autisticadvocacy:

http://autisticadvocacy.org/2018/08/action-alert-disability-rights-v-kavanaugh-call-your-senators-today/

Since before there was a self-advocacy movement, our community has fought for the right to be in control in our own lives. Now, a nominee to the Supreme Court threatens the progress we have made. Judge Brett Kavanaugh doesn’t believe that people with intellectual and developmental disabilities have the right to make our own decisions—and that’s exactly why we don’t want him making decisions about our country’s laws. Call your Senators TODAY and tell them to vote NO on Kavanaugh’s nomination.

In 2007, Kavanaugh ruled against 3 women with intellectual disabilities who had been forced to have abortions or other elective surgeries by the city of DC. In this ruling, he said that people with intellectual disabilities do not have the right to have any say at all in what kind of health care we get. If Kavanaugh becomes a Supreme Court Justice, we can expect to see more decisions like this one: decisions that reject disability rights, deny our right to control our own bodies, and let other people make our most personal decisions for us. Remember, a Supreme Court appointment is FOR LIFE—if Kavanaugh is appointed, his decisions will affect us for decades to come.

We don’t have a moment to lose: Kavanaugh’s confirmation hearings begin NEXT WEEK. Call your Senators and tell them to vote NO on Kavanaugh! You can use our script while calling:

My name is [your full name]. I’m a constituent of Senator [Name], and I live in [your town]. I’m calling to ask the Senator to vote NOT to confirm Judge Kavanaugh. Judge Kavanaugh would undermine the Affordable Care Act, and he is a danger to the rights of people with disabilities. In 2007, he ruled that people with intellectual disabilities don’t have a right to a say in our health care. He sided with the DC government, which had forced people to have abortions they didn’t want. People with disabilities like [me/ my family member/ my friends] have a right to health care, and we have a right to make our own choices about what happens to our bodies. Please keep this dangerous man off the Supreme Court.

If you have trouble making phone calls or use AAC, our factsheet gives you strategies you can use to call your Senators. If you want more information about Judge Kavanaugh, including a plain language explainer, check out this resource page.

Once you’ve finished calling, here are some other steps you can take:

  • Visit your Senators’ state offices, and let their staff know how Kavanaugh’s confirmation would affect you and the people you love. This kind of face-to-face meeting really makes a difference. You can find lists of your Senators’ state offices on their websites.
  • Email or fax your Senators. You can use the same script you did while calling.

Judge Kavanaugh wants to make decisions for the whole country, but he doesn’t respect our right to make decisions in our own lives. Our Senators need to decide now where they stand. Call your Senators today, and tell them: from our homes to our health care, from our self-determination to the Supreme Court—there can be Nothing About Us, Without Us!

mahtheyzhawey:

mahtheyzhawey:

mahtheyzhawey:

mahtheyzhawey:

Everything I have for sale. I’m also taking medallion orders, have a pic of examples I’ve done. Medallion with necklace $100, without $65. Needing to make enough for rent.

As you know I had to move suddenly and that took all my money and rent is due in new place by Friday. I haven’t had a steady income for the last 2 months because of chronic illness flare ups and family issues. I am trying to raise enough to pay the rent by selling beadwork and taking more orders.

If you don’t want to order anything and just want to help my PayPal is kiagbear@yahoo.com and my cash app is $kiagbear

Anything is appreciated and my kids and I are grateful for any help.

The turquoise edged earrings are sold, both pairs. Everything else is still available. Still needing to make rent by end of the week. 6 medallion orders would cover that if I can get orders for them. Again any help is appreciated.

I have 2 days left to try and get rent made for my new place. Any help is appreciated.

Still trying to raise $500. I have until the end of day Saturday. I’m beading like crazy to make things and work on orders placed. I’m just trying to keep a roof over my kids head.

notsoterriblymisanthropic:

twodotsknowwhy:

tilthat:

TIL that in 1985, police engaged in a standoff with the black liberation group ‘MOVE’ at their home in Philadelphia. A massive firefight ensued in which the police used choppers to drop two C4 bombs on the roof. The fire destroyed 65 houses and 11 people died.

via reddit.com

Half of the people who died in the bombing were children. The youngest of whom was only seven. Two hundred and fifty people were left homeless. When the bomb was dropped, the firefighters were ordered to stand back and not do anything to help. Police shot people as they tried to escape. And while the city apologized and called the bombing “unconscionable” the only person who was ever criminally charged in the affair was Ramona Africa, the sole adult survivor of the bombing.

Seriously, every single American should be required to learn about the MOVE bombing.

While this is going around, probably worth adding that Ramona Africa is currently suffering from cancer and asking for help with medical fees, gofundme here: https://www.gofundme.com/helpsaveramonaafrica

reclaiming a slur means using it for yourself. you can’t just say calling other people queer without their permission (incl. using it as a blanket term) is ok just because it “has a history of being reclaimed”, that doesn’t change that it’s a slur. it’s no different from the f slur. how is some people being fine with it more important than the people who are Not fine with it? if you forcefully call OTHERS the word, thats not reclaiming it, it’s just calling others a slur

lenyberry:

fierceawakening:

lenyberry:

fierceawakening:

lines-and-edges:

fierceawakening:

satans-tiddies:

I assume you’re talking about this post. Well done on missing the entire point, I guess?

Let’s see how your ask holds up when we replace queer with another reclaimed homophobic slur: gay.

reclaiming a slur means using it for yourself. you can’t just say calling other people gay without their permission (incl. using it as a blanket term) is ok just because it “has a history of being reclaimed”, that doesn’t change that it’s a slur. it’s no different from the f slur. how is some people being fine with it more important than the people who are Not fine with it? if you forcefully call OTHERS gay, thats not reclaiming it, it’s just calling others a slur

Oh no, no one is allowed to say “they gay community” anymore because you might accidentally include men attracted exclusively to men who don’t identify as gay! /sarcasm

If you want the long-form, researched and sourced answer to your frankly insulting, asinine ask, it’s under the readmore, but tl;dr:

  • When I say “queer people”, I am (shockingly enough) referring to people who identify as queer.
  • If you don’t identify as queer, I am not talking about you.
  • If you’re going to police queer people about their identity because it’s a slur, but not any of the other IDs that are also reclaimed slurs (gay, bisexual, fag, etc.) or that have a pathological history (homosexual, lesbian, trans, etc.), all you’re telling me is that you’re being hypocritical and perpetuating exclusionist/REG/radfem rhetoric.

Keep reading

“When I say “queer people”, I am (shockingly enough) referring to people who identify as queer.”

I hate to be That Guy, but wouldn’t this make it hard to talk about the community as a whole? (Or actually in a weird way get what exclusionists want—having to say LGBT+ when we mean everyone, because on this definition, exclusionists are not queer?)

It seems to me this could have the unintended (?) consequence of shutting people out of conversations and communities they actually should be part of even if we disagree with them or even think their views are toxic.

(By which I mean, like, if something gets called the queer community center or queer resource center, does this mean you have to philosophically commit to identifying as queer before being allowed inside?)

I don’t think so; after all, I spent a hell of a lot of time swimming in the YMCA pool as a kid, while being neither a young man nor a Christian. And I took gentile friends with me to events at the JCC, too. One doesn’t have to be a Sikh to eat at a Sikh temple, either.

I think it is a perfectly fair stance to say “the queer community” refers to people who identify as queer, but also that one of the ideological stances of this community is generally to have open doors and share resources with people who need them, whether or not they identify as queer.

More pragmatically I think it’s the only workable compromise we’ve got.

The queer community is my community. I don’t think we need to dismantle or erase our identity and history in order to share resources with people who exist outside that identity for one reason or another.

If people require that we dismantle or erase our identity and history before they are willing to break bread with us, they can find another table to sit at, but only because they choose to be intolerant and wish to do us harm (cf. Karl Popper’s tolerance paradox.)

So someone who doesn’t use the word queer but who goes to the resource center for education and condoms is a non-queer person using queer resources?

I guess I can see the logic, but it still makes more sense to me just to think that person is being a little precious about what other people who don’t even know them call them.

(Like, an example from my own life: I find the prefix allo- unfortunate. I would prefer people specifically not refer to me as “allosexual” or “allistic” when they want to say I’m not ace or not autistic. I think I should be able to tell them I’m not a fan of those words (though not to *demand* people specifically remember not to call me that; people know a lot of other humans, generally.)

But I don’t think it’s my place to get mad at random posts that are like “hey any allistics who read me, what’s up with Thing x?” That person isn’t using a word I dislike AT me, they’re just talking. I don’t get to demand they talk in ways that don’t bug my ears.

They’re also not saying “hey anyone who, specifically, BOTH isn’t autistic AND is okay with this word.”)

Well, I do think that you’d be within your rights to decide “since I don’t like being referred to by that word, I’m going to choose to assume you don’t mean me with that comment”. 

Of course, you’re also perfectly within your rights to just, in general, decide not to respond to general talking-into-the-void-of-tumblr posts that you don’t feel like you have anything to say to or just find annoying for any reason and want to ignore. In fact I generally recommend that people consider doing that thing, where the annoyance is objectively petty (such as, “this person used a word I personally dislike but which is in common usage, with intent to refer generally to a group that I’m technically qualified to consider myself a part of”.

…but that’s apparently a lot of emotional maturity to ask of people and they’d rather scream about how queer is a slur every time you so much as speak of “queer people” or even call YOURSELF queer. 

This is exactly my issue with it, right here.

(And yes, I think you’d be within your rights to assume it, but I also think you’d be rude if you said the person didn’t ask you, only “allistics.”

Kind of the same way I think ink it’s rude when a radfem uses her objections to “cis” (some of which I share!) to be like “oh you couldn’t have meant me, I’m a WOMAN not a CISWOMAN.”

Like, you get to dislike the term but you don’t get to… evade consequences for publicly screaming at people who see things differently for reasons that don’t involve being mean to you on purpose.)

Agreed. It’s one thing to refrain from commenting at all because someone used a word you personally dislike, it’s quite another to be snide about it and go out of your way to tell the person that you’re Not Acknowledging Them until they bow to your nitpicky linguistic demands.

criticalrolo:

this-seamonkeys-gone-to-heaven:

fierceawakening:

rnoonpie:

frontier-heart:

Legitimate *pro bono legal services* don’t exist without a good reason. In a few of the exmormon groups I’m in you’ll see regular posts saying stuff like “Look what my lawyer sent me today!” with a pic of their resignation confirmation letter from the church.

You know. Just stuff that a normal average church that is definitely not actually a cult would do. ¯_(ツ)_/¯

🙄

As an ex-mormon, I’m gonna look the fuck into this. I want nothing to do with the church that shaped so much toxicity about my self image and my sexual orientation.

Not sure if any followers need this but if you do, here you go.

Everyone should be able to choose their religious beliefs and community, and leave any that they find does not work for them.

Ex mormon here – this guy’s legit. The Mormon holds your files for eternity, and when they find out that you’ve moved to a new area, they will send members and missionaries from that region to harass you. I know this sounds like dystopic bullshit, but they followed my father through three moves before he rejoined the church.

Also ex mormon here who used this. It’s a ridiculously helpful service that is incredibly easy to use. They keep you updated throughout the whole process, and it’s totally worth it since the church doesn’t get to keep all your private information and pass it around once you resign 🙂