VoteVets.org ad in response to the Limbaugh “phony soldiers” malarky.Digby has the back and forth from a Bill Bennett bloviating escapade on CNN yesterday. Note to Blitzer: you might want to have your producers prepare a fact sheet for you[...]
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Add to myYahoo!WHY ADD GENDER IDENTITY TO ENDA WHEN YOU KNOW IT'S GOING TO BE DROPPED ANYWAY?
Something has been bugging me. Why did Congress add gender identity to ENDA this year if they knew it didn't have the votes and they knew they were going to remove it anyway? I mean, they must have known that America isn't exactly as trans-friendly as it is gay-friendly (and calling America gay-friendly is already a stretch). And they must have known that they didn't yet have the votes in the House, and certainly the Senate, to pass a law that protects transexuals in the workplace. Yet, at the same time they added gender identity to ENDA for the first time ever, those same members of Congress knew that this year they were going to get ENDA passed, come hell or high water.
But none of this makes sense. If you're hell-bent on passing ENDA this year, then you don't add a provision to ENDA that you know is going to kill it. And if you were planning on eventually dropping transgendered people from the bill from the git-go, then why add them in the first place, when you know darn well that there's going to be hell to pay when you drop them? The entire thing doesn't make sense.
Or does it?
MY THEORY ON REVOLUTIONS
I have a theory about all of this. It's a theory about revolutions. I've always believed that you can't force a country to have a revolution, and then expect democracy to stick. Yes, you can launch a coup, topple a government, execute Saddam, but for a revolution to stick - for democracy to stick - a country's citizens need to be responsible for their OWN revolution. Otherwise they have no ownership - it wasn't their revolution, it was yours. (And actually, the Washington Post (I think) did a fascinating article about this a while back, about how statistically revolutions really don't stick when they're forced from the outside - anybody got the link?)
Anyway, that brings us back to transgender rights.
THE ORIGINS OF LGBT/GLBT
Once upon a time we were called "the gay community." Then some of the women in the community felt that the word "gay" really only applied to gay men - women were called "lesbian." So lesbian was added to gay (not clear by whom) and we became the "gay and lesbian" (or "lesbian and gay") community. Then a while after that, bisexuals were feeling left out. Someone then decided to add bisexual to the mix, so we became the "gay, lesbian and bisexual community" (or "lesbian, gay, bisexual"). And if you Google the phrase, you'll see that the phrase, while not used any more, was in popular use a while back, and if you put the lesbians in front, and call it "lgb community," you get 15,000 hits. While verbose, perhaps, none of these inclusions was terribly controversial as everyone in the community accepted that gays, lesbians and bisexuals were all "gay" (well, bisexuals were at least "part-time gays," as the religious right so affectionately calls them :-)
As little as 14 years ago, the phrase "lesbian and gay community" was used by the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force back in 1993 (while NGLTF is now leading the charge for transgender inclusion in the "LGBT" community). And as little as two years ago, GLAAD (which has also been at the forefront of trans inclusion in the gay community) still used the phrase "LGB community" on their Web site to differentiate the gay community from the transgendered community ("By dismissing these issues as merely a by-product of comedy, the LGB community gives a free pass to the mockery of the trans community"). Then, sometime in the late 90s, groups like GLAAD and NGLTF started adding the T to the LGB, and I remember at the time scratching my head as to why. And I wasn't alone.
The moral of the story: Anyone who says that transgendered people have always been accepted as part of the gay community is simply wrong. A little over ten years ago, NGLTF, the group that was quite possibly at the forefront of pushing the inclusion of T in LGB (and who is leading the effort to include trans in ENDA) didn't even use the T themselves. So the question remains, if NGLTF has only accepted transgendered people as part of the community for a little over ten years, when did the rest of the gay community do the same, and has it yet?
I would argue that the gay community never collectively and overwhelmingly decided to include the T in LGB (or GLB). It happened because a few groups like NGLTF and GLAAD starting using it, and they and a handful of vocal activists and transgender leaders pretty much shamed everyone else into doing it. Now, that's not necessarily a bad thing, and it doesn't necessarily mean that the T shouldn't have been added. I'm just saying that I don't think the T was added because there was a groundswell of demand in the gay community that we add T to LGB. I think it happened through pressure, organizational fiat, shame, and osmosis.
And that is how we got into the mess we're in today.
WHEN REVOLUTIONS FAIL
I think that the transgender community was added to ENDA the same way the T got added on to the LGB. By force, and attrition, rather than by popular demand. I remember being at the beach with a bunch of gay friends about 6 or 7 years ago. There was an Advocate or OUT magazine on the table and it was open to some article about the transgender community. The details of the discussion now elude me, but I remember there being a lively debate about just how and when transexuals became part of the gay community, and vice versa - the consensus was that nobody knew how it happened, and nobody was quite sure that they agreed with the inclusion. Now zoom forward to today. We've heard a lot of anger from every single gay group on the planet, save HRC, that gender identity is being dropped from ENDA in order to save the bill. We've also heard from a number of vocal activists. But when I speak to friends and colleagues privately, senior members of the gay political/journalistic establishment, and just plain old gay friends around the country (and our own readers), the message I hear is far different from what I'm hearing from the groups. I'm clearly hearing three things. Well, four:
1. I feel empathy for transgendered people, and support their struggle for civil rights.What I'm hearing is a message far different from what you hear from NGLTF and some of the louder activist claiming to speak for the enlightened masses. I think that a lot of gay people never truly accepted the transgender revolution that was thrust upon them. They simply sat back and shut up about their questions and concerns and doubts out of a sense of shame that it was somehow impolite to even question what was happening, and fear that if they did ask questions they'd be marked as bigots. And now, that paper-thin transgender revolution is coming home to roost.
2. I want ENDA to pass this year even if we can't include transgendered people.
3. I don't understand when transgendered people became part of the gay community?
And then there's always #4: Please don't tell anyone I told you this.
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Add to myYahoo!I'm a big fan of the political concept costume: Last year I wore a Kansas shirt, carried anti-abortion propaganda, and was "What's the Matter With Kansas." Similarly, I have a different costume picked out for this year and so can't...[...]
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Add to myYahoo!Chris Cilizza picks apart the latest poll on Clinton from the Washington Post, which shows her with[...]
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Add to myYahoo!From Monday’s show:Jon Stewart looks at the priorities of the top tier Republican presidential candidates in opting to skip the Tavis Smiley-moderated GOP debate last week… Download (6) | Play (6) Download (0) | Play (3)…and investigative team John Oliver and Larry Willmore ask Morgan State University’s Professor of Black History, Dr. C. Vernon Gray about the importance [...]
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an-american-debate/
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Add to myYahoo!Cato probably deserves some credit for publishing, rather than hiding, this chart showing there's no significant relationship between economic freedom -- as measured by Cato -- and growth. Leaving out the Zimbabwes of the world, economic freedom simply[...]
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Add to myYahoo!You were wondering if these people will say literally anything about their political opponents, including the soldiers they claim to revere, I give you Rush Limbaugh.
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Add to myYahoo!I think most of the OpenLeft.com community would agree that helping strong progressives win[...]
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Add to myYahoo!Yesterday, a couple of GOP congressman tried to reach for the stars, and paint Blackwater USA (and it's CEO Erik Prince) as bi-partisan mercenaries. Unable to show that Prince had given any financial support to Democrats, the GOP trotted out his generous contributions to the Green Party in Pennsylvania last year. And no, the support was not because Prince is particularly environmentally conscious...
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Yesterday, Clear Channel CEO Mark Mays responded to the Senate Democratic Leadership’s call for him to repudiate Rush Limbaugh’s “phony troops” remark. “While I certainly do not agree with all views that are voiced on our stations, I will not condemn our talent for exercising their right to voice them,” Mays wrote.
Though Blackwater USA CEO Erik Prince told a congressional committee yesterday that the company’s guards only opened fire on 195 occasions in Iraq since 2005, “two former Blackwater security guards” say they believe “employees fired more often than the company has disclosed. “The underreporting of shooting incidents was routine in Iraq,” said one guard.
Congress is pushing legislation to give Inspectors General “greater budgetary independence.” The measure would also make it harder for the administration to fire the the watchdogs. The White House is threatening to veto the bill.
The Bush administration has made “seemingly inconsistent decisions” when releasing prisoners they deem “among America’s most-hardened criminals” from Guantanamo Bay, according to Pentagon documents. “Human rights groups contend that the documents show” that the military panels are often “overridden by political expediency.”
The State Department launched its own blog last week, called “Dipnote.” People have already complained “that the white print on a black background makes it hard to read” Finally, “unbiased news directly from the federal government, a news source long noted for truthful, unbiased reporting,” the Washington Post’s Al Kamen mockingly writes.
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