Happy Monday all, and what a Monday it is. We have a new Presidential candidate, a new ticket soon, an historic, profoundly successful President to honor and be grateful for and an election to go win.
To talk about our new moment Iβve scheduled two calls this week – tonight at 7pm for paid subscribers, tomorrow night at 7pm for the broader Hopium community. The Tuesday night call will be recorded and shared here on Wednesday. You can RSVP to either by following the links above and if you want to become a paid subscriber to join the call tonight you can do so here.
Since President Biden announced he was leaving the race the new Harris campaign has raised over $50m online, and weβve contributed more than $55,000 so far here at Hopium. I hope all of you will take an action on her behalf today, this week – Donate | Volunteer | Learn More. Letβs help the campaign get to $100m raised and overwhelm their volunteer shifts!
We are all going to learn a lot about the Vice President in the coming days – her story, her vision, her agenda. Letβs start with this ad from her 2020 primary campaign. Itβs a good indication of what we can expect from her:
A few things about the 2024 election remain true today:
In the last few months weβve gotten repeated and powerful confirmations of the success of the Biden-Harris Presidency – inflation *fell* last month and is running at the Fedβs target rate over the past six months, crime and murder rates are way down, gas prices are down, the flow to the border is down. Weβve had the strongest economic recovery of any advanced economy in the world, the best job market since the 1960s, the lowest uninsured rate in American history, the deficit is trillions less, the Dow has broken 40,000 and all three indices continue to hover in record territory. Domestic oil, gas and renewable production continue to be at all time highs leaving America more energy independent than it has been in decades. The Wall Street Journal has called the American economy the βenvy of the world,β and the Economist recently wrote about the unprecedented start up boom America is experiencing right now. The three big Biden-Harris investment bills have dramatically accelerated the energy transition necessary to combat climate change and will be creating opportunities and jobs for our workers for decades to come. Together, the President and Vice President have reinvigorated the Western alliance, been an historic champion of democracy and freedom, and President Biden helped successfully defeat the fascists in recent European and French elections.
What is also true today is the election remains close and competitive. The Vice President has led Trump in several recent polls. Our Senate polling has held, and remains encouraging. We have one of our largest leads in the Congressional Generic this year, and the largest since Mid-May. Weβve been winning elections of all kinds all across the country these last few years and the far-right was just denied power in Europe, the UK and France – folks just keep voting against the fascists. We have no idea where polling on the race will be for some time, but right now the race is close, and winning the Presidential, keeping the Senate and flipping the House remains something we can do. Expect lots of games from right wing pollsters in the coming days – prepare to block out the noise – as we just wonβt really know where the race is for weeks, perhaps until after the Vice President chooses her running mate and we have our Convention in August.
What is also still true today is that Trump remains a rapist, a fraudster, a traitor and a felon. He is old, unfit and unwell; a dangerous extremist; and hereβs what he and his Project 2025 and Russia loving VP want to do if in the White House:
They want Putin to win, the West to lose. The border to be in chaos, and migrants to keep flowing into the country. Americans to lose even more rights and freedoms. The planet to warm faster. 10 year olds to carry their rapist’s baby to term, and for more women to die on operating room tables. Tens of millions to lose their health insurance. More dead kids in schools. Verified rapists in positions of authority. A restoration of pre-Civil Rights era white supremacy. Huge new tariffs which will raise prices on everything and wreck the global economy which has made us prosperous. Big new tax cuts for their wealthiest donors and tax increases for every day people. Books banned across the US. Seniors to pay more for insulin and prescription drugs. Foreign governments free to pollute our daily discourse and harass our citizens. Teenagers to work night shifts in meat packing plants and not go to school. The minimum wage to stay at $7.25. Mass arrests and mass deportations of immigrants long settled in the US. Insurrectionists to be pardoned. To end American democracy for all time.
What also remains true today is that in addition to rallying behind the new Harris campaign, we have other critical candidate and state parties who need your help today, for here at Hopium we do more and worry less:
Winning The House – $543,000 today, $600,000 goal –Β DonateΒ |Β VolunteerΒ |Β Learn More. Weβve also raised more then $46,000 into the individual House campaigns (you can either give to all 12 or each one individually)
Commit toΒ Vote on Day 1Β and get everyone you know to join you. Early voting begins in a few states on September 20th, less than 2 months away!
Finally, I want to thank all of the members of the Hopium community for raising your game these last few weeks as we debated the best way to beat Donald Trump. I asked folks to be guided by respect – respect for our President, respect for our Party leaders, respect for each other. I asked you to not be a bystander but a leader, and to work to keep us together during a tough period, and bring us back together when the path became clear. I know there are many in this community, many many of you, who love and admire President Biden and wanted him to remain our candidate. I am sure yesterday came as a shock and that many of you will need some time to process what happened, to take some time off and focus on other things. Thatβs fine. Yesterday was a shock. After returning from Raleigh yesterday and a great trip to North Carolina, I was at a Nats baseball game when the news broke. I thought I was going to have a day off. The weather was beautiful in DC yesterday and the Nats are playing good baseball right now. And then my phone started going crazy and we all got the news.
This is what terrifies the fundamentalist and republicans.Β That is why the attacks on LGBTQ+ kids in schools, it is an attempt to stop this acceptance of people different, of people not straight or cis.Β This is what it is about.Β They are terrified their outdated unreasonable hates and moral superiority of straight people is going away.Β So like the people who hated equality for black people, they created Jim Crow laws for gay or trans people.Β Hopefully we can beat back this attack on liberty and rights.Β Hugs.Β Scottie
Madeline Monroe/iStock
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Story at a glance
Roughly 1.6 percent of American adults are now transgender or nonbinary, according to a 2022 survey.Β
That number is higher still among young adults, with 5 percent of people under 30 now identifying their gender as different from the one assigned them at birth.Β Β
The growing visibility of transgender and nonbinary people comes amid rising societal acceptance and new efforts to count the populations.Β
One young adult in 20Β is nowΒ nonbinary or transgender, communities that society barely recognized and seldom counted until a few years ago.Β
Those populations are not new. Only recently, though, have survey-takers thought to ask people about gender identity, invoking terminology that did not exist for prior generations. The word βnonbinaryβ did not appear in The New York Times until 2014.Β Β
The rising visibility of nonbinary and transgender people reflects the nationβs growing acceptance of gender fluidity, especially among the young. OneΒ landmark studyΒ found 1.2 million nonbinary peopleΒ in the 18-60 age group. Of that total, three-quarters were under 30, which suggests Generation Z has explored gender identity to an extent that older Americans have not.Β Β
βWe have a world in which we are finally counting these groups,β said Kay Simon, 28, an assistant professor at the University of Minnesota who studies the experiences of queer youth and their families. βYou canβt identify as something if you donβt know what the word is.βΒ
Simon grew up in Florida and Texas. βFrom a very young age, I kind of realized I was gay,β they said. βAt the time, I probably could have told you that I felt different about my gender, but I didnβt have a word for it.βΒ
The word was nonbinary, denoting a person who identifies with neither the male nor female gender.Β Β
Simon remembers when the academic community introduced he-she-they pronouns on faculty pages and email salutations, during their grad-school years. Even now, teaching about sexuality and gender identity in the presumptively safe space of a college campus, Simon must decide βkind of regularlyβ whether to correct someone who refers to them with the wrong pronoun.Β
βIβve had students misgender me,β they said. βAnd it becomes this joke of, A, youβre referring to your professor wrong, and, B, you didnβt read the syllabus. So, we have two problems.βΒ
The population of young nonbinary and transgender people is clearly large and probably growing.Β
A 2022 report from the Williams Institute, a research center at the University of California, Los Angeles, estimates that 1.3 percent of adults ages 18-24 and 1.4 percent of 13- to 17-year-olds are transgender, with a gender identity different than the one assigned at birth. Teens and young adults are much more likely to be transgender than older adults.Β
Five years earlier, in a 2017 report, the Williams Institute had found roughly half as many young transgender people. But the earlier analysis used different methods and drew on comparatively sparse data, so itβs hard to know how much of the increase is real.Β
Is the transgender population exploding, or are researchers simply counting better? That is a common quandary, researchers say, in studies of the nonbinary and transgender communities.Β
βI would argue, actually, it is not an increase,β said Russ Toomey, a professor of family studies and human development at the University of Arizona. βWe are seeing the numbers of people disclosing nonbinary and trans identity on a survey because we are asking people in more inclusive ways about their gender.βΒ
Perhaps the most expansive tally to date of transgender and nonbinary people comes from the Pew Research Center.Β In a 2022 survey, Pew found that 1.6 percent of U.S. adults reported a gender different from the one assigned to them at birth.Β Β
Pew, too, found that the nonbinary and transgender populations skewed young. Three percent of adults ages 18-29 said they were nonbinary and 2 percent said they were transgender. In the 50-plus population, by contrast, only 0.3 percent of respondents identified themselves as transgender or nonbinary.Β
βI think that Gen-Z individuals are not alone in this, but they are kind of leading the charge,β said Rachel Farr, an associate professor of developmental psychology at the University of Kentucky.Β
Todayβs young adults have grown up in a society that is gradually recognizing the rights of the LGBTQ community. In 2010, the Senate voted to repeal the Clinton-era βDonβt Ask, Donβt Tellβ policy, allowing LGBTQ people to serve openly in the military. In 2015, the Supreme Court recognized a legal right for same-sex couples to marry.Β
βItβs not that there are more people. Itβs that there are more people who are open and who are out,β said Shoshana Goldberg, director of public education and research at Human Rights Campaign, the LGBTQ rights group. βThe reality is that when you talk to the average person on the street, theyβre going to be more accepting and more affirming than theyβve ever been.βΒ
Within Generation Z, polling suggests the LGBTQ population doubled in just four years, from 10.5 percent in 2017 to 20.8 percent in 2021.Β
Bisexuals, and especially bisexual women, populate the majority of the Gen-Z queer community, according to research from Gallup and others. Transgender and nonbinary people constitute a smaller but significant share.Β Β
Researchers say social media played a defining role in helping transgender and nonbinary young people define themselves.Β Β
Landon Richie, 20, grew up in Texas and came out as transgender at 11. βBut since I was two,β he said, βreally as early as I could think and express myself with some sort of agency, I understood that I did not fit into the role that I was assigned as a girl.βΒ
Richie couldnβt fully process his identity until around age 10, when he βgained larger access to the internet and saw people who were transgender and who talked about their experiences,β he said. βAnd I was able to see myself reflected in their stories and their experiences.βΒ
Now that the transgender and nonbinary communities have been identified and counted, researchers say, they need societyβs support.Β Β
Both groups face a heightened risk of physical, emotional and sexual abuse in both childhood and adulthood, the UCLA study found. Depression and suicidal ideation are alarmingly common.Β
Transgender and nonbinary people often feel under attack, and with good reason. Research shows queer people face a heightened risk of being victims of violent crime. Transgender and nonbinary individuals also face higher rates of workplace harassment and discrimination.Β
The communities also face legislative attack. GLAAD, an LGBTQ media advocacy group, tracked more than 300 anti-LGBTQ bills across the nation in 2022, many of them targeting transgender persons by seeking to bar them from equal access to sports, restrooms or health care.Β
βAlmost for as long as Iβve been out, thereβs been a target placed by the Texas legislature on my back,β said Richie, who has been politically active in his state for several years.Β Β
Some faith-based and socially conservative groups have argued that influential Instagram posters and overzealous educators seed gender confusion in young people.Β
Advocates for the queer community counter that social media and progressive curricula help transgender and nonbinary people discover their identities, rather than create them.Β
Friends and loved ones can play a crucial role, researchers say, simply by honoring the name and pronoun requested by a transgender or nonbinary person.Β
βI think the first thing is just to accept them and listen to them,β said Allison Eliscu, M.D., medical director of the adolescent LGBTQ* Care Program at Stony Brook Medicine in Stony Brook, N.Y.Β Β
βIf you make a mistake, because we all do, apologize, say it correctly and then try to do better.βΒ Β
This is what terrifies the fundamentalist and republicans.Β That is why the attacks on LGBTQ+ kids in schools, it is an attempt to stop this acceptance of people different, of people not straight or cis.Β This is what it is about.Β They are terrified their outdated unreasonable hates and moral superiority of straight people is going away.Β So like the people who hated equality for black people, they created Jim Crow laws for gay or trans people.Β Hopefully we can beat back this attack on liberty and rights.Β Hugs.Β Scottie
Anew survey confirms that a record numberβnearly halfβof Gen Z youth are identifying with a sexual orientation other than βfully straight.β The survey joins a growing number of studies demonstrating the rising acceptance of LGBTQ+ identities and willingness to be out and proud at younger ages.
Commissioned by condom and sex toy brand Durex, the Global Sex Survey interviewed 29,000 adults across 36 countries. 44% of survey participants aged 18 to 24 identified as βnot fully straight.β
Coinciding with the growing number of out LGBTQ+ people, support for same-sex relationships has increased as well. The number of survey respondents who say that itβs acceptable to have a same-sex partner has gone up 34% since 2006.
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Breaking that number down by country, however, shows that thereβs still room to grow. 69% of respondents in the Netherlands and Spain support same-sex relationships, whereas only 66% of UK respondents do.
The fact that Gen Z is not only more likely to accept queer people but to be queer themselves has been demonstrated time and again. Earlier this year, a survey from the Public Religion Research Institute found that Gen Z wereΒ more likely to be queer than Republican. Specifically, 28% of Gen Z identify along the LGBTQ+ spectrum whereas only 21% identify as Republican.
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As for which letter of the alphabet mafia is the most prevalent, a survey by Gallup found thatβin America, at leastβmost LGBTQ+ people identify as bisexual. Overall, the percentage of people identifying as LGBTQ+ has more than doubled since Gallup began the survey in 2012.
While the rise in out queer people is a promising sign of progress, that increased visibility has also given bigots a target. A recentΒ poll from YouGovΒ found that nearly half of LGBTQ+ ages 16 to 24 have experienced bullying over their sexual orientation and 25% over their gender identity.
In this sense, Gen Z might not represent the haven for equality and acceptance weβre all hoping for. But it speaks to the resilience of queer youth today that they keep coming out in record numbers in spite of the bullying and hatred.
Again the phone post did not put the article in the post on WordPress.Β Β As I told Ali it looks great on the phone and when I post it the links to the story is not there.Β Below are the links supplied by Ali.Β Thanks again Ali.Β Hugs.Β Scottie
OKLAHOMA CITY (KFOR) β State Superintendent Ryan Walters and his top staff continue to bill Oklahoma taxpayers for expenses related to out-of-state trips β including for talk show appearances, a multi-day retreat, PragerU events at five-star resorts, and even a hot air balloon tour β according to open records obtained by News 4.
This week, News 4 obtained out-of-state travel expense records for State Superintendent Ryan Walters, his Chief Policy Advisor Matt Langston and his spokesperson Dan Isett dating back to the day Walters took office in 2023.
News 4 did not obtain the records through the Oklahoma State Department of Education, but rather from the Oklahoma Office of Management and Enterprise Services (OMES).
In January, News 4 reported when Walters faced intense scrutiny for his out-of-state travel expenses billed to taxpayers, which at that time included other trips for talk show appearances, partisan conferences, and even a movie premiere.
The new records News 4 has obtained indicate, since facing that scrutiny in January, Walters and his staff have continued to bill the state travel expenses for trips Walters makes to help grow his national political profile.
Now, multiple Republican and Democratic Oklahoma lawmakers tell News 4 they want to see Waltersβ spending formally investigated.
Back on March 19, Walters appeared on Fox News. On the studio backdrop behind him was a picture of the Phoenix skyline.
The records obtained by News 4 indicate Walters went to Phoenix for a five-day retreat hosted by national conservative think tank βthe Heritage Foundation.β
Waltersβ travel itinerary for March 19 scheduled him to begin the day at 5:45 a.m. for a βsunrise hot air balloon tour.β
Other things on Waltersβ five-day itinerary included attending sessions titled βPhilosophy and Conservative Vision of Educationβ and βHow do we grow the movement,β among others. (snip-graphic on the page)
Walters also attended a reception dinner hosted by Heritage Foundation President Kevin Roberts.
Roberts is a main co-author of the Heritage Foundationβs controversial βProject 2025β plan.
Walters recently named Roberts to an executive review committee he tasked with rewriting Oklahomaβs social studies curriculum standards.
The records obtained by News 4 show, in total, Walters billed the State of Oklahoma $1,160 for airfare, mileage, per diem, taxi and βmiscellaneousβ expenses. The records indicate he did not seek to be reimbursed for lodging expenses on the trip.
Lansing, MI parents are concerned about their school librarians, in a good way:
LANSING, Mich. (WLNS) β Concerns over library access sparked a packed Lansing School Board meeting Thursday night, with parents sharing their worries about staffing priorities in the Lansing School District.
Almost 100 people filled the Eastern High School gym, with over a dozen parents and community members showing their support for the schoolβs librarians with book-themed shirts.
Many of them worry about the district possibly cutting librarians off its staff and whether or not libraries would be included in new school construction plansβspecifically the Lewton School campus.
Several district directors shared a plan during the meeting that would cut the number of certified librarians from seven to five in exchange for adding 34 assistants to their staff. Officials say that the assistants would support literacy, instruction, and library usage.
βStudents would access the library before and after school, during lunch, our collections would remain protected under our certified positions,β said a district official.βIt also allows for opportunity for our parents and our community to help us with check-in and check out when they have been obviously trained.β
Slides from LSD Superintendent Report on possible staffing change. (Lansing School District)
While parents like the idea of more library access, many of them are not on board with the plan. Some think there are skills that only a librarian can teach, and that the aides might not have as much training or expertiseβwhich they think is unfair for the staff.
βYou set that person up for failure, but itβs also unfair for my kids who will now have to learn with someone whoβs not up to the task,β says Gaelle Cassin-Ross, whose two children attend Post Oak Academy. βIβm not saying someone canβt learn. Iβm saying we already have people who know the job, why not go with them?β (snip, graphic on the page)
Superintendent Ben Shuldiner says thereβs a long road ahead before any plan is set in stone, and that this discussion must balance experts in the district and the desires of the parents.
βYou also have to be respectful to the community and to listen to what is right for their children,β said Shuldiner. βBecause itβs ultimately up to them if their kids go here or somewhere else.β(snip-a bit more)