Let’s talk about Alec Baldwin, charges, and lessons….

Let’s talk about Elvis helping us see the future….

Quick update on me before the video that has information that everyone should hear.ย  ย I hurt so bad right now I can only stand a few minutes before the pain is so bad I either have to sit or fall.ย  ย Of course it is better earlier when I first get up by noon or 1 PM I can barely get up and go to the bathroom before the pain is so severe I am in danger of falling down.ย  ย  But if I sit the pain builds up in the upper part of my back instead of the lower part so again I have to move.ย  ย Mostly right now it seems I get about 3 hours up at most and then 2 hours laying down.ย  ย When I take enough medication to help cover the pain which lately has been the maximum of my medications, the next day I am sick to my stomach and have nausea issues.ย  Think of it like being on a drunken night out at the bars, and how you would feel the next day.ย  ย That lasts until I get enough medication back in my system again, and then if I take the maximum again I am sick the next day.ย  ย  It is a cycle I cannot stand.ย  ย Be pain controlled in the afternoon and rest of the day while befuddled with confusion of the medications and the next morning wake up sick with a rolling stomach and nausea that either makes me vomit (three times yesterday) or just feel like I am going to vomit such as today when I did not vomit but felt I could until about 1 PM.ย  ย I have an MRI on the 25th.ย  ย I am losing the good from the last set of spine shots in the bottom of my spine, so tomorrow I need to call the pain clinic and see if they can adjust my appointment to get another set of spine epidurals for all three sections.ย  ย Right now I am spending as much time laying down as I am upright.ย  ย However this morning and yesterday morning Ron and I did take a short walk as we used to before the hurricane.ย  ย It is much shorter than the other walks were because my back gives out and his hip starts to bother him too much to do a longer one.ย  ย  If the new spine shots don’t fix this, then I need to change medications to fentanyl or something as strong.ย  ย The doctor tells me that fentanyl is much stronger than the medications I am currently taking.ย  One last thing.ย  ย Randy my wonderful brother has tried to get me to look at getting an over the bedside table like hospitals use and using a couple of the old laptops we have or at least the bedroom TV and a laptop to read and answer comments which I bitch constantly I am missing.ย  ย  Today Ron and I have started talking about it.ย  ย It will depend on what the doctors can do.ย  ย Hugs

Why saying โ€œI donโ€™t see race at allโ€ just makes racism worse

Mar 3, 2021ย /ย 

When I was growing up in the 1980s, we were taught that the way to be a good person was to swear that race didnโ€™t matter, at least not anymore.

We had all learned the lessons of the civil rights movement โ€” that everybody is equal, and according to the morals of the sitcoms we watched after school (Diffโ€™rent Strokes,ย Webster,ย Saved by the Bell), what was racist was pretending that people were any different from one another. Furthermore, the most un-racist people didnโ€™t even see race at all; they were color blind.

We now know that color blindness is a form of racial denial that took one of the aspirations of the civil rights movement โ€” that individuals would one day โ€œnot be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their characterโ€ โ€” and stripped it from any consideration of power, hierarchy or structure.ย The moral logic and social appeal of color blindness is clear, and many well-meaning people have embraced it. But when itโ€™s put into practice in a still-racist world, the result is more racism.

The sociologist Eduardo Bonilla-Silva, author of the groundbreaking bookย Racism Without Racists: Color-Blind Racism and the Persistence of Racial Inequality in America, describes how once we stop seeing racism as a factor and treat equality as a reality rather than an aspiration, our minds naturally seek other explanations for the disparities all around us.

In a way, color blindness makes the civil rights movement a victim of its own success: Legal segregation is over, so now it must be up to people of color to finish the work themselves.ย As Bonilla-Silva puts it, if racism is no longer actively limiting the lives of people of color, then their failure to achieve parity with whites in wealth, education, employment, and other areas must mean there is something wrong with them, not with the social systems that somehow always benefit white people the most.

Social scientists look to this question โ€” whether you believe that racism is to blame for disparities or that Black people just need to work harder โ€” to help them determine what they call racial resentment. And racial resentment, in turn, is a predictor of opposition to policies that would improve the economic security of millions.

Instead of being blind to race, color blindness makes people blind to racism, unwilling to acknowledge where its effects have shaped opportunity or to use race-conscious solutions to address it.ย Denial that racism still exists; denial that, even if it does exist, itโ€™s to blame for the situation at hand; denial that the problem is as bad as people of color say it is โ€” these denials are the easy outs that the dominant white narrative offers to people. Wellesley College professor Jennifer Chudyโ€™s research finds that only one in five white Americans consistently expresses high levels of sympathy about anti-Black discrimination.

Color blindness has become a powerful weapon against progress for people of color, but as a denial mindset, it doesnโ€™t do white people any favors, either.ย A person who avoids the realities of racism doesnโ€™t build the crucial muscles for navigating cross-cultural tensions or recovering with grace from missteps. That person is less likely to listen deeply to unexpected ideas expressed by people from other cultures or to do the research on her own to learn about her blind spots.

When that person then faces the inevitable uncomfortable racial reality โ€” an offended coworker, a presentation about racial disparity at a PTA meeting, her inadvertent use of a stereotype โ€” sheโ€™s caught flatfooted. Denial leaves people ill-prepared to function or thrive in a diverse society. It makes people less effective at collaborating with colleagues, coaching kidsโ€™ sports teams, advocating for their neighborhoods, even chatting with acquaintances at social events. Nor is denial easy to sustain.

To uphold the illusion of effortless white advantage actually requires unrelenting psychological exertion.ย Sociologist Dr. Jennifer Mueller explains that color blindness is a key step in โ€œa process of knowing designed to produce not knowing surrounding white privilege, culpability and structural white supremacy.โ€

But it was a white poet, novelist and farmer named Wendell Berry whose words brought home to me most poignantly the moral consequences of denial. In August 2017, I traveled to Northern Kentucky to meet with a multiracial grassroots organization called Kentuckians for the Commonwealth.

After a day of workshops, one of the members gave me a dog-eared copy of a book by Berry, a local hero who had grown up in rural Kentucky during the Jim Crow era. The book was calledย The Hidden Woundย โ€” Berry wrote it in 1968, in the midst of widespread protest and unrest โ€” and that night in my hotel room, I read it from cover to cover.

By denying the reality of racism and their own role in it, Berry explained, white Americans have denied themselves critical self-knowledge and created a prettified and falsified version of American history for themselves to believe in, one built on the โ€œwishful insinuation that we have done no harm.โ€ย Of course, he understood the impulse of white people โ€” himself included โ€” to protect themselves from โ€œthe anguish implicit in their racism.โ€

A few years before Berry publishedย The Hidden Wound, James Baldwin, as keen an observer of human behavior as thereโ€™s ever been, wrote his own account of what happens when white people open their eyes to racism.

โ€œWhat they see is a disastrous, continuing, present condition which menaces them, and for which they bear an inescapable responsibility. But since, in the main, they seem to lack the energy to change this condition, they would rather not be reminded of it.โ€ Baldwin went on to observe that white Americans โ€œare dimly, or vividly, aware that the history they have fed themselves is mainly a lie, but they do not know how to release themselves from it, and they suffer enormously from the resulting personal incoherence.โ€

Wendell Berry calls this suffering โ€œthe hidden wound.โ€ย He counsels that when โ€œyou begin to awaken to the realities of what you know, you are subject to staggering recognitions of your complicity in history and in the events of your own life.โ€ Of this wound โ€” this psychic and emotional damage that racism does to white people โ€” he writes, โ€œI have borne it all my life . . . always with the most delicate consideration for the pain I would feel if I were somehow forced to acknowledge it.โ€

As I closed Berryโ€™s book in that Kentucky hotel room, I thought about what it must it be like to be part of the dominant group in an unfair โ€œmeritocracyโ€ that denies its oppressions and pathologizes the oppressed.

โ€œI think white folks are terribly invested in our own innocence,โ€ says the scholar Catherine Orr.ย The belief that the United States is a meritocracy, in which anyone can succeed if only they try hard enough, also supports the notion that anyone who is financially successful is so because theyโ€™ve worked harder or are somehow more innately gifted than others.

Both ideas operate as a justification for maintaining our profoundly unjust economic system. Recent research from social psychologists at Yale and Northwestern finds that โ€œAmericans, on average, systematically overestimate the extent to which society has progressed toward racial economic equality, driven largely by overestimates of current racial equality.โ€

Wealthy white Americans, they find, have the most unrealistic assessment of how much progress the United States has made in terms of economic equality (and thus how fair the competition has been that they seem to have won).ย In a 2019 public opinion survey, majorities of both Black and white people said that being Black makes it more difficult to get ahead in America. Yet only 56 percent of white respondents believed the corollary โ€” that being white helps you get ahead.

And of those who recognized the obstacles Black people face in terms of economic mobility, Black respondents attributed this to systemic discrimination, such as having less access to good schools and high-paying jobs. White people, on the other hand, were more likely to blame problems such as the lack of good role models and family instability โ€” pathologies, in other words, that ultimately lay blame at the feet of Black people themselves.

Morally defending your position in a racially unequal society requires the fierce protection of your self-image as a person who earns everything you receive. From the tradition that trade unions make a place for membersโ€™ sons and legacy admissions at colleges to college students who can choose career-building but unpaid or low-paying internships because families can support them and employers who seek โ€œa good fitโ€ by hiring younger versions of themselves, the deck is stacked on behalf of white people in ways that are so pervasive we rarely notice them.

Within this context, many white people both resent affirmative action and imagine that it is vastly more widespread than it really is.ย The share of Black and brown students at selective colleges has actually declined over 35 years despite stated affirmative action policies, and the overwhelmingly white categories of children of alumni, faculty, donors or athletes made up 43 percent, for example, of students admitted to Harvard from 2010 to 2015.

Meanwhile, according to a 2016 study by Harvard Business School professor Katherine DeCelles, Black job applicants who removed any indications of their race from their rรฉsumรฉs were significantly more likely to advance to an interview. Many other studies bear out similar findings, including an economic research paper that traced improved job prospects to whether applicants had names like โ€œGregโ€ or โ€œEmilyโ€ as opposed to โ€œLakishaโ€ or โ€œJamal,โ€ and a sociological study in New York City that found that โ€œBlack applicants were half as likely as equally qualified whites to receive a callback or job offer.โ€

Still, the idea that people of color are taking jobs from white people is another zero-sum belief that lumbers on from era to era.ย As Ronald, a middle-aged white man from Buffalo, New York, told theย Whiteness Project, โ€œI think affirmative action was nice. It had its time, but I think that time is over with. Are we going to keep this up another one hundred fifty years? โ€˜Oh, we gotta have so many Asians in the fire department, we gotta have so many Blacks in the fire department.โ€™ . . . The white guys will never have a chance to be a fireman or a cop anymore.โ€ Although using such numerical quotas to achieve affirmative action in employment was outlawed in 1978 by the Supreme Court, Ronaldโ€™s grievance is evergreen, as is his certainty that white guys getting all the public service jobs was the natural order of things, not its own form of white affirmative action.

Excerpted from the new bookย The Sum of Us: What Racism Costs Everyone and How We Can Prosper Togetherย by Heather McGhee. Copyright ยฉ 2021 by Heather McGhee. Reprinted by arrangement with One World, an imprint of Random House, a division of Penguin Random House LLC. All rights reserved.

Watch her TEDWomen Talk now:ย 

Randy sent me some thought provoking tweets.

You should go to the actual tweet and read the comments.ย  ย Hugs

Why do kids need guns made for them?ย  ย They seem to do well with adult guns at shooting people.ย  But seriously everyone understands that kids emotional control and reasoning ability are limited.ย  ย Some adults never grow out of those limitations.ย  Again the comments are all over the map.ย  Hugs

I just started to follow this guy above on YouTube.ย  ย He has a veery reasonable take on things and is easy to understand.ย  ย Hugs

https://www.youtube.com/@TizzyEnt

The story below is amazing because it took kids to figure out something the adults should have seem a long time ago.ย  ย Grand kids.ย  ย Hugs

Let’s talk about “just asking questions”….

Drunk TRESPASSER Enjoys Full Benefit Of His White Privilege (Video)

This police interaction is so different from what we’re used to seeing in these sorts of videos. Leave a comment with your thoughts below!

New Arkansas Bill Could Ban White Chicks, Mrs. Doubtfire & Mulan?

Republican wants to expand definition of โ€œchild pornographyโ€ to make it easier to ban LGBTQ+ books

https://www.lgbtqnation.com/2023/01/republican-wants-expand-definition-child-pornography-make-easier-ban-lgbtq-books/

I cannot get over the fact that there are people today in 2023 that think just the mention of LGBTQ+ or any depiction of LGBTQ+ characters in books or movies is obscene.ย  ย And by this womans definition of “Child Pornography” any depiction of sex in any media even if it only depicts adults is classified as child porn.ย  ย Why are right wingers so afraid of sex between consenting adults and why won’t they accept the science that says kids are born / know their sexual orientation or gender identity.ย  Young people don’t read a book about LGBTQ+ people or watch a movie with an LGBTQ+ character suddenly becoming gay or trans.ย  If that was the case every kid who watched cartoons would be trans and gay just from watching Bugs Bunny, who while being associated with the male gender often dressed as a woman and kissed a lot of guys.ย  ย This is like people who believe in a flat earth or in young earth creationism, it defies all the science and advancement in medical science.ย  ย  Hugs

ย 
November โ€Ž7, โ€Ž2019 Santa Cruz, California - Various books by different authors for sale at Bookshop Santa Cruz
Photo: Shutterstock

A freshman lawmaker from Wyoming has already begun efforts to remove LGBTQ+ books for youth from both school and public libraries in the state.

Republican Rep.-elect Jeanette Ward has introducedย House Bill 87, which expands the definition of โ€œchild pornographyโ€ to mean โ€œany visual depiction, including any photograph, film, video, picture, cartoon, drawing, computer or computer generated image or picture, whether or not made or produced by electronic, mechanical or other means, or any other form of depiction of explicit sexual conduct.โ€

The bill also repeals a law that gives exemptions for those who โ€œpossess or disseminate obscene materialโ€ for activities related to schools, universities, colleges, museums, and public libraries.

Based on this definition, many books that provide sexual health information to youth would be banned, along with several books that help LGBTQ+ youth learn about their identities.

โ€œNot requiring tax payers to pay for obscenity is reasonable and just,โ€ย Ward toldย theย Casper Star Tribune. โ€œThese books will continue to be available in the marketplace, but not paid for by taxpayer dollars. Reasonable people everywhere recognize these books as obscene and reasonable people do not want their money used to subsidize obscenity.โ€

According to theย Tribune,ย Ward, herself, has passionately advocated for the removal of two LGBTQ+ books from a high school library in her district โ€“ speaking at multiple school board meetings against the acclaimed graphic memoirย Gender Queerย by Maia Kobabe and a trans resource guide calledย Trans Bodies, Trans Selves.

Ward also helped members of the anti-LGBTQ+ group Moms for Liberty get elected to the Natrona County school board. Moms for Liberty members have been running for school board positions across the country as part of the right-wing effort to shift schools toward a more conservative ideology.

On boards where Moms for Liberty is in control, curricula is likely to exclude LGBTQ+-inclusive and anti-racist education.

In Florida, anti-LGBTQ+ Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis, himself,ย helped Moms for Liberty membersย get elected to local school boards. The newly seated members repaid DeSantis by ousting school officials who dared defy his orders against school mask mandates during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Wardโ€™s bill in Wyoming currently has 13 Republic cosponsors. If it passes, it will go into effect on July 1st.

ย 

Florida lawmakers consider extending Donโ€™t Say Gay law up to sixth grade

https://www.lgbtqnation.com/2023/01/florida-lawmakers-consider-extending-dont-say-gay-law-sixth-grade/

What the right is claiming is any discussion of gay, trans, or same sex couples is sexualizing kids.ย  ย  Even talking about the existence of same sex families and of gay / trans kids in class is harmful to kids.ย  ย It again is the Russian model and it is easier to pass regressive restrictions on society if you claim it is to protect kids.ย  ย We all want to protect kids, but the truth is the right only wants to protect straight white Christian kids.ย  The rest are going to hell anyway and might even have demons in them.ย  ย This will not stop until they get what they want, a regressive white straight Christian state that enforces their view of religious values.ย  ย Rufo has admitted the goal is to make New College over in the image of a deeply conservative Christian school, and use it as the model for all education systems.ย  ย And they are coming for the entire country unless people wake up and fight against them now.ย  Oh and the point is to indoctrinate the kids and then the public in the deeply right republican mode of how society must be without exceptions.ย  ย the indoctrination they claim they are fight the left over is inclusion, diversity, and tolerance of others.ย  ย That is something the right is fighting with all they have.ย  They cannot have acceptance or even tolerance of those different from themselves.ย  ย  We must not let them win this fight and become the US Taliban.ย  ย  Hugs

ย 
Gov. Ron DeSantis
Gov. Ron DeSantisPhoto: Shutterstock

The office of Florida Gov. DeSantis (R) has confirmed that the anti-LGBTQ+ governor is supportive of extending the stipulations of the stateโ€™s Donโ€™t Say Gay law โ€“ known formally as the Parental Rights in Education Act.

Right now, the law bans discussions of sexual orientation and gender identity up to third grade, and a staffer for the stateโ€™s Senate President Kathleen Passidomo (R)ย toldย The Daily Mailย that lawmakers are thinking about introducing legislation to expand the law up to sixth grade.

In a press conference in December, Passidomo expanded on this, saying that she doesnโ€™t think sheโ€™d โ€œbe supportive of high school because kids in high school are, hopefully, a little more mature, or at least they should be, but you know, the middle school, maybe go up to 6th grade or something like that.โ€

DeSantis Press Secretary Bryan Griffin then saidย that โ€œThe governor would certainly consider the merits of such a bill in final form if it comes to his desk as a product of the forthcoming legislation session.โ€

Griffin said DeSantis often expresses his belief that โ€œthe purpose of our education system is to educate kids, not indoctrinate kids.โ€

In addition to banning classroom instruction on LGBTQ+ issues up to third grade, the law as it currently stands also requires in vague terms that discussions on the topic in older grades be โ€œdevelopmentally appropriate.โ€

Instead of defining those terms, the bill allows parents to sue schools if they believe the law was violated.

DeSantisโ€™s support for increasing the age range for the Donโ€™t Say Gay law is not a surprise, as he has made it clear he is virulently opposed to protecting LGBTQ+ students.

In December, it was revealedย that DeSantis helpedย members of the anti-LGBTQ+ group Moms for Liberty get elected to local school boards in his state.

An educational anti-censorship expert says this development is part of DeSantisโ€™ plan to shift his stateโ€™s schools toward a conservative ideology. With Moms for Liberty in control, curricula will exclude LGBTQ+-inclusive and anti-racist education.

And more recently,ย DeSantis appointedย the far-right anti-LGBTQ+ activist Christopher Rufo to the board of trustees of the New College of Florida โ€“ a school with a reputation for being progressive and queer-friendly.

Rufo told theย New York Timesย the board is planning a โ€œtop-down restructuringโ€ of the school that will involve designing โ€œa new core curriculum from scratch.โ€

โ€œIf we can take this high-risk, high-reward gambit and turn it into a victory,โ€ he said, โ€œweโ€™re going to see conservative state legislators starting to reconquer public institutions all over the United States.โ€

ย 

Florida Universities Are Renaming Their Courses

Yet the right says the democrats are the ones indoctrinating students.ย  ย These are upper levels of schooling, college and universities, that they are removing any talk of equality, racism, and so much more.ย  ย Professors having to scrub their courses and presentations of anything that might upset the ruler / dictator DeathSantis.ย  ย Imagine this country wide.ย  ย Talk about the Taliban or moral / vice police.ย  This is stunning and worse it is not getting any national attention or scrutiny.ย  ย It is scary how fascist the state of Florida has become in several short years.ย  With DeathSantis making Florida a maga white Christian paradise the state is being flooded with intolerant people who won’t accept any social advance since the 1850s.ย  Plus notice the drive is to make a public school be just like a conservative Christian college.ย  ย Hugs

ย 

Theย Orlando Sentinelย reports:

Yovanna Pineda, hired more than a decade ago to teach Latin American history at the University of Central Florida, rebranded one of her signature courses last fall. Striking references to โ€œdictatorshipsโ€ and โ€œhuman rightsโ€ from the title, she decided to simply call her class โ€œHistory of South America.โ€

Pineda said many of her colleagues are making similar changes, either because they fear blowback from state leaders who say they are trying to eliminate โ€œindoctrinationโ€ from university campuses or because they donโ€™t want the hassle of additional scrutiny.

DeSantis continued his campaign last week, appointing far-right activist Christopher Rufo to the Board of Trustees at New College of Florida. Rufo is best known for launching a national campaign against critical race theory. Rufo told The New York Times he and his new colleagues seek to transform New College into a public version of Michiganโ€™s Hillsdale College, a conservative Christian school.

Read theย full article. Thatโ€™s Rufo standing appropriately on the far-right in the screenshot above.

zheraan hour ago

“Freedom from indoctrination”

Double-speak, much?

Ninja0980a few seconds from now

If you want to see true hypocrisy, look no further then Cuban Republicans in FL who scream about how evil socialism and Castro are while applauding everything DeSantis does.
They hate socialism but love fascism.

zhera Ragnar Lothbrokan hour ago

It’s terrifying! I fear for you Americans.

JoeMyGodModan hour ago

Like openly gay Florida state Rep. Carlos Smith (seen above), I am a graduate of UCF, which is now the nation’s largest public university by enrollment.

jeffg166 clayan hour ago

Accreditation may just become a problem for Florida schools as they try to muzzle thinking.

TrollopeReader jeffg16629 minutes ago

aren’t accreditations done by regional groups? So as FL / GA / the Deep South grow less “tolerant” the agency will just go along?

Jay Silversmithan hour ago

Theย Grievanceย Onย Parade party.

heleninedinburgh2 hours ago edited

So the ‘academic freedom’ they’re so loudly in favour of just means the ability of professors to use slurs and misgender their students without being talked to by HR.
I mean we knew that, but nice to see it actually being confirmed in real time.

weshlovrcman hour ago

In the Fascist State of Florida, the remaking of education continues on course. Henceforth, all institutions of learning will be used to groom children into fascism and eliminate anything that does not support/agree with fascist theory.

J.Martindale2 hours ago

“Freedom from indoctrination” by stifling free speech. The irony of it all!

J.Martindalean hour ago

What I don’t understand is why the ACLU or some other organization hasn’t brought suit against the governor for violation of the First Amendment. This is exactly what the amendment was designed to prohibit: governmental interference with free speech.

bambinoitaliano2 hours ago

Why even send your children to Florida universities at this point. Soon none of the institution live up to the normal standard of operation. Moron Death Sentence is hell bend on turning Florida into a shit hole state.

TexasBoy2 hours ago edited

What good is college if they can’t present alternative views and stimulate the students analytical thinking to make up their own minds.

This is what stimulates creativity, abstract views, and new inventions to improve everyones lives.

Republicans….taking us back to the Middle Ages without the need for a flux capacitor.

Melissia TexasBoyan hour ago

Simple.

If they cannot stimulate the students’ minds, then they shall be indoctrination centers for capitalism.

There is no such thing as an apolitical education, it either serves to liberate men or make them slaves.

J.Martindale2 hours ago

And the administrations of these schools are unable to protect academic freedom for their professors because of fear of retribution and firing. DeSantis is Big Brother.

JT2 hours ago

“A History of Our Lord and Savior DeSantis”

John Tan hour ago

Imagine living in a state where you can get in trouble for criticizing dictators in a classroom lecture.

Leftyan hour ago edited

He is scary evil. Dog help usย ifย when he runs for president.

What, me worry?an hour ago

Welcome to 1984 and Newspeak. Double-plus good!

Frankly, I can hardly wait to flush this timeline down the Memory Hole.

TexasBoy2 hours ago edited

All public educators, at all grade levels, should simply walk out. There is no way Florida would be able to replace every single teacher and college professor in the state. The federal government would be forced to step in.