Intolerance and Judgmentalism

we could all use a Good News Tuesday by Jeff Tiedrich

(More good news, after Scottie’s video, as to the early voting news! Blue language alert, so no reading until you’re not somewhere the f-word is not acceptable. Else scroll just a bit, because of course the first sentence is joyous and contains the f-word. Also, italicized script beneath the suns are by the author, Jeff Tiedrich.)

Kamalaโ€™s up and Donnyโ€™s down Read on Substack

LA LA LA LA no reading here if you’re at work,

LA LA LA LA no reading here if you’re at work.

LA LA LA LA no reading here if you’re at work,

LA LA LA LA no reading here if you’re at work!

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Okay. Next line,

fuck this fucking nail-biter of an election. good news is out there โ€” letโ€™s have a look.

undecideds are deciding โ€” and theyโ€™re breaking towards Kamala Harris.

A majority of voters (80%) say they made up their minds about which candidate to support over a month ago, while 11% made up their minds in the last month, 6% made up their minds in the past week, and 3% still have not made up their mind. 

โ€œVoters who made their decision on who to support over a month ago break for Trump, 52% to 48%, while voters who made up their mind in the last month or week break for Harris, 60% to 36%,โ€ Kimball said. โ€œThe three percent of voters who said they could still change their mind currently favor Harris, 48% to 43%.โ€

I know, right? who could be undecided in a race thatโ€™s basically everyone gets a puppy vs diarrhea forever?

but there are huge swaths of votes who just donโ€™t pay attention to politics until the very last minute โ€” and now that theyโ€™re finally tuned in, itโ€™s dawning on them that wait, one of the candidates is ass-spraying mayhem? oh, fuck that shit.

think back to 1980. polling showed the race was a dead heat โ€” but in the final weeks, just about every goddamned undecided broke towards Reagan, and what looked like a nail-biter ended up being a blowout.

this year, however, it looks like the fence-sitters are doing the right thing.


hang on, you need some more good polling news? fine, be that way.

Kamala leads dong-obsessed fry chef Donny Convict in favorability by 11 percentage points, while 58% of registered voters fucking loathe Donny.

The nationwide poll, conducted last week, found Harrisโ€™s favorability to be significantly higher than Trumpโ€™s, with 51 percent of registered voters viewing Harris as a favorable candidate compared to just 40 percent who felt the same about Trump. Independent voters, notably, were equally split on their opinions of Harris, while the majority of independent votersโ€”58 percentโ€”felt negatively about Trump.

donโ€™t forget that this is going to be the first post-Roe national election.

But perhaps no Democratic stance resonated more with voters than abortion, which saw Harris lead Trump by 23 percent.

reproductive rights continues to be a losing issue for Donny, and heโ€™s still bragging about being the guy who shitcanned Roe.


Donny is being abandoned by his base.

white folks who never went to college have long been Donnyโ€™s most hardcore cultists โ€” but this year they seem to be suffering from Dear Leader Fatigue.

hereโ€™s CNNโ€™s Harry Enten to explain.

โ€œitโ€™s been a key demographic for him โ€” his base. and this is whatโ€™s so interesting โ€ฆ in fact, itโ€™s moving away from him. this is Trumpโ€™s margin with non-college white voters. this group is not moving towards him. itโ€™s moving slightly away. go back eight years ago, he won it by 33. you go back four years ago, he won it be 31. now we see heโ€™s only up by 27.โ€

Donnyโ€™s losing the people who have been filing out of his hate-rallies early.

after a half hour of listening to him drone on about sharks and batteries and Hannibal Lecter wants to have you for dinner, they turn to their spouse and say Lurleen, letโ€™s go home and see if NASCARโ€™s on TV.

plus-27 is still a fuck-ton of support from Donnyโ€™s base โ€” but in a close election, he canโ€™t afford to lose the additional 6% who voted for him in 2016. these people may never vote for Komrade Kamala, but enough of them may stay home on election day to make a difference.

weโ€™re all worried about post-election fuckery, but letโ€™s not forget that nearly all swing state governors are Democrats.

hereโ€™s WaPoโ€™s Jennifer Rubin to talk us all down off that ledge.

Constitutional expert Richard H. Pildes reminded us that scenarios involving mischief by governors are unlikely. โ€œIn nearly all the swing states, the governors are Democrats, who are hardly going to be receptive to any entreaties by Trump,โ€ he wrote. Even in Georgia, Gov. Brian Kemp and Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, both Republicans, โ€œhave done as much under fire as any political officials to prove their commitment to certifying an accurate, lawful count.โ€ And although a few local boards might refuse to certify, there are remedies in court. (A Georgia court recently rejected the notion that officials could refuse to certify results.)

and, on that note, some Arizona dipshit who thought she could fuck around with certifying her stateโ€™s 2022 senate race is now learning that finding out truly sucks.

An Arizona County elections official has agreed to plead guilty after she refused to certify the 2022 election in which Kari Lake lost to Katie Hobbs.

The Washington Post reported Monday that Peggy Judd, who helps lead Cochise County southeast of Phoenix, was indicted last year for allegedly โ€œflouting the stateโ€™s deadlinesโ€ for the 2022 election certification.

actions, consequences. itโ€™s nice when things work out in that order.


Jill Stein might be hurting Donny this year.

perpetual Kremlin dinner guest Jill Stein is like some fucked-up asteroid. every four years, her weird-ass orbit swings her too close to the Earth, and she ends up dicking with the tides and screwing with our electoral magnetic field.

Jillyโ€™s back, but a new poll apparently indicates that this year, sheโ€™s taking away votes from Donny.

A new poll suggests that Green Party presidential candidate Jill Stein is drawing more voters from former President Donald Trump than from Vice President Kamala Harris.

The poll shows Harris leading Trump 49 percent to 47 percent. However, with Stein in the race, Trump’s support dips to 46 percent, while Harris maintains her 49 percent backing, suggesting that Stein draws more support from Trump than from Harris. Though Stein’s voter base remains relatively small, at about 1 percent, it could prove crucial in an election that hinges on tight margins in swing states.


the five innocent and exonerated black men known as the Central Park Five are suing Donny for defamation.

The five men who make up the Central Park Five and now call themselves the Exonerated Five have filed a defamation lawsuit against Donald Trump over his remarks during the presidential debate last month.

During the debate he said: “They admitted โ€” they said, they pled guilty. And I said, well, if they pled guilty they badly hurt a person, killed a person ultimately. And if they pled guilty โ€” then they pled weโ€™re not guilty.”

At the time of the trials, each had pleaded not guilty, and the victim of the attack survived.

ok, this one is not election-related news โ€” but it still makes me laugh to see Donny get served another big, fat slice of Justice Pie.


Donny continues to be an increasingly-deteriorating imbecile.

โ€œitโ€™s as big a waterโ€” yโ€™know, itโ€™s as big a water-storm, they say, as weโ€™ve ever seen.โ€

โ€˜water-storm?โ€™ the word is hurricane, you decompensating dotard.

Alexa, whatโ€™s aphasia?

Aphasia is a language disorder that affects how you communicate. It’s caused by damage in the area of the brain that controls language expression and comprehension. Aphasia leaves a person unable to communicate effectively with others.

Alexa, can aphasia be a sign of dementia?

what the fuck do you think?


so, thereโ€™s lots of good news all around โ€” but as a commenter under yesterdayโ€™s post said, โ€œwe still have to fight like weโ€™re ten points down.โ€ that person is exactly right. we donโ€™t have the luxury of complacency. thatโ€™s how we fucked it up in 2016 โ€” we all thought Hillaryโ€™s got this in the bag, and so we blew up the balloons and popped the champagne way too early, and too many of us decided it was totes okay stay home on election day. after all, Nate Silver promised us that Hillary had a 99% chance of victory, right? but polls donโ€™t vote โ€” people do.

this year, we all understand the assignment.

Kamala understands the assignment, too. unlike the email lady in 2016, Kamala and Uncle Tim are hitting all the swing states. meanwhile, Donny Convict is squandering his time doing vanity rallies in places like California and New York โ€” states he hasnโ€™t a snowballโ€™s chance of winning.

14 days to the election. if we vote, we win.

Things to Remind People in the Grocery Line

or wherever mentions of prices, and whatever else has improved since Pres. Biden took office. I post this because my own US Rep is campaigning about how bad everything is, with facts from the Don’s admin when they’re facts at all. I’m certain he’s not the only “safe” (I voted for the Dem-we actually have a Dem running!) Republican running for the US House, as they’re all up for election every two years. Anyway, he makes the claims that things are bad under Biden-Harris, and how he’s just focusing on improving those very things that have improved thanks to Biden-Harris and the legislators who managed to get things passed (most Republicans are not among those legislators, btw.) Anyway, here’s Heather Cox Richardson:

October 17, 2024

Heather Cox Richardson

Oct 18, 2024

In a new rule released yesterday, the Federal Trade Commission requires sellers to make it as easy to cancel a subscription to a gym or a service as it is to sign up for one. In a statement, FTC chair Lina Khan explained the reasoning behind the โ€œclick-to-cancelโ€ rule: โ€œToo often, businesses make people jump through endless hoops just to cancel a subscription,โ€ she said. โ€œNobody should be stuck paying for a service they no longer want.โ€ Although most of the new requirements wonโ€™t take effect for about six months, David Dayen of The American Prospect noted that the stock price of Planet Fitness fell 8% after the announcement. 

When he took office in January 2021, with democracy under siege from autocratic governments abroad and an authoritarian movement at home, President Joe Biden set out to prove that democracy could deliver for the ordinary people who had lost faith in it. The click-to-cancel rule is an illustration of an obvious and long-overdue protection, but it is only one of many waysโ€”$35 insulin, new bridges, loan forgiveness, higher wages, good jobsโ€”in which policies designed to benefit ordinary people have demonstrated that a democratic government can improve lives.

When Secretary of the Treasury Janet Yellen spoke to the Council on Foreign Relations yesterday, she noted that the administration โ€œhas driven a historic economic recoveryโ€ with strong growth, very low unemployment rates, and inflation returning to normal. Now it is focused on lowering costs for families and expanding the economy while reducing inequality. That strong economy at home is helping to power the global economy, Yellen noted, and the U.S. has been working to strengthen that economy by reinforcing global policies, investments, and institutions that reinforce economic stability. 

โ€œOver the past four years, the world has been through a lot,โ€ Yellen said, โ€œfrom a once-in-a-century pandemic, to the largest land war in Europe since World War II, to increasingly frequent and severe climate disasters. This has only underlined that we are all in it together. Americaโ€™s economic well-being depends on the worldโ€™s, and Americaโ€™s economic leadership is key to global prosperity and security.โ€ She warned against isolationism that would undermine such prosperity both at home and abroad.

The numbers behind the proven experience that government protection of ordinary people is good for economic growth got the blessing of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences on Monday, when it awarded the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences to Daron Acemoglu and Simon Johnson, both of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and to James Robinson of the University of Chicago. Their research explains why โ€œ[s]ocieties with a poor rule of law and institutions that exploit the population do not generate growth or change for the better,โ€ while democracies do.   

Although democracy has been delivering for Americans, Donald Trump and MAGAs rose to power by convincing those left behind by 40 years of supply-side economics that their problem was not the people in charge of the government, but rather the government itself. 

Trump wants to get rid of the current government so that he can enrich himself, do whatever he wants to his enemies, and avoid answering to the law. The Christian nationalists who wrote Project 2025 want to destroy the federal government so they can put in place an authoritarian who will force Americans to live under religious rule. Tech elites like Elon Musk and Peter Thiel want to get rid of the federal government so they can control the future without having to worry about regulations. 

In place of what they insist is a democratic system that has failed, they are offering a strongman who, they claim, will take care of people more efficiently than a democratic government can. The focus on masculinity and portrayals of Trump as a muscled heroโ€š much as Russian president Vladimir Putin portrays himself, fit the mold of an authoritarian leader.

But the argument that Americans need a strongman depends on the argument that democracy does not work. In the last three-and-a-half years, Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris, and the Democrats have proved that it can, so long as it operates with the best interests of ordinary people in mind. Trump and Vanceโ€™s outlandish lies about the federal response to Hurricane Helene are designed to override the reality of a competent administration addressing a crisis with all the tools it has. In its place, the lies provide a false narrative of federal officials ignoring people and trying to steal their property.  

Their attack on democracy has another problem, as well. In addition to the reality that democracy has been delivering for Americans for more than three years nowโ€”and pretty dramaticallyโ€”Trump is no longer a strongman. Vice President Kamala Harris is outperforming  him in the theater of political dominance. And as she does so, his image is crumbling.

In an article in US News and World Report yesterday, NBCโ€™s former chief marketer John D. Miller apologized to America for helping to โ€œcreate a monster.โ€ Miller led the team that marketed The Apprentice, the reality TV show that made Trump a household name. โ€œTo sell the show,โ€ Miller wrote, โ€œwe created the narrative that Trump was a super-successful businessman who lived like royalty.โ€ But the truth was that he declared bankruptcy six times, and โ€œ[t]he imposing board room where he famously fired contestants was a set, because his real boardroom was too old and shabby for TV,โ€ Miller wrote. While Trump loved the attention the show provided, โ€œmore successful CEOs were too busy to get involved in reality TV.โ€ 

Miller says they โ€œpromoted the show relentlessly,โ€ blanketing the country with a โ€œhighly exaggeratedโ€ image of Trump as a successful businessman โ€œlike a heavy snowstorm.โ€ โ€œ[W]eโ€ฆdid irreparable harm by creating the false image of Trump as a successful leader,โ€ Miller wrote. โ€œI deeply regret that. And I regret that it has taken me so long to go public.โ€ 

Speaking as a โ€œborn-and-bred Republican,โ€ Miller warned: โ€œIf you believe that Trump will be better for you or better for the country, that is an illusion, much like The Apprentice was.โ€ He strongly urged people to vote for Kamala Harris. โ€œThe country will be better off and so will you.โ€ 

A new video shown last night on Jimmy Kimmel Live even more powerfully illustrated the collapse of Trumpโ€™s tough guy image. Written by Jesse Joyce of Comedy Central, the two-minute video featured actor and retired professional wrestler Dave Bautista dominating his sparring partner in a boxing ring and then telling those who think Trump is โ€œsome sort of tough guyโ€ that โ€œheโ€™s not.โ€ 

Working out in a gym, Bautista insults Trumpโ€™s heavy makeup, out-of-shape body, draft dodging, and physical weakness, and notes that โ€œhe sells imaginary baseball cards pretending to be a cowboy firemanโ€ when โ€œheโ€™s barely strong enough to hold an umbrella.โ€ Bautista says Trumpโ€™s two-handed method of drinking water looks โ€œlike a little pink chickadee,โ€ and goes on to make a raunchy observation about Trumpโ€™s stage dancing. โ€œHeโ€™s moody, he pouts, he throws tantrums,โ€ Bautista goes on. โ€œHeโ€™s cattier on social media than a middle-school mean girl.โ€

Bautista ends by listing Trumpโ€™s fears of rain, dogs, windmillsโ€ฆand being laughed at.โ€ โ€œAnd mostly,โ€ Bautista concludes, โ€œheโ€™s terrified that real, red-blooded American men will find out that heโ€™s a weak, tubby toddler.โ€ Calling Trump a โ€œwhiny b*tch,โ€ Bautista walks away from the camera. 

The sketch was billed as comedy, but it was deadly serious in its takedown of the key element of Trumpโ€™s political power.

And he seems vulnerable. Forbes and Newsweek have recently questioned his mental health; yesterday the Boston Globe ran an op-ed saying, โ€œTrumpโ€™s decline is too dangerous to ignore. We can see the decline in the former presidentโ€™s ability to hold a train of thought, speak coherently, or demonstrate a command of the English language, to say nothing of policy.โ€ 

Trumpโ€™s Fox News Channel town hall yesterday got 2.9 million viewers; Harrisโ€™s interview got 7.1 million. Today, Trump canceled yet another appearance, this one with the National Rifle Association in Savannah, Georgia, scheduled for October 22, where he was supposed to be the keynote speaker.

Meanwhile, Vice President Harris today held rallies in Milwaukee, Green Bay, and La Crosse, Wisconsin. In La Crosse, MAGA hecklers tried to interrupt her while she was speaking about the centrality of the three Trump-appointed Supreme Court justices to the overturning of the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision that recognized the constitutional right to abortion. 

โ€œOh, you guys are at the wrong rally,โ€ Harris called to them with a smile and a wave. As the crowd roared with approval, she added: โ€œNo, I think you meant to go to the smaller one down the street.โ€ 

โ€”

Notes:

https://www.npr.org/2024/10/16/nx-s1-5154814/click-to-cancel-subscriptions-memberships-ftc-rule

https://www.ftc.gov/news-events/news/press-releases/2024/10/federal-trade-commission-announces-final-click-cancel-rule-making-it-easier-consumers-end-recurring

https://www.msnbc.com/the-reidout/reidout-blog/dave-bautista-trump-jimmy-kimmel-masculinity-rcna175963

https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/jy2654

https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/speeches-remarks/2023/03/29/remarks-by-president-biden-at-the-summit-for-democracy-virtual-plenary-on-democracy-delivering-on-global-challenges/

https://www.nobelprize.org/prizes/economic-sciences/2024/press-release/

https://www.nobelprize.org/prizes/economic-sciences/2024/popular-information/

https://www.newsweek.com/donald-trump-ditches-nra-event-latest-cancellation-1970902

https://www.usnews.com/opinion/articles/2024-10-16/we-created-a-tv-illusion-for-the-apprentice-but-the-real-trump-threatens-america

https://www.newsweek.com/kamala-harris-fox-news-interview-ratings-donald-trump-1970906

https://www.bostonglobe.com/2024/10/16/opinion/trump-cognitive-decline-press-republicans/

https://www.forbes.com/sites/saradorn/2024/10/16/trumps-unwieldy-speeches-raise-questions-about-his-mental-acuity/

https://www.newsweek.com/dancing-donald-trump-clearly-steep-decline-opinion-1969551

X:

ddayen/status/1846991070309101761

ddayen/status/1847011806587634007

carlquintanilla/status/1847051458618736920

KamalaHQ/status/1847026957407449361

YouTube:

watch?v=rn-Dw2JUVmo&t=910s (video starts at 15.23)

Reblog from Janet

I think Janet makes important points about directness.

My Personal Voting Post

It’s been a day, really, but that can be a day-in-the-life post some other time. Meanwhile, I have a tab up that I intend to use in my voting post, and it’s still there because I haven’t gotten it done. Here I am at 1 til 5 PM, but I am doing it now. ๐ŸŒž๐Ÿคฏ๐ŸŒž

So my mission for today was to vote this morning. I got around and fixed my hair, and went to vote. There’s a jury trial, so parking was short. There was a spot, and I fit, but it was tough getting out of the car, as the person to my left had parked just barely on their righthand, my lefthand, line. But it got done. I figured they’d leave and make me look like the a-hole, even though I did have 3 in. of space between my car and my righthand line. Then, I figured they probably pulled in the best they could, and maybe/probably the person they pulled in next to had parked too far over, making this person look like the a-hole. So, all’s well, I got in, got signed in, and voted. There was not a line, but each machine was kept in use; there was a steady flow of voters. Awesome!

It was smooth as silk, and I actually got to vote for Dems all the way down the ticket except one office, where I wrote in a good friend of mine who I admire, and who would be a superlative state rep. Else, I voted Dem all the way. It was good. I usually post a pic of my pen and my sticker, but county costs are up, and there are no stickers today, and no free stylus pens, either. So, big whoop, but it got done! I expect to hear (read) that everyone who reads here votes this season; look at my WP handle!

Anyway, here’s a great post about another voter who votes Blue:

http://vixenstrangelymakesuncommonsense.blogspot.com/2024/10/heres-bit-of-history.html#more

Wednesday, October 16, 2024

Here’s a Bit of History

This is the first president whose inauguration I can remember. Now, if you know my age, you might think that is improbable, but 1976 was a big year in Philadelphia with the Bicentennial and all. And I guess I imbibed political sensibility a bit from my mom. In 1977 I had a turntable, a Kiss album alongside my Sesame Street records and was a fan of Happy Days and watched some documentary about the 25th anniversary of rock and roll on PBS about a dozen times, it felt like. 

I remember the 1970s. I was already me by the time I was a toddler cleaning up shot glasses after parties (the taste of blackberry brandy and the sound of Steppenwolf) and listening to the Midnight Special. when I definitely wasn’t supposed to still be awake and turning on the sole tv in the house and was lifting cold pizza out of the fridge. Mom finding me zonked on the floor with the farm report or Chief Halftown on in the morning.

He reminded me of Mr. Rogers then, and that was all right by me. He still does, and I don’t have a greater compliment. He cares, and he acts on his sense of caring. It’s the best thing you can say anyone ever does. 

Kamala Harris is a lot closer to my age than Jimmy Carter and is a woman, like me. I am still mad about the women in their 100’s and their 90’s in 2016, who finally got to vote for a woman for president and she never broke through the ceiling she most certainly dented. 

But maybe me and the first president I can remember as a girl, who talked so appreciatively of his own daughter, Amy, when I was a little girl myself and wanted grownups to believe in girls, can see Kamala Harris win together. 

Maybe this is just a sentimental, schmaltzy departure from me busting on Trump’s mental decline or whatever–but I would like to see this. She is so ready, and I am so ready. and we are so ready. 

So here is Harris calling Trump a weak bitch who loves dictators because of his weak bitchness. Because I am sentimental, but this is business and Trump needs a boot in the ass. 

I’m not saying “we’ve come a long way, baby” or “she can bring home the bacon” or whatever passed for 1970s feminism. I am saying this candidate is herself outstanding and can do the damn job. Not because she’s a woman, but because she is a boss. 

And the miserable misogynist she is running against is an echo of the past that a 100 year old man knows should be left to history. Because he has fought against that bigotry in his own life and in his own faith. 

Reblog Michael Seidel, writer

I look forward to these every day, even though I don’t get to them until the night! ๐Ÿคทโ€โ™€๏ธ๐ŸŒž๐Ÿ––

Theyโ€™re part of a community โ€˜who have the most to lose.โ€™ So theyโ€™re showing up for Harris.

(Note from Ali: I’ve seen a couple of headlines that the Don’s campaign plans to run heavy anti-trans ads in the swing states. I’ve used all my free NYT articles for life, but they have a story about it. So this is of interest to All Women.)

Black trans women are a small subset of trans voters, who make up a small portion of the electorate โ€” but theyโ€™re also longtime leaders of the LGBTQ+ rights movement who know whatโ€™s at stake.

Originally published by The 19th

Your trusted source for contextualizing LGBTQ+ and Election 2024 news. Sign up for our daily newsletter.

Five years ago, Democratic presidential primary hopeful Kamala Harris stepped onto a stage at a CNN LGBTQ+ town hall in Los Angeles.

โ€œMy pronouns are she, her and hers,โ€ Harris said in her introduction.

Offering her pronouns, which wasn’t nearly as commonplace in 2019 as it is now, showed solidarity with transgender and nonbinary Americans. It was a simple but impactful gesture for a community in the midst of an unprecedented homicide crisis, whose rights and humanity had been challenged by former President Donald Trump, who was in office at the time, and other Republicans

In standing shoulder to shoulder with transgender people, Harris began to shift a relationship that had been dogged by decisions of her past, like her support for bills cracking down on sex work during her time as a prosecutor in San Francisco and, while Californiaโ€™s attorney general, her stateโ€™s opposition to gender-affirming care for an incarcerated transgender woman in 2015.

Today, Black transgender women, some of the same people who questioned her candidacy five years ago, are supporting Harris on and off the campaign trail. One way they have shown up is by raising money and drumming up support, like a Zoom call in August that was joined by more than 1,000 transgender people, the brainchild of veteran Black trans activist Zahara Bassett.

โ€œI felt that we need to let people know that our voices are at the ballot,โ€ Bassett said. โ€œWhen we speak to you about our rights, about our visibility of being here, that needs to be respected.โ€ 

Bassett enlisted the help of several trans luminaries, including Precious Davis, who had long heard criticism of Harris among her LGBTQ+ peers. Davis, chief strategy officer of Center on Halsted, Chicagoโ€™s largest LGBTQ+ community center, said she knew it would be critical for Black trans women to show up for Harris, in part as a way of signaling to Black trans women and queer communities they had permission to vote for the vice president.

โ€œWe are a part of a community who have the most to lose,โ€ Davis said of Black trans women. โ€œOur rights and freedom are at stake. We have seen Donald Trump’s attacks against the trans community time and time again.โ€

Many LGBTQ+ advocates have argued that even if Harris has room for growth on LGBTQ+ issues, itโ€™s nearly impossible to compare her with Trump, who regularly misgenders trans women and refers to trans people as โ€œinsane.โ€ 

โ€œI will say that I would rather have a fighting chance with her than have no chance at all with Trump,โ€ said Hope Giselle-Godsey, executive director of the National Trans Visibility March, another organizer of the Zoom call for Harris. 

While she was roundly criticized four years ago for mixing up language in referring to transgender women, overall, Harrisโ€™ record on LGBTQ+ rights is largely viewed positively. She provided some of the earliest support for marriage equality of any presidential hopeful when, as district attorney in San Francisco, in 2004 she officiated a same-sex wedding in California. She also opposed so-called gay and trans โ€œpanic defenses,โ€ where perpetrators attempted to claim that fear or disgust of LGBTQ+ people was reasonable motivation for attacking them. 

She lost significant ground going into 2020 after her support of FOSTA/SESTA, a  2018 package of bills that aimed to crack down on websites used by sex workers. Transgender people are disproportionately forced into underground economies like sex work due to a lack of employment opportunities.  

Trump, however, has fared much worse. During his four years as president, the National Center for Transgender Equality labeled his cabinet the โ€œDiscrimination Administrationโ€ and the media advocacy group GLAAD logged 210 attacks on queer people. He also barred transgender people from serving in the military, banned Pride flag displays at embassies and gutted transgender health care protections under the Affordable Care Act, among other things. 

Channyn Lynn Parker, CEO of the Brave Space Alliance, which serves trans and gender nonconforming youth on the south and west sides of Chicago, speaks about both candidates with resignation. She, too, helped organize the Zoom for Harris, though less enthusiastically than her peers. 

Parker has worked with street-based and unhoused youth for more than 10 years and has seen Democratic candidates come and go, all of them with different promises for the community; for example, Biden pledged to trans kids that he โ€œhad their backs.โ€ 

Meanwhile, the kids she works with still face the same challenges. Many are still kicked out of their homes by their own parents and theyโ€™re particularly vulnerable to the anti-trans laws and hate that has also flourished across the country.

โ€œI have never seen a candidate where I feel completely safe, and I’ve ever been able to breathe a full sigh of relief, never,โ€ Parker said. โ€œSo, I don’t know if Kamala is going to be any different in that regard.โ€

Black trans women are a small subset of the transgender voters, who make up a small portion of the electorate. An estimated 825,100 transgender adults of all races will be eligible to vote in November, according to the Williams Institute at the UCLA School of Law. As of last year, 161 million Americans were registered to vote. 

Queer Americans now make up 7.6 percent of the overall population, Gallup reports. According to GLAAD, 94 percent of those LGBTQ+ Americans are motivated to vote.  Black trans women have an outsized influence on these voters, a group that tends to lean heavily Democratic

In recent years, advocates have invested heavily in giving credit to Black trans activists for leading the charge at the Stonewall uprising in 1969, where queer people famously fought back against homophobic policing in New York City. 

At the same time, Black trans women have been overrepresented in the numbers of trans homicide victims and often underrepresented in the media.

At the 2019 LGBTQ+ Town Hall, where Harris introduced herself with her pronouns, Black trans women made headlines by interrupting the event repeatedly, noting that not a single Black trans woman had been invited to ask candidates a question.

The town hall also included a gaffe: Immediately after Harris shared her pronouns, CNNโ€™s Chris Cuomo replied, โ€œMine too.โ€ To transgender people, the moment highlighted how, even at an event centered on LGBTQ+ communities, transgender issues could become an afterthought. And in the four years since, Trump and his running mate, Ohio Sen. JD Vance, have repeatedly attacked transgender people; 176 anti-trans bills have become law; and none of the debates have delved meaningfully into LGBTQ+ issues. 

The Black trans women backing Harris see the setbacks โ€” and also an opportunity if Harris wins. Davis said she is ready to lobby Harris on trans issues the moment Harris takes the oath of office. Bassett has at the ready a wish list of policies that would make gender-affirming care more accessible and less stigmatized. 

And Parker is clear about one thing: Supporting a candidate doesnโ€™t mean agreeing with them unconditionally. It means challenging them to be better. 

โ€œWe’re going to provide you with all the necessary tools and resources and individuals to help you to get this right,โ€ she said. โ€œIf you don’t use those tools, meaning the individuals who are providing you with the level of access and education needed, then shame on you.โ€

To check your voter registration status or to get more information about registering to vote, text 19thnews to 26797.

Flamy Grant Pushes the Boundaries of Christian Music โ€” and Drag

Byย Mitchell Atencio

Full confession; this is an article from Sojourners Magazine. I subscribe, and I brought the whole piece here, for those who may wish to read it but don’t want to go on a Christian site. I did not see anything besides that to warn about; there is discussion of church but not of bad happenings. However, if I missed something, I am so sorry; if you would be able to let me know in comments, that helps me learn what I should look for. This article struck me as something that should be at Scottie’s Playtime.

This interview is part of The Reconstruct, a weekly newsletter from Sojourners. In a world where so much needs to change, Mitchell Atencio and Josiah R. Daniels interview people who have faith in a new future and are working toward repair. Subscribe here.

Flamy Grant called in to her morning interview after participating in a day-long silent retreat. Well, not a silent retreat exactly โ€” it was a vocal rest.

After spending the last year touring the U.S. off the success of her album, Grant, who prefers to use her stage name in interviews, needed to rest her voice. Since her rise to Christian music stardom โ€” or infamy, depending on how one feels about a drag queen topping the Christian charts โ€” she has performed in bars, clubs, and churches spreading the good news in glitter.

Since then, Grant has collaborated with artists like Semler, Derek Webb, and Jennifer Knapp. And she has spoken out for LGBTQ+ rights, joining a lawsuit against the state of Tennessee in 2023.

A few weeks before the release of her second album, CHURCH, Grant and I spoke about her time touring the country, writing songs in drag, leaving the church but still going to churches weekly, and more.

Coincidentally, as the interview ended, Amy Grantโ€™s โ€œLucky Oneโ€ began playing over the hotel lobbyโ€™s speakers.

[Editorโ€™s note: This interview was performed before Hurricane Helene devastated many regions in the South, including Flamy Grantโ€™s hometown of Asheville, N.C. Grant and her team canceled shows in North Carolina, but continue touring in Georgia and Nashville this week before touring the West Coast.]

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Mitchell Atencio: How is touring? What have you heard from folks while on the road?

Flamy Grant: I feel like Iโ€™ve been on tour pretty much nonstop for the past year. A year ago I quit my day job and moved back to Asheville, N.C., where I was born and raised. And honestly, this is not even an exaggeration, Iโ€™ve spent more time on the road than I have in my bedroom at home.

This [tour], though, is very different. Iโ€™m on a tour with two other acts and a full band. Mostly, Iโ€™ve just been solo on the road, which I love in a lot of ways because Iโ€™m actually very much an introvert.

Weโ€™re only in our second week right now of the โ€œNo More Traumaโ€ tour, and the response has been amazing so far. Now that Iโ€™m a year in, there have been people whoโ€™ve come up to me to say hello afterwards, and [they say], โ€œThis is our third or fourth time seeing you!โ€ And Iโ€™m like, Iโ€™ve really only been doing this full-time for a year. What do you mean the third or fourth time? It is really cool to know that thereโ€™s this community and fan loyalty.

My favorite moment on tour so far was in St. Louis. We were getting ready, there was no green room at the venue, so I was literally just painting my face in front of the windows, right outside where the line was forming to get in. There was this family โ€” a mother and a little girl, around 7-9 years old. She had a sign, painted in full rainbow lettering, that said, โ€œThis is my first concert!โ€ And she was just holding it up to the window. So I popped out to say hello, and they had driven two hours to St. Louis to come to this show. Her name was Claire, and Iโ€™m her favorite artist, and Iโ€™m her first concert.

That was wild because it just threw me back to when I was that age and excited about music and wanting to go to concerts for the first time. Everybody always asks that question, โ€œWhat was your first concert?โ€ throughout your entire life. And now Claire is always going to say, โ€œI saw a drag queen in St. Louis.โ€ 

Now Iโ€™m curious what your first concert was.

Clay Crosse. He had quite a big hit with that song โ€œI Surrender Allโ€ in the โ€™90s. I just loved him. I probably had a crush on him, if weโ€™re being honest. He had that classic jawline, that beautiful blonde hair, and yeah, I was obsessed with him. My parents couldnโ€™t take me, so I roped one of my friends from church and got his dad to drive us down to this show. What I remember most about it was that Jaci Velasquez opened and she was so good. She was phenomenal.

Mine, for fairness, was the Newsboys back when Peter Furler was still leading them. Speaking of touring, I noticed you have a different booking process for churches and for โ€œtraditional venuesโ€ like bars and clubs. Why is that?

Thatโ€™s been interesting to navigate. I feel like Iโ€™m definitely straddling two worlds. I very much want to be taken seriously as a musician and songwriter. The drag can sometimes be a little bit of a barrier to that, because people tend to see drag and think itโ€™s a gimmick or, they just immediately associate it with Sunday drag brunch or weekend clubs.

I have done a fair bit of that, especially early on, but Iโ€™m a singer-songwriter and I write my own original music, and I happen to perform in drag. Itโ€™s been a challenge to convey that as weโ€™re booking and marketing shows. My booking agent is fantastic, and sheโ€™s been really good at helping people understand that theyโ€™re booking a singer-songwriter who needs an extra hour in the green room to get ready.

What happened last year, with โ€œGood Dayโ€ hitting number one, so many churches reached out and the first question was, โ€œCan we do โ€˜Good Dayโ€™ in Sunday worship?โ€ And Iโ€™m like, of course you can, just make sure they know itโ€™s written by a drag queen. The next question was, โ€œHow do we get you to come?โ€ Either on a Sunday morning or to do a special concert on an evening.

Because I know the church world and was a worship leader for 22 years, it just makes more sense for me to book those myself. I donโ€™t generally go out seeking church bookings, those really do come to me, and thatโ€™s a gift in so many ways.

Iโ€™ve played in over 50 churches in the last year. Some want to integrate me into their Sunday morning service, Iโ€™ll be part of the service planning, and weโ€™ll have a song during communion or the offertory. Others want to bring me in on a Saturday night and have me come sing to their congregation and community.

I have officially left the church myself. The last church I was involved in was in San Diego, I was a worship leader there for 8-and-a-half years and it closed down after the pandemic. I have not sought out a new church home since then, but Iโ€™m still in churches a lot.

Youโ€™re in churches about once a week โ€” thatโ€™s more than many church members. What makes writing music as Flamy Grant feel different? How does one write songs in drag?

In some ways, thereโ€™s no difference at all. At the end of the day, Iโ€™m just writing about my experiences. Derek Webb says the artistโ€™s role is just to look at the world and speak about it. Thatโ€™s so much of what Iโ€™ve done since I was 9 years old when I wrote my first song. That process of songwriting doesnโ€™t necessarily feel all that different.

And yet, there is this shift in the tone and subject matter of what I write about, because my life has changed so dramatically. And drag is a huge part of that change.

Flamy Grant poses for a photo. Photo by Ash Perlberg/Courtesy Flamy Grant

Itโ€™s been really fun to feel like Iโ€™m excavating parts of myself that have been dormant or suppressed for so long. [Drag] definitely changes the subject matter of what Iโ€™m writing about.

And itโ€™s been there all along, I just havenโ€™t allowed myself the pleasure and joy of exploring the range of my own gender identity, even the range of my physical voice. Being able to play with how I sing a song or a lyric, itโ€™s opened up a world of songwriting to me. There are times now, when Iโ€™m writing, where I do think about what this is going to look and feel like on stage, in drag, in a big wig with sequins and glitter on my face and all of this.

I still love to write a gut-punch ballad; thatโ€™s one of my specialties. And I love doing that because thatโ€™s not really a thing you tend to associate with drag too much. That tends to be a more surprising moment for people in my concerts, when I get serious. People expect the fierceness and sass and qualities of drag that theyโ€™re used to.

Mostly itโ€™s just a lot of fun. I really enjoy the opportunity to play with music in new ways.

It sounds like part of what youโ€™re saying is that it offers an added element of creativity to a songwriting process, even in the โ€œconstraintโ€ of writing as Flamy Grant.

Thatโ€™s absolutely right, there is a constraining piece to it. Whatever music I put out, itโ€™s going to be out under that name, Flamy Grant, and I know itโ€™s going to be associated with drag.

In some ways itโ€™s obviously pushing the boundaries of Christian music, but itโ€™s also pushing the boundaries of what people might consider drag to be.

What has the response been like from the drag community?

I just got a message from a drag queen back in San Diego. Her drag name is Nadya Symone. I love this queen. Sheโ€™s just one of the people I look up to. Sheโ€™s a Southern queen who lives in San Diego now. She was there at my very first drag show; I was nervous, and she could tell. And she just said, โ€œBaby, whatever happens, the show goes on. You make a mistake, you forget a lyric, you forget a line, your wig falls off, whatever โ€” the show goes on.โ€

I just felt so taken in, included, and welcomed. And thatโ€™s never changed. The people who get [Flamy] the quickest are other drag performers. I donโ€™t have to explain much to them. Theyโ€™re like, โ€œOh youโ€™re just bringing yourself to drag, which is what we all do.โ€

Anyway, the message that Symone sent me just yesterday was just, โ€œIโ€™m so proud of you, baby.โ€ I donโ€™t know what she had seen, but sheโ€™s still there and cheering me on. I had a lot of anxiety coming into this and a lot of imposter syndrome. Am I a real drag queen? Do I really belong in this community if what I want to do is write my own folk songs and sing them? And that has all been laid to rest by interacting with other performers.

Is there anything that you wanted to do differently between your first album, Bible Belt Baby, and your second album, CHURCH?

Iโ€™m so proud of Bible Belt Baby, but it did come together circumstantially and without a lot of intention. My initial conversation with my producer, Ben, who was my housemate in San Diego at the time, was, I think I want to sing in drag. And we were going to put together a five-song EP. I ran a Kickstarter, and we raised more than I expected. And it just continued to blossom and grow until it was a full album.

And in order to make it a full album, I was pulling from songs that predated Flamy. What was really cool about that was discovering that Flamy has been there all along, right?

But with CHURCH, I had the opportunity to really, for the first time, think about crafting a complete narrative. Thinking about themes that would all be contained on one record and writing, for the first time, a full album in Flamyโ€™s voice intentionally.

The second thing was having the resources to go to Nashville and make a Nashville record with Nashville players. That was a really exciting prospect for me.

We sent them all the demos in advance. I, [pauses] I donโ€™t know that they listened to them, but they didnโ€™t need to. They heard the song one time, took a couple notes, went to their instruments, and five, six, seven takes later we had what we needed. It was wild to watch how, at the skill level of those musicians, they brought the songs to life in ways I could have only hoped for.

I really wanted a sound that was in this Nashville vein, but we also talked about how to make it still a drag record. How do we pull in some of this country disco feel? How do we make sure it stands on par with anything coming out of Nashville, but also uniquely Flamy. They did a phenomenal job.

[Lastly], with Bible Belt Baby, I didnโ€™t know, up until a couple months before releasing it, whether I would even put it out as a Christian record. It wasnโ€™t until we finished it that I was like, yeah, this absolutely belongs in the Christian genre

Now, Christian music is largely worship music, which I personally donโ€™t care for. I like music that tells someoneโ€™s story. I want to hear what an individual person has gone through in their life and how they got to where they are.

And thatโ€™s why I loved artists like Margaret Becker, or Jennifer Knapp, Caedmonโ€™s Call, and folks famous for writing really personal. Whatโ€™s that thing people say? We find the universal in the specific โ€” thatโ€™s what I love about singer songwriters. I donโ€™t know if Iโ€™ll continue to make Christian music forever or what the next album will look like yet, but for this album, I [wanted] to be really intentional with the messaging. I think the tagline for the Kickstarter was โ€œFlamy Grantโ€™s Big Gay Christian Record.โ€

https://sojo.net/articles/interview/reconstruct/flamy-grant-pushes-boundaries-christian-music-and-drag

Links: Romancing the Vote, Yarn, & More

by Amanda ยท Oct 2, 2024 at 2:00 pm ยท

Good info regarding books that could be near and dear to hearts of readers, some other stuff, and Romancing the Vote helping to save democracy.

Good Review of Last Night’s Debate

with a transcript link.