The video below is hilarious.ย Right wing trump loving maga Dave Rubin gets destroyed with facts and figures from podcaster Parkergetajob.ย While Rubin tries to spout maga talking points and fox news misinformation.ย Hugs
The video below is hilarious.ย Right wing trump loving maga Dave Rubin gets destroyed with facts and figures from podcaster Parkergetajob.ย While Rubin tries to spout maga talking points and fox news misinformation.ย Hugs
I am at the allergist waiting after getting my shots. I have to wait for 30 minutes. During that time I use my pad to read news and sent it via email to Scotties Playtime. This is out right racism. The southern states are making no effort to hide their re=a sim and rush to return to Jim Crow now that SCOTUS has giving the green light to white nationalism. Hugs
Best Wishes and Hugs,
Scottie
Horrifying attempt by religious fanatics to take of the US government, destroy democracy by implementing theocratic rule. Specifically their religious sects doctrines and beliefs. The would force everyone in the country to follow and worship as their church does regardless of any individuals beliefs or desires a person already holds. And as for mainstream Christianity he clearly doesnโt follow the word Jesus spoke about caring for the stranger and the poor. Nor does he follow Jesus command that the greatest amount the them should be the servant of the people. Hugs
https://www.joemygod.com/2026/06/on-markwayne-mullins-christian-nationalist-sect/
Best Wishes and Hugs,
Scottie
Hello all, hope youโll enjoy the upcoming Pride month content! This year, Iโm planning to post comics every single day until the end of June. If you caught a glimpse at comment sections under recent strips, it has already pissed off thousands! Itโs just the beginning.
Itโs been a while since I gave you any life updates. My husband and I are still on the IVF train – itโs slow but steady. We are being crushed under the weight of debts because of it, but at least we got to keep our car after this springโs threats, for those who wondered. Such is the price for growing our little queer family! At least weโve got health.
Iโm still trying to make a living from my art. I believe covering the internet with queer and trans comics and making bigots foam at the mouth is an important job, and you can help make it happen byย getting me a coffeeย or byย subscribing on Patreon. Every bit makes a huge difference!
So I hope Pride month will be good to you all. Except the bigots.
Be gay, trans, hydrated, or not,
Sophie



















Birds (Sources: Birdsandblooms, Blair Benson, Bill Duncan, Blair Benson, JM Arment, Hummingbird centarl)
It’s June 1, which means Pride Month begins again today. It’s my seventh Pride. I remember my first one, seven years agoโterrified and excited, going out dressed in the clothes I felt best in, using the name I wanted to use for the first time in public. I had people with me that day, people I found safety with, people who helped me grow into the person I am now. Seven years later, so sure of myself and so comfortable in my skin, I look back on those moments as some of the best of my life. And now, this year, as I have every year, I watch the new flockโcountless in numberโwho are wearing rainbow colors and joining a family that will show them more love than they have ever known. They are arriving even after a political winter that was, by any measure, cold and brutal to all of us. It is watching them that has me thinking about the beauty of what we witness starting today.
This year, I took up birding. I always thought it was a silly hobby, but my wife Zooey encouraged me to point my camera at a new subject. I first did so on the Pattee Canyon trail up in Missoulaโand caught, soaring in place, a single red-tailed hawk, just hovering, watching the ground below. I stared at it for a while in awe. That was all it took. And the timing was perfect, because in the weeks that followed I stumbled into the best time to be a birder: spring migration. Wave after wave of orioles, tanagers, flycatchers, and warblers of every different color and size came pouring through. I didn’t even know there were so many birds. It made me realize that for most of my life I had been walking through the world completely unaware of the beauty around meโthat there was this entire world that had always been there, just waiting for me to lay eyes on it.
What I also didn’t know was the incredible journeys so many of these birds had taken just to be hereโhow far they had traveled to find the flocks they’d spend the season with, to build nests, to raise families, to simply exist in a place that could sustain them. The Prothonotary Warbler I spotted in the marsh? It spent the winter in the mangrove swamps of Central America, then crossed the entire Gulf of Mexico in a single flightโmore than 600 miles of open water, eighteen hours in the air with nowhere to land. It had to travel that far just to find its family. And the most stunning thing about a bird like thatโone that has gone through so much, that has flapped its wings until it has exhausted itself and left everything behind? It arrived here in the most brilliant gold you’ve ever seen, and began to sing. The Prothonotary Warbler isn’t nearly the only species that does this. Ruby throated hummingbirds, blackpoll warblers, bobolinksโฆ all take incredible journeys.
I was unaware of all of this before I took up birding. It makes me wonder how much else I walk right past without seeing. I remember before I came out, I didn’t know how rich this chosen family was, how many different people were also queer like me. I had no idea that once I came out, I’d find so many of them had been here all along. They were just waiting for me, and all I had to do was stop and look and embrace something new. And I did, and an entire world opened up. I love moments like this, where life teaches you something about itself, and you realize that diversity and surprise might just be the best things it has to offer.
Today, as Pride begins, I am reminded that every single person who has made it here, put on their colors, and found their family has survived something difficult. Every one of them has just lasted through a winter where our rights were systematically stripped away. Politicians who hate us have spent the year dismantling everything we builtโhealthcare ripped from hospitals, identities stripped from documents. Corporations that once draped themselves in rainbows every June are nowhere to be found. Some of us have quite literally migrated to entirely new states looking for safety. And our gulf crossing this year was met with heavy headwinds.
And yet, so many of us still made it. This year, you will see your city streets filled with rainbows. This year, countless new people will celebrate their first Prides. People will put on the clothes that fit them best. People will love in ways they didn’t know how to before. People will dance and sing, and others will have no choice but to acknowledge our existence, because when we arrive, we do not do so quietly. Every single person you see in the streets this month is a testament to our resilience, and a reminder to the fact that this is a journey we have been making since the beginning of human existence. We call it something different now. We carve out a specific month for it. But we have always been here, and we have always had to search for ways to express ourselves, be ourselves, and find our kin.
Maybe birding is a silly hobby. Maybe dragging myself out of bed before dawnโand I am not a morning person, I might addโis more trouble than it’s worth. Birders look ridiculous. We stuff our pants into our socks so the ticks don’t climb up our legs. We carry binoculars and absurdly large cameras into places where everyone else is just taking a walk. But I think there is something more to it than that, something that opened my eyes to the way the world moves around meโsomething I wasn’t expecting to find when I first pointed a camera at a hawk and couldn’t look away. I think I understand something about this month that I didnโt understand before because of it. Pride isnโt just a celebration, itโs a testament to survival and a refusal to be quiet even after the journey. It’s putting on your most brilliant colors after the longest winter of your life. And Iโm so glad we made it one more year.
Happy Pride.
In normal times, in a normal Federal Communications Commission, Anna M. Gomezโs job might be described as wonky. But now is not that time.
โA large part of my role is to call out this administrationโs abuses of the First Amendment, particularly when it chooses to weaponize the FCC in trying to shut down any voices that it doesnโt like,โ said Gomez. โAnd we see this constantly, there is a constant infringement on the free press and on the First Amendment and on the rights of viewers and listeners to see and hear what they want to see.โ
Gomez is the sole Democrat on the commission. Her term is set to end on June 30. Normally, there would be five commissioners at the FCC, but right now, there are only three. Two resigned last year, and the Trump administration has not nominated their replacements. Gomez is on a First Amendment tour of sortsโtelling Americans that the actions of the FCC chair, Brendan Carr, are egregious. Disney seems to agree. Unlike other media companies, itโs lawyered up to fight against the FCCโs latest demands.
On a recent episode of What Next: TBD, host Lizzie OโLeary spoke to Gomez about the FCC and why ABC isnโt folding like CBS did. This transcript has been edited and condensed for clarity.
Lizzie OโLeary: How do broadcast affiliates work?
Anna M. Gomez: Although Disney owns and operates only eight stations nationwide, there are hundreds of ABC affiliates because there are hundreds of markets all over this country. They are owned independently by other broadcasters. Some of those broadcasters are quite large, and some of them are very small.
The FCC manufactured a complaint against a Disney station in Texas that carried The View. And although multiple ABC stations carried that particular program, it had the Texas Democratic Senate nominee James Talarico on it.
There were tons of other ABC affiliates that also could have had this complaint lodged against them. But the FCC went to the nonowned affiliates in the market and said to them: โWe want you to file with us, and weโre not going to hold it against you because of this alleged violation.โ They didnโt go to Disney.
The FCC then used the fact that other affiliates filed as a reason to initiate this investigation against the one Disney-owned station. That to me is a setup. Some would call that entrapment. Itโs where the FCC manufactures an issue and coordinates with the other stations so that only the Disney-owned station is the outlier. And this is why it is so egregious what this FCC is doing, because it is clearly targeting Disney in retaliation for its viewpoints.
How is that legal?
Itโs not. Itโs absolutely unlawful. Not only is it unlawful, it is also unconstitutional. The FCC is challenging the First Amendment rights of the broadcasters, the talent, the press, through all of these actions. We are explicitly prohibited from censoring broadcasters, but this is censorship.
This feels like a shakedown. This feels like the emperor doesnโt like these comedians, whether itโs Jimmy Kimmel or Joy Behar, and if you donโt do something, weโre going to take away your affiliate licenses. Is that a fair reading?
Absolutely. This administration cannot tolerate anything that is critical of it, that doesnโt mention its worldview. And it is weaponizing any tool in its toolbox, whether itโs the FCC, the Federal Trade Commission, the Department of Defense, in order to go after the press and to go after the media.
It is clear that this is absolute harassment in order to get Disney to capitulate. The good news is that Disney is not capitulating. It has actually shown courage. It has decided to stand up for its First Amendment rights and to push back. And if this gets carried out to its conclusion, and by that I mean it goes to court, the FCC will lose.
Is Disney finding a spine, or can Disney read a poll?
Disney has, in fact, found its spine. Part of that, of course, is that we saw Disney capitulate very early on when it settled the case against ABC because of the George Stephanopoulos interview. And legal scholars said there is no basis for this case, but it went ahead and settled it. And that opened the door to all of these future actions against the media. I think what Disney learned is that capitulation doesnโt buy you protection; it might buy you some time, but they will keep coming back and coming back for more because what they demand is absolute allegiance to this administration and nothing else.
Iโm curious about where this impacts TV. How much of this campaign is about pressuring tech platforms?ย
Thereโs an absolute campaign by this administration to censor and control any media outlet using whatever levers it has at its power. Look at social media. The Federal Trade Commission used the fact that there were two ad agencies merging to force them to carry ads on Twitter, which they had stopped doing because of some of the content that they found to be harmful to their clientsโ interests. And that is forced speech. That is a First Amendment violation.
I do believe that this administration is sending a signal. We have seen media companies win time and time again against this administration when they go to court. But litigation and regulatory investigations are costly, and a lot of companies, corporate parents, make the decision that it is actually less painful to settle and to capitulate than it is to fight. So the process is the point, the pain is the point, the threat is the point. They donโt want this to be carried out to its fruition. They want it to just force the companies enough pain so that they will capitulate. Now, I think this is a signal to every part of the media that they would do this to them, whether itโs to the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, universities, law firms, or broadcasters. They will go after anyone who speaks out against them.
Friend of Playtime Barry, from Another Spectrum, intro’d me to this blog I’m reblogging today. Thanks to both!
By Emma Cieslik
When I was coming out of the closet, I was looking for someoneโanyoneโto share about their experience of coming out as a queer woman raised Catholic.
Any stories I found about reconciling queerness and Catholicism came from the perspective of gay white men. I could not find any accounts of Catholic women, nor could I find stories about deconstructing purity culture as a queer Catholic. But I knewโor rather, had faithโthat I couldnโt be alone. So in 2021, I reached out to Bernie Schlager, executive director of the Center for LGBTQ & Gender Studies in Religion at the Pacific School of Religion, and asked if there were any archives, projects, or books that shared my own experience.
Schlager confirmed my suspicions: No such archives existed. But he invited me to begin the work of making an archive. I jumped at the suggestion. After all, I felt a need to find and hear other peopleโs stories, and I also had the skill set to conduct these interviews, having worked on oral history projects in the past. Maybe it was my calling to create an archive of queer and trans people grappling with their identity and how it related to Catholicism.
In 2022, I founded the Queer and Catholic Oral History Project. The purpose of this project is to record stories of queer and trans people who have some connection to Catholicismโwhether they were born into it, converted to it, left it, or returned to it. So far, Iโve recorded over 100 interviews with LGBTQ+ clergy and laypeople who are proud to let the Catholic Church know that they exist, even if the church continues to bar them from being full members of the faith.
And as Iโve discovered, I am not alone in searching for queer Catholic stories as a way to find and affirm my place within this tradition.
As Justin Telthorst, a gay Catholic man who runs the LGBTQ+ Catholic ministry Empty Chairs, shared with me after his interview, many people reached out to him seeking stories of LGBTQ+ Catholics, but he didnโt know where to direct them until he learned about my project.
Theyโre not alone. Philip Calabro, a gender-fluid Catholic drag queen and employee of PFLAG, an LGBTQ+ advocacy organization, explained his own search for representation in his interview: โOne thing I find myself doing pretty consistently is looking for other queer Catholics who are existing as queer Catholics because I want to know how they do it,โ Calabro said. โBecause I know it is possible. I can feel it.โ
Like me, Calabro had faith that we were not the only ones navigating these identities. And what I will say after working on this project for five years is that learning how other people hold these two identities together only strengthens my belief in the importance of recording our histories and the transformative power of an all-inclusive gospel.
Often, anti-LGBTQ+ Christians claim that queer and trans people did not exist before the 20th century, or that modern LGBTQ+ inclusion or theology is shallow because it is rooted in cultural trends rather than the deep wells of the Christian tradition. But itโs less a matter of us not existing, or of there being no evidence that we have always been part of religious communities, than of certain terms only coming into use as societyโs understanding of gender and sexuality expanded.
Sister Eva Lynn Goode, a nonbinary and Catholic Sister of Perpetual Indulgence, shared the following with me in their interview: โI come from a long line of queer people in church history, and I am blessed to continue that tradition.โ They are not wrong. As I dig into contemporary queer Catholic histories, Iโve learned that there are many saints throughout church history whom people today consider queer and trans. These saints are recognized by the institutional church, but their queerness is not. Although they would not have known or claimed these terms, modern queer historians identify these saints as queer and trans ancestors who lit the way for LGBTQ+ people living today.
Perhaps the best example is queer Catholic author, teacher, and medievalist A.W. Strouse, who believes that their queerness cannot be separated from their spirituality. In fact, as they shared in their interview, being queer is a spiritual vocation.
โI donโt really see them as being distinct,โ Strouse explained. โI think that being queer just saturates everything, and being a believer also saturates everything. And I know many people would find this sacrilegious, but I think that being gay for me is a spiritual vocation. I think that itโs my mission to love other queer people. And I mean, talk about loving your neighbor. If thereโs anyone more destitute and in need, it is other queer people.โ
LGBTQ+ Catholic lay minister and lawyer Yunuen Trujillo agreed that her visibility is an urgent testament to and a call to return to the gospel teachings of love and inclusion in her interview. โI think God made me an LGBTQ person for a reason, and I think that reason was to call the church back to its roots and to be able to show the church that weโre not supposed to be a church of power and dominance and exclusion, but weโre supposed to be a church of love and care,โ she explained. โI think they fit perfectly, even though the church might not agree.โ
For some people, their faith is only deepened by their identities. As they came to understand themselves more fully, they grew spiritually. In finding queer and trans spiritual ancestries, they realize and affirm the divinity and dignity in themselvesโand connect more deeply with Catholicism.
In her interview, Madeline Marlett, a trans Catholic woman and board member of the LGBTQ+ Catholic organization DignityUSA, explained that she returned to the faith after stepping away from the church for a period of time. โIt wasnโt until part of the way through transitioning that I felt like I wanted to reconnect with my faith,โ she explained, โso that kind of brought me back into Catholic spaces, helped me find dignity.โ
Itโs one of the reasons many queer and trans Catholics I speak to are often very literate in church dogma and the catechism. After fighting against bigoted members of the church to live how they want and love whomever they want, they have a fuller understanding of gospel teachings and Catholic theologies of the body.
For transmasculine Catholic artist Elliott Barnhill, who creates icons of queer saints online, learning about the fields of queer theology and queer biblical studies was critical. โItโs really important for me in my coming out experience, my own acceptance of Catholicness in myself,โ he said in his interview. โI have a very strong interest in the way that this fits together, that queer lives and deaths can be found in Catholic history and the way that echoes back to the present day. I believe that this history is a form of good news, and is a form of Gospel.โ
Itโs important to note that not all of the people I interviewed are still Catholic or align themselves with the Roman Catholic Church. The project is a testament to the diverse experiences of many queer and trans people raised in Catholic homes, communities, and cultures.
Documenting our queer religious histories and educating the Catholic church about its queer members is, on the one hand, a way to resist the homophobia in our tradition and, on the other hand, a way to honor the LGBTQ+ ancestors and contemporaries who have and are charting pathways forward inside and outside of the church. Their testimony brings attention to the harm that the church has caused, but it also brings attention to the fact that there are people committed to the church even if it rarely loves them back. For those who choose to stay, they live the gospel truth just by showing up as themselves.
Ultimately, my hope is that the Queer and Catholic Oral History Project will offer future queer Catholics what I didnโt have when I was coming out: an archive of stories to remind queer Catholics that we can change things and that we have always and will always exist.
Date: May 31, 2026
Source:University of Rochester
Summary: Scientists have developed a solar desalination system that turns seawater into drinking water without creating environmentally damaging brine. Special laser-textured metal panels use sunlight to evaporate water while automatically moving salt deposits away from the working surface, preventing clogging. The process was successfully tested with water from three oceans and can recover nearly all salts as solids. Those leftover materials could even become a source of valuable lithium for batteries.
โThis is a tragedyโ: swimming snakes open new front in battle with Balearic lizards
Sam Jonesย in Madrid
Irrefutable proof of what Spanish researchers and wildlife experts had long suspected, and long feared, finally presented itself in the form of a grainy video that was shot on a minuscule island in the Balearics in April 2024.
Ribboning its way through the turquoise waters that separate the east coast of Ibiza from the islet of Santa Eulร ria 450 metres away, came a pale and solitary horseshoe whip snake in search of new territory and fresh sustenance.
The arrival of the snake on Santa Eulร ria, recorded by a local wildlife ranger, confirmed that the insatiable invader from the Spanish mainland โ which has almost wiped out Ibizaโs endemic population of dazzlingly coloured wall lizards โ had opened up a new front.
โThereโd been increasing anecdotal evidence from fishermen and tourists whoโd seen the snakes swimming, so weโd thought it was happening very often,โ said Oriol Lapiedra, a biologist at the Centre for Ecological Research and Forestry Applications (Creaf) in Catalonia. โBut this was the first proper [evidence] weโd had of a snake swimming from Ibiza to the islet.โ
The horseshoe whip snake, a non-venomous reptile found across southern and eastern Spain, has become an existential threat to the lizards since it began appearing on the island two decades ago.
Its rapid colonisation has been attributed to the fashion among wealthy property owners in Ibiza for importing ancient olive trees from mainlandย Spainย to adorn the grounds of their homes. Unbeknown to them, however, the trees โ replete with their nooks and hollows โ have provided ideal travel berths for hibernating snakes and snake eggs. (snip-MORE)