How the Photography of Dorothea Lange and Ansel Adams Told the Story of Japanese American Internment

After photographing families and other residents being led into “assembly centers” in the central and coastal cities of California and the county seats of Salinas, Stockton, Turlock, and San Bruno, photographer Dorothea Lange turned her camera to southern California, towards the first concentration camp to open for residents of Japanese descent.

How the Photography of Dorothea Lange and Ansel Adams Told the Story of Japanese American Internment

 

hmmmm

Mississippi residents unsure of controversial billboard’s intent – CNN.com

A controversial billboard in Pearl, Mississippi, shows the famous “Two Minute Warning” picture with Trump’s campaign slogan “Make America Great Again.” What does it mean?

Mississippi residents unsure of controversial billboard’s intent – CNN.com

If you have to ask what this billboard means you will never understand it.

Melania Trump’s White House snub: Appalling or good parenting? 

Melania and Barron Trump won’t move to Washington with Donald yet – is that unusual?

Melania Trump’s White House snub: Appalling or good parenting? – BBC News

Fuck the little scion’s comfort and education. If the Trumps aren’t paying for the millions and millions the extra security for this (non)move will cost, they shouldn’t be inflicting their princess-ass priorities on the country. They -and that most definitely includes Melania and the minor- gave up the right to be private citizens when they campaigned.

How Angela Merkel, a conservative, became the ‘leader of the free world’ 

Speaking Sunday, Merkel specified that the resurgence of a political discourse characterized by “hate” was one of the reasons she had decided to run again. She also lowered expectations by saying it was “absurd” to believe that she alone would be able to turn the populist momentum. “No person alone, not even the most experienced, can turn things to good in Germany, Europe and the world, especially not a chancellor of the Federal Republic of Germany,” she said.

…Few consider the right-wing Alternative for Germany party strong enough to become a real threat to Merkel’s ambitions for a fourth term. In the long run, though, Merkel’s decision not to champion traditional conservative policy stances could have a lasting effect on German politics.

Her party used to test the limits of how far to the right a German conservative party can go. That is no longer the case.

How Angela Merkel, a conservative, became the ‘leader of the free world’ – The Washington Post

hmmm

Police fire water cannon at Dakota pipeline protesters in freezing weather

Police fire water cannon at Dakota pipeline protesters in freezing weather | Reuters

There need to be charges against the police.
Law enforcement is not only not keeping the peace, they are posing clear and present danger to thousands of the citizenry.
Hope the first nations successfully sue every law enforcement agency present at these atrocities into the ground.

Texas Lawmaker Wants To Force Teachers To Out LGBT Students To Parents 

Sen. Konni Burton argues that “a parent has a right to full and total information [about] their child.”

…Because in Buron’s mind parents own their children.
…Because in Burton’s mind human beings can own other human beings?

Texas Lawmaker Wants To Force Teachers To Out LGBT Students To Parents | NewNowNext

Biatch

Donald Trump is moving to the White House, and liberals put him there 

But she was exactly the wrong candidate for this angry, populist moment. An insider when the country was screaming for an outsider. A technocrat who offered fine-tuning when the country wanted to take a sledgehammer to the machine.

There was Joe Biden, with his powerful plainspoken style, and there was Bernie Sanders, an inspiring and largely scandal-free figure….

Donald Trump is moving to the White House, and liberals put him there | Thomas Frank | Opinion | The Guardian

OOOOOOoooohhhhhhh,  you would have preferred a career politician who was an old white guy with messy hair and you’ll say anything to justify that viewpoint.

Gotcha.

Don’t call Clinton a weak candidate: it took decades of scheming to beat her 

And it took a shortsighted campaign of hatred on the left, an almost hysterical rage like nothing I have ever seen before about any public figure. Some uncritically picked up half-truths, outright fictions, and rightwing spin to feed their hate and rejected anything that diluted the purity and focus of that fury, including larger questions about the other candidate and the fate of the Earth. 

…A lot of people seemed to think the Sanders-Clinton primary ended the night Trump was elected. I saw that stuckness from climate activists, anti-racist journalists, civil-rights champions, and others who you might expect would have turned to face the clear and present danger of a Trump presidency. 

…It’s impossible to disconnect the seething, irrational emotionality from misogyny, and the misogyny continues. Since election night, I’ve been hearing too many men of the left go on and on about how Clinton was a weak candidate. I’ve wondered about that word weak, not only because it is so often associated with women, but because what they’re calling her weakness was their refusal to support her. It’s as if they’re saying, “They sent a pink lifeboat and we sent it back, because we wanted a blue lifeboat, and now we are very upset that people are drowning.”

Don’t call Clinton a weak candidate: it took decades of scheming to beat her | US news | The Guardian

Hmmm

What A 1950s Texas Textbook Can Teach Us About Today’s Textbook Fight

On the Mexican-American history textbook:

“One of the fundamental problems with the scholarship of the book is that you have non-historians writing a textbook for history,” said Trinidad Gonzales, a professor of history at South Texas College. “It’s really a polemic masquerading as a textbook, and it’s really trying to argue that Mexican-American culture, including Catholicism, is a fundamental threat to American democracy.”

On seventh-grade Texas history textbook, published in 1954:

“What you have set up here is this mythology. The women who helped these brave men were wives and mothers. They were connected to men through marriage and motherhood. They were not single women. They were not working women. They were not reformers,” [Dr. Nancy Baker Jones of the Ruth Winegarden Foundation for Texas Women’s History] said. “They were the women that were in their socially approved places to the exclusion of many other roles that women have played and contributions that women have made and lives that women have lived.”

This textbook was used by public school students across Texas in the late 1950s and early 1960s, so it helped shape the perceptions and attitudes of people who today would likely be in their ‘60s.

…The textbook acknowledges that slavery at least played a role in the Civil War, but it also treats African-Americans as sub-humans, and again, only defines their history in terms of the convenience of slavery to Anglo, white property owners.

…”That was not just the reigning consensus in a middle school Texas history textbook. That was the reigning consensus in the 1950s in the northern and mid-western dominated college history professoriate. That’s the way college history was written about.” [Benjamin Johnson, an associate professor of history at Loyola University in Chicago]

[Walter Buenger, a professor in the history department at Texas A&M University] agrees. He says academics taught a whole generation to think of African-Americans as “children who were easily misled” after the end of slavery, which he says translates into modern day racism.

What A 1950s Texas Textbook Can Teach Us About Today’s Textbook Fight – Houston Public Media

hmmmm