Will They Do It?

Something to keep track of.

Trump administration agrees to return rainbow Pride flag to New Yorkโ€™s Stonewall monument

Byย ย JENNIFER PELTZย andย MICHAEL R. SISAK

NEW YORK (AP) โ€” The Trump administration said Monday it will resume flying a rainbow Pride flag on a federal flagpole at the Stonewall National Monument in New York City, reversing course two months after removing the banner from the first national monument commemorating LGBTQ+ history.

The government revealed the decision in court papers as it agreed to settle a lawsuit filed by advocacy and historic preservation groups who had sought to block the Feb. 9 removal. A judge approved the deal.

The Interior Department and National Park Service โ€œhave confirmed their intention to maintain a Pride flag at Stonewall,โ€ lawyers for the government and the groups wrote in a joint court filing.

The flag โ€” one of several Pride banners at the 7.7-acre (3.1-hectare) park โ€” wonโ€™t be removed, except for โ€œmaintenance or other practical purposes,โ€ the filing said. (snip-details of position and measurements of the Pride flag)

https://apnews.com/article/stonewall-rainbow-flag-trump-lgbtq-historic-preservation-ac4ab59d3251476139700db6687828ca

Hrmphh. Nobody Ever Listens To Us.

Feminists began raising the alarm about the manosphere decades ago โ€“ and we were ignored

Laurie Penny

We were told we couldnโ€™t take a joke, and that social media isnโ€™t real life. Now the misogyny of early chatrooms and Gamergate has reached the White House

Harrison Sullivan, known as HSTikkyTokky, in Louis Theroux: Inside the Manosphere.ย Photograph: Netflix/PA

Why has it taken so long for us to treat misogyny as a political problem? The modern manosphere has been metastasising for many years โ€“ and for years, mainstream culture has responded with a helpless shrug. There was nothing unusual about men hurting women, even if the technology was new.

In the early aughts, angry and alienated men began indulging in recreational misogyny online, bombarding women and girls in the public eye with threats, insults, harassment, hacking, and hideous โ€œrevenge pornโ€. Strange as it may now sound, though, โ€œthe internetโ€ was still seen as separate from โ€œreal lifeโ€.

That, at least, was what I was told the first time I went to the police about the death threats I was receiving as a young columnist. Nothing could be done, because what happened on social media wasnโ€™t real and didnโ€™t count. If I didnโ€™t like it I should get offline, and presumably continue my work via rotary phone and fax. Those of us who were early targets of what would become the manosphere did not have the luxury of ignoring the issue. For us, it was easy to see that this was something new and serious, easy to understand how the tactics used against us might be deployed elsewhere โ€“ and how quickly matters could escalate.

Which is what happened in 2014. In May of that year, the terrorist Elliot Rodger killed six people and brought global attention to โ€œincelsโ€ โ€“ young men radicalised by sexual resentment.

Three months later came Gamergate, a global orgy of online harassment targeting women in the video game industry. It all started when up-and-coming game creator Zoe Quinn was attacked by a bitter ex-boyfriend in a book-length tirade of sexual and professional jealousy. The non-scandal became a lightning rod for tens of thousands of gamers furious that women were intruding on a medium that was meant to be their personal power fantasy.

On anonymous forums like 4chan, men coordinated an extraordinary campaign of abuse dressed up as concern for โ€œjournalistic ethicsโ€. Quinn and other creators were driven from their homes, but the firestorm was already out of control. Over the next few years, as โ€œincelsโ€ continued to carry out acts of mass murder, every entertainment industry, from comics and publishing to film and TV, was besieged by obsessive trolls casting themselves as brave rebels against illiberal โ€œsocial justice warriorsโ€. The more they got away with it, the more they treated it like a game.

Gamergate brought together the disparate strands of what we now call the manosphere: the grifting pickup-artists, the Christian nationalists, the bitter โ€œincelsโ€ and the furious fans triggered into mass social vandalism whenever they heard a story they werenโ€™t the hero of. This slurry of half-formed fixations congealed into a coherent ideology of aggrieved entitlement, with its own language โ€“ โ€œescaping the matrixโ€, โ€œtaking the red pillโ€ โ€“ and their own logic of heroic victimhood in the face of womenโ€™s sexual power. The rage and alienation of men abandoned by post-crash capitalism was channelled towards a common cause โ€“ one ripe for co-option by the worst possible actors.

Throughout the mid-aughts, mainstream media continued to underestimate the manosphere. The fringes of the right did not make the same mistake. Gamergate was the proving ground for some of the central propagandists of the new โ€œalt-rightโ€. Steve Bannon, the political svengali and co-founder of Breitbart News, saw the potential in this cohort of cranks. He went on to run Donald Trumpโ€™s first presidential campaign, helping to deliver that key demographic to a president who personified everything the new cult of male supremacy most admired, as he crowed about sexual violence and held the notionally free world hostage to his every emotional spasm.

In hindsight, it is startling that all of this was normalised for so long. It was apparently inconceivable that violence against women could constitute a crisis โ€“ unless, of course, the violence was blamed on immigrants or on transgender people, at which point womenโ€™s safety suddenly shot to the top of the political agenda. When feminists and others in the infected eye of the storm tried to raise the alarm, we were told we were exaggerating for attention, or that we couldnโ€™t take a joke. Under the posturing, cartoon frogs and memespeak, these were lost young men who deserved patience and understanding, and if we didnโ€™t offer it we were heartless, humourless killjoys.

Identical arguments were used to dismiss the rise of Maga until it was far too late. The playbook tested out on feminists and on Black, queer and female creators in the mid-aughts was replicated in far-right movements across the global north โ€“ as was the response of muted both-sidesism. Then as now, politicians, pundits and industry leaders officially disapproved of the worst excesses of the manosphere, but declined to take an explicit stand, terrified that any display of moral integrity would alienate their base.

As the 2010s turned into the 2020s and the manosphere continued to expandfunnelling its recruits towards ever more extreme, explicitly racist ideas, it became fashionable to cast โ€œsocial justice warriorsโ€ as the pressing danger to human freedom. Politicians and public figures seemed far more concerned about the #MeToo movement, which seemed proof positive that feminists had gone too far โ€“ and deserved, perhaps, to be punished for it. After the third or fourth time a documentary crew came to interview me about all the death threats, I realised that they didnโ€™t want to help โ€“ they wanted to watch.

Lots of people did. After Gamergate, bigotry became a growth industry for enterprising young lads unburdened by conscience. As a journalist, I interviewed many young far-right men who admitted that what they really wanted was to be influencers and film-makers. For clicks and views they courted controversy and flirted with the far right โ€“ but it didnโ€™t take long for the relationship to get serious. As Kurt Vonnegut writes in his anti-fascist masterpiece Mother Night, โ€œwe are what we pretend to be, so we must be careful what we pretend to beโ€.

Today, nobody is pretending that this is a joke any more. Trump, in his deranged dotage, is openly courting the manosphere, and the young men of gen Z are veering towards the far right en masse. Thereโ€™s a clear line from the social vandalism of Gamergate to the mega-grifting male supremacists, scamming their followers with the promise of a reality where women and girls are non-player characters, to be defeated, exploited or traded for tokens in a brutal marketplace of human value. Many young men have lived their entire lives in the shadow of this weaponised misogyny โ€“ and so have young women. And that sinister ideology is still gnawing at the heart of power.

A few weeks ago, in a break from encouraging his deranged president to take over Greenland, White House adviser Stephen Miller found time to post a tweet on X that appears to be mocking the new Star Trek series for being too diverse. Elon Musk emerged from his fug of racial conspiracy theories and transphobia to agree. This is embarrassing, and not just because any half-literate nerd knows that Star Trek has been woke since 1966. Because even after turning the world into their personal thunder dome, the representatives of aggrieved white male power are still unsatisfied, still demanding we cater to their every petty whim. They will continue to do so until the rest of us, at last, refuse to tolerate their nonsense.

  • Laurie Penny is a journalist, author and screenwriter. They write the substackย Force of Culture

This Week’s “Lay Lines”

is a fundraiser for a friend of the cartoonist. I’m posting it not so much to try to help, but because I promised I’d post this every week. There is, as always, great art here!

Trump Admin Fires Top US Army General In The Middle Of A War

Ron flew to Texas on Saturday.ย  We used Uber to take him.ย  He is driving his sister back here.ย  They should be here tomorrow.ย  I need a few days of rest then I will start replying to comments and bogging again.ย  Hugs

Heather โ€˜Digbyโ€™ Parton joins the program to recap the weekโ€™s news. Check out Digbyโ€™s work at Salon as well as her blog Hullabaloo. Topics include the American right-wingโ€™s desperation to keep Victor Orban in power in Hungary, Trump firing all the women around him, Iran and more.

Doctor Reports from Gaza | Dr. Tarek Loubani | TMR

Dr. Tarek Loubani, a Canadian emergency room physician who has been volunteering in Palestine joins the program from Gaza for a harrowing interview. If you can, please support Dr. Loubaniโ€™s Glia Project, a medical solidarity organization that empowers low-resource communities to build sustainable, locally-drive healthcare project.

From Jenny Lawson, Between Tour Appearances

Mentally though, I’m here

Jenny Lawson (thebloggess)

Hello friend!

I am leaving for the second part of my book tour in 10 hours and I have not done laundry, packed, or (if Iโ€™m being honest) unpacked from the first leg of book tour. In spite of the fact that the first stops were so lovely and fun and filled with fellow weirdos who completely understood my anxiety, I am once again convinced that everyone will hate me and no one will show up and probably I will be eaten by sea lions. So right now I am writing this to you and reminding myself that everything will be okay.

I did lots of little drawings this week but Hunter S. Thomcat is laying on my sketch pad and I donโ€™t want to move him so instead Iโ€™m sharing a drawing from the book because I drew it when I was having a high anxiety week and it feels fitting to come back to it now. Just a reminder that even when things feels scary, you can always make a little oasis in your mind. My spell check tried to change that to โ€œyou can always make a little oatmeal in your mindโ€ and Iโ€™m feeling very relieved that I caught that because thatโ€™s even weirder than my normal letters to you.

WAIT, DID I TELL YOU HOW TO BE OKAY WHEN NOTHING IS OKAY IS #4 ON THE NYT BESTSELLER LIST?

Sorry. Didnโ€™t mean to yell. Itโ€™s just late and my meds have worn off.

If youโ€™re in California, Oregon or Austin, come join me?

Barnes & Noble in California

Powellโ€™s in Oregon

Book People in Austin

I super crazy love you,

~ me

When You Need A Break-

Owlets Hatch At The Wildflower Center Great Horned Owl Nest

The Great Horned Owl Cam just got a whole lot cuter this week thanks to two new arrivals. Athena, the female owl, stood watch over the nest as her first egg hatched a down-covered owlet on April 8 after 34 days of incubation. The second owlet arrived two days later, on April 10. Over the next six weeks, viewers will get an intimate look at the nestling period of one of the skyโ€™s most formidable predators.

This marks Athenaโ€™s sixteenth consecutive season nesting with her mate in a sotol planter above the courtyard of the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center in Austin, Texas. It is also the third year in a row that she has successfully hatched a pair of owlets on camera since the stream launched in 2024.

At hatch, the owlets are covered in white natal down and are largely helpless. They begin to raise their heads after about three days and may start snapping their bills and casting pellets of indigestible material within the first week. Their eyes remain closed until about 9โ€“11 days old, and they rely on Athena to keep them warm and fed during their first weeks.

(snip-how owlets grow, etc.)

Watch the owls journey through the breeding season live on theย Great Horned Owl Cam, and follow daily updates onย Twitter/Xย andย Mastodon.

What leading Planned Parenthood is like now

Apr 08, 2026 Errin Haines

This story was originally reported by Errin Haines of The 19th. Meet Errin and read more of their reporting on gender, politics and policy.

This column first appeared in The Amendment, a newsletter by Errin Haines, The 19thโ€™s editor-at-large. Subscribe today to get early access to her analysis.

When Alexis McGill Johnson took the helm as leader of Planned Parenthood in 2020, the nationโ€™s largest provider of reproductive care and a major force in American politics was already at a critical juncture.

The organizationโ€™s last president had lasted just eight months; she followed Cecile Richards, the charismatic and connected leader who was in the role for a dozen years. The future of abortion rights looked potentially shaky, and Donald Trump was in his first term. 

In the six years since, the U.S. Supreme Court ended federal protections for abortion, a major challenge both for providing care and for the organizationโ€™s political arm โ€” then Trump won a second term and moved to take away federal funding, slashing a third of Planned Parenthoodโ€™s budget. Under the first Trump administration, Planned Parenthood had more than 600 health centers. Since the start of 2025, 53 have closed. More are threatened since Trump on July 4 signed into law a measure to block them from accepting Medicaid. 

The end of federal abortion protections led to a surge in energy around the issue from Democrats and the left. It has faded since then as the presidentโ€™s military actions and mass deportation strategy dominate attention โ€” but McGill Johnson still has to figure out how to galvanize supporters; keep Planned Parenthood clinics serving patients; and elect Democrats in key races in states including Georgia, North Carolina and Ohio. 

As one of the abortion rights movementโ€™s key standard bearers, McGill Johnson is navigating expectations from activists, donors and voters who want a fighter and expect her to deliver. Their sense of urgency can obscure what it means to both lead the fight and provide essential care to millions of Americans in an intentionally overwhelming and chaotic news cycle. 

Johnson stands in front of a group of women speaking while those behind her hold signs.
Alexis McGill Johnsonโ€™s presence at the top of Planned Parenthood reflects a broader pattern in American institutions, in which Black women are often called on to lead in moments of crisis while having limited room for error and a lack of support. (Jessica Rinaldi/The Boston Globe/Getty Images)

โ€œWhen I look at where Planned Parenthood is in this moment, we are navigating all of the chaos, but also looking for where the opportunities are inside that chaos,โ€ McGill Johnson said. โ€œChaos is a strategy: throw everything at people so they donโ€™t know where to look or how to fight.โ€

McGill Johnson describes her style as collaborative; those who know her best say sheโ€™s a master strategist, confronting a challenging political climate with courage, clarity and creativity. 

The political climate in which McGill Johnson has led can really not be compared to any other past leader, said Fatima Goss Graves, president of the National Womenโ€™s Law Center.

โ€œThis isnโ€™t something thatโ€™s happened over three decades; this has been the last six years,โ€ said Goss Graves, who first met McGill Johnson in 2017 after Goss Graves became the first Black woman to head her organization. โ€œAlexis was the right person at the right time. It is a big deal that surviving the level of attacks they have faced, that they are still here, they are serving patients, they are still committed, and they have had to make adjustments. The work is what sheโ€™s doing.โ€


Planned Parenthood is shorthand for dual entities: Planned Parenthood Federation of America, the nonprofit supporting affiliate clinics across two dozen states; and Planned Parenthood Action Fund, the groupโ€™s political arm, focused on organizing, advocacy and voter education. 

McGill Johnsonโ€™s path to leading both came after a career working on voting rights and civil rights, and she approaches the work through a racial and gender lens. She is only the second Black woman leader in the organizationโ€™s existence of more than a century. 

Her presence at the top of Planned Parenthood reflects a broader pattern in American institutions, in which Black women are often called on to lead in moments of crisis, with limited room for error and a lack of support.

McGill Johnson talked about the added weight of doing this work as a Black woman in a movement that has been largely White at the national level. She said that having lived and worked at the intersection of race and gender has been an asset in her current role.

McGill Johnson is familiar with leading in moments like the one Planned Parenthood is facing, โ€œmoments where our leadership is judged more harshly, where we may be granted more scrutiny, less grace.โ€ 

โ€œThose are the places where I’ve had to find my center, to remind myself that I’m in this role to be unapologetic about fighting for the liberation of women of color, Black women, at the center of that liberation, because I think that actually transforms the liberation of everyone else,โ€ she said.

Former Democratic U.S. Sen. Laphonza Butler, the first Black woman to head EMILYโ€™s List, the political action committee focused on electing Democratic women, put it this way when asked about the challenges of leadership for Black women: โ€œIt is an expectation whose bumper sticker reads: โ€˜Fix it for us, please.โ€™ When you look across the movement spaces where both crisis and care are on a collision course, it is Black women like Alexis who are stepping up.โ€


The Supreme Courtโ€™s 2022 decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Womenโ€™s Health Organization, which ended the nearly 50-year precedent of legal abortion access nationwide, angered many Democratic women and motivated them in record numbers in the 2022 midterm elections. 

Then-Vice President Kamala Harris championed reproductive rights as a pillar of her 2024 presidential campaign โ€” but her loss was criticized by some, in part, as prioritizing abortion access over the economy. Now, the Democratic Partyโ€™s uncertainty around whether and how to talk about abortion to voters adds to McGill Johnsonโ€™s challenges in this moment.

The stakes on the ground are still life and death for many Americans, but political strategists say the issue of abortion has proved less politically potent as the national spotlight has moved on.

โ€œFor someone fighting on this issue, the progressive movement that was so galvanized is less so because theyโ€™re focused on many of the other things that Trump is doing that are dangerous to the country,โ€ said Democratic strategist Karen Finney.

Abortion can still be a motivating issue for Democrats โ€” especially as itโ€™s related to the two biggest issues at the moment, health care and affordability, said Democratic pollster Celinda Lake. 

โ€œItโ€™s still motivating to voters for turnout,โ€ Lake said. โ€œRight now, everything is being pushed out by the war and the economy. I think it will reemerge as a much more powerful issue in 2028. Health is the number one issue, the number one pocketbook issue. When you talk about abortion and broaden it, itโ€™s very powerful there.โ€

McGill Johnson worked to do just that, emphasizing Planned Parenthoodโ€™s presence particularly in communities with a lack of options for reproductive care. Politically, she has framed the issue as one of affordability and of democracy, and is focused on a message to voters about how the administrationโ€™s actions in recent years are impacting them. 

โ€œIt may not feel as though abortion is as front and center as it was in the year or two after the Dobbs decision โ€ฆ but when you bring it to people and remind them that these things are happening, it taps directly into that rage,โ€ McGill Johnson said.

She added that part of the job now also looks like acknowledging the concerns of those in the movement as a leader of a complex organization with little room for error. Supporters of abortion rights โ€” and even supporters of McGill Johnson herself โ€” have criticized her for not responding strongly enough to attacks on access, saying they donโ€™t see her fighting in the way they want.

What does it mean when some on the left are more in the mood for a wartime general than a collaborator? 

โ€œIn the day-to-day, it is a lot of navigating peopleโ€™s frustrations, anxieties and hopes, and how to keep people focused on that hope and a strategy for how to get there,โ€ McGill Johnson said. โ€œWe’re living in moments where philanthropy has pulled back from a number of institutions where there is a federal defund, which has impacted a lot of my colleagues. One day, you’re navigating ICE and the next day, the countryโ€™s at war, right? All within the same time period. I think my kind of special superpower is the ability to kind of keep myself at the 30,000-foot view to understand how all of these things are interacting with each other.โ€


McGill Johnson said the urgent question for her is: Who are we going to be now that weโ€™re no longer defending Roe? Itโ€™s one that no other president of Planned Parenthood had to grapple with after the landmark 1973 case that made abortion the law of the land.

Since 2019 when she became interim leader, Planned Parenthoodโ€™s supporter base โ€” which includes volunteers, donors, activists and email subscribers โ€” has grown from 13 million to 20 million. 

In addition to her focus on the campaign trail, McGill Johnson will also have to continue the work of reimagining Planned Parenthoodโ€™s network of clinics as part of the national health care infrastructure. According to the organization, 1 in 3 women in the United States has visited a Planned Parenthood clinic. 

โ€œI believe that Planned Parenthood could become the Cleveland Clinic of sexual and reproductive health care, because we have such great clinical excellence,โ€ McGill Johnson said. โ€œWe are already a leader in standardizing best-in-class care, on sexual, reproductive health care, including abortion, so I think a lot about what it would mean for us to to focus on seeing as many patients as Planned Parenthood can, but to also export that influence into ensuring everybody else’s is standard of care is raised.โ€

To get there, McGill Johnson will have to endure and survive the current climate and the demands of the post-Roe era. Reproductive Freedom for All President Mini Timmaraju said meeting the multiple challenges at the local, state and federal level with diminished resources and competing areas of attention is daunting.

โ€œWe have to do more than weโ€™ve ever done before, and the funding is not what it should be,โ€ said Timmaraju, the first woman of color to lead her organization. โ€œWe are all scrambling to make sure that in the moment where abortion funds need funding, clinics need funding, we also have enough resources for advocacy at every single level, and that’s really challenging in an environment where donors are understandably a little frustrated with progressive entities right after 2024 so we’re having to prove ourselves again, and continually having to prove and reprove, over and over again, the salience of abortion electorally.โ€

What do you think of MAGA Christians ruining God’s reputation?

The idea of living to show others your lifestyle with god is something they want was what the SDA highly religious farmer taught me as a teen.ย  He said we strive to live our lives in such a way that people want what we have, a relationship with the god we worship.ย  It was why the allies went over to East Berlin from West Berlin, it was to show the people what we had that they could have if they got rid of their current government.ย  Hugs

Still Workin’ On My Sunday Comics …

But I love this one, and want you all to have it, too!

https://www.gocomics.com/wallace-the-brave/2026/04/12