Anti-choicers are modern day witch hunters

Aside

Anti-choicers are modern day witch hunters:

As I noted last night, I have a blog post up at Slate about Susan G. Komen—who purports to be a women’s health charity—abandoning their alliance with Planned Parenthood, even though 17% of Planned Parenthood’s services are cancer screening and prevention. They claim that it’s because Planned Parenthood is under investigation, but it seems that excuse was ginned up because it was easy cover for caving into anti-choice nuts. The investigation has been launched as a nuisance investigation by an anti-choice congressman, and is not compelled by any sincere concern that Planned Parenthood is violating the law with its funds. It’s completely obvious that they’re caving into anti-choice activists, and specifically, as I noted at Slate, into the ridiculous idea that you can separate “good girl” health care from “bad girl” health care, the latter being everything from cervical cancer prevention and treatment to abortion. And yes, before we forget, it’s all lumped together with the anti-choice movement now. That’s how they made the HPV vaccine an issue in the Republican primary, because it’s widely believed that preventing cervical cancer gives girls “license” to be sluts.

In other words, a supposedly anti-cancer charity just threw their lot in with people who believe that cancer shouldn’t be prevented if it’s linked to sexually transmitted diseases. Objectively pro-cancer, at least for women they deem slutty, i.e. about 95% of us.

[T]he war on reproductive health care is basically a witchhunt, and the religious fundamentalists behind it are the modern day version of medieval paranoids of old who believed that women who didn’t conform to their exacting standards were consorting with Satan.

Anyone who thinks breast cancer can be neatly cordoned off from this growing circle of hate for all things women’s health care is fooling themselves. That’s not how witch hunts work. The fear here is not about fetuses or babies per se, but a deep-set fear of female sexuality. Already anti-choicers have scooped breast cancer under the umbrella “abortion”, claiming that abortion causes breast cancer. (It doesn’t.) Komen would rather side with people who see breast cancer as god’s judgment on you for having an abortion rather than side with people support comprehensive health care for women. That tells you all you need to know about their organization. I’m all for picking up your sneakers and taking up running as a hobby, but recommend now you do it for you, and not for the ever-elusive cure for cancer.

[pandagon/Amanda Marcotte/2 feb 2012]

Breasts Yes, Vaginas No? Race for the Cure Group’s Bizarre Capitulation to Right-Wingers (And How to Hit Them Where it Hurts)

How the Susan G. Komen for the Cure Foundation put their corporation-friendly image before women’s actual health concerns.

AlterNet/Amanda Marcotte/1 Feb 2012

It’s probably the fastest-spreading story in Internet history about the relationship between two non-profits. Late Tuesday afternoon, Planned Parenthood and Susan G. Komen Race for the Cure announced that Komen would be withdrawing grants given to Planned Parenthood for breast cancer screenings. Despite Komen’s lame attempts to claim otherwise, it was widely understood that this was about Komen aligning itself with the anti-choice movement, despite the anti-choice movement’s long history of opposing not just safe and legal abortion, but also access to contraception and even the prevention of cervical cancer through the use of the HPV vaccine.
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Walken reads, Duchovny on X-Files, Don’t Eat That, and we’re not property [I read stuff]

Wherein I read things, laugh [or not], and pass them on to you…

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Where the Wild Things Are (as read by Christopher Walken):
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David Duchovny: ‘The X-Files made me a better actor’:
YoungAtHeart868David Duchovny has credited starring in The X-Files with helping him become a better actor.

Duchovny, who played Special Agent Mulder on the sci-fi series, commented that he learned a great deal during his nine years on The X-Files.

He explained: “Every day I had to go to work and every day for 14 hours year after year after year. I don’t know if I would’ve made it to this point if I would’ve just gone from movie to movie to movie like a three-month stint here and a three-month stint there.

“It was very good for me and my particular sense of myself or my craft to have to go in every day and do it.”

[digitalspy.ca/18 jan 2012]

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In Defense of SGU, Life Before Feminism, and Happy International Fetish Day! [I read stuff]

Wherein I read things, laugh [or not], and pass them on to you…

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In defence of Stargate: Universe:
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[W]hen it came to Stargate:Universe, they’d learned the lesson that square-jawed action heroes don’t always equal interesting. Universe is filled with flawed characters, so much so that the entire premise of the show was based around the consequences of having the wrong people in the right place at the right time.

Universe had utterly different themes; cynicism and struggle where the order of the day, problems would not go away once someone had shouted “SCIENCE!” at it and the conflict was almost always internal, rather than some horrid threat from beyond the stars. Which made for great television, but after 10+ years of seeing Stargate Command take on gods and win, I can see why fans were disappointed. They wanted bright heroic romance, not dark struggle.

Which is a pity, because the show was all about triumphing over the impossible.

[edfortune.wordpress.com/Ed Fortune/20 Jan 2012 ]

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The GOP’s bizarre war on sex

Polls show we’re pro-choice, pro-gay marriage and ever kinkier. So why are the Republican candidates such prudes?

salon.com/Tracy Clark-Flory/7 Jan 2012

So far, the Republican primaries have been a decidedly unsexy affair. Candidates have passionately spouted rhetoric against premarital sex, gay sex — even non-procreative sex within marriage. It’s enough to make you wonder if the country has gone to the prudes.
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Worst Sex Lies, Famous Writers Take On Twilight, and Evil Cream Cheese! [I read stuff]

Wherein I read things, laugh, and pass them on to you…

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Best (Worst?) Sex Lies of 2011:

Well, my plans to blog some of the best of 2011 totally fell apart, and for that I apologize. I thought I would make it up to you by compiling a list of some of my favorite (or most disturbing) moments in sexual misinformation. These are some of the strangest, most dunderheaded, or most appalling falsehoods of the year, at least when it comes to doin’ it. You’d think Americans in 2011 wouldn’t be so dumb, but sadly, we have a long way to go before we start getting smarter about sex.

[pandagon.net/Amanda Marcotte/31 Dec 2011]

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Why Do Men’s Magazines Sound Like Rapists?

Why does the language of young men’s magazines sound creepily like the language of rapists?

AlterNet/Anna Clark/4 jan 2011

“You do not want to be caught red-handed…go and smash her on a park bench. That used to be my trick.” (– from a lads’, or young men’s, mag)

“You know girls in general are all right. But some of them are bitches….The bitches are the type that…need to have it stuffed to them hard and heavy.” (– from convicted rapist)

Do these descriptions sound too close for comfort?
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Conservatives and “homo-bestiality”

Conservatives and “homo-bestiality”

This is a real thing in the world, believe it or not. In the wild and wooly days when I still took part in (read: ripped my hair out in) internet debate groups, it was amazing just how often right wingers got all hot and frothy over bestiality after linking it to homosexuality. Or any kind of sexuality, really. Most often, when presented with the evidence of these weird tangents they would engage in, they offered up one strategy: Deny! Deny! Deny! Deny! And then it was right back to talking about bestiality. It was downright bizarre. I don’t shy away from most talk of healthy sexuality, even weird but healthy sexuality, but there was something downright unhealthy about how often bestiality came up in these circles. Why? Do we really want a closer look into their brains to find out?
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Why do right-wing extremists keep linking gay sex to animal abuse?
salon.com Tracy Clark-Flory 10 dec 2011

This week conservatives got all hot and bothered over bestiality – which they condemn, of course, but just can’t stop talking about.

Last week, the Senate voted to repeal an archaic military ban on sodomy that happens to also reference sex with animals. Article 125 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice holds that a service member who “engages in unnatural carnal copulation with another person of the same sex or opposite sex or with an animal is guilty of sodomy.” This bit of legal housekeeping helps to put military law more in line with both the repeal of “don’t ask, don’t tell” and this little thing called the Constitution. But right-wingers were quick to announce that the repeal of Article 125 meant bestiality was being legalized in the military. Continue reading

Death of a Well manicured Man, 10 must have tools, and saved by a foot [I read stuff]

Wherein I read things, laugh, and pass them on to you…

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Actor John Neville dies at 86:

John Neville, a veteran Canadian actor and stage director who appeared in a multitude of productions, including the hit TV series The X-Files, has died at the age of 86.

Neville, who was suffering from Alzheimer’s disease, died in Toronto Saturday surrounded by family, said a statement from the Stratford Shakespeare Festival, where Neville worked as an artistic director in the 1980s.

Neville appeared in dozens of movies, television shows and theatre productions during a career that spanned six decades.

…Perhaps the one that gave him the most prominence came in the ’90s when he landed the recurring role of the “The Well-Manicured Man” in the The X-Files.

[The Canadian Press Nov 21, 2011]

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Vamp Wars!, Batista on Riddick 3, and the new sex guide [I read stuff]

Wherein I read things, laugh, and pass them on to you…

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Anne Rice picks a fight with Stephenie Meyer: “Lestat and Louie feel sorry for vampires that sparkle”:

Over on Anne Rice’s Facebook, the author of Interview with the Vampire has some interesting words about the undead creatures who sparkle. Her first post posed a bit of a loaded question, linking to an article from the University of North Dakota:

And then there is this other really pressing issue: should vampires sparkle? Think before you speak! This is probably the most important issue facing our time!!! (I have a suspicion that Louis, Lestat and Armand will refuse to discuss this. But then you know how contrary and difficult they can be.)…

She later revealed how her beloved characters Lestat and Louie would react to the Twilight creatures dreamed up by Meyer:

Lestat and Louie feel sorry for vampires that sparkle in the sun. They would never hurt immortals who choose to spend eternity going to high school over and over again in a small town —— anymore than they would hurt the physically disabled or the mentally challenged. My vampires possess gravitas. They can afford to be merciful.

[io9.com Meredith Woerner Nov 2, 2011]

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