arionwind:

butts-bouncing-on-the-beltway:

Some extra details from the article:

In a budget bill, a funding committee has introduced a clause which states that federal government cannot end contracts with foster care and adoption agencies just because they discriminate, and yearly funding will be cut by a full 15% to any state which penalizes foster care and adoption agencies for discriminating.

Now. The article doesn’t go into exactly how this is going to have the kind of negative impact they’re predicting, so I’m going to, just so you understand that the first part of that clause is somehow actually the less horrifying one.

There are waaaaaaay too many kids in the foster care system (that’s where 90% of the kids waiting to be adopted are), way more than state level child protective services can handle. This is in part because of funding (it can be very expensive to keep a CPS department fully staffed). So they contract out to private agencies, usually non profits, to place kids with higher levels of need. You’re not going to hear me arguing that these agencies are perfect but a lot of them, seriously a lot, are REALLY GOOD. They’re often charities, they often specialize in various intensive mental health care and provide strict rules, guidelines, and training to any families and staff on board, a lot of these agencies do really fucking good work. And these agencies are critical. They’re almost universally taking in exactly the children that are so hard to place anywhere else (including adoptive homes) and they make sure those kids are safe, that they have free access to quality mental health treatment, that they are prepared to age out if that’s what’s going to happen. And most of the people who work at these programs take really low wages because these are charities and their funding is even more restrictive than the state, but they’re doing this because there are children in the system who need them, because there are a lot of bad things that can and do happen in the system and all they can do is keep protecting kids and keep fighting to prevent those things.

Now lets talk about the not so good agencies. The ones who may or may not be non-profits. The ones that are usually run on socially conservative values of family and discipline despite mountains of evidence and research showing how that directly leads to the kinds of bad things that can and do happen to kids in foster care. The kind that run overcrowded homes and discriminate. Where there is one emotional abuse against a child, there is ALWAYS more. And any of these agencies which gets penalized by the state that contracts with them could now argue it was because of the discrimination. And if they argue that successfully, THE ENTIRE STATE’S ALREADY MEAGER FUNDING GETS CUT BY AN ENTIRE 15%.

15% is a lot, folks. 15% is the difference between whether or not any child can be placed in an intensive support agency’s care ever again. A state that gets punished like this sees every single agency and department within it crippled, unable to serve a full additional 15% of the children they currently serve.

Except they can’t opt out of it. Because these are fucking children. Children without homes, children ripped from families for good or for ill, children with trauma with anxiety with high medical involvement with an enormous risk added to their future simply by virtue of having gone through a system that is already desperately overworked and underfunded. So the agencies don’t stop serving any children. Instead they cut pay to staff, they put fewer kids in the level of support they need, they turn a blind eye to smaller infractions by foster parents and staff because the kid says they want to stay and they can’t afford to disrupt the placement. Kids fall through the cracks. Kids run away and the resources to go looking for them aren’t there. Kids get caught up in abusive or cult like relationships with people who show care and affection to them because they’re not getting enough of it.

Don’t get me wrong, my heart is broken that the one fear I spent my entire childhood and adulthood reassuring myself I wouldn’t face – being told that my sexuality, my partners’ my parents’ made me an unfit parent – is at risk of becoming my reality. I’m fucking devastated by that. I’ve spent a lifetime trying to train myself out of the terror created by watching my mother’s friends’ kids ripped away from them because they were lesbians or bi and that made them unsafe to their own truly beloved children. The guilt created by knowing that if I ever spoke up about the abuse in my home it would be blamed on the sexuality my mom and I shared, and not on her actions. But honestly? In the end? This has a much bigger impact than just that grief. This effects far more children then the ones who would have been adopted or fostered by queer parents.

Which is why it’s so important that we make this a priority. This budget hasn’t been approved yet. This isn’t it’s final draft, and there’s still time for this clause to be written out. So please. For all the kids out there waiting for homes. Add this to what I’m sure is your ever growing list of things to write to congress about. Even if we vote everyone out in 2018 and 45 with them in 2020, two years of these kids’ suffering is too long. One year is too long. Anything more than they already go through is too long.

Just for reference: the federal minimum drinking age is enforced by similar budget incentives. Only states will lose just 8% of federal highway funding if they set the age below 21. This measure is just about double that incentive, which is astounding and draconian as these things go.

‘College Isn’t for Everyone’: Mentally Ill Students Say Universities Like Stanford Are Leaving Them Behind – Rewire.News

autisticadvocacy:

“This case, which may have wider applicability for college students [in the US]…asserts that students have a right to university resources even during mental health crises, and that universities must accommodate mentally ill students under the law.”

‘College Isn’t for Everyone’: Mentally Ill Students Say Universities Like Stanford Are Leaving Them Behind – Rewire.News

cannibalcoalition:

Uuumm actually it has been illegal to fire anyone based on gender race religion or sexual orientation for several decades in the US unwad your panties and read the employee handbook, and state and fedral laws

I should learn to not read the comments. 

But since it’s been brought up. 

About half the LGBTQ people I know have been fired for discriminatory reasons. Every person of color I know knows someone else who has been fired based on their skin color. And if you read Patheos or any of the alternative religion news blogs, there’s usually a story about someone being fired for their religion every few months (and more that don’t make the papers). 

The thing is that the legislation in many states doesn’t say explicitly that you can fire someone based on their personal identity. But it does say that if you fire someone that you don’t have to give a reason. So you can fire someone just because you don’t like them. And if you don’t like them because of their personal identity you can avoid a discrimination suit by just not telling them. 

Which is why they told me ‘its just not going to work out’ the day after I came out of the closet to someone who was disquieted by my outedness. I asked for a reason, they didn’t give me one. 

This is why people stay in the closet. This is why people of color have to work twice as hard to keep jobs. This is why people don’t display their religious leanings publicly, even though it’s perfectly acceptable to ask a person what church they attend.

It might be illegal to fire a person based on these things, but if there is a way to do it while covering their ass they will find a way. And that’s how they do it- they don’t give a reason.

So pardon me for being able to put two and two together to get four. 

And I’m absolutely baffled that people will use the phrase ‘it’s illegal to do this, so it didn’t happen’ when it applies to us in the margins, but will absolutely use the phrase ‘making it illegal won’t stop people from doing it’ when it applies to things like guns. Or murder. Or theft. But I digress. 

 So when people tell me shit like ‘you won the right to marry- rights are equal now’ I get so fucking angry. You can still be denied housing if you’re transgender. You can still be fired for coming out. You can be denied adoption rights. Your state clerk can still refuse to verify your marriage license and become a local hero for it. You can be the victim of a hate crime and your murderer can cite ‘gay panic’ or ‘trans panic’ as a legitimate defense. 

The list gets even longer if you’re trans or a person of color or disabled. Or a veteran or homeless. 

And this is why our activism needs to be intersectional. And this is why when we were given the right to marry, there was a rumbling cry of ‘this is a first step’ among the cheers of ‘we won.’ Anyone who has ever fought for their rights will tell you that it does not end with a single legislation. 

So maybe your panties could stand to be in a tighter wad. 

inauspicious-bossuet:

fight the australian government’s military violence towards refugees

The situation for refugees on Manus Island has always been pretty brutal but the Australian government has been ramping things up through military violence over the last few days and weeks and the situation is more urgent than ever.

What does Australia do to refugees?

Australia holds refugees indefinitely on island prisons in Papua New Guinea, where doctors and teachers who speak about the conditions can go to prison for up to two years and from the leaks that come out of these camps, we know there’s massive human rights violations involved. Australia’s refugee policy is something that right wing politicians like Trump and neo-nazis like Marie Le Pen look to as the ideal model for treating refugees.

What’s happening now?

Over the past few weeks, instead of freeing these people, the government has been trying to move refugees to another camp that is essentially shipping containers for lodgings and with no protection from racist, anti-refugee attacks. 606 men decided to peacefully protest and challenge their horrible mistreatment and stay until they were given freedom and brought to Australia. Electricity has been cut off, all staff have been removed, the water supply has been poisoned with cholera by the military.

As of yesterday the military have invaded the camp and have attacked and beaten the refugees in the camp, destroyed facilities and water storage, and arrested Behrouz Boochani (an award winning journalist and refugee who has been held at the camp for four years). And today the refugees have all been forcibly removed from the camp though violence and threats from the military.

What does this mean?

As much as the new accomodation the refugees are being moved to is sub-par and unsuitable, this isn’t just about the accomodation. These people have been locked up and imprisoned for over four years for simply trying to flee war and persecuation (that the Australian government has often participated in) and want to come to Australia to join their families and be safe. This is about freedom.

Racism towards refugees has always been a particularly useful tool to Australian politians, providing a scapegoat while wages, education, and healthcare keep being cut back at home, and both major political parties have been perfectly happy to sit back and let these atrocities happen.

We need to continue to put pressure on the Australian Government and make this an issue that they can no longer continue to ignore and stand in solidarity with those who have been protesting for weeks and continue the fight for them.  

What can we do about it?

If you don’t live in Australia: share this urgently and sign the petition

If you do live in Australia: come to the protests happening in every major city THIS SATURDAY AND SUNDAY (25th and 26th of November)

Melbourne: 12pm Sunday at Federation Square, there are also weekly protests at every Friday at 5.30pm at the State Library until these men are set free or until further notice (you can keep up with these protests here).

Sydney: 12pm Sunday at the First Fleet Park

Adelaide: 12pm Sunday at Parliament House

Brisbane: 12pm Sunday at King George Square

Perth: 2pm Saturday at the Perth Cultural Centre

Hobart: 12pm Sunday at the Salamanca Lawns

Canberra: 10am Sunday on the Parliament House Lawn