Earlier this week I wondered what was up with Brewster County, Texas — waaay down on the Mexican border, which according to the census has 8.2 same-sex couples for every 1,000 households. While that doesn’t approach the numbers you find in some of the more famously gay-friendly regions, that’s almost as high a density as […]
E.J. Graff
E.J. Graff writes on social-justice and human-rights issues, particularly discrimination and violence against women and children; marriage and family policy; and lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender lives. She is a resident scholar at the Brandeis Women’s Studies Research Center and the author of What Is Marriage For? The Strange Social History of Our Most Intimate Institution (Beacon Press, 1999, 2004).
Paula Ettelbrick Dies
Another reason to grieve (and to read Hopkins): Paula Ettelbrick is dead. She was a fierce and important LGBT advocate, working in the movement for her entire adulthood, in just about every capacity, including Lambda Legal, the Empire State Pride Agenda, the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force, International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission, […]
Obit Day
Today is obit day. The nation lost three visionaries, as you’ve heard by now: Steve Jobs, the Reverend Fred Shuttlesworth, and Derrick Bell. Others have said what there is to say, brilliantly. But such a day of losses made me think of a Gerard Manley Hopkins poem I try to say to someone every autumn. […]
My Body, Myself
(Homepage photo credit: Georgia O’Keeffe, Grey Line with Black, Blue, and Yellow, 1923. Houston Museum of Fine Arts.) So you’ve been watching those early ’60s nostalgia shows in fascinated horror — oh lord, women really had to live like that — and wondering: How in the world did that world change into this one? Here’s […]
Where Are All the Same-Sex Couples At?
Thanks to the tireless demographer Gary Gates of UCLA’s Williams Institute, NPR has an interactive map of where in the U.S., according to the census, the most same-sex couples live. (Or at least, where you can find same-sex couples who feel safe enough to tell the census that they’re together.) As you’d imagine, every state […]
Poor, Poor Rich People
Over at The Washington Post, Barbara Ehrenreich feels terrible, just terrible about the problems of the super-rich, who can’t dress the way they want to. She describes a New Yorker profile of Daphne Guinness … who is apparently best known for wearing clothes, which she draws from a wardrobe of 2,500 garments, 450 pairs of […]
The Best Man-Splanation
In response to my article yesterday about offices where sexism is a low-grade fever — and let’s be clear, this definitely happens in progressive and journalistic organizations as well as in finance, manufacturing, and all the rest — Amanda Marcotte tweeted at me that the word “mansplaining” can sometimes help counter the problem. Aha! Yes […]
Sexism’s Low-Grade Fever
Last week, many in the D.C. elite were chattering about Ron Suskind’s new book, Confidence Men: Wall Street, Washington, and the Education of a President. While I’m not going to weigh in on the merits and demerits of the book as a whole — too many people have done that already — I was fascinated […]
The Sexism Salon
Last week I wondered how Elizabeth Warren’s rousing sermon espousing core progressive beliefs, which brought so much joy and hope to the left, would affect those on the right. One libertarian parody was posted by Glenn Reynolds at Instapundit.com. Here’s how it starts: There is no woman in this country who got hot on her […]
Church for Dissent
Here’s an interesting take on #OccupyWallStreet from Matt Stoler (which I found via @jayrosen): What these people are doing is building, for lack of a better word, a church of dissent. It’s not a march, though marches are spinning off of the campground. It’s not even a protest, really. It is a group of people, […]

