Top Stories Daily

The latest thought-provoking Fediverse stories

There is no better way to demonstrate how Murmel works than give you a taste of it right away. This page aggregates the most widely shared news and articles from a broad range of people across the Fediverse. You can get those in your favorite RSS reader too. Want the news and stories that matter to you personally? Sign up and enjoy a fully-tailored experience free for 30 days.
Trending on Mastodon

The Subway Is Not Scary

hamiltonnolan.com · Jun 19

Fear of the subway is a mark of low moral character.

Shared by @toddthomas and 27 others.
Dinah 🕊🇺🇦 (@metagrrrl) · Jun 19
🔁 @kottke:

The [NYC] Subway Is Not Scary. “It’s fine and safe. It’s full of women and children. There are tons of old ladies on there.” And: “You sound real corny being scared of the subway.” hamiltonnolan.com/p/the-subway

trending_bot (@trending_bot) · Jun 19
🔁 @kottke:

The [NYC] Subway Is Not Scary. “It’s fine and safe. It’s full of women and children. There are tons of old ladies on there.” And: “You sound real corny being scared of the subway.” hamiltonnolan.com/p/the-subway

petes_bread_eqn_xls (@petes_bread_eqn_xls) · Jun 19
🔁 @kottke:

The [NYC] Subway Is Not Scary. “It’s fine and safe. It’s full of women and children. There are tons of old ladies on there.” And: “You sound real corny being scared of the subway.” hamiltonnolan.com/p/the-subway

mattmaison (@mattmaison) · Jun 19
🔁 @kottke:

The [NYC] Subway Is Not Scary. “It’s fine and safe. It’s full of women and children. There are tons of old ladies on there.” And: “You sound real corny being scared of the subway.” hamiltonnolan.com/p/the-subway

Neil E. Hodges (@tk) · Jun 19
🔁 @kottke:

The [NYC] Subway Is Not Scary. “It’s fine and safe. It’s full of women and children. There are tons of old ladies on there.” And: “You sound real corny being scared of the subway.” hamiltonnolan.com/p/the-subway

Worth reading

JavaScript broke the web (and called it progress)

jonoalderson.com · Jun 19

We replaced simple websites with complex apps nobody asked for. Now it takes a complex build pipeline just to change a headline.

Shared by @topstories and 44 others.
petes_bread_eqn_xls (@petes_bread_eqn_xls) · Jun 20
🔁 @jalefkowit:

“Today, we optimise for ‘DX’ – developer experience. Not user experience. Not performance. Not outcomes.

Today’s popular frameworks are sold on their DX. The docs are slick. The onboarding is smooth. The tooling is smart, integrated, clever. You can spin up a new app with a CLI command and feel productive before you’ve even written a line of content.

But good DX doesn’t guarantee good UX. In fact, it’s often the opposite. Because the more comfortable we make things for developers, the more abstraction we add. And every abstraction creates distance between the thing being built and the people it’s for.”

jonoalderson.com/conjecture/ja

AJ Sadauskas (@aj) · Jun 20
🔁 @jalefkowit:

“Today, we optimise for ‘DX’ – developer experience. Not user experience. Not performance. Not outcomes.

Today’s popular frameworks are sold on their DX. The docs are slick. The onboarding is smooth. The tooling is smart, integrated, clever. You can spin up a new app with a CLI command and feel productive before you’ve even written a line of content.

But good DX doesn’t guarantee good UX. In fact, it’s often the opposite. Because the more comfortable we make things for developers, the more abstraction we add. And every abstraction creates distance between the thing being built and the people it’s for.”

jonoalderson.com/conjecture/ja

(@Perrin42) · Jun 20
🔁 @jalefkowit:

“Today, we optimise for ‘DX’ – developer experience. Not user experience. Not performance. Not outcomes.

Today’s popular frameworks are sold on their DX. The docs are slick. The onboarding is smooth. The tooling is smart, integrated, clever. You can spin up a new app with a CLI command and feel productive before you’ve even written a line of content.

But good DX doesn’t guarantee good UX. In fact, it’s often the opposite. Because the more comfortable we make things for developers, the more abstraction we add. And every abstraction creates distance between the thing being built and the people it’s for.”

jonoalderson.com/conjecture/ja

How My Reporting on the Columbia Protests Led to My Deportation

newyorker.com · Jun 19

As an Australian who wrote about the demonstrations while on campus, I gave my phone a superficial clean before flying to the U.S. I underestimated what I was up against.

Shared by @kushal and 61 others.
petes_bread_eqn_xls (@petes_bread_eqn_xls) · Jun 19
🔁 @jalefkowit:

"Officer Martinez said I needed to unlock the Hidden folder in my photo album. He insisted. I felt I had no choice. I did have a choice: noncompliance, deportation. But my bravery had left me. I was afraid of this man and the power he represented. So I unlocked the folder and watched as he scrolled through all of my most personal content. We looked at a photo of my penis together.

When he was done, he disappeared again. I sat there, trying to understand why I felt so violated. I am proud of my life, of who I am. That didn’t seem to help. I realized then I had no privacy left for them to invade."

newyorker.com/news/the-lede/ho

#USPol

Witchzilla (@msbw) · Jun 19
🔁 @notjustbikes:

I had already basically written-off ever going back to the United States ever again, but these (repeated) stories of completely innocent travellers getting detained and deported are the nail in the coffin.

newyorker.com/news/the-lede/ho

Ivey Janette McClelland (@IveyJanette) · Jun 19
🔁 @notjustbikes:

I had already basically written-off ever going back to the United States ever again, but these (repeated) stories of completely innocent travellers getting detained and deported are the nail in the coffin.

newyorker.com/news/the-lede/ho

I Want to Love Linux. It Doesn’t Love Me Back: Post 4 – Wayland Is Growing Up. And Now We Don’t Have a Choice — fireborn

fireborn.mataroa.blog · Jun 19

This post wasn’t supposed to exist — not yet. I meant to talk about bootloaders. About inaccessible USB installs. About the deafening silence between pressing the power button and hearing a screen reader. That post is still coming.

Shared by @quinn and 47 others.
Federico Mena Quintero (@federicomena) · Jun 20
🔁 @fireborn:

I didn’t plan to write about Wayland yet. But Xorg is dying — not eventually, but now. GNOME’s dropping X11 support. RHEL already removed it. Ubuntu and Fedora are next. And if you rely on accessibility, you don’t get to wait this one out.
So here’s Post 4 of I Want to Love Linux. It Doesn’t Love Me Back.
I’m using Wayland now. Primarily. Not because I love it. Because the fallback is disappearing, and I want to be there helping fix what comes next. GNOME with Orca actually works. KDE and COSMIC are making progress. I’ve talked to the people involved. They care.
But a lot is broken.
MATE — the desktop most blind users preferred — isn’t on Wayland.
ocrdesktop doesn’t work. xdotool is gone.
wlroots compositors still don’t reliably support Orca’s keybindings, especially on laptops.
This isn’t GNOME’s fault. They’re the only reason accessibility on Wayland works at all.
But the old excuses are gone. “Just use Xorg” isn’t going to be an option much longer.
So yeah. I’m a Wayland shill now. Because I’m using it. Because I have to.
And I want to make sure we’re not excluded from what comes next.
fireborn.mataroa.blog/blog/i-w
#Linux #Wayland #Accessibility #Orca #GNOME #KDE #COSMIC #FOSS #a11y #BlindTech #xorg

David Gerard (@davidgerard) · Jun 19
🔁 @fireborn:

I didn’t plan to write about Wayland yet. But Xorg is dying — not eventually, but now. GNOME’s dropping X11 support. RHEL already removed it. Ubuntu and Fedora are next. And if you rely on accessibility, you don’t get to wait this one out.
So here’s Post 4 of I Want to Love Linux. It Doesn’t Love Me Back.
I’m using Wayland now. Primarily. Not because I love it. Because the fallback is disappearing, and I want to be there helping fix what comes next. GNOME with Orca actually works. KDE and COSMIC are making progress. I’ve talked to the people involved. They care.
But a lot is broken.
MATE — the desktop most blind users preferred — isn’t on Wayland.
ocrdesktop doesn’t work. xdotool is gone.
wlroots compositors still don’t reliably support Orca’s keybindings, especially on laptops.
This isn’t GNOME’s fault. They’re the only reason accessibility on Wayland works at all.
But the old excuses are gone. “Just use Xorg” isn’t going to be an option much longer.
So yeah. I’m a Wayland shill now. Because I’m using it. Because I have to.
And I want to make sure we’re not excluded from what comes next.
fireborn.mataroa.blog/blog/i-w
#Linux #Wayland #Accessibility #Orca #GNOME #KDE #COSMIC #FOSS #a11y #BlindTech #xorg

Misty (@misty) · Jun 19
🔁 @fireborn:

I didn’t plan to write about Wayland yet. But Xorg is dying — not eventually, but now. GNOME’s dropping X11 support. RHEL already removed it. Ubuntu and Fedora are next. And if you rely on accessibility, you don’t get to wait this one out.
So here’s Post 4 of I Want to Love Linux. It Doesn’t Love Me Back.
I’m using Wayland now. Primarily. Not because I love it. Because the fallback is disappearing, and I want to be there helping fix what comes next. GNOME with Orca actually works. KDE and COSMIC are making progress. I’ve talked to the people involved. They care.
But a lot is broken.
MATE — the desktop most blind users preferred — isn’t on Wayland.
ocrdesktop doesn’t work. xdotool is gone.
wlroots compositors still don’t reliably support Orca’s keybindings, especially on laptops.
This isn’t GNOME’s fault. They’re the only reason accessibility on Wayland works at all.
But the old excuses are gone. “Just use Xorg” isn’t going to be an option much longer.
So yeah. I’m a Wayland shill now. Because I’m using it. Because I have to.
And I want to make sure we’re not excluded from what comes next.
fireborn.mataroa.blog/blog/i-w
#Linux #Wayland #Accessibility #Orca #GNOME #KDE #COSMIC #FOSS #a11y #BlindTech #xorg

TheEvilSkeleton (@TheEvilSkeleton) · Jun 19
🔁 @fireborn:

I didn’t plan to write about Wayland yet. But Xorg is dying — not eventually, but now. GNOME’s dropping X11 support. RHEL already removed it. Ubuntu and Fedora are next. And if you rely on accessibility, you don’t get to wait this one out.
So here’s Post 4 of I Want to Love Linux. It Doesn’t Love Me Back.
I’m using Wayland now. Primarily. Not because I love it. Because the fallback is disappearing, and I want to be there helping fix what comes next. GNOME with Orca actually works. KDE and COSMIC are making progress. I’ve talked to the people involved. They care.
But a lot is broken.
MATE — the desktop most blind users preferred — isn’t on Wayland.
ocrdesktop doesn’t work. xdotool is gone.
wlroots compositors still don’t reliably support Orca’s keybindings, especially on laptops.
This isn’t GNOME’s fault. They’re the only reason accessibility on Wayland works at all.
But the old excuses are gone. “Just use Xorg” isn’t going to be an option much longer.
So yeah. I’m a Wayland shill now. Because I’m using it. Because I have to.
And I want to make sure we’re not excluded from what comes next.
fireborn.mataroa.blog/blog/i-w
#Linux #Wayland #Accessibility #Orca #GNOME #KDE #COSMIC #FOSS #a11y #BlindTech #xorg

Thijmer (@trogluur) · Jun 20
🔁 @fireborn:

I didn’t plan to write about Wayland yet. But Xorg is dying — not eventually, but now. GNOME’s dropping X11 support. RHEL already removed it. Ubuntu and Fedora are next. And if you rely on accessibility, you don’t get to wait this one out.
So here’s Post 4 of I Want to Love Linux. It Doesn’t Love Me Back.
I’m using Wayland now. Primarily. Not because I love it. Because the fallback is disappearing, and I want to be there helping fix what comes next. GNOME with Orca actually works. KDE and COSMIC are making progress. I’ve talked to the people involved. They care.
But a lot is broken.
MATE — the desktop most blind users preferred — isn’t on Wayland.
ocrdesktop doesn’t work. xdotool is gone.
wlroots compositors still don’t reliably support Orca’s keybindings, especially on laptops.
This isn’t GNOME’s fault. They’re the only reason accessibility on Wayland works at all.
But the old excuses are gone. “Just use Xorg” isn’t going to be an option much longer.
So yeah. I’m a Wayland shill now. Because I’m using it. Because I have to.
And I want to make sure we’re not excluded from what comes next.
fireborn.mataroa.blog/blog/i-w
#Linux #Wayland #Accessibility #Orca #GNOME #KDE #COSMIC #FOSS #a11y #BlindTech #xorg

Robert Mader (@rmader) · Jun 20
🔁 @fireborn:

I didn’t plan to write about Wayland yet. But Xorg is dying — not eventually, but now. GNOME’s dropping X11 support. RHEL already removed it. Ubuntu and Fedora are next. And if you rely on accessibility, you don’t get to wait this one out.
So here’s Post 4 of I Want to Love Linux. It Doesn’t Love Me Back.
I’m using Wayland now. Primarily. Not because I love it. Because the fallback is disappearing, and I want to be there helping fix what comes next. GNOME with Orca actually works. KDE and COSMIC are making progress. I’ve talked to the people involved. They care.
But a lot is broken.
MATE — the desktop most blind users preferred — isn’t on Wayland.
ocrdesktop doesn’t work. xdotool is gone.
wlroots compositors still don’t reliably support Orca’s keybindings, especially on laptops.
This isn’t GNOME’s fault. They’re the only reason accessibility on Wayland works at all.
But the old excuses are gone. “Just use Xorg” isn’t going to be an option much longer.
So yeah. I’m a Wayland shill now. Because I’m using it. Because I have to.
And I want to make sure we’re not excluded from what comes next.
fireborn.mataroa.blog/blog/i-w
#Linux #Wayland #Accessibility #Orca #GNOME #KDE #COSMIC #FOSS #a11y #BlindTech #xorg

Matěj Cepl 🇪🇺 🇨🇿 🇺🇦 (@mcepl) · Jun 20
🔁 @fireborn:

I didn’t plan to write about Wayland yet. But Xorg is dying — not eventually, but now. GNOME’s dropping X11 support. RHEL already removed it. Ubuntu and Fedora are next. And if you rely on accessibility, you don’t get to wait this one out.
So here’s Post 4 of I Want to Love Linux. It Doesn’t Love Me Back.
I’m using Wayland now. Primarily. Not because I love it. Because the fallback is disappearing, and I want to be there helping fix what comes next. GNOME with Orca actually works. KDE and COSMIC are making progress. I’ve talked to the people involved. They care.
But a lot is broken.
MATE — the desktop most blind users preferred — isn’t on Wayland.
ocrdesktop doesn’t work. xdotool is gone.
wlroots compositors still don’t reliably support Orca’s keybindings, especially on laptops.
This isn’t GNOME’s fault. They’re the only reason accessibility on Wayland works at all.
But the old excuses are gone. “Just use Xorg” isn’t going to be an option much longer.
So yeah. I’m a Wayland shill now. Because I’m using it. Because I have to.
And I want to make sure we’re not excluded from what comes next.
fireborn.mataroa.blog/blog/i-w
#Linux #Wayland #Accessibility #Orca #GNOME #KDE #COSMIC #FOSS #a11y #BlindTech #xorg

New dating for White Sands footprints confirms controversial theory

arstechnica.com · Jun 18

Results are consistent with two earlier studies dating the footprints to between 22,000 and 24,000 years ago.

Shared by @DelilahTech and 33 others.
millennial falcon (@falcennial) · Jun 20
🔁 @JenLucPiquant:

New dating for White Sands footprints confirms controversial theory. Results are consistent with two earlier studies dating the footprints to between 22,000 and 24,000 years ago. arstechnica.com/science/2025/0

Bob Tregilus (@elaterite) · Jun 20
🔁 @JenLucPiquant:

New dating for White Sands footprints confirms controversial theory. Results are consistent with two earlier studies dating the footprints to between 22,000 and 24,000 years ago. arstechnica.com/science/2025/0

Dr. Nancy Wayne ✅ (@nancylwayne) · Jun 20
🔁 @JenLucPiquant:

New dating for White Sands footprints confirms controversial theory. Results are consistent with two earlier studies dating the footprints to between 22,000 and 24,000 years ago. arstechnica.com/science/2025/0

The Flight Attendant (@CosmicTraveler) · Jun 20
🔁 @JenLucPiquant:

New dating for White Sands footprints confirms controversial theory. Results are consistent with two earlier studies dating the footprints to between 22,000 and 24,000 years ago. arstechnica.com/science/2025/0

Brian Vastag (@brianvastag) · Jun 19
🔁 @JenLucPiquant:

New dating for White Sands footprints confirms controversial theory. Results are consistent with two earlier studies dating the footprints to between 22,000 and 24,000 years ago. arstechnica.com/science/2025/0

Aleen (@aleen) · Jun 19
🔁 @dev:

This is so exciting! 55 different radiocarbon results now support that humans were in New Mexico 22000 years ago, 8000 years before first humans have been assumed to be in the Americas arstechnica.com/science/2025/0

"The Rainbow Beast" Full Metal Archaeopteryx (@DelilahTech) · Jun 20
🔁 @dev:

This is so exciting! 55 different radiocarbon results now support that humans were in New Mexico 22000 years ago, 8000 years before first humans have been assumed to be in the Americas arstechnica.com/science/2025/0

🅰🅻🅸🅲🅴 (🌈🦄) (@alice) · Jun 20
🔁 @dev:

This is so exciting! 55 different radiocarbon results now support that humans were in New Mexico 22000 years ago, 8000 years before first humans have been assumed to be in the Americas arstechnica.com/science/2025/0

Lance (@analogfusion) · Jun 20
🔁 @dev:

This is so exciting! 55 different radiocarbon results now support that humans were in New Mexico 22000 years ago, 8000 years before first humans have been assumed to be in the Americas arstechnica.com/science/2025/0

Only two years left of world’s carbon budget to meet 1.5C target, scientists warn

theguardian.com · Jun 18

Breaching threshold would ramp up catastrophic weather events, further increasing human suffering

Shared by @by_caballero and 23 others.
Worth reading

Rose-Gold-Tinted Liquid Glasses

lmnt.me · Jun 19

This could’ve easily been 12 blog posts, but I opted for one that comprehensively captures how I feel about design on Apple platforms right now.

Shared by @rezmason and 16 others.
Ged Maheux (@gedeonm) · Jun 20
🔁 @louie:

Today, I wrote for 12 hours in what could have been 12 separate blog posts. But instead, it’s one comprehensive post that covers what I think about Apple design right now.

It’s long. And there’s audio.

Rose-Gold-Tinted Liquid Glasses
🔗 lmnt.me/blog/rose-gold-tinted-

Paul Palinkas (@paulpalinkas) · Jun 20
🔁 @louie:

I recommend reading the whole post, but one thing I can’t stop thinking about regarding a small part of it:

I find it weird that no one really knows where Alan Dye came from or why—collectively—we should be trusting his judgement on design.

I’ve said this about Jony recently, but I keep wondering about some people in charge the days: Do these people even like computers?

🔗 lmnt.me/blog/rose-gold-tinted-

cwicseolfor (@cwicseolfor) · Jun 19
🔁 @louie:

Today, I wrote for 12 hours in what could have been 12 separate blog posts. But instead, it’s one comprehensive post that covers what I think about Apple design right now.

It’s long. And there’s audio.

Rose-Gold-Tinted Liquid Glasses
🔗 lmnt.me/blog/rose-gold-tinted-

Aleksandar Vacić (@aleck) · Jun 20
🔁 @louie:

Today, I wrote for 12 hours in what could have been 12 separate blog posts. But instead, it’s one comprehensive post that covers what I think about Apple design right now.

It’s long. And there’s audio.

Rose-Gold-Tinted Liquid Glasses
🔗 lmnt.me/blog/rose-gold-tinted-

Nick Radcliffe (@njr) · Jun 20
🔁 @louie:

Today, I wrote for 12 hours in what could have been 12 separate blog posts. But instead, it’s one comprehensive post that covers what I think about Apple design right now.

It’s long. And there’s audio.

Rose-Gold-Tinted Liquid Glasses
🔗 lmnt.me/blog/rose-gold-tinted-

Frank Rausch (@frankrausch) · Jun 20
🔁 @louie:

Today, I wrote for 12 hours in what could have been 12 separate blog posts. But instead, it’s one comprehensive post that covers what I think about Apple design right now.

It’s long. And there’s audio.

Rose-Gold-Tinted Liquid Glasses
🔗 lmnt.me/blog/rose-gold-tinted-

Mario Alberto Guzmán (@marioguzman) · Jun 20
🔁 @louie:

Today, I wrote for 12 hours in what could have been 12 separate blog posts. But instead, it’s one comprehensive post that covers what I think about Apple design right now.

It’s long. And there’s audio.

Rose-Gold-Tinted Liquid Glasses
🔗 lmnt.me/blog/rose-gold-tinted-

NMDoerner (@cdfinder) · Jun 20
🔁 @louie:

Today, I wrote for 12 hours in what could have been 12 separate blog posts. But instead, it’s one comprehensive post that covers what I think about Apple design right now.

It’s long. And there’s audio.

Rose-Gold-Tinted Liquid Glasses
🔗 lmnt.me/blog/rose-gold-tinted-

Steve Roy (@steveroy) · Jun 19
🔁 @louie:

Today, I wrote for 12 hours in what could have been 12 separate blog posts. But instead, it’s one comprehensive post that covers what I think about Apple design right now.

It’s long. And there’s audio.

Rose-Gold-Tinted Liquid Glasses
🔗 lmnt.me/blog/rose-gold-tinted-

It’s True: The JAWS Shark is Public Domain

ironicsans.ghost.io · Jun 19

A story with legal drama, a mystery, snow leopards, and, uh, naughty bits.

Shared by @chris_e_simpson and 21 others.
Matthew Skelton (@matthewskelton) · Jun 19
🔁 @ironicsans:

It turns out the iconic Jaws poster is public domain! And the story behind it is crazy. ironicsans.ghost.io/how-the-ja

Schalk Neethling (@schalkneethling) · Jun 19
🔁 @ironicsans:

It turns out the iconic Jaws poster is public domain! And the story behind it is crazy. ironicsans.ghost.io/how-the-ja

VM (Vicky) Brasseur (@vmbrasseur) · Jun 19
🔁 @ironicsans:

It turns out the iconic Jaws poster is public domain! And the story behind it is crazy. ironicsans.ghost.io/how-the-ja

teledyn 𓂀 (@teledyn) · Jun 20
🔁 @ironicsans:

It turns out the iconic Jaws poster is public domain! And the story behind it is crazy. ironicsans.ghost.io/how-the-ja

Tom Lorenz (@CaptainFlab) · Jun 20
🔁 @ironicsans:

It turns out the iconic Jaws poster is public domain! And the story behind it is crazy. ironicsans.ghost.io/how-the-ja

Mx. Eddie R (@silvermoon82) · Jun 20
🔁 @ironicsans:

It turns out the iconic Jaws poster is public domain! And the story behind it is crazy. ironicsans.ghost.io/how-the-ja

David Zaslavsky (@diazona) · Jun 20
🔁 @ironicsans:

It turns out the iconic Jaws poster is public domain! And the story behind it is crazy. ironicsans.ghost.io/how-the-ja

Kelson (@kelson) · Jun 19
🔁 @fskornia:

An intersection between 'Jaws' and copyright in a story that made me laugh out loud a couple times at a public service desk. This made my day.
ironicsans.ghost.io/how-the-ja

Where is the outrage over Skrmetti?

lawdork.com · Jun 20

On the far right's campaign to create uncertainty. And the powerful institutions that helped along the way.

Shared by @lisagetspolitik and 19 others.
Lizzie she/her (@Lizette603_23) · Jun 20
🔁 @chrisgeidner:

The response to Wednesday’s U.S. Supreme Court decision upholding Tennessee’s law barring transgender minors from obtaining gender-affirming medical care has been muted at best.

At Law Dork, a look at how we actually got here. lawdork.com/p/where-is-the-out

AkaSci 🛰️ (@AkaSci) · Jun 20
🔁 @wdlindsy:

"Wednesday was the result of a long-term campaign that ultimately succeeded. As same-sex couples succeeded in obtaining marriage equality in 2015, the far-right organizations who had used their opposition to those couples’ marriage rights to fund their work needed a new cause.

The far right moved on to attacking transgender people."

~ Chris Geidner

#SupremeCourt #Trump #Republicans #Skrmetti #trans #cruelty
/1

lawdork.com/p/where-is-the-out

Sara (@sarae) · Jun 20
🔁 @chrisgeidner:

NEW: "Where is the outrage over Skrmetti?"

On the far right's campaign to create uncertainty over gender-affirming medical care for minors — and the powerful institutions that helped along the way.

Tonight, at Law Dork, my written equivalent of a direct-to-camera address. lawdork.com/p/where-is-the-out

Theresa O’Connor (@hober) · Jun 20
🔁 @chrisgeidner:

NEW: "Where is the outrage over Skrmetti?"

On the far right's campaign to create uncertainty over gender-affirming medical care for minors — and the powerful institutions that helped along the way.

Tonight, at Law Dork, my written equivalent of a direct-to-camera address. lawdork.com/p/where-is-the-out

The Flight Attendant (@CosmicTraveler) · Jun 20
🔁 @chrisgeidner:

NEW: "Where is the outrage over Skrmetti?"

On the far right's campaign to create uncertainty over gender-affirming medical care for minors — and the powerful institutions that helped along the way.

Tonight, at Law Dork, my written equivalent of a direct-to-camera address. lawdork.com/p/where-is-the-out

Tuckers Nuts Resist! 🇺🇦  (@jstatepost) · Jun 20
🔁 @chrisgeidner:

NEW: "Where is the outrage over Skrmetti?"

On the far right's campaign to create uncertainty over gender-affirming medical care for minors — and the powerful institutions that helped along the way.

Tonight, at Law Dork, my written equivalent of a direct-to-camera address. lawdork.com/p/where-is-the-out

Lisa Gets Politik (@lisagetspolitik) · Jun 20
🔁 @wdlindsy:

"Wednesday was the result of a long-term campaign that ultimately succeeded. As same-sex couples succeeded in obtaining marriage equality in 2015, the far-right organizations who had used their opposition to those couples’ marriage rights to fund their work needed a new cause.

The far right moved on to attacking transgender people."

~ Chris Geidner

#SupremeCourt #Trump #Republicans #Skrmetti #trans #cruelty
/1

lawdork.com/p/where-is-the-out

(@Perrin42) · Jun 20
🔁 @chrisgeidner:

The response to Wednesday’s U.S. Supreme Court decision upholding Tennessee’s law barring transgender minors from obtaining gender-affirming medical care has been muted at best.

At Law Dork, a look at how we actually got here. lawdork.com/p/where-is-the-out

There are no more posts at this time, but we are constantly looking for new ones.

© 2021 IN2 Digital Innovations GmbH . All rights reserved.