Letter to the New York Post

Courtesy of Color of Change via Facebook:

Dear Friend,

Yesterday, the day after President Obama signed his stimulus bill into law, the NY Post ran a cartoon depicting the bill’s “author” as a dead monkey, covered in blood after being shot by police. You can see the image by clicking on the link below.

In the face of intense criticism, the Post’s editor is standing by the cartoon, claiming that it’s not about Obama, has no racial undertones, and that it was simply referencing a recent incident when police shot a pet chimpanzee. But it’s impossible to believe that any newspaper editor could be ignorant enough to not understand how this cartoon evokes a history of racist symbolism, or how frightening this image feels at a time when death threats against President Obama have been on the rise.

Please join me and other ColorOfChange.org members in demanding that the Post apologize publicly and fire the editor who allowed this cartoon to go to print:

http://www.colorofchange.org/nypost/?id=2450-812839

The Post would have us believe that the cartoon is not about Obama. But on the page just before the cartoon appears, there’s a big picture of Obama signing the stimulus bill. A reader paging through the Post would see Obama putting pen to paper, then turn the page to see this violent cartoon. The imagery is chilling.

There is a clear history in our country of racist symbolism that depicts Black people as apes or monkeys, and it came up multiple times during the presidential campaign.

We’re also in a time of increased race-based violence. In the months following President Obama’s election there has been a nationwide surge in hate crimes ranging from vandalism to assaults to arson on Black churches. There has been an unprecedented number of threats against President Obama since he was elected, with hate-based groups fantasizing about the killing of the president. Just a week ago, a man drove from Louisiana to the Capitol with a rifle, telling the police who stopped him that he had a “delivery” for the president.

There is no excuse for the Post to have allowed this cartoon to be printed, and even less for Editor Col Allan’s outright dismissal of Black concerns.

But let’s be clear who’s behind the Post: Rupert Murdoch. Murdoch, the Post’s owner, is the man behind FOX News Channel. FOX has continually attacked and denigrated Black people, politicians, institutions at every opportunity, and ColorOfChange has run several campaigns to make clear how FOX poisons public debate.

I don’t expect much from Murdoch. However, with enough public pressure, we can set the stage for advertisers and subscribers to think long and hard before patronizing outlets like the Post that refuse to be held accountable.

You can help, by making clear that the Post’s behavior is unacceptable, and by asking your friends and family to do the same. Please join me:

http://www.colorofchange.org/nypost/?id=2450-812839

————-

In addition, I’ll just echo the following quote from the hit song of the same title by
the rap group Public Enemy:

“Here’s a letter to the New York Post
The worst piece of paper on the east coast
Matter of fact the whole state’s forty cents
in New York City fifty cents elsewhere
It makes no goddamn sense at all
America’s oldest continuously published daily piece of bullshit”

I seldom read LOL cats but . . .

Kittywampus tempted me to take this quiz, since I haven’t posted in awhile and don’t feel like coming up with anything that would strain my brain on a holiday.   The result:

Lion Warning Cat

81% Affectionate, 61% Excitable, 42% Hungry

lion-cat

“You are the good Samaritan of the lolcat world. Protecting others from danger by shouting observations and guidance in cases of imminent threat, you believe in the well-being of everyone.”

Well, I agree with the 42% hungry part — time for lunch!

Knitting Clio on TV

The CCSU BOOKSTORE  presents

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CCSU’s cable television show featuring members of the Central family (faculty, staff, and alumni) talking about their books

and airing on some 20 cable outlets throughout Connecticut.  (Check your local listings!)

TODAY at NOON in the CCSU Bookstore

Student Bodies: the Influence of Student Health Services in American Society and Medicine

Heather Prescott (History)

BRING A LUNCH AND A FRIEND.

Watch Central Authors daily on CCSU TV, channel 23, at 8:30 am, 2:30 pm, and 7:30 pm,

or

online at www.ccsu.edu/centralauthors/programming.htm

Scientific Fraud in MMR/Autism study

Media dis&dat reports that  Dr. Andrew Wakefield, who published a study allegedly linking MMR vaccine and autism, has been accused of “cooking” the data to fit his theory.  Wakefield’s findings led to a sharp decline in the percentage of children receiving vaccinations for MMR and other childhood diseases, leading to a resurgence of these diseases in areas where herd immunity is lower than optimal.

I just received a copy of Paul Offit’s book, Autism’s False Prophets, which I hope to read soon (after the pile of papers I just received from my disability history class!)

Black History Month (satire)

Edge of the American West referred me to  postbourgie’s satirical series for Black History Month, “Know Your History.”

Here is the entry for the sole female in the group, Whoopi Goldberg:

whoopi_goldberg_3

Born Caryn Elaine Johnson in 1955, Whoopi Goldberg rose to fame in the acting world, becoming the second black woman to win an Academy Award for her role in the 1975 blaxploitation film, Blackface Jones and the Temple of Jive. After beating pinkytoe cancer in 1963, Goldberg established Brows(e) for a Cure, an organization that encourages people to donate their eyebrows to make wigs for others battling the disease. She continues to donate to this day.”

Any women’s historians out there want to join me in coming up with similar entries for WHM? Historiann, are you game?  Or has this been done already and I missed it?

Just because you quote Abigail Adams doesn’t make you a feminist

In her budget address, Governor Jodi Rell used the following quote from Abigail Adams’ letter to her son John Quincy Adams, written on January 13, 1780:

“It is not in the still calm of life … that great characters are formed. The habits of a vigorous mind are formed in contending with difficulties. Great necessities call out great virtues. When a mind is raised … then those qualities which would otherwise lay dormant, wake into life and form the character of the hero and the statesman.”

Apparently, the Governor forgot about another famous quote from Abigail Adams — i.e. “remember the ladies.” One of the proposed cuts will be to the state’s Permanent Commission on the Status of Women.  She also proposed deep cuts in the state’s safety net that serve women, children, veterans, disabled persons, the elderly — in short everyone but the rich Republicans will pay for the current state budget crisis.

Susan Campbell has an excellent critique of the Governor’s proposal.  Nope, Rell don’t got game, that’s for sure.

I propose that the Democrats find a real feminist to run against Governor Rell in 2010.

P.S.  Uh, oh, looks like Big Sister Governor Rell will be watching me and other state employees.  Guess I won’t be blogging from the office anymore!

My hopes have already been dashed. . .

In my last post, I expressed my hopes for the new president when it came to reproductive rights.  After being encouraged by the executive order lifting the Global Gag rule, I am crushed by the latest news from  Reproductive Health Reality Check that President Obama has caved into conservative pressure to eliminate funding for the Medicaid Family Planning State Option from the economic stimulus bill.  This means that women in the U.S. who are unemployed, underemployed, living in poverty, will not be able to get affordable birth control.

To express your concerns about this issue,  call the White House comment line at 202-456-1111 and use these talking points from PPFA.

P.S.  Christina Page’s blog entry on this issue further demonstrates why Chris Matthews is an idiot, like we needed reminding. . .

Belated Blog for Choice Post

bfcday2009

Yesterday was Blog for Choice day, in honor of the 36th anniversary of Roe v. Wade.  Here’s my belated answer.  The question was, What is your top pro-choice hope for President Obama and/or the new Congress?:

Well, this is probably too much — but how about getting someone who is pro-choice to head HHS?  Seriously, I don’t have much faith that Tom Daschle will be much of an improvement over his predecessor.  I’m even more disappointed about the new chair of the DNC.  Also, how about picking someone for Attorney General who has come out firmly in favor of reproductive rights?  There was much talk during the campaign that President Obama would save Roe — but these choices for key posts are not encouraging.

The Prayer you didn’t get to hear

A few posts ago, I was excited about Bishop Gene Robinson’s invitation to give the opening prayer at the inaugural concert on Sunday.  Because I don’t have HBO, or any Time Warner channels, I wasn’t able to see it live.  It turns out that no one was able to, even those on the Mall.  HBO chose to censor it, and those there in person were not able to hear it because the speakers were turned off.

Fortunately, because HBO didn’t broadcast it, they can’t pull it from YouTube like they have other videos taken by spectators.  Enjoy!

You can read the full text at Pam’s House Blend.

This prayer makes me proud to be an Episcopalian.  To hear Bishop Robinson’s reaction to this censorship, go to NPR’s Talk of the Nation.