Nudity is an appropriate response
Life on this planet is not easy. Every part of this planet is trying to exterminate us, from floods to hurricanes, a “wall of water” in Florida, earthquakes, volcano eruptions, and bears that are sick and tired of being compared to creepy white men. This is not a planet that is especially kind to human beings. You’d think we’d be more careful to band together and make sure that we are all living the best lives we possibly can. But no. We stupidly have decided that killing each other, disrespecting each other, and just plain being mean is how we want to behave.
Okay, maybe let me filter that a little bit. That is how the far-right portion of the country, dominated politically by Southern Baptists and the GOP, chooses to behave. I’ve not seen too many people outside of that group being such poor examples of humanity, though there certainly are some. Mental illness is usually the excuse given to them. Still, the GOP and their felonious leader are intent on disrespecting, if not outright eliminating, the lives of everyone who doesn’t agree with them. Whoever gave them the idea that they have the right to do that needs to have their noggin examined, but since no one is taking responsibility for that, we have to take them to task ourselves.
I’m going to look at three specific things that happened recently and were reported today. These things matter because if we don’t lock them down and yell and scream our absolute disgust and outrage, they’ll keep happening and, ultimately you will pay the price. Personally, I plan on dying sometime in the next twenty years, so I’ll probably avoid the worst of it. But the rest of you are in danger. Consider this your warning.
A lot of people like to accuse the good folks of Seattle, Washington of being liberal and soft on crime, but that’s not the case of Aaron Brown Myers, a 51-year-old resident of the city who apparently thinks he’s a one-person police force. This fucking idiot decided that he was going to sit outside a Big 5 Sporting Goods store in Renton, Washington “just in case” the place were to be the victim of a violent crime. WHY he thought that the sporting goods store was going to be targeted no one seems to know at this point. Still, this self-proclaimed “security consultant” sat out in the parking lot and waited for something to happen.
Along come three kids, two of the kids had Airsoft guns on their person, one in a back pocket, the other in a coat pocket. They intended to return or replace the guns because they weren’t operating as they should. It’s important to understand that Airsoft is a game, not a brand. The compressed air-powered weapons can be purchased legally from a variety of sources and, because they’re not considered lethal, can be purchased and carried by people under the age of 18. Because of the wide variety of brands and the popularity of such games, it’s not too surprising that some guns would be prone to being faulty.
Seeing the three kids, Myers makes the stupid decision that they must be about to violently rob the store and decides to intervene. He ended up killing a 17-year-old. The teen was shot once in the side and six times in the back. King County senior deputy prosecuting attorney Lauren M. Burke wrote in a case summary, “In this case, the defendant attacked three teenagers who had not committed any crime and at every stage of the interaction chose to escalate with more and more violence until it culminated in the defendant taking the life of 17-year-old H.R.”
Myers’ attorneys are claiming that he “feared for his life,” but you and I both know that’s total nonsense. He was told that the boys were only carrying Airsoft guns, not real ones. And shooting anyone in the back six times is overly aggressive. Furthermore, this isn’t the first time Myers has pulled this stunt! According to public records, on March 22, Myers called 911 and said that a person on a bicycle was holding a gun and pointing it at people. He told the 911 operator that he (Myers) had a pistol and “might have to intervene.” That time, the police got there and discovered that there was no weapon. Left to his own devices, Myers would have shot a totally innocent person.
This is one of the biggest problems with the broad outline of the Second Amendment. Myers isn’t part of some “regulated militia!” He’s a fucking menace! It’s because of him that the very concept of “good guys with a gun” is null and void. Just earlier this week, the FBI announced that murders across the country are down by 15% over last year! We don’t need fuck-ups like Myers taking it upon himself to sit in random parking lots and look for potential robbers. He’s killed someone completely innocent. A kid who had his entire life in front of him and probably was himself a gun proponent. Because of idiots like this, you and I are better off shopping from home.
Long before they showed up in Indianapolis this week, we knew the Southern Baptist Convention was going to do some stupid things while in town. The fun thing is that the headline being spread around sounds like they didn’t. “Southern Baptists reject ban on women pastors in historic vote” is the headline being pushed by USA Today. As is often the case with this particular news source, the headline is not 100% accurate.
While the 10,000 or so “messengers” fell short of the two-thirds majority to change their constitution, they only did so narrowly. 61% voted in favor of the measure. Southern Baptists still hate the voice of women, still reject the historical and biblical authority of women, and have their heads completely up their asses and stuck deep in their bowels as to how women could actually help the rapidly declining population of the denomination. Being a woman in a Southern Baptist church is like being a mole on someone’s back: no one notices until it turns cancerous and starts causing trouble.
Let’s be very clear: what Southern Baptist rejected was allowing the national organization, or any subset thereof, to control the actions of individual churches in any way, shape, or form. This was about governmental autonomy, not women. One of the hallmarks of the SBC is that each of their churches is independent. There is no council that keeps pastors in line, there is no committee that can slap sanctions on a church that steps out of line. This is why they have no database, no hard records, and no way of defrocking ministers who are guilty of rape and sexual abuse, both of which are, according to previous outside reports, rampant across the entirety of SBC churches. They’re a bunch of ministerial predators who want to avoid anything that could get them caught and result in a large number of pastors and youth ministers ending up in jail. THAT is what the SBC rejected this afternoon.
Making their hatred of and desire to dominate women even more obvious, the SBC also voted today to condemn IVF procedures. In my opinion, this may be one of the most cruel statements they’ve ever issued. What the statement essentially does is allow local churches to excommunicate, or in their terms, “remove from fellowship,” any woman who avails herself of IVF procedures at any time, whether it works or not.
Disclaimer: I have both family members and very dear friends who are the fortunate parents of darling children whose birth would not have been possible without IVF. I might be a bit biased on the issue.
Why in the world would the SBC [and the Catholic church as well] villainize a medical procedure that holds the potential of bolstering their sagging membership? Because IVF has become the new center of the ridiculous abortion argument. Mind you, it’s not a debate. A debate occurs between two reasonable people based on established facts. The anti-abortion side is not reasonable and refuses to recognize established medical facts. This is a sloppy and unnecessary argument that no intelligent person would engage in were this a reasonable society. The far-right is afraid of reason, however. They fear that reason will keep you from believing in their deity (which is likely true). Therefore, they abandon reason altogether and come at us with one stupid idea after another.
IVF has helped millions of families conceive and have beautiful children who are loved and cherished. The process (which I just had to explain to Tipper because she was looking over my shoulder) involves taking an egg from the mommy and the sperm from the daddy and introducing them to each other in a petri dish. If the egg likes the sperm and becomes fertilized, it is then planted back in the mommy who then becomes pregnant. Nine months later, if everything goes well, a beautiful little baby is born.
The problem, from a medical perspective, is that not everything goes well. In fact, the chances of a mother’s body rejecting the zygote (calling it a fetus is wrong) are pretty high. That’s why doctors don’t do one at a time. Repeated rejections would be extremely difficult on the mother’s body and could keep her from ever carrying a baby to term. To remedy that problem, they take multiple eggs (and plenty of sperm) and then only reinsert the most viable zygotes. This is why you’ve seen a dramatic increase in the number of twins, triplets, and quads over the past few years. It is safe to assume that if they’re not identical (all from the same egg) siblings, then they are likely IVF babies.
Again, you’d think churches would be excited about the prospect of more babies! But no, they’re worried about the leftovers, the ones that are either ethically destroyed or frozen in case the couple wants to try again somewhere down the road. In the opinion of the church, destroying those eggs and sperm, most of which have not yet been brought together and likely never will be, is the same as abortion.
See? I told you they don’t recognize established facts! These are not viable fetuses that we’re talking about! If implanted in a mother’s womb, there is a severe potential they could do incalculable damage to the woman’s body. And you know what else? The SBC wants other couples to “adopt” these frozen specimens and “bring them into a full life.” Do you even begin to comprehend how fucking dangerous that is? Getting IVF to take hold is rough enough when only the biological parents are involved. Bring in another family and the chances for everything to go wrong, including but not limited to the death of the woman, rises astronomically! Who the fuck would want to encourage that? Slapping everyone across the face with an iron skillet would be less painful!
This is exactly how wrong Catholics, Southern Baptists, and the GOP are on reproductive rights. They’d rather see people die than listen to science and/or allow a woman to have control over her own body. They’re happy to risk the lives of adults if it “saves” a fucking zygote. There are no working brain cells in their argument! This is idiocy at its worst and if you’re buying this load of crap then you’re just as big an idiot.
Yeah, I said it. Intelligent people trust the science, not the mythology.
And that’s just a part of the crazy that has taken place today. You might as well strip down and run around naked in your front yard. You still won’t be as crazy as the far right and their felonious leader.
Morning Update: 07/24/24
When yesterday started, I wasn’t expecting much from the day. My legs were feeling a bit worn from Monday’s adventures around Lake Ogle. I was expecting a low-key day with maybe some photo processing in the afternoon. I had discussed with Tipper the possibility of going on the bus to familiarize her with the route she would need to take to go downtown and she seemed to dismiss the idea rather flatly. Then, around 11:00, she comes in and asks, “If we go on the bus today, what time would we need to leave?” I checked the schedule, made sure the bus was on time (always an issue), and told her we needed to catch the 12:38 bus. She said, “Okay, let’s do that. We’ll leave around noon?”
And that was that. We had another adventure scheduled for the day. The first question was whether she could wear her furry head on the bus. I told her no, that the head would be too large. I was also thinking that it might frighten any small children we encountered and I’m not 100% sure what the bus rules are on such things. She was disappointed but optioned to wear the furry paws instead. That was still a questionable choice in Dad’s opinion, but what does Dad know? I finished what I was doing and got ready to go.
Of course, with Tipper being much like her mother in matters of timing, we were at the bus stop early. A young man who was sitting there immediately engaged us in conversation. His first question to me was, “Are you Mexican?” I shook my head no. I wasn’t interested in starting down that road. He then asked if Tipper was my granddaughter. I stifled the laugh and tried to keep my voice stern when answering, “No, she’s my daughter.” He turned to Tipper and started chatting with her, dumping fragments of his life story in a barrage that didn’t end even after we got on the bus. She was pleasant and polite to him, but I was glad she didn’t have an open seat next to her. I’m going to be concerned any time she has to take the bus by herself.
We got to the Transit Center downtown. I showed her where her connecting bus would normally be waiting, and then we discussed an alternative bus in the event the first bus was delayed (because that, too, is an issue). We decided to ride the alternative bus to the school, which was interesting. That bus took us down through Fountain Square before turning up past the Justice Center (jail and related courts), before turning back West and going past the school. The trip was long enough that we agreed that the route should only be used if the original bus route was running more than 20 minutes late.
Getting off across the street from the school, the bus for the normal route she would take came up almost immediately to take us back to the Transit Center. The brevity of that ride emphasized the importance of taking that route over the alternative.
By the time we arrived at the Transit Center, it was past 2:30 and we had neither one had lunch. Downtown is as good a place as any to find something to eat, so I asked Tipper what type of food she wanted and her response was, “soup.” No problem. There’s a little locally-owned soup shop just off the Circle on Market Street, a brief three-block stroll. Tipper’s not been downtown much since she was younger, so this was a good chance to familiarize her with the area, specifically the City/County building and other places that should be safe to duck into if something was wrong or out of the ordinary. Again, her being alone is my biggest concern.
The soup was great, we walked back to the Transit Center and got on the bus to bring us home. We were about 20 minutes into the ride when the bus broke down. Hydraulics failure. Once again, this happens far too often and is one of the reasons people who live here can’t depend on the bus for critical back-and-forth-to-work transportation. We waited over 30 minutes for another bus to pick us up and complete the route. G told us that this sort of thing happened quite a bit last year, so Tipper will have to be ready for those delays.
By the time we got home, I was beyond exhausted. I had a coupon for KFC, so we used that for dinner. There was no way I was cooking. KFC was a severe disappointment, though, and G reminded me, rather sternly, that both he and his sister can cook. He would have rather they take care of dinner than suffer through the disaster we had just eaten. I’ll take note of that.
I forced myself to stay awake long enough to ensure that I’d sleep through the night, though it didn’t feel as though that was going to be an issue. The kids are both still asleep, despite the animals and me bumping around, taking out trash, making coffee, and all the other morning noises. In a way, this is sort of our last “open” day before school starts on Monday. Tomorrow is their back-to-school events. Friday will be making final preparations. Saturday will be getting all the chores done for the next week. I want to say there’s some obligation on Sunday but I don’t remember at the moment what it is.
Personally, I’m looking forward to a nap. Maybe two. We’ve pushed against the chemo pretty hard the past two days. Yesterday afternoon was significantly more difficult for me than Monday. It’s probably best to take a break.
Speaking of Monday, did you know that was the hottest day on record? I know, Sunday broke the record as well, but Monday topped it. I’ve not heard about yesterday. This is a good time to remind people that there’s a difference between weather and climate. Just because it’s not steaming hot right where you’re standing doesn’t mean the planet as a whole isn’t melting. Don’t risk opening your mouth and being stupid.
Whales are capsizing boats again. No one will ever convince me that aquatic mammals are not more evolved than we give them credit. Just because we don’t understand how they communicate doesn’t mean that they’re not doing so. I firmly believe they’re trying to send us a warning, proven by the fact they’re not eating the people from the boats they capsize. Perhaps we should pay attention.
There was a video circulating on social media of a geyser exploding in Biscuit Basin at Yellowstone Park. In some instances, it came with a caption saying that this particular explosion was a first for that geyser. That statement would be incorrect. These explosions happen, usually when there aren’t a lot of tourists around. Fortunately, no one was hurt, but it reminds us that our planet is still a dangerous place and that a big chunk of North America could explode at any time.
Speaking of misinformation, along with Kamala Harris taking control of the Democratic Party nomination for President has come a significant amount of misinformation about her and some of the things she’s done. AP corrects some of the most frequent errors, something I encourage you to read before jousting with anyone.
Speaking of errors, boy have Southern Baptists stumbled into a new one. At this point, the denomination has become an embarrassment to all of Christianity. Can we not cancel them completely? They had a chance and they blew it.
And, just in case you missed the news, Mattel has finally introduced a blind Barbie (video). The company is well-known for championing women in sports, women of color, and other differently-abled women. That they haven’t had a blind doll before now seems something of an oversight (no pun intended). We’re glad they have corrected that error.
We should also mention that there’s a new HIV shot, administered twice a year, that seems to be 100% effective in preventing HIV, at least in African women. While it may still be too early to consider the injection universally fool-proof, those of us who remember the horrors of the HIV/AIDS outbreak in the 1980s should be amazed at how far medicine has come in treating the disease.
There are a couple of other little stories running around, but I don’t think they’re fully developed yet so we’ll wait before commenting.
It’s almost 8:30 AM in Indianapolis. I need to start laundry and eat breakfast. Is it too early to take a nap?
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