThe cops are waiting at the exit.
Come noon on 20 January 2021, Trump and his inner circle will be private citizens again. Devoid of legal immunity, stripped of the air of invincibility, they become fair game for federal and local law enforcement alike. The potential for prison hovers over them like the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come.
Cyrus Vance, Manhattan’s district attorney, is circling Trump and his business. Eric Trump has testified at a court-ordered deposition conducted by New York’s attorney general. As for federal prosecutors in the southern district of New York, they labeled Trump an unindicted co-conspirator in the case of Michael Cohen. The statute of limitations has not expired.
So the Trumps have to … Read the rest
Ivanka goes slumming
Dec 24th, 2020 10:26 am | By Ophelia BensonThe princess wants us to know that she really really cares about poor people.
— Ivanka Trump (@IvankaTrump) December 24, 2020
.@IvankaTrump helps load food into cars of drivers in need https://t.co/EaHaUeFohY
— CBS 58 News (@CBS58) December 23, 2020
https://twitter.com/IvankaTrump/status/1341769710480871425
Ivanka Trump Takes Part in South Florida Food Distribution Ahead of Christmas – NBC 6 South Florida https://t.co/MZlVemnU5g
— Ivanka Trump (@IvankaTrump) December 23, 2020
Remember that story her friend from school told about her (cough) lack of interest in poor people?
… Read the restIn the most scathing passage, Ohrstrom claimed that in their mid-20s she recommended to her friend the book Empire Falls, a Pulitzer prize-winning novel by Richard Russo about working-class characters in a small town in
Look beyond the numbers
Dec 24th, 2020 9:08 am | By Ophelia BensonThe latest gotcha – ooooooh Obama pardoned lots more.
The issue isn’t quantity – although lots of a bad thing is worse than a little, so quantity is part of the issue in that sense. But in the rest of the senses it isn’t.
What a Maroon directed us to Politifact from last February.
… Read the restThe latest round of clemency grants from President Donald Trump sparked new criticism that he was abusing his expansive pardon powers by skirting the normal review process and favoring white-collar criminals who were prominent and well-connected.
But two days after the Feb. 18 announcements, a Facebook post implied that it was Barack Obama, not Trump, who had abused the largely unchecked pardon power.
The post
