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Posts by Joe Sonka

Adios, Feministe!

My two weeks of guest posting are up today, a big thanks to Jill and everybody here at the Feministe community for welcoming me.

You can find me over at Amplify, where (in my highly biased opinion) we have some of the best young feminist bloggers you’ll find on the internet tubes.

I leave you with some video from Nebraska yesterday, where Dr. Carhart’s allies outnumbered Operation Rescue almost 3:1. Yes, the clinic will stay open, for a long, long time.

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Target Women: Brooke Shields

Sarah Haskins on Mrs. Mom-a-morphosis, who wants to help cure your un-feminine eyelashes, fyi…

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“You don’t have to tell me about ‘the parts’… just tell me to wait”

No, that’s not Leslee Unruh or the National Abstinence Education Association.

It’s the Obama Administration.

Here’s the new tv ad from 4parents.gov, run by the US Dept. of Health and Human Services:

So, let’s see, you’ve been in office 8 months now, right Barack? And this is what we’re still peddling?

It gets worse at their website. Here’s what they have to say about marriage:

This Web site talks a lot about marriage, and that waiting until marriage is a sensible choice for your son or daughter to make when it comes to sex. But what’s so valuable about marriage? Why is marriage any different, or any better than other family situations?

First of all, let’s be clear on one important point. In general, children – and adults – do better in homes headed by a married mother and father.

****

What are the benefits married people enjoy?

  • Live longer.
  • Have better physical and emotional health.
  • Are happier.
  • Earn more.
  • Enjoy better sex lives.

That’s right, folks. Tell your kids they better get hitched to their heterosexual partner, or else you’ll never have great sex and you’ll die young, poor and unhappy. And whatever you do, don’t talk about “the parts”…

Your tax dollars (still) at work…

(crossposted from Amplify)

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“Are you a treasure or a target?”: More sex ed FAIL from Ohio

For some reason or another, Ohio schools seemed to be inundated with some of the worst abstinence-only-until-marriage programs in the entire country.

Ohio is the home of Elizabeth’s New Life Center, notable for employing Derek the Abstinence Clown, who comes to middle school classrooms to perform and inform kids that using condoms is like juggling machetes. Elizabeth also teaches that abortion will give you breast cancer and “post-abortion-syndrome“, a nice fallback for those unfortunate students who learned sex from a fracking clown and find themselves with a positive pregnancy test.

Ohio also has the creatively named Abstinence Till Marriage program, whose Miss the Mess website happily promoted Rape Culture, informing youth that, as Jill put it, “you can’t rape a slut” (this was before the Netroots shamed them into taking it down, fortunately).

But Ohio also has Operation Keepsake, another multi-million dollar ab-only beneficiary of our tax dollars over the past decade. (I’ll give you a hint what the “keepsake” is: it rhymes with rhymin’)

I recently ran across a quiz on their website called “Are you a treasure or a target”, aimed at young women.

Yea, I bet you see where this is going…

Below is the quiz. I bolded hypothetical answers for each question to see if I was, in fact, a “target”.

1. Micro minis are hot again, but they don’t leave too much to the imagination.  You:

a. Run out to Express and buy one.
b. Compromise-cut off your longer jean skirt to give it a fresh look, but no shorter than a couple of inches above the knee.
c. Who cares about the latest style?  You hate skirts-its cargo pants all the way.

2. You met your crush at:

a. School
b. A teen dance club
c. Through a friend of the family
3. Your crush asks you out.  He seems really nice but you’re not sure he values waiting to have sex until marriage like you do.  You:

a. Ask him straight up.
b. Go with the flow-it will come up sooner or later.
c. Assume he’s a good guy. I mean, he’s cute and dresses well.

4. What do you know about your crush?

a. Not much, except that he’s hot!
b. He looks good on my arm, and he’s been a real gentleman the whole two weeks we’ve gone out!
c. He’s cute, respectful, and fun to hang with.

5. Your parents give you an 11 P.M. curfew.  You think it’s SO childish.  Don’t they trust you?  So when you’re out with your crush, you:

a. Lie about it-tell him you have a 12:30 A.M. curfew.
b. Respect your parents and confidently tell your guy that he should have you home by 11 p.m.
c. Tell the truth, but trash your parents and their “stupid” rules in the meantime.

6. You’re at the movies with friends and you notice a group of cute guys.  You:

a. Walk by repeatedly, tossing your hair, talking and giggling loudly.
b. Walk right up to them and invite them to sit with you and your friends.
c. Appreciate the fact that they are cute and move on.  They might be cute, but you know nothing about them.

As you can see, I chose some pretty “conservative” answers, nothing that could even remotely be considered “scandalous”. But guess what? Wrong. A young woman filling out the quiz this way is informed that they are, in fact, a “target”:

6 – 10: Target…You make decisions based on what others think instead of what is best and healthiest for you.  It’s not a big deal when it comes to picking simple things like shoes, but when it comes to major decisions-like who you date-you could be in a lot of trouble.  If you want to be truly respected and valued for the real you, then you’ve got to know what makes you truly valuable.  Hint:  It’s more than your body, your looks, the friends you hang with, and the guys you date.  If you don’t know what really makes you valuable, then why would anyone else?

Yes, in other words: “if you act like a tramp, you’ll get what’s coming to you”.

“Slut-shaming” and Rape Culture, all wrapped into one.

But the madness from Operation Keepsake of course doesn’t stop there. As is the case with most abstinence-only programs, they intentionally demonize condom use.

BUT… maybe you’re saying that wearing a condom is still better than nothing. Hmm…interesting idea. Tell you what, I’ll go out to the parking lot after school and we’ll have a demonstration about that point. I’ll run out into the street and stand in front of a car. Before I let it hit me, I’ll put on a football helmet because it’s better than wearing nothing.

Now that’s some first class “education” right there! Its no wonder that, after a 15 year decline, teen births rates have gone up the past 2 recorded years in Ohio, along with a skyrocketing STI rate.

With President Obama zeroing out the existing federal funding for abstinence-only-until-marriage programs in his 2010 budget, their days of sucking up our tax dollars to spew this nonsense are numbered. The battle will now come down at the local level, both in terms of state/local government, and these organizations’ ability to raise money in the private sector to stay afloat.

In Ohio, as well as the rest of the country, let’s hope they sink.

(crossposted from Amplify)

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Senator Kennedy and the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances Act

Last night, Senator Ted Kennedy passed away at the age of 77, after 47 years of serving his country in the United States Senate.

As we currently still face the threat of harrassment and violence at women’s health clinics from the likes of Randall Terry and Operation Rescue, let’s remember the work of Senator Kennedy to pass the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances Act, which made it a federal crime to use force, the threat of force, or physical obstruction to prevent individuals from obtaining or providing reproductive health care services.

While we are nowhere near where we should be in terms of protecting women and employees of these clinics, lets all be grateful for the work of Sen. Kennedy to at least bring their safety one step further in America.

Here is the text of Sen. Kennedy’s speech on the Senate floor in 1993:

Mr. President, this legislation will protect women, doctors and other health care providers from the tactics of violence and intimidation that are often used by antiabortion activists.

In the past 15 years, more than 1,000 acts of violence against abortion providers have been documented in the United States. Over 100 clinics have been bombed or burned to the ground. Hundreds more have been vandalized.

A recent survey by the Feminist Majority Foundation of clinics around the country showed that during the first 7 months of this year, fully half of the participating clinics had been the targets of arson, bomb threats, chemical attacks, invasions and blockades, and other abuses.

It is not only the clinics that are being attacked. Doctors, nurses, and patients have all become targets. At least two doctors have been shot by antiabortion extremists.

Dr. David Gunn was murdered last March when he was shot at point-blank range outside a clinic in Pensacola, FL. At a Wichita clinic in August, Dr. George Tiller was shot and wounded in both arms.

In December 1991,

a man in a ski mask opened fire with a sawed-off shotgun at an abortion clinic in Springfield, MO, and two clinic workers were seriously wounded.

And the worst is by no means over.

The Pensacola News Journal reported last week that Operation Rescue has announced plans to shut down two Pensacola clinics this month, using unspecified field activities that will undoubtedly include these tactics.

Attacks on clinics are not isolated incidents. Health care providers are living in fear for their lives. Many have received explicit threats against themselves and their families. One doctor in Texas received a letter in his mailbox at home that said, `Now you will die by my gun in your head * * *. Get ready [you're] dead.’

A doctor in Rhode Island, who testified before the Labor Committee, was notified that a catastrophic health and dismemberment insurance policy was taken out for his wife.

Many physicians have found their faces, names, and addresses on `Wanted’ posters. They take these threats seriously–especially after Dr. Gunn’s murder, because he, too, had been targeted on wanted posters.

In addition to the violence and threats of violence,

clinic blockades and invasions are disrupting the delivery of health care services throughout the country. Since 1977, over 30,000 arrests have been made in connection with clinic blockades and related disruptions.

Typically, in these incidents, dozens of persons–and sometimes hundreds, or even thousands–join together to barricade clinic entrances and exits. Often, they push their way into the clinics, then chain themselves to the furniture and equipment.

A widely used recent tactic is to inject toxic chemicals into the facility in the middle of the night. Acid to make staff and patients ill is sprayed into the clinic, where it seeps into carpets and furniture. The clinic is forced to shut down for days or weeks while it undergoes an expensive cleanup.

These are not peaceful protests. These attacks are more akin to assaults. The city manager of Falls Church, VA called them military assaults in testimony before the Labor Committee describing attacks on a clinic in his jurisdiction. Patients and staff were held hostage for hours while the police tried to restore order, and a police officer was injured in the melee.

The consequences of this kind of conduct are unacceptable. The constitution guarantees the right of a woman to end a pregnancy, but the violence and blockades are designed to make it impossible for women to exercise that right.

Already, 83 percent of the counties in this country have no abortion provider. As clinics are burned down and the doctors are intimidated, it becomes harder and harder for women to obtain a safe and legal abortion.

The violence and blockades hurt others too. Many of the targeted clinics offer a wide range of health services. When these clinics are bombed, burned, blockaded or invaded, all of their patients suffer.

The Blue Mountain Clinic in Missoula, MT, was totally destroyed by arson last March. The clinic offered abortions, but it also provided prenatal care and delivery, childhood immunizations, diagnosis and treatment of sexually transmitted diseases, and contraceptive services. Many patients traveled over a hundred miles to obtain health care from the clinic. Now, that community has lost access to these needed services.

The perpetrators of this conduct believe that abortion is wrong, and they are entitled to their view. But no matter how strongly they feel, assaulting doctors and blockading and bombing clinics should not be tolerated.

This legislation is designed to prevent this reprehensible conduct and to ensure that it will be punished when it occurs.

It establishes a new Federal criminal offense prohibiting force, threat of force, physical obstruction, or destruction of property intended to interfere with access to pregnancy or abortion-related services. It also establishes the right to bring Federal civil suits to enjoin such conduct and to obtain damages to compensate the victims.

The language of the bill is drawn in part from Federal civil rights laws that prohibit force or threat of force to interfere with the exercise of other fundamental Federal rights–such as the right to vote, or to obtain Federal benefits, or to obtain housing without regard to race. Examples are found at 18 U.S.C. 245(b), and 42 U.S.C. 3631. Both of these laws were enacted as part of the Civil Rights Act of 1968.

The penalties in this bill are consistent with the penalties set forth in those laws: up to 1 year of imprisonment for the first offense; up to 3 years for subsequent offenses; up to 10 years if bodily injury results; and up to life in prison if death results.

The U.S. Criminal Code also provides for a range of maximum fines for Federal crimes, depending on the applicable maximum prison term, and such fines will be available here as well.

This measure prohibits four specific categories of conduct:

(1) It prohibits the use of force, including shooting or assaulting providers or patients.

(2) It prohibits the threat of force.

This provision applies in the case of serious, credible threats of bodily harm, such as the explicit death threats that many doctors have received.

(3) It prohibits physical obstruction of the facilities.

This is carefully defined in the legislation to mean making the entrance or exit impassable, or making passage unreasonably difficult or hazardous.

(4) It prohibits the damage or destruction of property. This includes arson, firebombing, chemical attacks, and other serious vandalism.

The legislation does not restrict activities protected by the first amendment. Those who are picketing peacefully outside clinics, praying or singing, or engaging in sidewalk counseling and similar activities that do not block the entrances have nothing to fear from this law. Those activities are protected by the Constitution, and this legislation does not restrict them.

The violent conduct that this legislation does prohibit is not even arguably protected by the first amendment, even if it is intended to express a point of view. As the Supreme Court said last June in its unanimous opinion in the hate crimes case Wisconsin versus Mitchell:

[A] physical assault is not by any stretch of the imagination expressive conduct protected by the first amendment * * *. Violence or other types of potentially expressive activities that produce special harms distinct from their communicative impact * * * are entitled to no constitutional protection.

[Wisconsin v. Mitchell, 113 S. Ct. 2194 (June 11, 1993).]

The same is true of physical obstruction of access to a public or private building–it is entitled to no constitutional protection. [Cox v. Louisiana, 379 U.S. 536, 555 (1965).]

In short, this legislation will not penalize a point of view. It will not penalize conduct expressing that point of view in nonviolent, nonobstructive ways.

The only conduct it prohibits is violent or obstructive conduct that is far outside any constitutional protection.

That is why the measure has been unequivocally endorsed by the American Civil Liberties Union and many others who have reviewed its constitutional implications.

Some may wonder why we need a Federal law, since such activities are normally a matter for State and local authorities. State and local laws against trespass, vandalism, assault and homicide, cover a large part of the conduct this legislation would address.

But in a number of incidents around the country, local officials, apparently opponents of abortion rights themselves, have been unwilling to enforce the laws. A sheriff in Texas has stated unequivocally that he will not enforce the law against those seeking to stop abortions. A police chief in Minnesota was arrested for participating in a clinic invasion himself.

A Federal law is also needed because we are confronted with a nationwide pattern of conduct by persons and organizations who operate across State lines in a manner that often makes it difficult or impossible for local authorities to respond effectively. Antiabortion activities of the most extreme kind have been reported in every part of the United States. When the organizers and their recruits move from one clinic to another in different jurisdictions, Federal investigative and law enforcement resources are essential.

Local authorities are often overwhelmed by the sheer numbers of clinic attackers. The Falls Church, VA, official who testified to the Labor Committee told us that his town had only 30 uniformed officers to arrest over 200 clinic attackers. It took hours for the police to clear the clinic. The lone city prosecutor handling the charges was swamped, and ultimately the trial had to be held in the community gym, because it was the only place large enough.

Clearly, these cases should be Federal cases.

Prior to the Supreme Court’s decision in Bray versus Alexandria Health Clinic last January, in circumstances like this the clinic operators, staff or patients could apply to Federal court for an injunction, which could then be enforced by U.S. marshals.

For example, in the campaign against several clinics in Wichita in the summer of 1991, it was the Federal marshals who were able to restore order. But in Bray, the Court held that the civil rights law under which such injunctions had been issued does not apply to antiabortion blockades. That decision created an unfortunate gap in the Federal laws that this legislation will close.

Attorney General Reno, with her background in local law enforcement and her special sensitivity to the appropriate roles of Federal and local authorities, wholeheartedly concurs in the need for Federal help here. In fact, she testified that enactment of this legislation is one of the Justice Department’s top priorities.

Some have asked why the bill singles out abortion-related violence and blockades. The answer is that this legislation singles out for new Federal penalties and remedies exactly the conduct that calls for a Federal response–no more, no less. Antiabortion violence and blockades that have been occurring across the Nation as part of a coordinated, systematic campaign to intimidate abortion providers and patients, and State and local authorities have been unable to control it.

Nothing remotely comparable is happening that would justify a Federal law against violent demonstrations in other contexts. There is no record of any organized, nationwide pattern of violence or blockades by labor unions or any other group, let alone a pattern of conduct that local authorities have been unable to handle.

When a need for Federal legislation is shown, Congress should act.

Last year we passed by voice vote a law prohibiting violence against animal research facilities. No one objected on the ground that it singled out animal research opponents unfairly.

Finally, S. 636 evenhandedly addresses the possibility of abuses by both sides of the abortion controversy. It provides exactly the same protection for pro-life counseling centers, staff, and clients that it provides for abortion clinics and their staff or clients. It does so by applying its prohibitions to conduct aimed at interfering with pregnancy or abortion-related services, and defining that term to include services relating to pregnancy or the termination of a pregnancy.

If abortion rights activists were to vandalize a pro-life counseling center, or use force against a counselor who works there, they would be subject to the same criminal and civil liability as pro-life activists who attack abortion clinics or use force against a doctor who works there.

This provision was added to S. 636 in the Labor Committee to respond to the desire for equal treatment of both sides. The even-handedness principle is further refined in the modified substitute I offer today. At the request of Senator Wofford, we have changed the name of the services covered from `abortion-related’ to `pregnancy or abortion-related,’ to make it even clearer that pro-life pregnancy counseling is included in its protections.

In addition, as a further modification after discussions with Senators Durenberger and Kassebaum, the bill ensures that demonstrators–whichever side of the abortion debate they are on–do not obtain any right under this law to bring a civil suit.

Only patients and clinic personnel will have that right.

As reported by the Labor Committee, S. 636 permitted any person aggrieved by the prohibited conduct to sue for damages or injunctive relief. That could have been read to permit suits against clinic attackers to be brought not only by a patient or doctor or clinic owner, but also by a pro-choice demonstrator or clinic defender. Pro-life demonstrators outside the same clinic would not have had a similar right to such relief.

As modified, the bill restores the evenhandedness principle. It permits suits only by persons involved in providing or obtaining services in the facility. If demonstrators outside a clinic engage in pushing, shoving, or other forceful conduct against each other, neither side can sue under this law.

This measure, in short, provides fair, evenhanded treatment for all concerned. It is urgently needed. It is not enough for Congress to condemn the violence.

We must act before more doctors are killed, or more clinics are blockaded or burned to the ground.

Law enforcement officials at all levels of government agree, including Attorney General Reno,

who testified in strong support of this legislation. The consensus includes the State attorneys general, who adopted a unanimous resolution urging Congress to pass this law. It includes local officials throughout the country who need this Federal help.

All of the leading women’s rights groups and groups concerned with women’s reproductive health regard this measure as a top priority.

Health care providers, too, have joined in calling for passage of this legislation. The American Medical Association has endorsed it, and so has the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. Their view is clear–no doctor should be forced to go to work in a bulletproof vest.

In addition, the respected British medical journal, the Lancet, in an editorial in its October 16, 1993 issue, addressed this issue in American medicine and stated, `Congress should act soon to end this terrorism.’

The Senate should act, and act now. This measure has bipartisan support from Senators who are pro-choice and Senators who are pro-choice and Senators who are pro-life. We may not agree on the issue of abortion, but we do agree that the use of violence by either side to advance its views is wrong.

I urge the Senate to pass this legislation.

(crossposted from Amplify)
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Randall Terry’s pathetic road show

Domestic terrorist Randall Terry, who has warned of “random acts of violence” and violent “reprisals against those deemed guilty” if healthcare reform is passed, is currently on a 10-city freakshow tour of the south.

terry1Yesterday, the freakshow went to Louisville, KY, where Terry performed a “skit” with two “actors”. Dressed as a doctor (after stabbing a baby doll), he stabbed someone playing an old women in the neck, with a sign behind him reading “Obama death-care. One dead patient at a time.” He then shook the hand of a white guy in an Obama mask over the woman on the ground.

Oh, and the politician’s office that was the target of this “protest”? Mitch McConnell, he of the 100% rating from the National Right to Life Committee over the last 10 years. Because? He hasn’t opposed Obama’s health care plan enough. Mitch McConnell hasn’t.

This is true, unbridled insanity.

Though no one attended his idiotic display besides two journalists in Louisville, a 13 and 14-year old who witnessed Terry in Nashville had this to say:

“I think this is a disgrace,” said 13-year-old Jontrez London of Nashville. “Obama’s trying to save people. He ain’t gonna try to kill an old lady.”

Another baby doll went flying and 14-year-old Malcolm Wells shook his head and sighed.

“These are adults acting like children,” he said.

Not children. These are psychopathic violent people, who have every intention to act on it, if given the opportunity. And if the Justice Department lets their guard down, Dr. Tiller’s tragedy can happen again.

With Dr. Leroy Carhart’s federal Marshall protection recently withdrawn, Operation Rescue is now set to descend on his clinic in Nebraska this weekend to “keep it closed”, referring to Carhart’s intention to re-open Tiller’s clinic in Kansas.

If you live in Kansas and Nebraska, the local NOWs are organizing massive counter-demonstrations for the entire weekend, which you can find out about at the links above.

But in all seriousness, this should not be the job of private citizens to defend doctors and patients from potential terrorists. Call Attorney Gen. Holder (202-353-1555) and demand that the Justice Department return federal Marshall protection for Dr. Carhart, immediately.

(crossposted from Amplify)

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Target Women: Charm School

National treasure Sarah Haskins takes a look at the most horrid reality show this side of “More to Love“.

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Michele Bachmann: radical pro-choice feminist?

Fo realz?!?

“That’s why people need to continue to go to the town halls, continue to melt the phone lines of their liberal members of Congress, and let them know, under no certain circumstances will I give the government control over my body and my health care decisions.

Umm… Michele? Maybe you should think really hard about those words that just came out of your mouth?

Here’s Michele on a typical (bad) day:

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One woman takes on King Coal. And wins.

Back in my home state of Kentucky, there is perhaps no greater tragedy than mountaintop removal coal mining (MTR). This is a method of mining where mountains are literally blown up and leveled, with the remaining debris dumped into the valleys. This creates not only horrific wastelands in its wake, but pollutes valley streams and the water supply all who live around it. MTR in Appalachia has destroyed an estimated 470 mountains and has buried or polluted 2,000 miles of waterways. But coal companies do this in eastern Kentucky and West Virginia because it is cheaper and requires less labor.

Why is this allowed to happen? Because in WV, and to a large extent in KY, the coal industry owns the state government. To cite just one of many examples in KY, the chairman of the House environmental committee is a staunch global warming denier who every year blocks a hearing or a vote on the bill seeking to end MTR practices. For the past 100 years, “King Coal” has gotten exactly whatever policy it wanted. However, the benefits for these communities have not “trickled down” to the citizens, as this region of Appalachia remains one of the poorest, least healthy, and least happy regions in the entire country.

Many grassroots activists have fought against MTR in this region, but they are at a severe disadvantage. Not only from their state government, but from coal company goons who threaten and intimidate anyone who stands in their way.

But in a small WV town, one woman fought the coal industry and won. Meet Maria Gunnoe:

In 2000, a 1,200-acre mountaintop removal mine began on the ridge above Gunnoe’s home. Today, her house sits directly below a 10-story valley fill that contains two toxic ponds of mine waste comprised of run-off from the mine. Since the mine became operational, Gunnoe’s property has flooded seven times. Before mining began, Gunnoe’s property was never prone to such flooding. In a 2004 flood, much of Gunnoe’s ancestral home was destroyed and her yard was covered in toxic coal sludge. The coal company told her the damage was an “act of God.” As a result of mine waste, her well and ground water have been contaminated, forcing her family to use bottled water for cooking and drinking.

That’s when Gunnoe sprung into action, organizing people in her community with the help of the Ohio Valley Environmental Committee. Though Gunnoe and OVEC won a court ruling against MTR permits in southern WV, the Army Corps of Engineers defied this ruling and still granted valley fill permits. When Gunnoe organized a meeting for fellow residents who were scheduled to testify with her in the coming trial, 60 coal company goons descended on them, breaking up the meeting and threatening them with violence if they kept rocking the boat. Gunnoe and her family became the constant targets of death threats.

(to give you an example of what “coal company goons” look like, check out this video of Massey Coal Company thugs breaking up small picnic of local environmentalists in Kentucky this past 4th of July. These are frighteningly ignorant and violent people)

Because of the threats to their safety, Gunnoe’s neighbors refused to testify, leaving Gunnoe as the only witness from her community willing to do so. Nevertheless, she won the case and Jupiter Holdings was barred from making any new valley fills in her community.

Today, she remains the constant targets of threats against her family, life, and property. These sick thugs even shot her daughter’s dog. But she continues to fight, and isn’t going to let them bully her.

I know that much of Appalachia got a really bad rap during the 2008 election, and much of it deservingly so. But I just wanted to let everybody know that there are truly righteous, amazing and courageous people who live here, who don’t fit into the negative stereotype that people have of this region. And they have one kickass feminist activist named Maria Gunnoe, who everybody should know.

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Plumber Sam joins the Violence Against Pelosi Club

Fresh off having been the butt of a murder “joke” by Glenn Beck (ha ha), Nancy Pelosi today got another veiled threat of violence by an unhinged man. This time, it was the 2008 mascot of the Republican Party, “Joe” the Plumber:

For Pelosi to write about us bein’ un-American and disprespectful — I’ll tell ya what: I respect nobody who lies to me and manipulates me and takes my money and puts my children in debt. They want me to be respectful towards them? Please! You know, I’m not the most civilized person: Those kind of people, I usually took behind the woodshed and just beat the livin’ tar out of ‘em.

While we’re all quite impressed with what a rugged manly man Sam is (he also talked about disciplining his children with his feet), what I’m constantly struck by is how easily this stuff just rolls off of the tongue of people like him and Beck. It’s a second nature reaction towards any woman who dares to disagree or stand up for what they believe in. Oh, but both of them to tell their supporters (as Sam did today) that using violence against people they disagree with is wrong, in their next breath. So persuasive, that argument…

Fortunately, as I write this, Wal-Mart (yes, Wal-Mart) has just become the 20th company over the past two weeks to pull their advertising from Glenn Beck’s crazy hate-and-tears fest. At least blatant racism, sexism and violence provocation isn’t as market-friendly as it used to be. Not that that will stop people from trying to sell it, by any means.

(crossposted from Amplify)

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