Friday, June 28, 2013

Daily Read: 28JUNE2013 - History Roundup

It's bad news when in 2013 the term Jim Crow makes it back into an article:
With a non-white majority growing larger in the window, Republicans cleverly ginned up a fake voter fraud crisis then prescribed new laws to combat the fake crisis. Every single Republican-controlled state government has passed or is attempting to pass laws that will require a second layer of government approval, the acquisition of a Voter ID, on top of registering to vote. You know, because Republicans hate big government bureaucracy.
The nefarious goal is to make it more difficult for low income voters to successfully cast a ballot by engaging yet another step in the process -- and sometimes charging money for the privilege, which clearly recalls the days of poll taxes.
One of those lawmakers, conservative state Rep. Daryl Metcalfe (R-Butler), told WHYY that he believed Sims' comments would be a violation of "God's law."
"I did not believe that as a member of that body that I should allow someone to make comments such as he was preparing to make that ultimately were just open rebellion against what the word of God has said, what God has said, and just open rebellion against God's law," Metcalfe said. 
No words could explain the madness of being admonished about absent concepts like "tradition" and "decorum," when the only real traditions being upheld by the Republicans were oppression and control. No words could compel those who had already made up their minds about what is right and what is wrong to reconsider, because those words were not allowed to be heard. No words could describe the electric feeling of a granite-walled chamber being filled with the energy and spirit of people who, despite all valid reasons to be convinced otherwise, choose to still believe in the basic tenants of democracy, of autonomy, and of freedom, sitting patiently through hours of a clock ticking down on their collective fate.
But then, something happened.
Twenty minutes until midnight, a question was posed by Senator Leticia Van de Putte. A question that came, slowly, from a careful, sticky-sweet voice of measured outrage. Twenty three words that were the only words left for the only question left to be asked and answered: "At what point must a female senator raise her hand or her voice to be recognized over her male colleagues in the room?"
More work left to do when it comes to marriage equality:
In the first case, Section 3 of the Defense of Marriage Act — the portion of the 1996 law that defined “marriage” and “spouse” as referring only to opposite-sex married couples — was struck down by the court as unconstitutional.

In the other case, the court dismissed the appeal in the challenge to California’s Proposition 8 marriage amendment, leaving in place the initial 2010 trial-court decision striking down the state amendment as unconstitutional. 

This means that the two same-sex couples who sued California officials will be allowed to marry.
 The court did not address whether states can ban same-sex couples from marrying. Including California, 13 states allow for marriage equality.

One of the key questions is how the federal government will address the relationships of same-sex couples who are married and live in a state with marriage equality and then move to a state that does not recognize their marriage. Although some federal laws count a couple as married if the marriage was valid in the “place of celebration” — in other words, if the marriage was valid in the state where the couple wed — other laws and policies determine the treatment based on whether the marriage is valid in the “place of residence".
Oh my goodness...I love Plinko!!!
“When we realized it was the 30th anniversary of Plinko, we wanted to do something special,” says executive producer Mike Richards. “And [host] Drew [Carey] and I have always wanted to do an all-Plinko show. This seemed like the perfect opportunity to keep trotting it out.” To sweeten the experience, the studio audience was kept unaware that it was an all-Plinko episode.



Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Daily Read: 27JUNE2013 - Sick Leave

I remember many times when I coworker would come to work sick...like death warmed over sick...and I would tell them to go home.  Nothing we were doing was important enough to come to work *that* sick and it sure didn't warrant getting me sick as well.  That is what sick days are for, silly.

What?  Florida is blocking actual sick days?  As in you have to go to work sick?  You have got to be kidding me.  Are legislators (who happen to be Republican) so swayed by big business that they are willing to force sick people to go to work or stay at work for fear of losing their job otherwise?  Apparently.
As attempts to dehumanize the workplace go, few could be more sadistic than forcing workers to come to work sick, but that's precisely what the Florida legislature and Governor Rick Scott recently did.

This throwback to the Satanic mills era of industrial relations came in response to a successful petition by 50,000 voters in Orange County, Florida, to place on the ballot an initiative to guarantee a certain number of paid sick days to all workers in the county. The state bill nullifies the ballot measure by blocking local governments from enacting any standards on sick leave, voter preferences be damned.
Governor Scott and the state legislature did this at the behest of some of Florida's largest employers, including Disney World, which might otherwise have suffered the inconvenience of employees being able to go to the doctor without losing their jobs. Ostensibly, legislators say it's to maintain "uniform regulatory standards" throughout the state. But Florida legislators have never been particularly devoted to uniformity in other legal matters.

Monday, June 24, 2013

Daily Read: 24JUNE2013 - The hooliganism that is Pussy Riot

Since the trials, a smorgasbord of new legislation, informally known as the Pussy Riot laws, have been put into place in Russia to clamp down on the group and anyone who might try to imitate their art-protests. You can’t cover your face in public, and the laws against ‘offending religious sensibilities’ have been tightened in a way that suggests Jesus isn’t the one who’s worried. In addition, distribution and discussion of Pussy Riot’s protests is strictly forbidden. Their websites have been attacked, people have been prosecuted for making tshirts with their image, and videos of four of their impromptu concerts have been declared extremist, meaning that it is illegal to possess them in Russia. It is also illegal for any Russian citizen to criticise the administration to a foreign journalist.

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Daily Read: 20JUNE2013 - Serena is not my role model

I'm not one of those people who expect athletes to be a role model.  Way to smoke that pot, Michael Phelps.  Thanks a lot for crushing my blind faith in humanity, Lance Armstrong.  They are human just like the rest of us.  They can disappoint.  Attaching too high of an expectation on them will backfire more often than not.  The thing is, athletes are role models for many.  It's the nature of the beast, I suppose.  Well, in a pretend world of Okie's athlete role models, Serena Williams is not one of them.

Plenty of articles out there to choose from on this one concerning her statements concerning the Steubenville rape victim.  That's right...victim.  Remember the victim, Serena?  No...apparently not.

From her Rolling Stones interview, Serena hops right on that blame-the-rape-victim bandwagon.
 Do you think it was fair, what they got? They did something stupid, but I don't know. I'm not blaming the girl, but if you're a 16-year-old and you're drunk like that, your parents should teach you: Don't take drinks from other people. She's 16, why was she that drunk where she doesn't remember? It could have been much worse. She's lucky. Obviously, I don't know, maybe she wasn't a virgin, but she shouldn't have put herself in that position, unless they slipped her something, then that's different. 
What Serena Williams 'Taught Me' About Rape is today's daily read on this situation.
1. Rape is your fault if you're 16 years old girl.
2. Rape is your fault if you're drunk.
3. Rape is your fault if your parents didn't teach you not to take drinks from other people.
4. Rape is your fault if you're too intoxicated to remember it.
5. Rape could possibly be your fault if you aren't a virgin.
6. Rape isn't a position you should put yourself in.
7. Rape is only a problem if you were "slipped something" … that's different.
The rape and sexual assault of women in this world has been a tactic of war and control since the beginning of time. Our bodies politicalized. We as women are constantly guilty for being women, for being beautiful, for being afraid, for being drunk, for being in the wrong place at the wrong time. Search for one woman that was "asking for it" … and you'd have a snowball's chance in hell of finding one. Williams' statements hurt plenty of us to our core.
 I appreciate how this article ends:
Until we are willing to teach all of our children that "no means no", we will continue to perpetuate this cycle of shaming. It is a responsibility for all of us to champion.
I am reminded of the Zulu proverb "Ubuntu" which simply says: I am a person through other people. My humanity is tied to yours.

Saturday, June 15, 2013

Daily Read: 15JUNE2013 - Sexism in world politics

I bet it was hard for The Guardian to pick out the top ten examples of sexism towards women in politics.  Honestly, I am surprised that it was Cameron who took the top spot.  I would have figured Berlusconi to be a sure bet for #1.