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China Earthquake Comic Strips

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Coco Wang has written a series of comic strips documenting stories of rescue from the devastating earthquake in China. An excerpt from Wang’s introduction:

Thousands of heart-breaking stories are happening 24 hours non-stop everyday, some are so sad that you can hardly bear, some are incredibly moving that you just can’t stop crying… I wanted to go to the front to help with all those people, some of my friends have already gone there, but I heard that the traffic needed to be kept totally clear for rescue transportation at the moment, people like me without knowledge of first-aid and experience of rescue operations going there now would cause choas and trouble… but I can’t just sit at home and do nothing, I have been crying my eyes out in the past three days, I have never felt more proud of my country and people… their love, courage and kindness rock me to my core! I have decided to tell these touching stories by drawing comics.

It’s a very difficult read. Many stories are inspiring, but they’re just as often unbearably tragic — though actually, there are a few funny strips towards the end. The sixth comic “My Father is a Hero” had me crying like a baby.

But, at least in the U.S., these are stories that we aren’t hearing. And they deserve to be heard. Also, Wang’s illustration and retelling of the events amounts to a wonderful tribute.

So get your hankies, and head on over to read all of the earthquake strips.

via Lauredhel

Is it time for fence-mending YET?

For months, Hillary has been trying to emasculate Obama with the sort of words and themes she has chosen, stirring up feminist anger by promoting the idea that the men were unfairly taking it away from the women, and covering up her own campaign mistakes with cries of sexism. Even his ability to finally clinch the historic nomination did not stop her in that pursuit. She did not bat her eyelashes at him and proclaim him Rhett Butler instead of Ashley Wilkes.

Evidently Maureen Dowd doesn’t think so, since she’s relying on the fact that ongoing drama must sell newspapers! If a groan-inducing Gone With the Wind reference (or suggestion, even!?) is the best she can do to smear Clinton and make Obama look bad in the process, I’m not that worried about the crypto-conservative overtones. (John McCain is being anointed?)

Her suggestion about Clinton hoping that Obama will be assassinated isn’t much better. I’s a bad joke that’s been on everyone’s lips since rumors went around that Clinton would accept a running mate offer, but coming from Dowd’s acidic pen, so often poised to puncture female candidacies, it loses most of the humor. Blech, I’m going back to sleep for a few weeks at least — someone wake me up when all this “race vs. gender” crap is over and people actually start focusing on beating the old white establishment guy.

On a more positive note, what Jill just said.

UPDATE: On a less positive note, this point of this post is that Maureen Dowd’s column is salting wounds (and possibly the earth) and, as zuzu said on Shakesville, doing her best to stick a shiv in both candidates. At this point it seems like the most vocal and angry supporters in either camp are ALL starting to have that effect. Especially on people like me who really don’t care which candidate won — because they’re almost entirely indistinguishable in any way that I think really matters and that you can really talk about without sounding like a jerk.

So the point of this post, and the following discussion, is certainly NOT to engage in even more intra-partisan across-the-lines sniping and hostility. There’s been plenty of that already, so don’t be surprised if I delete your post like I already did to a dozen off-topic ones, including some of my own. (If you are the author of one of those posts, they’re all in moderation, so you should be able to retrieve the text if you really need it.)

Police State, USA

Not even sure what to say about this:

D.C. police will seal off entire neighborhoods, set up checkpoints and kick out strangers under a new program that D.C. officials hope will help them rescue the city from its out-of-control violence.

Under an executive order expected to be announced today, police Chief Cathy L. Lanier will have the authority to designate “Neighborhood Safety Zones.” At least six officers will man cordons around those zones and demand identification from people coming in and out of them. Anyone who doesn’t live there, work there or have “legitimate reason” to be there will be sent away or face arrest, documents obtained by The Examiner show.

Lanier has been struggling to reverse D.C.’s spiraling crime rate but has been forced by public outcry to scale back several initiatives including her “All Hands on Deck” weekends and plans for warrantless, door-to-door searches for drugs and guns.

Huh. We still have a Constitution, don’t we?

And I wonder who’s going to be targeted with this brilliant new plan?

Thanks to Alex for the link.

Bookends.

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All the campaign hoopla has been stressful and demoralizing, but I have to admit: I am excited. Either candidate would have been historic — and I’m trilled that someone as inspiring, intelligent and passionate as Barack Obama will very possibly be President of the United States.

There’s a lot of good stuff being written today, but Liss’s post made me burst into tears.

Back in April, I posted this picture of the Obamas and noted: “Barack Obama would, if nominated and elected, be the first Illinois legislator to occupy the White House since Abraham Lincoln. That’s some fucking bookends right there.”

He’s now the presumptive Democratic nominee. The first ever person of color in his position in the history of this nation, which, upon its founding, would not have acknowledged his freedom, his citizenship, or his very personhood.

And now he stands in a position where he is very likely to be this nation’s next president.

Senator Barack Obama, from the Land of Lincoln.

That’s some fucking bookends right there.

Yes ma’am it is.

I know many women (and men) today are mourning the fact that the female candidate didn’t get her historic moment. I am mourning that too. And again, Melissa says it better than I could. Women are hurting, and our confidence in our “allies” and in our fellow progressives has been thoroughly challenged. Even in that thread, a whole contingent of asshole “progressive” Obama supporters feel the need to show up and put Liss in her place. So I’m grateful that despite the assholery, Liss was able to open up a space for Clinton supporters to vent and to share their frustrations. That’s important today, too.

What Clinton Can Do Now: Give the Gender Speech

Anna Holmes of Jezebel is spot-on. I have some trouble with the last line — has Clinton really not been making noise her whole life? — and the idea that we construct our own glass ceilings, but it would be nice to see Clinton seize this opportunity to continue to inspire women around the world. And it’s a damn shame that the country simply would not have been receptive to a “gender speech” from a prominent female candidate. But, while it’s too late to make such a speech as a candidate, Clinton can still start that conversation — perhaps more effectively now that the white-hot limelight isn’t bearing down on her.

UPDATE: I agree with Donna in the comments:

I disagree with the part about when and where she should do it. Few will be watching or listening after she concedes and at some college somewhere. It might garner a little sound byte in the evening news. Right before she concedes on the other hand, like last night, or within the next week or so? Everyone would have been/will be listening. I would hope that as part of the speech she would add that for the most part Obama and his campaign have not engaged in sexist or misogynist rhetoric, this does not mean unaffiliated supporters and Obama voters have not, but that it was not in any way to be construed as a conscientious campaign tactic endorsed by Obama. That instead it is entrenched in our American culture. I’d also like to see her say something along the lines of, “There are those who hate women, but there are also those who patronize women, they don’t hate us, but think we are less able, less intelligent, weaker, less than equal. It is this attitude amongst those who call themselves liberal, or progressive, or Democrats, that has infuriated Democratic women all across America during this campaign. We must eradicate these beliefs among our ranks in order to live up to the ideals of the Democratic Party.”

This is exactly what most of us WOC have been saying in so many ways to our white liberal counterparts, that we are being patronized, and that those who call themselves progressives and Democrats do not hate people of color, but they do see us as less than equal.

Read her whole comment here.

The Bad Old Days

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A must-read piece in the New York Times, written by an 80-something doctor who remembers what life was like before Roe. It’s a good reminder of what we have (blessedly) left behind — but what anti-choicers would like to turn us back to. He details the gruesome effects of illegal abortion, but I want to highlight his concluding statement:

It is important to remember that Roe v. Wade did not mean that abortions could be performed. They have always been done, dating from ancient Greek days.

What Roe said was that ending a pregnancy could be carried out by medical personnel, in a medically accepted setting, thus conferring on women, finally, the full rights of first-class citizens — and freeing their doctors to treat them as such.

This is not about ending abortion — it’s about whether women are first-class citizens, deserving of full human rights. Abortion exists. It has always existed, and it probably will always exist. We know what decreases it — contraception; sexual health education; healthy views of sex as a responsibility and a pleasure, not a shame — and we know that the policies promoted by anti-choice groups increase it. We know that illegalizing it doesn’t make it go away. But it does create situations like this:

The patient also did not explain why she had attempted the abortion, and we did not ask. This was a decision she made for herself, and the reasons were hers alone. Yet this much was clear: The woman had put herself at total risk, and literally did not know whether she would live or die.

This, too, was clear: Her desperate need to terminate a pregnancy was the driving force behind the selection of any method available.

The familiar symbol of illegal abortion is the infamous “coat hanger” — which may be the symbol, but is in no way a myth. In my years in New York, several women arrived with a hanger still in place. Whoever put it in — perhaps the patient herself — found it trapped in the cervix and could not remove it.

We did not have ultrasound, CT scans or any of the now accepted radiology techniques. The woman was placed under anesthesia, and as we removed the metal piece we held our breath, because we could not tell whether the hanger had gone through the uterus into the abdominal cavity. Fortunately, in the cases I saw, it had not.

However, not simply coat hangers were used.

Almost any implement you can imagine had been and was used to start an abortion — darning needles, crochet hooks, cut-glass salt shakers, soda bottles, sometimes intact, sometimes with the top broken off.

Another method that I did not encounter, but heard about from colleagues in other hospitals, was a soap solution forced through the cervical canal with a syringe. This could cause almost immediate death if a bubble in the solution entered a blood vessel and was transported to the heart.

The worst case I saw, and one I hope no one else will ever have to face, was that of a nurse who was admitted with what looked like a partly delivered umbilical cord. Yet as soon as we examined her, we realized that what we thought was the cord was in fact part of her intestine, which had been hooked and torn by whatever implement had been used in the abortion. It took six hours of surgery to remove the infected uterus and ovaries and repair the part of the bowel that was still functional.

That is what illegal abortion looks like. All the feigned concern for “babies” doesn’t negate that fact.

And this article fully emphasizes that “pro-lifers” don’t care all that much about life at all — because if they did, they’d take a few minutes to consider the women’s lives they’re putting at risk. And if they were actually interested in decreasing the abortion rate, they would agitate for the kinds of policies we see in the countries with the lowest abortion rates in the world: Universal health care, free contraception, comprehensive sex ed, open discussion about human sexuality, and, yes, legal (and often free) abortion. Instead, they’re busy protesting contraception. Yes, you read that right: They are opposed to the very best tool around at lowering the abortion rate. In fact, they’re claiming that contraception is abortion.

What’s clear is that their definition of “abortion” is something along the lines of “letting women have sex for pleasure” or “letting uppity bitches make their own decisions.”

And as the Times article illustrates, “pro-lifers” are a-ok with allowing death or serious bodily injury be punishment for such a transgression. For the babies, of course.

Finally.

It’s over. I could not be more relieved.

Now it’s time to fight the really bad guy.

UPDATE: I’m happy to see that they’re being classy about this and playing nice:

But she paid homage to Mr. Obama’s accomplishments, saying, “It has been an honor to contest the primaries with him, just as it has been an honor to call him my friend.”

Mr. Obama returned the compliment, saying, “I am a better candidate for having had the honor to compete with Hillary Rodham Clinton.” [interestingly, though, the Times calls Clinton’s speech “combative” and then uses this exact same Obama quote twice in the same story. -ed].

“You can rest assured that when we finally win the battle for universal health care in this country, she will be central to that victory,” Mr. Obama said in remarks prepared to be delivered to his supporters. “When we transform our energy policy and lift our children out of poverty, it will be because she worked to help make it happen.”

Dear Pro-Lifers:

More of this, plz, and less bombing. If you’re going to waste your time harassing people, might as well make it your own.

Thanks.

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