Ep. 18: Save Your Hemorrhoids Story For Facebook
EQ: How are disability justice and racial justice intertwined?
Guest: Carrie Basas, Director at WA Education Ombuds; Former Employment & Civil Rights Lawyer; Harvard Law School
Hope first met Carrie at the Seattle Times Ignite Event when she presented “Short Bus to Social Justice.” In this (delightfully) looooong conversation we discuss what it means to “pass,” what Crip Hop is and who Wheelchair Sports Camp is. Learn about Lawrence Carter Long and how the term “disabled” is being reclaimed.
Be less basic about the disabled community and and how disability rights intersect with racial equity issues by checking out the following:
- #DisabilityTooWhite
- #CripplePunk Instagram
- #365dayswithdisability
- Stella Young Ted Talk “I’m Not your Inspiration”
- DisCrit: Disability Study and Critical Race Theory in Education
- Alice Wong Disability Visibility Project
- Lydia Brown: Autistic Hoya
- National Coalition for Latinx with Disabilities
- Asians and Pacific Islanders with Disabilities of California
- National Study on the Experiences of Natives with Disabilities
- Vilissa Thompson: Ramp Your Voice
We started a new segment “Guilty-Favesies”!
- Hope: microwaveable popcorn. Covered in weird plastic and waste, but SO delicious and convenient!
- Annie: my commute. It’s a contemplative, quiet time in the car.
- Carrie: dysfunctional family shows and romantic comedies. See: “Love” and “Grace and Frankie” on Netflix.
Do Your Fudging Homework:
- Hope: Go read Carrie’s article Disabilities So White and Let’s Play Ableism Bingo
- Carrie: October Disabilities Month
- Annie: My AP Government students just learned about the Americans with Disabilities Act, or ADA. If you care about civil rights, which I know you do, go read up on the law and make sure you understand it. The ADA prohibits discrimination against individuals in all areas of public life, including employment, education, transit, and anywhere else open to the public.
2017 EOY Review: Bright Embers of Hope in a White-Hot Dump Fire
Our EQ: What the hell happened this year and how do we make sense of it?
From hijab wearing Barbies and the election of the first openly transgender legislator (Danica Roem) to Australia legalizing gay marriage via national referendum and Bey slayin in her maternity pictures, 2017 had many hopeful moments. We recall some of our pop culture highlights of the year. In another segment called “Where Are They Now?” we catch up on the latest from women of the Alt Right and Roy Moore, the creep who won’t go away.
Mentioned in the episode:
- At a moment when white supremacy is echoed in the “America first” slogan of President Trump, Beyoncé dislodges “white” from its central place in religious symbolism with her maternity pics.
The White mediocrity of Taylor Swift continues to be as inspiring as Miracle Whip on Wonderbread AND she used her (very powerful) platform to take her sexual abuser to court and promote #MeToo
Time Person of the Year: Silence Breakers
Notable Movies: Moonlight Wins Best Picture, Kumail Nanjiani’s The Big Sick, Jordan Peele’s Get Out
Notable Music: Kendrick Lamar’s “Damn: Collectors Edition”, Drake’s Passionfruit has special significance, DJ Khaled/Bieber/Migos/Chance/Lil Wayne “I’m the One”, Luis Fonsi/Daddy Yankee “Despacito” and the Biology Parody, Macklemore had a new album with good “flow” (as the kids say), even if some of the lyrics are extreme slant rhymes or make literally no sense (he’s since sold out two shows at Key Arena)
Women of the Alt Right
Ladies Night: Meet the Women of the Alt Right
Umm….Mary Elizabeth Tyler is highly problematic
Alt Right Women Asked to Choose Submission To Grow Political Movement
“Alt Right Women Are Upset that Alt Right Men are treating them terribly”
Alt Right Women Discover Bitter Racists are Also Sexist Jerks
Women of the Alt Right Are Shocked and Hurt that Men in the Movement are Sexist
Roy Moore & Rebecca Corry
Louis CK has been SCRUBBED from Disney’s reruns of Gravity Falls. Like they voiced over his voice overs.
Since our episode the list of accused sexual abusers got longer: 25 new ones! Garrison Keillor, Tavis Smiley, and Morgan Spurlock (who outed himself!)
Timeless or Terrible:
Danskos
Dressing up your pet
Do Your Fudging Homework:
- Annie: in 2018, if you do nothing else, protect democracy. https://www.benjerry.com/whats-new/2016/advocates-for-democracy
- Hope: Go Read On Tyranny by Timothy Snyder
Ep. 7: Foster Care 101: A Primer for Teachers and Other Humans
Our EQ this week: How does being an interchangeable white lady impact your work in foster care?
Special Guests: Skylar Cole from Treehouse & Brianna Richardson a foster-to-adopt parent
Our guests help us understand many of the dynamics of the foster care system, including the fact that it is inherently reactive. We discuss how people of color have contact with CPS, DSHS, and foster care more often than white people. This disproportionality affects the youth we teach in a big way.
The assumptions made by those in the system are normed to white middle class values (middle class families are also much less likely to be investigated by CPS). Black families are two times and Native American families are three times as likely to be investigated as white families. Children of color are also less likely to be reunited with their families. We discuss a variety of related topics like dependency hearings, restrictions on foster parents, compensation and conditions for foster families, the serious lack of foster homes, and the subjectivity unintentionally built in to what is meant to be an objective system (which also mirrors systemic racism).
Do Your Fudging Homework:
- Skylar: Everyone needs to watch this video "What Mandated Reporters Need to Know about Racial Disproportionality in the Child Welfare System"
- Brianna: Read "Twenty Things Adopted Kids Wish Their Adoptive Parents Parents Knew" and check out the website Fostering Together for resources.
Annie/Hope: Go read up on Washington’s recent consolidation of Child Protective Services into the new Department of Children, Youth, and Families. Reflect on the fact that this department now also houses the juvenile justice system and what that means for youth. Go to the community liaison or Treehouse representative at your neighborhood school and see what kind of support foster youth need right now. Take action to help those kids! If you have the capacity, consider how you might contribute mentorship or a safe, loving home for foster youth.
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