Extra! Extra! Without Apology hits newsstands worldwide!

Okay, so maybe my publication is actually still sitting in my car. And maybe it’s only going to mostly get around my university’s campus. But it is on the world wide webernets.

For those not familiar, I have a physical publication printed in news style (but it is not a newspaper) which I distribute to friends and neighbors and around my university. For this edition I have a couple new contributors for whom I am greatly thankful. Make sure to check out some of the photography contributed by Michael Amalfitano.

So head over to Without Apology and read all the new posts. There are 9 articles in total, and a couple repeat themes I’ve expressed here, but there’s more original work than not.

One of my particular favorites is the one by Matt titled Poker Legends and the Game of Life.

Extra! Extra! Without Apology hits newsstands worldwide!

Okay, so maybe my publication is actually still sitting in my car. And maybe it’s only going to mostly get around my university’s campus. But it is on the world wide webernets.

For those not familiar, I have a physical publication printed in news style (but it is not a newspaper) which I distribute to friends and neighbors and around my university. For this edition I have a couple new contributors for whom I am greatly thankful. Make sure to check out some of the photography contributed by Michael Amalfitano.

So head over to Without Apology and read all the new posts. There are 9 articles in total, and a couple repeat themes I’ve expressed here, but there’s more original work than not.

One of my particular favorites is the one by Matt titled Poker Legends and the Game of Life.

More religious killing in Nigeria

If religion could fuel our vehicles and homes, we’d never have an energy crisis.

Sectarian violence between Christians and Muslims in central Nigeria left 326 people dead last week, a state police commissioner said Monday, pledging to bring those responsible for the killings to justice.

There are conflicting accounts about what unleashed the recent bloodshed. According to a state police commissioner, skirmishes began after Muslim youths set a Christian church ablaze, but Muslim leaders denied that. Muslims say it began with an argument over the rebuilding of a Muslim home in a predominantly Christian neighborhood that had been destroyed in November 2008.

There is disagreement on the minutiae of the violence, but there is clear agreement that religion is the root of it all.

Tackling faux medicine

A UK group known as 10.23 is planning a protest where 300+ people will ingest full bottles of pills and other large quantities of homeopathic ‘medicine’.

Martin Robbins, a spokesman for the society, said: ‘The remedies themselves may not be directly harmful, but there is a real danger in misleading customers into thinking that homeopathy is somehow equivalent to real medicine.

‘Patients may believe that they are treating themselves or their children adequately, and delay seeking appropriate treatment; or they may receive dangerous advice after consulting with homeopaths rather than their GPs.’

He added: ‘The ‘overdose’ is a dramatic way of demonstrating to the public that these remedies have literally nothing in them. If eating an entire box of homeopathic sleeping pills fails to send one person to sleep, then how on Earth can their sale be justified?’

This comes after a homeopathic quack leader told the British government that there is no evidence that these ‘medicines’ do anything whatsoever. He has since defended, at the least, his right to sell the crap. But such a right only exists when there is no other risk to public safety. Homeopathic medicines do provide that risk and should thus be banned all together.

Now such a demonstration needs to take place in the U.S.

Expanding on sexism

I recently wrote about this awful post from Thus Spake Zuska (“Zuska” is Suzanne E. Franks, an engineer and scientist). It’s centered on this image from a CNN story about problems obese women face while trying to get medical care.

[The above image is shown] just so you can be sure to remember that the world is staring at and judging you when you are overweight, young lady! No, we don’t need to see your head or even your whole body. Just the boobs and crotch – the pieces that define women’s worth. White women only need apply for our decapitated torso shot, please, even though the problems of access to adequate medical care and weight-related health issue are just as critical and maybe even more so for brown women.

There are some inherent problems in this post, ones Franks refuses to address because her feminism, which has obvious value, has taken her off the deep end. First, the image doesn’t focus on “boobs and crotch”. It focuses on the most obese areas of two obese women. The mid-section is often the focus in these sort of images, but sometimes butt shots are used to show the fatness of people. But does anyone believe Franks wouldn’t have objected to those sort of images?

And has Franks not seen the average TV news report on obesity? When it’s about men, these same sort of areas become the focus. When it’s about Americans, the focus is again the same but with both sexes shown.

What is being muddled by Franks’ deep-end philosophy is that this is not an objectification of women: it’s an objectification of fat people. She has no standing to raise concerns here based upon her sex. As a human she has standing because it can be argued that objectification is always bad, but that goes beyond being male or female.

And then, of course, there’s the fact that Franks is inanely trying to bring race into the equation by calling both of the above women white. The one on the right clearly is not white; she has the skin tone of Obama. Even in the comment section of her post, Franks won’t acknowledge this error (which was noted by both myself and another person).

CNN is basically re-reporting a story from Health.com, which is primarily aimed at women. That may explain why the story focuses on the problems being overweight causes for women, as if overweight men didn’t experience any issues with obtaining adequate health care.

The story does not suggest overweight men don’t experience difficulty in obtaining health care. It specifically talks about studies on women’s health care. Those can probably be generalized to overweight men, but that would be going beyond the source material. This is just an instance of Franks trying to find sexism where it doesn’t exist (what with her deep-end mentality).

But what I find really interesting is comparing the photo that Health.com chose to illustrate their story, as compared to CNN. It’s this:

First of all, the photo takes up a lot less real estate on the page than CNN’s photo does. It sits beside the story, instead of blaring across the top of the page as something you have to scroll past before you can get to the story. And finally, CNN’s photo says to the female reader “this is how the world sees all you fat bitches” whereas Health.com’s photo says something more like “you are taking control of your health”.

Okay, so here’s what Franks has told us: 1) Her opinion about website aesthetics not only matters but is somehow relevant. 2) Health.com’s picture is far more acceptable even though it says “accept” and “reject” based upon weight.

To be fair, Franks later goes on in the comment section to point out that she did not actually read the scale. But let’s just pretend it was a normal scale with straight forward numbers. Is that really better? In that it does not objectify obese people, maybe. But that isn’t Franks’ ‘point’. She believes it’s better because it doesn’t objectify women. Of course, that was never the point of the image, and I’ve already shown that female-ness isn’t the concern but rather obesity (as can be seen all the time in news reports; coverage of obese people is equally objectifying towards men and women – Franks just wants to see sexism where it does not exist; it’s pathetic).

But the most interesting thing of all this comes from the comment section. I responded there but again and again I get accused of “mansplaining” and only making my points from a male perspective. I guess it is inherently male-y to point out where the fattest part of humans tends to be. It’s male-y to point out that people are being objectified, not a particular sex. And most of all, it’s male-y to ever disagree with a deep-end feminist about sexism. But I’m the one being sexist, right? I’m the one making accusations based upon sex, right? I’m the one who is stereotyping a person because of his/her chromosomes, right?

Finally, of interesting note is that Franks’ comment section had been completely open until just today. Comments yesterday did not require her approval. Now they do. It will be interesting to see if my latest comment shows up at all now.

Update: Franks has since made a new post on another topic, indicating that she has logged in. My comment has not appeared. I take this as evidence that she is unable to defend her position.

Also, on a final note, I defended myself against criticisms of “mansplaining” and other non-sense by pointing out my assumption that I was reading a post from a man (I can’t “mansplain” to another man, I presume). It’s true that I often assume I’m reading writing from men on the Internet, but that’s simply a product of the fact that the main blogs I read are by men, not to mention the fact that most blogs are by men anyway. This is an explanatory claim, not a normative one, and should be understood as such. But that isn’t the whole truth. I said I hadn’t noticed Franks’ picture on her front page while reading her post. I actually did see it, but I still thought I was reading a post by a man – just one with long hair. That isn’t to say that Franks’ appearance takes away the value of anything she has to say; it doesn’t. I knew I was in hostile, deep-end territory, so any comment on the appearance of anyone* was likely to be taken drastically out of context. But to repeat the point I was making, I thought I was reading a post by a man. This effectively defeats the silly claim of “mansplaining”.

*And by “anyone” I mean only women since these people are sexist in that way.

Double Update: My post finally has shown up – well after this post.

There are two ways to fix this

Religious-based violence has exploded in Nigeria again, no surprise there.

The rioting began Sunday after Muslim youths set a Catholic church ablaze. Witnesses said rioters armed with knives, homemade firearms and stones attacked passers-by and fought with security forces, leaving bodies in the street and stacked in local mosques.

The Minister of Police Affairs, Ibrahim Yakubu Lame, issued a statement Tuesday blaming the violence on “some highly placed individuals in the society who were exploiting the ignorance and poverty of the people to cause mayhem in the name of religion.”

Religion does really help in exploiting ignorance, but since it’s also a source of it, it’s hard too separate the two so distinctly. And why is Lame suggesting religion is not the cause of this violence? Does he believe that if religion were removed, the exact same thing would be happening. If so, why?

The way I see it, there are two ways to fix this. The first is that we could all wire about $4995 to a bank account we’ve been told is set up through Nigeria, even though it is based in Atlanta. This has the magical property of then getting to us far more cash that we’ve been selected to win as a result of, I don’t know, being awesome. We then use our new-found wealth to promote religious activity in the country because clearly that’s the only thing they’ve got going for them. This entire strategy has the added benefit of being based upon all true things. Especially the magic part.

Alternatively – and this one’s really a kicker – get rid of religion entirely because there would then be far less reason for violence.

Pay your damn taxes

As the upstanding citizen I am, I just finished getting through all my taxes. As it happens, I am getting money back, but I would have certainly paid up if that’s how the math worked out. Maybe I wouldn’t be doing that in January, but I would do it by April 15th. Paying taxes as they are due is just such a basic concept that one must be ignorant, stupid, or a crook to do otherwise. It turns out the Mormon Church is run by crooks.

The Mormon church worked to hide its involvement in the 2008 effort to ban gay marriage in California, telling the Proposition 8 campaign that it wanted “plausible deniability” in its connections with the movement, documents revealed in a California courtroom Wednesday show.

In the seventh day of testimony in the landmark gay-marriage trial in San Francisco, lawyers for the gay-rights side presented emails showing “close links between the Proposition 8 campaign and leaders of the Catholic and Mormon churches,” the Los Angeles Times reported.

Any reasonable person would have to conclude that this sort of political involvement demands the Mormon Church pay its taxes. Maine had this same problem with the Catholic Church recently. In both cases, no taxes will be rendered. It doesn’t make any sense. Ignoring for a moment that religious institutions generally should not be tax-exempt (except as they function as charities), if government is going to grant certain groups privileges, those groups should have to abide by the rules. They constantly and consistently do not do this. No one is saying “No! You can’t support cause X!”. Go ahead, support your bigotry or yearning for a theocracy. Just pay your damn taxes when you do it.

Oh, Rush

Rush Limbaugh recently said this:

Everything this president sees is a political opportunity, including Haiti, and he will use it to burnish his credentials with minorities in this country and around the world, and to accuse Republicans of having no compassion.

So what does Rush want? Should Obama not help Haiti? Was George Bush right when he initially only offered $35 million in aid after the 2004 tsunami? Perhaps he should have given less?

The reason anyone might accuse Republicans of having no compassion is because Limbaugh is the unofficial icon of the party and he says garbage like this. If he doesn’t like being perceived as heartless, then he needs to stop being heartless. It’s pretty simple.

He also appeared to discourage help for the island nation, saying, “We’ve already donated to Haiti. It’s called the U.S. income tax.”

So don’t give any more, people! What Obama has donated so far counts as your contribution! Idjit.

Text “HAITI” to 90999 to automatically donate $10 to the Red Cross.

Donating to Haiti

As probably everyone knows, a terrible Earthquake rocked Haiti recently. The estimates for the death toll are highly varied this early on, but I’ve so far read numbers ranging from 100,000 to 500,000. It’s possible this could be worse than the 2004 tsunami that killed roughly 230,000 people (though I doubt the economic damage will be worse given Haiti’s deep poverty). Haiti has a population just under 10 million. That means there’s a loss likely between 1-5% of the population. That would be 3 to 15 million people being wiped out in the U.S., not to mention the massive swath of individuals displaced.

As one might imagine, aid is greatly needed. There are a ton of avenues for making donations, but one of the easiest is through the Red Cross. Texting “HAITI” to 90999 will donate exactly $10.

The stupid political crap over Reid

Sen. Harry Reid recently was quoted as saying Obama’s electability comes in part from being relatively “light-skinned” and having no “Negro dialect, unless he wanted to have one”. Naturally, the political spin machines are going crazy.

One thing missing from all this is that Reid was right. His terminology was dumb, but the essence of what he was saying was correct. Obama’s skin tone and lack of identifiable accent have helped him. If he talked like Gary Coleman from back in the day, he would have been rejected rather promptly. Something similar can be said of accents from the deep south. There’s the on-the-border Fred Thompson accent that gets a pass, but the slack-jawed yokel accent would be unacceptable. Granted, that’s more a caricature than anything, but there are associations people make the more a person has an accent. How many politicians are there in England with thick cockney accents?

All that aside, this whole fiasco is being compared with the past political transgressions of Republican leaders. Trent Lott, for instance, said the country would have been better had Strong Thurmond been elected in ’48. He probably should have realized that Thurmond ran on a segregation platform, but there shouldn’t have been too much to say about his comments. It’s obvious he was trying to be nice to an old man on his birthday. Honestly, if Lott really is a racist, I think he would be either far more careful with his wording in all situations or he would have been found out much, much earlier.

Then there’s the case of Georgia Republican Rep. Lynn Westmoreland who said Obama was “uppity” during the last presidential campaign. He was roasted because the term has been used to trivialize blacks whenever they’ve argued for civil rights (sort of like “militant” gets applied to atheists who dare speak an ill word toward religion). Of course, Westmoreland claimed he had no idea what the racial connotations were of the word. I find this credible. Plenty of people didn’t know anything of the word (myself included). What’s more, it fit in with the political rhetoric of Obama being an elitist. But no one cares about truth when politics are involved.

So now there’s Reid. The GOP is calling for his resignation and just won’t shut the hell up. The talk shows are whining about Democratic hypocrisy in light of reactions to similar past Republican missteps. Okay, there’s a point there. The Democrats did put up a big political stink over a number of trivial issues. They’re politicians; we should expect as much. But don’t the Republicans agree that those past issues really were trivial? Don’t they agree (especially on the talk shows) that Lott et al shouldn’t have faced the sort of criticism they did? So why is it that two wrongs make a right? Their argument is essentially that Democrats should not be hypocrites by demonstrating that they can do something wrong once again. It’s entirely stupid and only politically motivated.

But if any Republican is interested in why more people may care about this sort of thing when they say it over when a Democrat says it, it’s obvious. The Republican party does not support policies which tend to favor minorities. There’s a strong feeling that George Bush and other Republicans really, in fact, don’t care about black people. Furthermore, Republicans aren’t necessarily going to be racists, but racists are likely to be Republicans. That’s why Democrats get more slack. They’ve tended to earn it by not having the same history as Republicans (more specifically, liberal trends don’t have the same track record as conservative trends, and Republicans are conservative and Democrats are (relatively) liberal, by and large).