Kenyon Anti-Outsourcing Progress
Campus Worker Justice Tour Kicks Off At Kenyon College -- Have I mentioned recently how proud I am of our community and our students?
Kenyon Community Alliance on Facebook -- if you're not FB-afflicted, and would like to be kept up to date on their work, send me a message and I'll get it to Melanie; I've already asked her about a mailing list for non-FB alums to maintain contact.
Photo Album: Informational Picket 9-19-12

Heather Ault/4000 Years for Choice
Headed out early today to catch Heather Ault's discussion of contraception, art, and activism at the Dittrick Medical History Center. Good stuff; lots of chewy thought-provoking ideas about activism and messaging. Heather particularly specializes in positive and affirming framing; talking about our values, about what we're FOR, not just what we're AGAINST. Great ideas for future protest signs; anyone got some posterboard?

Also, I'm totally a Heather Ault fangirl, and have been for several years, so it made me quite happy to get to hear her in person.
4000 Years for Choice
More about events in Cleveland this weekend around Heather's visit
Oh, and she's on Facebook too

I'm not 100% sure, but I think these are the two prints I have at home from the My Abortion My Life event last year (they're in the attic with all my other decorations at the moment):
TREASURE THE MENSTRUAL EXTRACTOR
COOPERATE JANE COLLECTIVE
Mine are "framed" much like these: I love the simple yet evocative coat hanger, clips, and plexi approach

On FB and her site, Heather's also now working on pieces drawn from women's personal statements about their abortions and also statements from providers' experiences. This is one of many that I absolutely love:
"We need to support all women’s ability to decide to terminate a pregnancy and not demand that they tell us a story of victimhood in order to gain access to abortions." - Tracy Weitz
Yes, yes, yes, a thousand times yes.

Random
The other fun thing about the Heather Ault talk today was that it was held at Dittrick Medical History Center and Museum. It's not a huge place, but it's fascinating, and their History of Contraception exhibit is among the best in the country, if not THE best -- Heather spoke there because she came out to Cleveland from CA just to see it when she was doing her project research. Last time I saw it was back in 2009 when it opened; I'm happy to report it's just gotten bigger and better. More on that exhibit here:
This unique collection includes a wide range of contraception items, prototypes, and manufacturing devices. The Dittrick Medical History Center learned in August of 2004 that it would receive the Percy Skuy Collection on the History of Contraception. Mr. Skuy, past President of Ortho Pharmaceutical (Canada), assembled the world's most comprehensive collection of historical contraceptive devices, numbering over 650 artifacts. Since its arrival the collection has grown through donations and museum purchases to approximately 1100 artifacts. The Dittrick also maintains a collection of literature on the topic, including primary source material as well as historical writings.
The exhibit depicts the social and cultural climate that influenced birth control decisions in this country, says James Edmonson, chief curator at the Dittrick. The Dittrick staff with guest curator Jimmy Wilkinson Meyer from The College of Wooster designed the exhibit.

Broke Clevelanders, this is a FREE Museum!

Wake The Fuck Up (Obama ad with Samuel L. Jackson; I love it!)

Also, for those who have not yet experienced it, Jackson reading "Go the Fuck to Sleep" is magnificent

Books!
I've finished two via Audible recently:

House of Many Ways by Diana Wynne Jones, one of the greats of YA Fantasy (also, I highly recommend that site, FantasticFiction.Co.UK, if you're ever struggling to sort out series and their sequence). This is related to Howl's Moving Castle and Castle in the Air, although I wouldn't call it a direct sequel. Howl and Sophie are moderately important secondary characters, though.
Incidentally, Studio Ghibli, my favorite animation studio, has done a lovely version of Howl's Moving Castle that is, while different from the books, quite excellent.
Ummm... Getting back to the book I just finished, now that I'm done with the more general fangirling:
House of Many Ways was wonderful; gentle and funny with marvelously imperfect characters. Highly recommended! The Audible version had a wonderfully British reader, as appropriate, and I haven't a lick of complaint about its translation to audiobook.


Animals Make Us Human by Temple Grandin. I was already well familiar with her work and deeply impressed by it, but this is the first of her books that I've read. Read it. Read it, read it, read it. If you ever interact with or eat animals, if you ever go to a zoo, if you ever interact with other humans, even, read it. I love animals, I almost went into an animal-centric career, I've lived with multiple critters my entire life and read a good bit about behavior, and I still gained a whole new framework from this. Hugely valuable. Although her old-school pronoun use throughout the book drives me a bit up the wall, and there are moment of gender essentialism as well, these are minor detractions (along with what I hope was an editing error that replaced "mammal" with "animal" in the chapter I link below -- I totally headdesked at her, of all people, making that error) from a thoroughly amazing book.
The excellent first chapter, free on her website The section on "Blue Ribbon Emotions" (Seeking, Rage, Fear, and Panic are the life-long ones, and Lust, Care, and Play are the more intermittent) is well-worth reading even if you aren't interested enough to read the entire book. It's really at the heart of what she's teaching, and I found it incredibly helpful not just for better contextualizing animal behavior and reactions, but for doing the same with human behavior and reactions. Although she never explicitly makes the latter connection in the book, I couldn't help seeing it jump out at me over and over again, and I found it quite valuable (especially the writings about the relationship between frustration and rage).

The chapters on animal husbandry (Cows, Pigs, Chickens) can be rough, and may be too rough for some folks (because some really fucking horrific shit happens to animals in the bad side of the meat industry), but I find reading her writing about them somewhat reassuring, so I'd encourage getting through them. Because Temple is so involved in livestock work, and revolutionizing livestock care approaches, I found the horror of hearing more details about some of what I already knew was happening to be counterbalanced by hearing compassionate and ethical approaches to correcting these problems, and specifically in hearing it from someone who's actively working in the system to create that change, and has already accomplished it to a greater extent than just about any other modern human (when fucking PETA, of all groups, gives someone in the Livestock Industry a "Visionary" award ya gotta be impressed -- not because PETA doesn't suck monkey balls, but because it's so damned amazing for them to take positive notice of anyone doing animal rights work that isn't extremist). If you can do it, read those chapters. If you can't, the book will read just fine even if you skip those three.

Something I noticed on Audible while looking those up:
WhisperSync -- Hmmm. Fascinating. I've lamented frequently that I couldn't do this, so it's definitely a step in the right direction. Really not loving having to buy a book twice just to be able to do it, though. Boo.
FYI, [livejournal.com profile] defend_freedom is apparently an anti-choice activist, after a bit of digging beyond their primary LJ account front (oh, hey, now there's a big "post to post-abortive women" so I wouldn't exactly call it a front anymore). Just a heads up for anyone else being pestered, or anyone they try to friend under false pretenses.
Preterm Access Fund
Cleveland Pro Choice Escorts
-- Please support my awesome friends and co-escorts! (each team member raises funds separately, so I'm selfishly linking to my partner Chad's fundraising page, since I have to work that day)
More: WE’RE GOING BALLS-OUT FOR ABORTION FUNDING!


Same event, notice about the Central Ohio (Columbus) event:
OHIO BOWL-A-THON!
3rd Annual Women Have Options Bowl-a-Thon
Where: Sequoia Pro Bowl
5501 Sandalwood Blvd
Columbus, Ohio 43229
Sunday, April 29
1pm - 4pm

Help Strike Down Barriers to Abortion Access

Women Have Options (WHO/O) is having their 2012 Bowl-a-Thon until April 29, 2012 to help raise money for women who want abortions and need some financial help in order to get an abortion. WHO provides financial assistance to the majority of clinics in Ohio. Hey, if you're still mulling over the bit about bowling, just remember: One of the great things about a bowl-a-thon is that you don't even have to bowl! ;)

You can find out more info about the bowl-a-thon at the link below.

http://bowlathon.nnaf.org/nnafbowl/fundevent.asp?nnaffundid=21

If you don't live in Ohio, you can learn if there's a bowl-a-thon near you by going to bowlathon.nnaf.org and clicking on "Find Event."

Here's a link to WHO's website and below that their own words saying what they are about.

http://womenhaveoptions.org/

In WHO's own words:

Women Have Options (WHO/O) is Ohio’s statewide abortion fund. We believe that every woman should be able to make her own reproductive decisions—and we work to make that a reality in Ohio. We help low-income women afford their reproductive choices because justice demands that all women be able to make personal decisions about pregnancy and childbearing.
Support us as we fight for reproductive justice. Join us in protecting women’s lives and women’s futures.
Three cheers for my Dad! When I talked to my folks by phone today the first thing he asked me was whether I'd talked to the Komen folks yet. They've apparently already received a note from him that he'll be ceasing all support for them until their policy changes. I love my family.

lots of Komen/PP links back here )
Somewhat related, here are various sites you can use to evaluate non-profits, including some info about what percentage of their collections go to actual services, and what just maintain the organization itself.
Worth.com: The 10 Most Fiscally Responsible Nonprofit Organizations
Charity Navigator
Better Business Bureau: Charity Ratings and Resources
GuideStar
Network For Good

the trailer for a new documentary 'Pink Ribbons, Inc' exploring how SKF commodifies Breast Cancer in a way that alienates many survivors.
Breast cancer has become the poster child of corporate cause-related marketing campaigns. Countless women and men walk, bike, climb and shop for the cure. Each year, millions of dollars are raised in the name of breast cancer, but where does this money go and what does it actually achieve? Pink Ribbons, Inc. is a feature documentary that shows how the devastating reality of breast cancer, which marketing experts have labeled a "dream cause," becomes obfuscated by a shiny, pink story of success.
FYI, there's a very similarly titled film, 'Pink Ribbons: One Small Step' that is also about breast cancer, but is not a critique of pinkwashing, and is unrelated to 'Pink Ribbons, Inc'.
I'm trimming this down from the original email I received, so I can share it about as widely as possible. If you're interested, please drop me a comment or message, and I'll happily put you in touch!

Hi there, Cleveland feminists--

Hi everyone. I'm writing because Voices and Choices needs help. Right now, [there are four people involved, three locally, and two of the locals are leaving town soon.]

I reached out to you because you're a Cleveland feminist activist and I thought you might be interested in contributing to keeping Voices and Choices going. We've been on WRUW since 2000, and we want to remain on the air. As far as we know, we're the only pro-choice dedicated radio show in the country.
Ways you could help:

-participate the WRUW AP training program next fall and become an official V+C member. You'd be fully trained by January. If you're interested, I can let you know what this process entails. Basically you go to a couple meetings, intern on a radio show for a semester (it has to be music so you learn how to operate the board well), and then take a final test. We already have one person who is planning on APing and joining V+C but we'd love to have more.

-conduct feminist/pro-choice/LGBTQ/etc interviews with people you're interested in hearing from, either live in-studio, or pre-recorded (Nikki uses google voice to record phone interviews. She says it is super easy and that she'd be willing to explain) to help keep the show fresh with interviews and take some weight off the rest of us as far as generating content goes.

-pass the word along to others that may be interested

Please let me know if any of you are interested in helping. We really need some new blood to keep V+C alive. Otherwise, this summer might be our last.
It's really been a good "weekend", all things considered. Weather's been all over the place, so I'm flaring, but I had a meeting at Preterm on Wednesday, and then the My Abortion My Life speakout event Thursday evening. The speakout went wonderfully; good turnout and a lot of powerful stories. As usual for these kinds of events, it was also a chance to see almost everyone I know in Cleveland (well, not everyone, but the local feminist/activist community rocks my socks quite thoroughly). I've been struggling with a good deal of depression recently, and yesterday was the best I've been doing emotionally in ages, thanks to the combination of "doing stuff I believe in" and "seeing people I adore". It's the most alive I've felt in quite a while.

There was also a display of Heather Ault's 4000 Years For Choice project, with poster sales. I got "Treasure" and "Cooperate", and bought one for Preterm to hang. Sadly, I left my two in a friend's trunk on the way home, but I'll retrieve them soon and get them hung up in the house somewhere. I'm very psyched.

Afterward a group of us went out to Winking Lizard, and I excused myself to wander down to Mac's Backs. I've now picked up the entire Game of Thrones series. Still only about 2/3rd through the first book, almost exactly to the same point as the series at the moment. It's starting to vary more from the show as things develop, but it's still all differences or simplifications that make pretty good sense, so I'm not finding it bothersome.

Work continues to be busier than usual, and I'm even more behind on replies that usual. Also, Wombat is back? Wowza! I'm ridiculously happy to see it, although if it continues this active it may be a major factor in making me even more behind on my other internet communications! (Wombat was a bi women's mailing list I joined back in college, and which kept going for years, until we all got sucked into LJ -- it's experiencing a new life as a Facebook group now). Although many wombats are still here, and among my longest-term friends on LJ (or online anywhere), it's different to see it resurrected as a group. Cheering.

Congress May Put Restrictions On Teaching Doctors To Perform Abortions -- *rage*

Man Arrested, Charged with Intent to Murder Abortion Providers in Wisconsin

The Lesser-Known Side of Dr. George Tiller: A Physician Colleague Speaks on the Second Anniversary of His Murder

Japanese-Americans not surprised by internment lies

Sudan: 150,000 flee Abyei clash, says southern minister

Scientists aiming their gene sequencers at commercial seafood are discovering rampant labeling fraud in supermarket coolers and restaurant tables: cheap fish is often substituted for expensive fillets, and overfished species are passed off as fish whose numbers are plentiful.

Brazil sex education material suspended by President (discussion thread is interesting)

The Racialization of Mental Illness

Six seismologists and a government official in Italy are being tried for failing to warn the public before an earthquake in 2009

This community really makes me wish I read russian

SlutWalks v. Ho Strolls

What would a teaspoonful of neutron star do to you?

10 Dirt-Cheap Aliens Who Still Look Awesome

Interesting but deceptively-titled article on water on the moon

Caffeine-eating bacteria discovered

Music Made from the Bones of Antarctica

What serial killers and epidemics have in common

How a satellite's infrared scanner discovered the lost Egyptian pyramids

Reindeer are the only mammals that can see ultraviolet light

According to new research in Science, babies as young as 12-months old have sophisticated "common sense" abilities, and are able to make predictions about a complex scenario.

Three years of supernova explosions become beautiful music

Important physics breakthrough solves the mystery of how dogs drink

Ten Strange Animal Hybrids

On a star forming in the constellation of Orion, it's raining crystals

Wearing sunglasses can save you from migraines -- My high-end polarized sunglasses have been an absolute lifesaver. Make sure they wrap around well enough to block light from sneaking in the sides, too.

More quack inventions from the early days of electricity

After 113 years in hiding, the red crested tree rat (Santamartamys rufodorsalis) has appeared once again and posed for its first ever photographs.

Sulfur volcanoes erupt on Jupiter's moon Io

The secret war between beetles and frogs

Your next tupperware set could be made with bacteria

Why this weird little fish is one of the top ten species discovered last year

10 reasons to bow down before your shark overlords

Another Icelandic volcano blots out the sky

Mummies reveal that ancient irrigation created modern plague

Netherlands amusement park unveils €30 million steampunk dragon show

Why the black hole at the center of our galaxy is spinning faster and faster

Watch a bridge kiss itself, and see a building frozen in the process of exploding

Feuding white dwarf stars have been destroying each other for millions of years

This is the new "Space Shuttle"

Llama poop was the secret to the success of the Inca civilization

This is the most important star in the universe

A brief history of bears fighting lions

How skillful advertisers can word-jack your brain

Richard A. Kirk is an artist inspired by the close-up view in his backyard garden - especially fungi, plants, insects, and birds. His intricate pieces are filled with so much that each time you look, you come away with something new.

The story behind the world's oldest museum, built by a Babylonian princess 2,500 years ago

Is it possible we've found the first white hole?

Monkeys experience regret over a game of rock-paper-scissors

The scientific reason why the honey badger doesn't have to give a s**t

Why we need volcanoes to build a high-tech society

Everybody keeps saying the Spider-Man musical is finally on track, but meanwhile there's a new alternative: Stephen King has teamed up with country-rocker John Mellencamp to create The Ghost Brothers of Darkland County, a play about ghosts and sibling rivalry.

The scientist who pretended to be a parrot

NASA probe will bring back pieces of an asteroid

Artist Christopher Burdett just posted pictures of three dragons he designed for the Game of Thrones card game, giving us something to tide us over until A Dance With Dragons.

Liquid crystals can detect bacterial infections

Yar! The Physics of Sailing, for Pirates

Deep inside the biggest storm we've ever seen on Saturn

Zebrafish reveal all the ingredients needed to regenerate a limb

10 Performances that Elevated Fantasy Movies to Classic Status

New ThunderCats trailer unleashes kitty karate and an epic cat choral anthem!

How MRIs work

Why you are mesmerized by people you've heard bad things about

A bit of hydrogen could save you from oxygen poisoning

The smell that caused ancient mammals' brains to double in size

Experiment confirms that microbes swim slower in saliva

Voluntary amputees opt for bionic hands over real ones (significantly exaggerated title -- this is referencing people whose hands no longer function)

Newly-discovered galactic arm means the Milky Way is more warped than we thought

A Gorgeous Dissection of Mermaid Anatomy

Why particles can travel up waterfalls, cheating gravity and common decency

Astronomer discovers strange new planets that don't orbit stars

Chart reveals what natural disaster is most likely to kill you in America

Badass Women of the Pulp Era

Can you guess what these terrifying 19th century inventions were used for?

The Earth's core melts and freezes all at the same time

3500-year-old mummy of an Egyptian princess reveals the first known case of coronary artery disease

The science behind a snake's poison bite, and why it's related to ketchup

The Willy Wonka cast reunites for the film's 40 Year anniversary

Massive study offers more evidence that environment causes asthma

Strange mountain-climbing crabs ruled Hawaii over 1000 years ago

A tomb in Florence could hold the remains of the model who sat for Leonardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa some 500 years ago.

How Self-Control Works, and How to Boost Your Willpower by Better Understanding It -- This is one of my biggest weaknesses.

NASA released an absolutely stunning gallery of real-world locations where alien life forms might like to spend some time if they visited. These are the weird, extreme places where astrobiologists have studied unusual life forms and conditions.

How To Have Sex With a Mermaid
Related: Mer-physics: How real-life mermaids would experience the world

Why tarantulas poop silk out of their feet

Ancient animals relied on "oxygen oases" to breathe Earth's early atmosphere

Indie auteur Jim Jarmusch is directing a vampire flick

The motherlode of insights into science fiction books

First Footage from Torchwood: Miracle Day! Plus will Eliza Dushku star in a Torchwood spinoff?

The Beginning and the End of Doctor Who's "UNIT Family" Era

This character map by NathanTheNerd breaks down the various escapades of the modern Whoverse going up to this season. Be sure to consult the key on the left to determine which companion is along for the (chronologically wacky) ride.

Immigrants for Sale

The TNG Rewatch continues with "Lonely Among Us" as we get the genesis of Data's Sherlock Holmes fetish, the first Enterprise-D crewmember to die on screen, and -- well, honestly, not a whole helluva lot else.

Chelsea Handler Reveals Abortion At 16, Rips Real Housewives -- Although I'm not normally a big fan of hers, I have a huge amount of respect for anyone who speaks publicly about their abortion experiences.

Wisconsin Union Law Struck Down By County Circuit Judge

Egypt to open border crossing at Rafah

Moscow Pride to go ahead despite ban

2011 Global Peace Index Results

Giant water bug photographed devouring baby turtle, snakes

SYDNEY: A 22-year-old Australian university student has solved a problem which has puzzled astrophysicists for decades, discovering part of the so-called "missing mass" of the universe during her summer break.
The 70 Best Walk For Choice Signs From Across The Country

Plotting To Bomb Abortion Clinic Gets Man 30 Month Sentence

Is Wisconsin The New Front In The War Against Women?

In a remarkable streak of coffee and research I managed to discover some hidden gems about this Abby Johnson lady – you know, the girl who defected to the conservative anti-choice movement.

OH Anti-Choice Activists Will Present ‘Youngest’ Witness ‘Ever’ To Testify For Abortion Bill: A Fetus

Pope urges doctors to protect women from abortion

Arizona House approves 2 abortion bills affecting Planned Parenthood's services, funding

Influential Conservative Media Owner Thinks GOP Is 'Dead Wrong' in Efforts to Defund Planned Parenthood

The G.O.P.’s Abandoned Babies

More Evidence That Abortions Don't Cause Depression

Revealed: The Group Behind the Bills that Could Legalize Killing Abortion Providers

One of Glenn Beck's catastrophically clueless listeners admits he's not sure how to argue why women who are pregnant as the result of rape should be forced to carry that pregnancy to term and give birth to their rapist's baby.
Beck's guest, anti-choicer Lila Rose, helpfully explains that women who terminate pregnancies caused by rape are cowards, while Beck adds that they are eugenicists.


The Cost of Unconstitutional Abortion Legislation

National Partnership for Women & Families is doing a "six words for Choice" campaign on their facebook

Mandatory Ultrasounds? Why Not Mandatory Vasectomies?

Georgia Plays Front-Runner on Anti-Choice Agenda

Dr. Gosnell Is Not Me

Gosnell may face death penalty

Why I left my children

Cheers and Jeers: Nepal OKs Abortion; Ongoing War on Women's Health

Ohio: Bill says no abortion if there's a heartbeat
House considers bill that would outlaw abortions after just six or seven weeks


NYC Council Passes Bill for Greater Transparency for CPCs

Thousands Gather in New York to Protest War on Women's Health

Bill requiring pre-abortion sonograms approved in Texas House

Planned Parenthood Aims Campaign Against Funding Cuts at Senate

Nebraska Considers Bill Allowing Pregnant Woman, Third Party To Protect Fetus With Force

Blogs Comment on House Action To Defund Planned Parenthood, 'Conscience' Rules

Providing Year's Worth of Birth Control Pills Lowers Unintended Pregnancies, Study Shows

Pope Advises Doctors To Discourage Abortion

New York City Council Passes Regulatory Bill for Crisis Pregnancy Centers

Controversial Antiabortion Billboard Removed From New York City Neighborhood

Videos Focus on Antiabortion Legislation in Wyo., Violence Against Abortion Providers

South Dakota Senate Passes Bill Requiring 72 Hour Wait Before Abortion

(VIDEO) Look Who’s “Talking” Now: A Fetus Is Scheduled to Testify in Front of Lawmakers in Ohio

Walker Walks All Over Rights of Wisconsin Women

Rachel's Sabbath and the Far Right's Attack on Women

Memo to the Far Right: You Can't Have it Both Ways

Planned Parenthood: Not Goldman Sachs

Fighting Black Anti-Choice Campaigns: Trust Black Women

Why We Speak Out For Family Planning

Bachmann wants government out of personal family choices…what the what?

One More in a Long Line of Attacks on Women's Access to Health Care

The New Morality: Kill the Woman, Save the Fetus

Morning Roundup: Nebraska Rejects Insurance Coverage of Abortion for Rape and Incest Victims

(VIDEO) Who Do You Trust? Cute Bunnies Or a Woman?

Mother Jones profiles the group behind the “justifiable homicide” bills that would legalize the murder of abortion providers (and potentially women).
Blog for International Women’s Day 2011 is coming up.
Looks like anti-choicers pulled a google bomb making “abortion” the number one result when you search for the word, “murder.” Thankfully, it’s been removed.
Why the fuck does Dr. Phil still have a job? (Via.)
An anti-choice billboard targeting the black community has shown up in LA too.


Free mobile ultrasounds for pregnant women come with a hidden price: anti-abortion agenda

Ultrasound images of two fetuses shown to lawmakers during 'heartbeat bill' hearing

Why the Right Attacked Unions, ACORN and Planned Parenthood -- Institutions That Help Bridge Politics and Daily Life

It's no coincidence that bills to expand justifiable homicide laws have popped up in South Dakota, Nebraska, and Iowa. Meet the group that launched the effort.

Obama Administration Rescinds Controversial Bush "Conscience Clause"

Doctors Say Women Should Know That Abortion Is Safer Than Childbirth

South Dakota Bill Would Mandate Religious Counseling Prior To Abortion

GOP War on Women: If You Have Sex, Republicans Want to Pry In Your Private Parts

How the Right Launched a Coordinated, All-Fronts Attack on Planned Parenthood.

Nebraska Resurrects "Justifiable Homicide" Abortion Bill
The War on Women

The War on Reproductive Rights: A Recap

Women’s ENews Cheers and Jeers includes lots of interesting links, and an entire section on reproductive rights legislation

New Virginia Regulations Could Shut Down Most Abortion Clinics

Response to Miscarriage Investigation Bill: "I Submit My Used Tampon as Evidence"

Virginia's Abortion Crackdown



Rep Moore Tells Anti-Choice GOP Where to Shove Black Genocide Lie

Over Half a Million People Sign On to Oppose Defunding PPFA

Fla. Mayoral Candidate Jokes About Bombing Abortion Clinic

Thai Police Free Women From Baby-Breeding Ring

Nebraska "Justifiable Homicide" Bill Allows ANYONE to Murder an Abortion Provider -- Good maude, another one.

Violent Rhetoric Has Consequences—Just Ask Abortion Providers -- an older article, but worthwhile

Racist Pro-Life Billboard Sparks Outrage in New York

Anti-Abortion Georgia Lawmaker Proposes Law That Would Criminalize Miscarriages -- lots of useful context in this one.

Two More States Introduce Anti-Abortion Bills

New York’s 9th District Representative, Democrat Anthony Weiner, reacts to a Republican-sponsored bill that would redefine the definition of rape in an attempt to reduce government funding of abortion.

Maddow : What's NOT the matter with Kansas -- A writeup by a fan who was at her Kansas filming, along with a run-down of the issues discussed.

Mom Wants Child's Image Gone from Anti-Abortion Billboard

To Celebrate Black History Month, Anti-Abortion Group Buys Offensive Billboard in Soho

House committee approves sonogram bill for floor debate And Okla. Panel Passes Fetal Pain Anti-Abortion Measure

Oh Toto! Rachel Maddow has come to Kansas.

Missouri State Senate propose bill with tougher late-term abortion restrictions

Ga. Law Could Give Death Penalty for Miscarriages

us: rep. gwen moore (d-wi) on cutting funding to planned parenthood

Sen. Franken Stands Up For Planned Parenthood [VIDEO]


If Georgia criminalizes miscarriage, will used tampons become evidence?

War on Women's Health

Your Regular But Unscheduled Reminder That Representative Anthony Weiner Rules

NE Follows SD's Lead, Proposes Bill That Would Make the Murder of an Abortion Provider a "Justifiable Homicide"

Poor Women Pay the Price in the Right’s War on Women’s Health

The Republicans’ War On Women

Let Me Tell You A Story

ONTD_F reacts to racist anti-abortion billboard

Jumping on the Morally Reprobate Bandwagon

Wow John Boehner, wow

Breaking: Racist anti-choice SoHo billboard will be taken down

The Pence Amendment isn’t really about ca$h money

Many feministing abortion-related links, and an amusing comic

Men’s stake in reproductive justice

New study shows over-the-counter birth control improves usage
Brilliant Idea: Donate to Planned Parenthood, and Have Thank You Note Sent to Anti-Choice Congressman

Events Responding to House’s Attacks on Planned Parenthood

Georgia Legislator Wants To Investigate Miscarriages, Create Uterus Police
Life Imitates Art, and Not in a Good Way

Quoted: Planned Parenthood’s Possible Defunding and Black Women

Bill Would Require Kan. Babies To Undego Paternity Test

Why I Support Planned Parenthood, Margaret Sanger Notwithstanding
• Citizen Dreamer’s comment really encapsulates my feelings about Sanger and the use of her offensively-in-line-with-her-times attitudes: Funny that people always bring up Sanger's connections to eugenicists. We don't boycott Ford because of Henry's support of eugenics. We never mentioned that Prescott Bush's Wall Street partner funded the Eugenics Record Office in Cold Springs Harbor. I never hear discussion of Winston Churchill's proposal that the poor and "otherwise unfit" be sterilized.

But it is always the cudgel used against women's access to reproductive rights.

This conflation is politico-moral entrepreneurship at its most basic:
--there is a hot topic with historical conflict;
--media magnification of the division;
--there is a kernel of truth in the allegiances that Sanger made (surely, she could not have gotten support from the Catholic Church--she went where the support was: eugenicist foundations);
--politico-moral entrepreneurs (people who make their living off of this controversy);
--professional interest groups;
--the association of birth control with some "dangerous class" of people (for at least one interest group, that "dangerous class" would include women who want to control their reproductive lives);
--scapegoating Sanger and Planned Parenthood for a variety of social problems.

This attack on Sanger is a red herring.


Birth Control for Men? 3 Promising Advances -- No mention of the research into reversible vasectomies?

Will Draconian South Dakota Force Women to Visit Religious Pregnancy Centers Before Abortions?
California congresswoman: a vendetta against Planned Parenthood has nothing to do with creating jobs or reducing the deficit
And a comment that includes more links and history: What sickens me is that Rep Speier is not the first woman to be "self-outed" as the recipient of an abortion in an effort to bring the point home. It's gotten to the point where our female politicians are being forced to disclose their medical histories to back their beliefs!

In Hour-Long Attack On Planned Parenthood, Beck Inexcusably Ignores Key Fact
You know what's especially extra-amazingly offensive about this? Aside from all the lies in general? He starts out with what seems to be intended to be a mostly rhetorical question: BECK: If I told you there were people in Afghanistan under the noses of our troops that were assisting mullahs that were keeping underaged girls in a slave trade and our troops were not reporting it and they were watching it go on, they were in fact assisting or advising the pimps, would you say those troops need to come home and be court-martialed? Those troops should not be serving us?
Really? REALLY? That's the example you're going to use? Because for once, I'll happily say Beck's right. He's right. We should go after anyone who does anything like that. LIKE DYNCORP. LIKE THE CONTRACTORS WE PAY. Somehow he seems to have missed that bit of actual news in his hunt to destroy scary left-wing purveyors of contraceptives, though. Nevermind that PP reported the scum to the FBI, and these contractors did nothing of the sort, and instead actively aided and abetted child prostitution. *rage*

Why I didn't have an abortion. -- Also, it's worth noting that the comment discussion clarifies further in useful ways. This reflects my story, too. My thoughts after the cut.

I'm fortunate and privileged and lucky that I haven't had to face this decision, at least yet (still 15-20 years to go, most likely). I had excellent and open sex ed from both family and school from a grade-school age (5th grade at a private school was head and shoulders above anything I received after that in public schools, but it laid the crucial groundwork, along with actively available info from my parents).

Although I didn't know of access to low-cost or free contraceptives when I first became sexually active, just after high school graduation, I did have the knowledge and confidence (thanks Mom!), to go to the pharmacy with my boyfriend to go condom-shopping. I also had the disposable income to buy them without worry. As soon as I got to college that fall, I had access to discounted contraceptives ($5/pack), and free condoms all over the place. I made use of both, got in the habit early of just always having protected sex, always using a backup method.

The one time I had a condom break when I wasn't using backup hormonal contraception, I was educated enough (thanks to a Female Sexuality class at college) to know about Emergency Contraception years before it was widely advertised information. I had access to a doctor I knew and trusted that I could immediately get ahold of for a scrip. As a favor, even though I had already graduated from college at that point, he only charged me college rates -- saw me free, and discounted the scrip (which was crucial, since I was broke).

From college on I've had uninterrupted health insurance for almost 20 years. Because I don't work for one of the many institutions that refuse to cover them (like the catholic hospital in our network), I had and have access to prescription coverage for the costs of my contraceptives, with relatively reasonable copays that I've generally been able to easily afford. My insurance is good enough that my preferred forms and brands have so far always been covered. I had the luxury of shopping around for a gyn I really trust and love, with whom I can easily have necessary conversations. Although I struggled some to find a good method, I've found options that work well with my body.

I have partners who share responsibility and, at times, costs of contraceptives. I have and have had partners who treat me and my body with respect and care. I've never been sexually assaulted in a way that created a risk of pregnancy. Lots of my sex over the years hasn't involved any risk of pregnancy at all.

All those advantages, and I've still had moments of panic and uncertainty, I'm still always aware of the risk, of the fact that "never me" only lasts until it doesn't. And despite the fact that so far it hasn't been me, abortion has been a part of my life since I was 16, since the first of many, many times the necessity or possibility has arisen amongst my friends and chosen family. When we talk about it, we're talking about our lives, not about some dry political debate. We're imagining what would happen if, what could've happened, we're applying the concepts to our lives. Because that's what it's about. It's about our lives. It's about what would've happened when my friends and I were 16 if Michigan had parental consent laws back then ("stern lecture" wasn't exactly on the list of possible responses in this situation). It's about what would've happened if my friends hadn't had the options they needed throughout the years. It's about the difference between choosing to have a child and being forced to carry one.

I get livid when folks imply that I just take this issue too seriously; it's at the core of my ability to choose the course of my life on the most intense and intimate level. And you know what's kind of interesting? When you do talk about it, when you are public about it, people talk to you. People who need an ear, or a referral, or who just know you're safe to share with. And sharing can be remarkably powerful, sometimes.

Also, as a note for my local friends, please be aware that I try to always keep a spare supply of condoms (including latex-free polyisoprene), emergency contraception, and pregnancy tests. If you are unable to get what you need elsewhere, either because of cost or access, be aware you're always welcome here.

Abortion rights activist Frances Kissling on why the movement is stuck in the past -- I disagree with her pretty thoroughly, especially her seemingly willful disregard for the fact that we _already_ make most of the distinctions she’s talking about (post-viability/third trimester requires medical/psychiatric need already, dammit! [also, since that cuts off unless you’re a member, have some wikigoodness; important note: the “reasons” listed is for 16 weeks and up, not for post-viability situations approximately two months beyond that point]). She’s got a long history with the movement, but the last few articles I’ve seen from her have gotten more and more baffling. I don’t really know what to make of it, but I do love watching the commenters tear this article apart in the meantime.

Texas to women: we'll manipulate you into keeping that fetus!

Nancy Pelosi's extremely blunt assessments of the true motives of Republicans are why her supporters love her and her enemies hate her with equal passion, and on a conference call with bloggers just now, she unleashed a slashing attack on the House GOP's new anti-abortion push that may churn up emotions on both sides.

Walk for Choice 2011

Rachel does it again. -- per a commenter: The segment that followed featured two Republican members of the Wyoming state legislature who were objecting to the radical abortion bill that was in debate... one of whom shared her personal story of having an abortion, and why the state needed to GTFO, from a purely libertarian point of view. It was pretty emotional and amazing.

On Labor
The first half or so is culled from previous posts, the second half is new links.

House votes to block all funding from Planned Parenthood -- More on the topic. Why, yes, I am ragingly furious, why do you ask?

Representatives stand up for Planned Parenthood

Raising Women’s Voices Speaks out Against HR3

The Good News and The Bad News

Breaking: South Dakota shelves bill that would have legitimated murder of abortion providers

Will Draconian South Dakota Force Women to Visit Religious Pregnancy Centers Before Abortions?

Texas Senate passes bill requiring pre-abortion ultrasound

Expert's Take: International Family Planning Funding Under Threat of Elimination

It seems our lovely government is fine with supporting birth control for wild horses, but not for women.

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy



Attacks on Planned Parenthood are attacks on American women

The House voted to bar Planned Parenthood from federal funding. They cut funding for HIV tests, cancer screenings, birth control, and more, putting millions of women and families at risk. We can't let it go unanswered. It's time for you and me to stand with Planned Parenthood. Sign the open letter to the reps who voted for this bill — and to the senators who still have a chance to stop it. -- We lost ACORN through tactics every bit as transparent. These are critical services for men and women all over the country. Many of you have benefited from them (or from Title X in general, if you've ever benefited from discounted contraception). Your friends, your neighbors, and your kids need these services available.

Jackie Speier: 5 Facts About the Congresswoman Who Discussed Her Abortion [VIDEO]
More: Planned Parenthood funding debate gets personal as lawmaker tells of her abortion

New Stuff:
Heath Shuler Wants to Permanently Stop Debating Abortion Rights

Kansas, Florida Jump on "Fetal Pain" Bandwagon

Obama Administration Repeals Portions of Bush "Provider Conscience Rules"

Meet a Woman Who the Forced Childbirth Movement Would Have Happily Killed

(VIDEO) Must See Video of Cong. Jackie Speier's Powerful Rebuke to Cong. Chris Smith on Abortion

Survey Indicates "Reproductive Coercion" Prevalent
More: Men Who Physically, Emotionally Abuse Women May Also Sabotage Birth Control

South Dakota Shelves "Justifiable Homicide" Measure

Teva Pharmaceuticals Requests FDA Remove Age Restrictions for Non-Prescription Plan B Pill
Blogs Comment on National Antiabortion Legislation, Title X Funding, CPCs

Why Do We Care What Justin Bieber Thinks About Abortion?

Could Self-Induced Abortions Be On the Rise?

A Match Made in Heaven? Abby Johnson Joins Live Action (I’d heard plenty about her previously, but the linked story is pretty fascinating, and covers a lot of interesting and questionable issues at hand)

The South Dakota Coathanger Brigade

It’s time to fucking rally.

Moving Beyond “Pro-Life” & “Pro-Choice”

Texas State Senator Dan Patrick Interviewed On Forced Abortion Sonograms

New wave of anti-abortion bills is about punishing women – not about saving babies

Nancy Pelosi brings it: “We have to make this issue too hot to handle.”

Let's Tax Abortions!

The Kansas judge who last week barred a doctor from providing abortion services in her Wichita office has, in the past, supported anti-abortion causes, according to state election records.
Every year the extent to which women's choices are controlled and limited is a more intense and horrifying battle. And in other ways, every year it's the same old slog; having to spend so much energy just struggling to maintain the status quo against the chip, chip, chip at every edge. This year is so far beyond freaky I don't even know what to say.

Rachel knocks in out of the park on domestic terrorism:

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy



You can practice women's health, but you can't do it here... (warning, RAGE inducing) -- This includes a text transcript of the interview

The other day I called Dr. Means' office to express my support. Please keep in mind the folks working to protect your rights are human, and tired, and stressed, and sometimes it means a lot to hear that they're helping. If you're not a phone person, an email or postcard is also awesome. Please do not send sealed letters or packages; the terrorism risks make these an additional stress to process for many offices.

The
National Day of Appreciation for Abortion Providers
is coming up in March, but really, there's never a bad day to pick up a phone and call and say "thanks for being there".

Ohio's race to trample the right to choose: Connie Schultz

Ohio Republican lawmakers introduce slew of bills aimed at restricting access to abortions

Holistic birthing delivers happy families: Alternative Paths -- I debated whether to put this here, with all the unrelentingly bad news, or in my regular linketies. Thing is, it's crucially tied up with abortion rights; it's part of a whole spectrum of decisions women have to make through the course of a pregnancy, and it's part of that same spectrum of decisions that've been denied to women at various points, to the detriment of them and their families.

South Dakota Moves To Legalize Killing Abortion Providers
A bill under consideration in the Mount Rushmore State would make preventing harm to a fetus a "justifiable homicide" in many cases
-- This is huge news right now, and I want to be clear about what the current claim is. First of all, it's not transparently allowing murder of doctors; the legislator who introduced it is hand-waving about how legal procedures would, of course, be protected. What it does do is set up the possibility of an anti-abortion terrorist deciding to try to take it to the courts to defend themselves; this is exactly the argument and wording they've been using for years, and if you look at who's backing this bill, it's obvious the political motivations at work, and that it will be encouragement for those already extreme enough to consider a violent attack. As nice as it sounds, superficially, to add penalties for harming a fetus in the commission of a crime (which is what this is ideologically related to), it's important to understand how this has been used, and the other realistic options for accomplishing the "same" goals (that is, if the goals are actually the stated goals, and not part of a longer-term anti-abortion strategy). This has also come up in terms of WIC provision in a state or two, and in terms of "Laci and Conner’s Law". It's entirely possibly to instead legislate an increased penalty for injuring a pregnant woman, because you have taken something additional from her (at minimum, her right to make decisions about that pregnancy). It is not necessary to define fetuses as legal entities, and it's really risky in the longer-term.
Overview of "fetal homicide" laws

More: The South Dakota Bill That Could Legitimize Murder of Abortion Providers

What Happens to Washington State Women if Title X Falls?

New MoveOn Ad: GOP Sending Women Back to the Back Alley

The GOP Unleashes a Horrifying Attack on Women

Horrific Bill Takes the GOP's War on Women to a Whole New Extreme
This bill would let public hospitals refuse to provide emergency abortion care even when necessary to save a woman’s life.
-- This is another obscene extension of the already deeply problematic conscience clause stuff.

Rape is Rape, DCCC, But Does Heath Shuler Know That?

Beyond the Planned Parenthood Hoax -- Sex Trafficking As Wingnut Buzzword

The “Protect Life Act:” Will There Be a Price to Be Paid?


Meet the HR3 Ten, The Anti-Choice, Anti-Woman Democrats. No. 2: Mark Critz


GOP Still Has Not Removed Awful "Forcible Rape" Language From Anti-Choice Bill

Nancy Pelosi on GOP's Anti-Women Bills: "Most Radical Assault... In Our Lifetimes"

Halting Second Trimester Abortions in Catholic Hospitals?

Mike Pence Reaaaally Hates Planned Parenthood. And Women In General, Probably.

Anti-abortion Laws: Big Brother's Invasion of Women's Rights

(UPDATED) Protecting Life? New Bill Says Its OK to Let Women Die

It's Not About Who Pays. It's About Respect

Discipline for Snoop Dog Kline. Bad Dog!

Weekly Pulse: #DearJohn, Does Banning Abortion Trump Job Growth?

I Was a "Prolife" Republican... Until I Fell in Love

Medical Abortion in Britain and Ireland: Let’s Join the 21st Century!

Pro-Lifers Stand Up for... Murder?

Morning Roundup: Pennsylvania Bill to Ban Insurance Coverage for Abortion

As They Seek to Ban Abortion, GOP Also Moves to Eliminate Title X Family Planning Program

Afternoon Roundup: Ohio Right to Life Says "No Thanks" to Anti-Choice Heartbeat Bill

Afternoon Roundup: Is There An Abortion Statistics 'Cover-Up'?

Hypocritical "Pro-Life" Republicans Slash Services for Women and Children in Proposed Cuts

GOP's Major Anti-Choice Move: Effectively Ending All Insurance Coverage for Abortion

(Some of the Reasons) Why Slavery Has No Place in the Abortion Debate

Limits on abortion advance

Abortion access is a youth issue

Bieber on abortion?

Six Pregnancy Tests in One Week -- Christian run 'pregnancy care centers' and the lies they tell.

Nebraska would join five other states in banning private insurers from paying for abortions unless the customer buys a separate rider for the extra coverage, under a bill being pushed by a state lawmaker.

PERSONHOOD ABORTION BANS SWEEP IOWA, NORTH DAKOTA, MONTANA, TEXAS, AND OKLAHOMA

On the proposed SD law and how it relates to other laws impacting pregnant women who do want to parent

H.R. 358, bill allowing hospitals to deny life-saving abortion care to women, advances
Finally, finally, finally finished the interminable KB cleanup work I've been doing since mid-January. Such a relief! Lots more to do before we move all the info into the new system, but it's a major milestone, and at least a bit of a break for me.

Also, we're finally getting into something resembling spring thaw. This would be much more awesome if it did not also herald the beginning of the GodAwfulPostWinterDogPooCleaning of the yard. Got started today. Ew. Much ew. Still lots too frozen to tackle, even with the real shovel. Still, it's progress, and by the time I've got that all done, maybe it'll be garden prep and porch-painting weather. I can hope.

Tomorrow's going to be busy; volunteering at Preterm, then straight to patient-instructing, then home for a SANE prep meeting.

Now I need to catch up on Linketies, Ramblings, and computer documentation for Mom, as well as my very backlogged email account and checking in on folks on LJ and Facebook. That's going to take a few days to get back to my usual status quo of only being moderately behind on everything.

Also, Kirikou and the Sorceress is really quite charming; I enjoyed it immensely. Highly recommended for kids and adults, as long as you're not bothered by large amounts of totally non-sexual nudity.

OK, on to the Linketies!
By the time I'm talking about mood, I'm usually on my way back up again (yeah, this icon is my "bipolar" icon). Not sure if it's definitive at this point, but I'm definitely doing better today than yesterday, at least. Volunteering today was certainly good for me, as it generally is.

Activism is always good for my general sense of self. It's very deeply connected to my sense of who I am and want to be in the world, and I feel all off-kilter and blah when it's not a big enough part of my life (I see similar effects in friends who are artists and writers, but aren't finding time or energy for their work in those regards). Doing it in an awesome feminist facility full of friends and other generally rockin' women is extra-good. Tomorrow I'm going to be meeting with C and a medical director over at Metro about working with their sexual assault nurses on pelvic exam practice, and I'm also really psyched about that. And I've got my patient-instructing dates for the coming month, which also gives me more of a sense of what productive stuff I'm doing in the near future. It's always so hard to drag myself out to go do these kinds of things, and I tend to need advance warning to psych myself up for them (not just activism stuff, but social stuff too, I find), but they do me so much good. Sort of like exercise that way, I guess.

This is the project I'm working on. I think I'm going to experiment with separating out my reproductive rights and justice links into separate Linketies posts, since I'm going to be regularly sending them to the volunteer coordinator at the clinic (the political posts aren't directly applicable to this project, but they're handy in the broader sense.) I'm also thinking about having a My Abortion My Life house party; both of the movies they're offering look really good. I'll likely buy my own copy of The Abortion Diaries, since it's pretty affordable, but it's unlikely I'll have enough spare to get my own copy of Silent Choices, so this'd be a good chance to get to see it. Oh, and I need to make some more progress on compiling lists of pro-choice and feminist groups at local campuses; that's another part of my project work.

Linketies will happen later on, probably much later on, since we've got folks coming over tonight. At the moment I'm tired and headachy, so I don't think prolonged online time is really the best plan right now. I did want to mention two other thoughts that occurred to me in the past day, though.

The first is about my childhood conception of Heaven. For as long as I believed in it the thing that excited me, that naturally struck me as what "perfect" would be about, was the idea of getting all the answers. I don't recall whether anyone else gave me that idea, or whether that's simply what my brain filled in for "perfect place", but it was an oddly Sagan-ish vision to be sure. It certainly didn't have all that much to do with singing praises forever, or being reunited with everyone. No, what I was excited about what watching the universe evolve, getting all the answers about how and why things worked, getting to learn everything, read everything, etc. Even as a Christian, what I came up with was essentially "science geek heaven". Frankly, it's a thoroughly unbiblical image, considering what little is said in description of heaven (Bible study was a pretty major part of my life, but that never seemed to shake my peculiar imagining of the place). Anyway, I just thought that was kind of odd and funny. How do/did you envision it?

The other question that came to mind is basically a generational one. I was thinking about how the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989 and the Fall of the Berlin Wall influenced me; they both happened in the middle of high school for me, right about the time I was really starting to form my understanding of the larger world. One "success", one "failure", but both hugely powerful and formative in my memories. I was glued to the TV then like I'm glued to Twitter now in regards to Egypt. I'm a total sap for protest movements; I think I've written about that before, but it's absolutely true. Although there's great danger in the power of large movements (the word "mob" should send shivers up the spine), I think there's also great, great hope, and I respond to that on a hugely emotional level. There's little on the planet that can so easily make me choke up with joy as seeing people come together to stand for justice. There's pain and horror there too, of course -- every protest movement is responding to something, and if it's enough to trigger a movement, it's probably not pretty, nor is the uncertainty and fear and risk of taking that step. Still, if you want to get me weeping like a fountain, don't bother with the traditional tearjerkers. Just toss on some protest footage and you've got me.
So my meeting at Preterm went really well, and it looks like I'll be working on an educational and awareness project for them, particularly focusing on the online elements. As a result, you may see even more reproductive rights postings here, or I may start a separate journal for that project -- I haven't decided on that yet. I'll be volunteering Wednesday afternoons, which will work out well to put me on the same side of town as patient-instructing on the days I'm scheduled, so that's handy.

On to the linketies:

letter to quantico

Ending the Silence on The Fraudulent Vaccine-Autism Link
More: How the vaccine crisis was meant to make money

Can you be both obese and healthy? -- There are points worth arguing in this, but it's interesting to see, regardless.

Chaucer’s Cunt -- It's a word I'm really quite fond of, and I wish I could find the paper I wrote for History of the English Language in college on the history of obscenity and profanity. Much fun.

Creationists have gotten clever, but there's still no debate over evolution

Bye Bye Blackbird: USDA acknowledges a hand in one mass bird death

Science geeky awesomeness:
The Carnal Carnival #3 – Death and Decay
Carnal Carnival #2: Vomit
Carnal Carnival #1 – Essentials of Elimination
Carnal Carnival #4: Orgasm

Giffords standing on own feet, headed to Houston for rehab to relearn basic skills

Possession With Intent to Soar: Colombian Carrier Pigeon Caught Smuggling Drugs

A Shameful Inheritance:
On the History of Political Violence in America


20 Obsolete English Words that Should Make a Comeback

20 Awesomely Untranslatable Words from Around the World
More: 20 More Awesomely Untranslatable Words From Around the World

How to Find ANYTHING on the Internet -- handy googling tips

Female indigenous wrestler challenges barriers in Bolivia

Grow Some Moss in Your Bathroom -- WANT! I love moss; I used to make little moss-based nature dioramas when I was a kid. Unfortunately, we suspect the critters would pee on it.

Photo Essay: 7 Beautifully Bizarre Beaches

Photo Essay: 15 Unusual Natural Phenomena and Where to Witness Them

Photo Essay: 18 Places to Feel Dwarfed by Nature

Best Nude Beaches in the World
More: Best Nude Beaches in the World, Volume 2

How to Discern Fallacious Arguments

Photo Essay: 20 Amazingly Creative Works of Paper Art

11 Reasons the TSA is NOT Making Us Safer, and Why It Needs to be Reformed NOW

Post-apocalyptic TV shows never succeed

The red supergiant star Betelgeuse is getting ready to go supernova, and when it does Earth will have a front-row seat. The explosion will be so bright that Earth will briefly seem to have two suns in the sky.

How to hypnotize a shark, and other tales of animal mind control

Why is Captain America ruling our screens and not Wonder Woman?

Book made using 4 daisy-chained printers spanning 100 years' worth of technology

A Chance to Change the Way We Look at Mental Illness

Two new species of wasp have been found in Brazil that use a neurotoxin (species of Hymenoepimecis) to enslave spiders into making nests for their parasitic young.

Los Angeles airport recorded the most laser-beam events in the country last year

Undercover policeman married activist he was sent to spy on

Relieving test anxiety by writing down worries

Ruleaks.net publishes first leak, gets DDoSed

Boy George returns pilfered Christian artifact to Cyprus

There is more to the eye than rods and cones — the discovery of a third photoreceptor is rewriting the visual rulebook. -- Wow!

Concerns new MTV teen drama "Skins" may violate child porn laws -- Oh, good grief.
MTV execs are scrutinizing upcoming episodes of their racy new teen-drama hit Skins to ensure they don’t violate child pornography laws -- more, since the original NYTimes article seems to be paywalled.

Best mafiosi nicknames from today's historic bust

Clean, Soap-Free Living: Here Comes the Science

Salt-loving microbe forges its own path

The Meal that Ended My Career as a Restaurant Critic

Colour blindness corrected by gene therapy

Life update

Aug. 4th, 2010 07:30 am
It's been a relatively trying few days around Villa Villekula. One of those "everything that can go wrong will" sort of times in a bunch of different ways, leading to a bunch of grumping and touchiness from all of us. Here's hoping we're mostly past the ridiculously bad luck we've been having on all fronts. On the positive side, I've finally gotten my laptop sorted and working again. Also on the positive side, our new rubber flooring works as we wanted, and blocks water getting to the basement exactly as hoped. On the negative side, we discovered this because we moved the hot tub back into the room and refilled it. And discovered at 3am that it had developed a leak. It's all drained again and we're working on identifying the source. If we're really damned lucky for once this week, it'll be an relatively easy fix, but after the last few days I'm not feeling like expecting "really damned lucky" on much of anything. Argh. Also, the weather's fucking with all of us, and the associated achies combined with all the crap of the last few days have gotten us downright snippy at each other on a level we very rarely reach (thankfully). The truck's going into the shop for engine evaluation on Thursday, we finally got the blood work done on Fatty Lumpkin and are awaiting results of that (expecting hyperthyroid, and hoping for it among the possible explanations for his weight loss, etc, since it's relatively easy to treat).

This weekend was bizarrely up and down for me. A bunch of good social stuff: Casey's party, which also involved seeing the east side folks I really dig, and getting hanging out time with Katy, a date with Katy Sunday morning, seeing my brother Matt before he headed down to AL again, seeing Nikki on her way through town. And right in the midst of all of it, two conversations totally unrelated to the socializing that both hit me the wrong way and left me more upset and touchier than I've been in a long time, a half-hour bathroom crying jag at about the worst possible time, and just generally feeling like my emotions have been yo-yoing all over the place. That was mostly Sunday and Monday, and I'm feeling more like myself now, thankfully. Yesterday was a migrainey and physically craptastic day, but my overall mood improved throughout, despite it being "the day nothing went right" to such an extent that we couldn't even conquer the sandwich-making process.

I'm teaching tonight, and hopefully hanging out with Casey and household afterwards, but otherwise planning to have a pretty slow-moving day with a lot of sleep, a lot of West Wing (I'm toward the end of Season 4 now), and maybe some more priming and painting. Once we get four or five of us around, we can flip the hot tub up and see about identifying the leak. Wish us luck on the results of that endeavor.

Oh, and speaking of teaching, I did have a really enjoyable conversation with Liv and Grafton yesterday. All three of us work in the patient-instructing program, and every so often we get to geeking about teaching approaches. It's invariably a learning experience, since it gives us a chance to compare how we're teaching various aspects, and pick up suggestions and tips from each other. And because each of us works solo with the students (Liv and I teaching gyn, Grafton teaching GU), it's not a feedback and fine-tuning that happens as much when we're actually at work, so I really value when we end up having those conversations outside of work. Oh, and Casey just got a job working on getting the Sim Center's GTA/GUTA program up and running, so now we get to geek with her about this stuff, too. I'm so psyched she's going to be handling that. We don't know if the two programs will end up merging eventually, and I feel much more comfortable about that possibility with someone I trust as much as Casey in an oversight position.

I really do love my social circle. I was reminded of that by the party at Casey's and the conversations with Nikki and the household and Katy. I love how "silly and fucked up" can integrate so well with discussion of politics and sociology and feminism and health care and such. I suck at small talk. I only really come alive in conversations when I'm passionate about the topics at hand, and I love having so many people in my life who also value those kinds of discussions.

Also, funny Coco story. It's not one of our Coco weeks, so I tend to go out and see her about once a day when I hear her in the yard next door. Usually I just stick my fingers through the fence and she pressed up against it for scritches, but I decided that I'd walk around and come sit on Christina's porch so I could hang out with Coco more easily. Damn, did that confuse the little fluffhead! She just didn't know what to do with me being on the wrong side of the fence. She came running up, bounced backward again, lather, rinse, repeat, went to get Christina, came excitedly bouncing back _again_, still staying a foot or so away from me because it was confusing her so much that I was on the wrong side of the fence. She finally climbed up on me after I moved down from sitting on the step to sitting on the ground (she gets really freaked out by people being taller than her, which makes life as a 10-inch-tall dog a bit tricky). It was all very silly and giggleworthy.

So, yeah. That's where things are at the moment. A run of bad luck and craptasticness, but life doesn't suck.
introductory story may be triggering regarding rape )

That really happened. Right here in Ohio. It's a horrific realization to know that someone can refuse you emergency contraception after you've been sexually assaulted. It's like experiencing a violation of your rights all over again.

The Care Act (Compassionate Assistance for Rape Emergencies Act) has been introduced in the Ohio House. It's designed to ensure that ALL rape survivors have access to EC and medically accurate information. NARAL Pro-Choice Ohio has partnered with the Cleveland Rape Crisis Center to host the Day of the Diva on June 13. Day of the Diva is a fabulous brunch event to benefit our work to make sure CARE is passed. We have a wonderful committee working to make the event a success, but we need everyone's help.

Here is where you come in. There are THREE things you can do to support Day of the Diva:

1. Spread the word. Visit the Day of the Diva event page on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/#!/event.php?eid=117173254962385&ref=ss. Click the Invite People to Come link on the right and invite your entire list of contacts. Include a personal message asking them to do the same. Facebook also has the option to email the invite to people who are not on your FB friends list. It takes only minutes and you are helping a three-person staff reach THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE in a few clicks. Our goal is to get 1,000 FB invitees on the event page. Please click here (LINK) and help promote the event.

2. Land us an awesome raffle item. We're looking for raffle items like gift certificates or merchandise! Ask your friend who makes jewelry, your fave bakery, your stylist, your fitness instructor, bar/restaurant, pet groomer, employer, etc. to donate an item. We make it easy for you: we have a request letter already created for you to print and drop off/email. Please email Rachel at rachel@naralohio.org with the place you want to contact.

3. Attend the event! What better way to support the event than by coming and having a good time! Visit www.dayofthediva.com for ticket info.

Home sick? Laid off? No money? Hate meetings?
Volunteer for the event by making phone calls to local businesses and asking for donations. We're also looking for people who can get donated decorations for the event space. If you are persistent and passionate, this is an easy job for you and we make it even simpler by providing the list and the script. You do the calls at your convenience and report back to NARAL. Folks who help make a ton of calls or get us donations will get into the event for free! Email Rachel and rachel@naralohio.org.

ALL rape survivors deserve CARE. Please help NARAL and CRCC by supporting Day of the Diva.

Maria Miranda
Event Chair
Day of the Diva 2010

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