Escape From Ronald Rump… Again
Matt's latest cartoon has moved me to share a comic I drew seven years ago, the last time we went through a Donald Trump-oriented media frenzy (click for larger version).
The corresponding blog post from April 27, 2004:
I sometimes watch late-night comedy shows while drawing the strip. One night recently, THREE shows in a row had interviews with Donald Trump or a sketch about Trump. When the networks want to ram something inane down our throats, they sure don't hold back. No wonder a majority of Americans still think Iraq had something to do with 9-11, even though the White House once quietly admitted this was false (it was barely covered).
So, you see, this happens once every seven years. He's like a PLAGUE OF LOCUSTS!
Stumptown Comics Fest
I'm going to be wandering around the con this afternoon and tomorrow afternoon, and will be appearing on a panel Sunday at noon about the possibility of starting a NW chapter of the National Cartoonists Society. If you happen to be there, you are invited to bump into me as I drift about and say hello.
This Week’s Cartoon: “Conservative Counseling”
Continuing with a long series of obnoxious happenings in matters repro, South Dakota has passed a law that pretty much forces women to seek "advice" from those faith-based "Crisis Pregnancy Centers" that I blogged about a few weeks ago. These centers are, as you might expect, notoriously unscientific. Poor South Dakotans. This is the second time I've had to make fun of them for this sort of thing. In all fairness, I will say the Badlands are lovely, and I spent a fine evening in Rapid City a couple years ago. South Dakota is also the home of the Corn Palace and a giant pink prairie dog (see below).
I debated whether or not to call this strip "Conservative Counseling" because I have misgivings about the term "conservative." It implies the opposite of radicalism, yet a number of self-described "conservative" pundits have policy prescriptions that are, to put it gently, nothing short of dramatic. But in the end, the alliterative "c's" had it.
[Afterthought: for a fascinating map of passport ownership that ties into the fourth panel of the cartoon, see this post by Krugman.]
WTF Email
A reader is upset about my Unplanned Parenthood cartoon:
Hi Jen, this is in response to your recent depiction of Planned Parenthood. First of all, I am not irrationally upset, please do not delete this message upon noting that it is a complaint. My lady associate and I found the particular section "Sexual Assault Victim" to be offensive and particularly insensitive. You have obviously never been raped, though many readers of Santa Cruz Weekly have been. You probably ruined someone's day. Play nice, bitch.
Now, the second panel of that cartoon obviously criticizes the viewpoint of the Unplanned Parenthood counselor, who suggests the sexual assault victim was "probably showing a little thigh." It illustrates the horror and absurdity of being told such a thing. This reader seems to think I'm attacking Planned Parenthood itself. But it says right underneath the title, "Pregnancy Centers, GOP style!" For some people, I suppose cartoon interpretation is a bitch.
Japanese Snow Monsters!
If you enjoyed my Oregonian story about the snow ghosts in Whitefish, Montana, you might want to check out these totally cool photos of the Japanese equivalent -- snow monsters!
(To give credit where credit is due, the above photo was originally posted here, prior to the snow monsters page linked above.)
Thanks to reader John A. for the link.
Lara Logan Rocks
I actually linked to this video nearly five years ago, but it's worth a replay now. The clip shows Logan being interviewed a highly condescending Howard Kurtz, who was needling her about why the reporting from Iraq was so "negative." I came away from this very impressed by Logan, and was saddened today to hear about what happened to her in Egypt.
[UPDATE: Reading more about Logan, I see she's made some comments about Afghanistan that suggest she's been embedded with the military too long. But I still admire the way she handled Kurtz here.]
Reader Mail, Surveillance Edition
Last week's comic about the domestic use of aerial drones drew a number of interesting comments from readers. Here are a couple emails I received:
From Ogden Utah, TC writes:
The Aerial Drone comic hits particularly close to home! Our illustrious Mayor, Matthew Godfrey, has been trying to push the city council to approve a freaking blimp for surveillance purposes in our town. It's really smart. I think he's trying to cover some of his more sinister ideas by pushing this asinine idea out in front. I'm pretty sure our criminals run much faster than the blimp can fly.
TPM has more on that here.
Reader Bruce P, who I'm guessing is writing from abroad, who is writing from New Jersey, says:
In the second frame you have "Soon businesses jump on the bandwagon." Here in my local Rite of Shoppes and the APe, they already have. Next to various products on the shelves are little boxes that extol the virtues of kitty crunchies, toilet paper, etc. These have a small video screen and a speaker to spout their drivel. They are motion sensor activated and trip when one gets within 3 feet or so of them. Life imitates art or vice versa..... None the less it is spot on.
Wow, I hope that doesn't catch on further.
People Saying Intelligent Things
I liked Amanda Marcotte's recent analogy:
Holding the right responsible for their paranoid, incendiary, violent rhetoric reminds me strongly of trying to put a cat in its carrier. You know it has to be done, but you really don’t want to do it. The cat is going to lash out. She’s going to hide under the bed. She’s going to hiss and scream. She’s going to grab the sides of the carrier as you push her in, in a pathetic final bid not to go the carrier. But you have the fight anyway, because you can’t just renege on your responsibilities the second they become a problem.
Matt Bors also has a good post:
And that’s where we are at. You can’t talk about the issues underneath this without being accused of “politicizing” it. The shooter is crazy and incoherent enough that we can all comfortably write him off as a “lone nut,” America’s favorite term to absolve us from looking at any of the societal problems that causes this type of behavior–or, god forbid, the tools he used to kill so many so fast. Unless the shooter fits into the binary mold of a mainstream liberal or conservative, we are content to pretend his behavior took place in a vacuum. “A lone nut! you’ll get those.”
There's also a refreshingly nuanced take on my latest cartoon over at Comic Strip of the Day:
There are a number of cartoons about the Tucson shootings, ranging from "weepers," which serve the important purpose of informing people that death is sad, to those suggesting a direct, specific correlation between the rhetoric and the action, as if the right wing had purposefully delivered a detailed "to do" list into the hands of the shooter. I haven't seen many that managed to make a persuasive point, but I would count this as one...
As for countering her examples, feel free, but I want to see something more persuasive than the time Obama explained his planned debating style with a flippant reference to Sean Connery's advice to Kevin Costner in "The Untouchables," or a DNC map that used traditional archery-style bull's-eyes to show the areas in which they planned special efforts. Don't waste my time unless you have specific examples of times nationally-known progressives used rhetoric about "refreshing the tree of liberty" or "reloading" or encouraged people to bring firearms to political rallies.
Predictably, I've been accused by others of not looking at the oh-so-incendiary rhetoric of the left, but tell me: when is the last time you heard a "mainstream" progressive pundit talk about killing ATF agents?
War on Christmas Flashback
I haven't been paying much attention to right-wing media lately, but Mr. Slowpoke just informed me that the "War on Christmas" is apparently still on. I've been so busy traveling and working and preparing to bake a feast and saying "Merry Christmas" to people I know who celebrate Christmas, I didn't even notice! Anyway, I thought I'd share this cartoon from the Great Christmas Battle of 2005.
(PS: I received an early Christmas present in the form of having a cartoon published on NPR.org yesterday. I think I may have a cartoon in the LA Times this Sunday too!)
Signed Slowpoke Books
...are now available in the Slowpoke Bookshop, just waiting to be personally-inscribed by moi, and shipped off via Priority Mail for the holidays. Whomever you give them to will love you forever. This concludes our public service announcement.




