Category Archives: Opinion

Where is Britney’s Vulva?

This is not Britney, but rather a limited edition Barbie of pro-golfer Brittany Lincicome BarbieApparently, Britney and Barbie, two iconic blondes,  share a common trait – a lack of girly bits.

Britney Spears has released a before-and-after photo set showing her natural self, and her airbrushed self (source, MTV UK.)

Along with “flaws ,”such as random freckles, a child-bearing booty, and occasional bulges, Britney’s vulva and hints of nipple pop also went missing, leaving her as smooth and sexless as Barbie herself.

Ironically, the photo shoot was produced for U.S. clothing giant Candies, which rose to fame in the late 1970s by making little molded-plastic slide high-heels, which many still think of as Barbie shoes for real feet.

Candies has also teamed with Bristol Palin in a campaign to prevent teen pregnancy.

There’s some sort common theme that will tie all this together, but I’m hard pressed to figure out exactly what it is…

Day of Silence – Letter From a Friend

This sweet note was in my flurry of email this morning, from another lesbian mommy:

Hi friends,

This is something on a personal note that I wanted to share. Today will mark a national youth movement in the LGBT community as a Day of Silence. The idea is to raise awareness about the silence that members of this community have had to face in order to avoid anti-LGBT bullying, name calling, and harassment – and too often leading to death through suicide or murder.

My 12-year-old daughter, Kirsten, found out about this, and – yes, all on her own – decided that she was going to participate. She is doing this at her middle school in Sonoma, California. Today she wore a white T-shirt to school on which she had written, in big bold letters across the front, “BREAK THE SILENCE,” and across the back, “WHAT WILL YOU DO?”  She had also prepared a flyer to explain to people, if they ask, why she is not speaking today.

Yesterday, she approached the principal of her school and asked if she can express the constitutional right of freedom of speech in her classes today by not talking. She was told “no”.

So, she is hoping that when she approaches her teachers with her written information at the beginning of class, that they will understand and not expect her to talk. I am hoping that I don’t get a phone call today saying that she is in the principal’s office for being insubordinate to her teachers.

Kirsten had attempted to get support from other students to do this with her, and although many of her friends thought it sounded like a “cool” idea, when it came down to it, they were just a little too afraid to do it too. However, she was able to get one other student to commit to this project. So, a good friend, with whom she grew up, will be doing the same.

I am very proud of her for standing up for what she believes in – even though it may prove to be quite a pivotal moment for her, in the delicate social balance of a middle school environment. I fervently hope that this does what she hopes it will do, and does not end up creating the very thing she is protesting – harassment, name calling, and bullying towards her.

When we talked about that possibility, her response was, “It’s worse not to do anything, because that’s what they want you to do”.

(Yay, brave Kirsten! The world needs more kids like you!)

Prom as a Community’s Litmus Test

Even though popular media would have us believe that prom is the apex of a American teen’s high school experience, often it turns out to be the opposite. Over-spending, binge-drinking and date-rape not withstanding, every year brings a new round of sad prom stories – kids who are forced to dress a certain way, who can’t bring their date of choice, and who are segregated by race.

So I have to say, I wasn’t entirely surprised to hear that Mississippi lesbian teen Constance McMillan was cheated into attending a fake prom while her classmates attended the real deal somewhere else. After all, small minds breed even smaller behavior.

It seems that events organized around fluffy dresses – proms and weddings – are the true litmus tests of a community’s acceptance, diversity, and (yes, folks) moral behavior.

Sex With Ducks

Something that’s making me laugh today:

Smart, sassy, irreverent singing/songwriting duo Garfunkel & Oates‘ response to a Pat Robertson comment that equated gay marriage with sex with ducks. Fuck a duck, these girls are funny:

Oh, Canada: On Hockey and Healing

I’ve come to realize that the Olympics don’t mean as much if you don’t have cable television. While much of the world was glued to the action, I went about my business as usual. But there are a few events I’m sorry I missed.

In her column on Xtra, the Canadian queer website, author Ivan Coyote talks about her experience watching the Canadian Women’s Hockey Team.

When you’re done with the essay, be sure to click the link at the bottom and read more of Ivan’s powerful work.

Kitty’s Wedding – A Creative Protest

My thanks to Dan Savage for the tip-off about this awesome video. Watch as two lesbians apply for a marriage license in New York state and are then refused. Then a gay man they’ve never met steps in for one of the women. They introduce themselves to each other and a license is immediately issued. Now that’s sanctity!

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F*ck Valentine’s Day

For the last month, I’ve been threatening to host a F*ck Valentine’s Day party, but I think I’ll need to plan for next year to do it up right.

I actually think these events should happen all over the country, in big cities and little towns. There could be “FVD” t-shirts and stickers. It could be a movement – the ultimate Hallmark backlash.

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The Little Ladies in Black Can Marry

My grandmother – my mother’s mother – emigrated to the United States from Portugal when she was a girl of 12. Accompanied by an older brother, she came through Ellis Island just after the turn of the 20th century. They were on the way to California, where they’d been promised a home with cousins. They were emissaries of parents that wanted to give their children a chance at a life better than the one they had known. Grams and her brother were the first to arrive in the United States. Others came later. They were sent first because, although young, they showed promise – promise the family hoped would be nurtured here. Their parents never emigrated.

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Another Butch Voice – Ivan Coyote Speaks Up

Back at the end of August, I wrote about my experiences as a femme ally at the Butch Voices conference held in Oakland. That first post, and the ones that came after, engendered a few comments. (You can read the posts here.)

This month, on Canada’s queer website, Xtra.ca, the site’s monthly columnist, author Ivan Coyote talks about her experiences at the conference. This is well worth reading.

The room smelled like hair wax and Old Spice deodorant and cigarette smoke caught in clothes.

There was the clunk of shitkicker boots and the creak of leather jackets and talking. Always there was talking.

I was in the conference room of a hotel in downtown Oakland, at the first-ever Butch Voices conference.

Read more on Xtra.

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California Already Has Your Gay Divorce

rosie+o'donnell,+weddingIt was bound to happen. As soon as discussion about gay and lesbian marriage equality was starting to feel pretty commonplace, it seems everyone is talking about gay divorce.

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Don’t All Girls Run Faster in Heels?

CasterSemenya
Thanks to Mikhaela Reid at The Boiling Point for sharing this.

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My Feelings Exactly…

bus_stopThank you to Emily Horne and Joey Comeau at A Softer World for this piece of brilliance.

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A Case for Marriage Equality, Irish Style

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A Butch Voice for Freedom

malkiacyrilThe final keynote speaker at the Butch Voices conference held recently in Oakland, was Malkia “Mac” Amala Cyril, the founder and executive director of the Center for Media Justice. The CMJ is a national media strategy and action center building a powerful grassroots movement for racial and economic justice through media change. It’s based in Oakland.

Cyril’s powerful speech, “From Identity Politics to Political Power: The Butch Voice in the Movement for Justice,” addressed a personal history as a queer, working class African-American/Caribbean born and raised in Brooklyn, NY, and dovetailed it with with a call to the needs and rights of all groups pushing back against oppression:

Family, can we talk about freedom?

Can we talk about what it is to live in a nation that has so manipulated that word many believe that simply by joining, by integrating, by sitting at the table of those whose media distorts our image and whose governance denies us our future- that this alone is a guarantee of freedom?

Can we talk about what it is to believe that freedom can come for the part of us that is female masculine, butch, tranny, faggot, stud, ag, genderqueer- and not come for the parts of us that are black, brown, south/southeast/east/and west asian, native, poor and working class, disabled, old and very young… can we talk about freedom? I think this is the right time and the right place to redefine its meaning.

Please take the time to read the rest of Cyril’s address here, on Democracy Guest List.

Read other posts from the Butch Voices conference here.

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Kennedy the Super Hero

I’m a fan of Mikhaela B. Reid‘s awesome cartoon, The Boiling Point. With her permission, I’m sharing her tribute to Ted Kennedy.

KennedyHero

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Femmes Aren’t Straight Girls Who Took A Wrong Turn

I spent the weekend at the Butch Voices conference in Oakland. It was an amazing weekend, with many insightful and joyful moments. (More about the conference here.)

I realized today that I was really happy I wasn’t PMS-ing during the conference. There were so many touching moments, and I found myself tearing up so many times, that I’m sure if I was on the downside of a progesterone spike, I could have cried all the way through the weekend.

But there was a moment during the conference that left me thinking my ears had deceived me and I want to talk about it.

I was in a workshop discussion between Jack Halberstam and Kim Peirce. Jack (Judith) is an English professor and director of The Center for Feminist Research at USC. Kim is the director of Boys Don’t Cry.

The discussion was about moving beyond Boys Don’t Cry into a next generation of butch/trans/genderqueer representation in the media. Jack and Kim are friends. In fact, Kim pointed out that Jack set her up on her only blind date, resulting in her current engagement.

At some point during the conversation, when comments and questions were moving quickly, Kim said something to the effect that butches have superior qualities to men and “that’s why femmes are with us and not men”.

Uh, no.

(Jack, why the hell didn’t you call her on this?)

I almost jumped out of my chair, but the moment to comment without rewinding the whole conversation had passed. Instead, I got distracted mulling it over and soon left the discussion and retired to my hotel room to rant a little.

There are many ways I think butches have it hands down over men. (And don’t write and call me a man-hater. Preferring one doesn’t mean hating the other.)

But that’s not why I’m with a butch woman and not a man. I’m with a butch woman because I’m a lesbian who loves butch women (and what butch/genderqueer author Ivan Coyote called “largely estrogen-based lifeforms” that fall anywhere on the masculine spectrum).

I came out later in life, after having been in heterosexual marriage, and I keenly feel the results of my coming out process and my “choices”. (Which, let’s face it, weren’t exactly choices, but internal imperatives.)

Femmes aren’t straight girls who have been won over by butches. Ask any butch who tried such a conversion and lived though the pain of watching her beloved return to a life with men. Admittedly a few of these projects work, but the vast majority don’t seem to.

I dated one woman who experienced this so many times, we joked about her being the “back door” lesbian  – the last thing a straight girl saw on her way back to heterosexuality.

Femmes are lesbians, no less than butches. We are dykes, queers, and homos. We are your counterparts, the yin to your yang. We grow more feminine in your reflection, as you become butcher in our glow. We exist in tandem.

But make no mistake, our sexual agency is only as great as your own. We don’t choose you over men and you didn’t win us as prizes in some sort of competition.

We chose you because you’re not men.

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A Femme Surrounded by Butch Voices

I’m suffering from a sort of culture shock. I noticed it as soon as I left the hotel yesterday.

You see, I’ve long known this about myself: My head turns when I see certain men on the street. Maybe it’s the cut and hang of a leather jacket, the perfect fit of a pair of well-faded jeans, or the shine of a polished shoe or boot. I watch their stride, long and certain, and the way their hips move.  I admire the trim of their hair. And then I think, “Damn. If only you were a woman.”

Well, I’ve just returned from three days in heaven, from a place where the cut, the stride, the polish, and the trim belonged to butches of every shape and size. Whether trans-masculine, genderqueer, female-identified, old-school, or new, they were all represented.

My quivering femme heart will take a long time to still.

But, make no mistake, I wasn’t at the Butch Voices conference, held this past weekend at the Oakland Marriott, simply to ogle the participants. I was there as an ally, to lend my support. I was there to learn. I was there because I love butch women. Butch women are my friends, my confidants, and my lovers. I was there to say “thanks”.

Thanks for all the time you’ve offered me an arm. Thanks for making the bar runs at crowded parties. Thanks for loaning me your jacket, leading when we dance, cooking for me, wrapping me up in big authentic hugs, and letting me cry on your shoulder.

Thank you for the reverence and respect with which you’ve touched my body – sometimes with more regard than I was feeling for it myself.

I was there to say thanks for being the most visual icons of our lesbian sub-culture. Thank you for taking the public heat for all of us. In your roles as outlaws and gender-benders, you are our front-men.

From the moment we arrived, I was conscious of my role as a non-butch participant. I’m a buzz-cut, sort of low-maintenance femme, and I had anticipated this and didn’t want to spend days explaining my gender orientation. So I packed a dress, strappy sandals, and got a fresh pedicure in preparation. I wanted to be clear about my position, and not appear to be teetering on top of the fence.

Femmes were definitely in the minority and I chose my workshops carefully, not wanting to encroach on others’ opportunities for butch bonding. The public visibility of butch women led to such workshops as “Non-conforming Gender Presentation and Job Searching,” “Politics of Passing,” and “Butch in the Streets: Techniques for Increasing Safety in Public”.  I did not attend these. I attended S. Bear Bergman’s workshop on chivalry, and Ivan Coyote’s workshop on beating writing procrastination.  I did not attend the workshop called “An Exploration of Dick,” even though I have more than a passing acquaintance with the topic. Strap-ons and toys, are just that for me – toys. They’re not My Dick. (And that’s only one of the things that marks me as femme.) This was a conversation the butches needed to have amongst themselves. But to be clear, as a femme ally, I was never made to feel unwelcome. The places I didn’t go were by my own choice.

In response, I suppose, to the bonding and visibility of the assembled butches, I heard several young femme women express how they feel invisible to their own community – that they’re not immediately recognized as lesbian and have to work to be noticed by the very women they want to attract.

To some degree I understand this because my usual fashion accessory is a 12-year-old son, which identifies me as a mommy above all else. I think in liberal places and among my peers, I’m often read as a gay woman, but in many environments, I’m just an older orchestra mom with an edgy haircut and funky glasses.

And, I hear women over 40, lesbian and straight alike, complain about their invisibility to the world as a whole. They say younger people don’t look them in the eye, and until we become senior citizens, don’t extend us the courtesies they jump to extend to younger women. I suppose that’s a valid complaint in a society that places a high value on feminine youth and beauty. I think I circumvent this by going out of my way to make eye contact with strangers,  and I am more likely to extend my courtesies to others – male or female – as to expect them extended to me. As a result, I don’t feel invisible so much as capable, if by necessity. I’ve worked in lots of environments where I was expected to lift, tote, and carry, and have set-up and stacked more folding tables and chairs than I would ever like to count. My egalitarianism makes my life run smoothly but doesn’t make me feel special.

Maybe that’s why I came home from Butch Voices feeling like a queen.

Yes, I felt conspicuous in my femininity among all the butch bodies. Yes, I was in the minority.

But I felt seen, valued, and cared for. I felt nurtured. It never occurred to me to move a folding chair. I’m pretty certain it would have been an insult to try, and I’m not bothered by that one iota. I do my share in other environments and had nothing to prove in this one. Everyone I met was warm in their greetings, gracious in their communications, conscious of their impact on the space around them. I heard one femme woman say that at the Saturday night Butch Nation entertainment review – which was jam-packed – she had never had so many people apologize for bumping into her.

Maybe this is because of the special pride so many butch women take in their manners. Maybe this is because we have all been socialized as female to some degree, and therefore have a special understanding of the value of warmth and courtesy.

In the past, I have told my son that if he wants to learn good manners and treat women with respect, he only has to look to his butch “uncles” for advice. And after this weekend, I stand by that now, more than ever.

My heartfelt thanks to Joe LeBlanc, the conference chair and Butch Voices board president, and the incredible group that put the conference together.

Here are all of the posts I made following the Butch Voices 2009 conference.

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Comments and Marriage Equality

I try to remember to write thank you notes for the comments people leave on this blog. Finding a well-thought-out or enthusiastic comment always makes my day. It lets me know what people are thinking, and it motivates me to keep writing.

There were some special ones this week. One woman, new to the site, wrote effusively to say;

Your blog is  fascinating, educational, hilarious, mesmerizing, intellectual, entertaining, inspiring and a bit naughty all at the same time.  I feel drunk now, thank you.

No, thank you. You made my day.

Another, a guy in Canada who follows me on Twitter and has been caring for his elderly father, wrote with kind words about the death of my friend, the veteran.

A regular reader, the author of many well-crafted comments, left her thoughts about the potential 2010 marriage equality push in California.

And, sometimes – in the way the best comments can – it motivated me to write more on the topic. One minute I was writing her a note of thanks, and in the next, I realized it would make an opinion post of its own:

Thank you for your thoughtful comment about the same-sex marriage push. I’m with you. I felt really disenfranchised through the last go-round – not by the idea of marriage equality, mind you – but by a campaign that appeared to be reactionary and fractured. Even at my local level, I wasn’t sure where money was going, or who was in charge.

The amount of money spent by both sides of the campaign – an estimated $73 million – is appalling, especially in light of the economy and all of the social and human services that are struggling or going unfunded. Church organizations who helped to fund Proposition 8 should be especially ashamed. When did God’s work become persecution and diverting resources away from the needy and the poor?

I think California marriage equality needs a better public relations campaign, one that starts at the grassroots level. Along with our rallies and fundraisers (which tend to attract our own and become media spectacles) we need more public speakers visiting service groups and churches.

We need to be reaching into communities up and down the state and talking about the economic impact of marriage equality to Realtors, Rotarians, and business organizations, about the need for recognized unions and families to educational and church groups. We need to talk about the potential impact of gay marriage on the state’s over-taxed adoption and foster parenting programs. We need to talk about civil rights to labor and ethnic organizations.

We need time to field questions and answers, to shake hands, and have rubber chicken lunches and punch in church halls. We need people to understand that marriage equality is about much more than government-recognized gay sex.

I love the queer craziness of our community as much as the next native California lesbian, but we have to remember that when we try to change the public mind by show up at rallies in flamboyant drag or holding kiss-ins, we’re going to lose as many votes as we gain. The same things that make great media images on the 6 o’clock news, and colorful photos on the front page of the newspapers serve to substantially increase the “ick” factor of homosexuality in communities that already aren’t voting with us. They can’t separate extremism from the core message.

Most importantly, we – the gay and lesbian community –  have to remember what we’re trying to sell. We’re trying to sell the conservative heartland of the state on the idea of equal recognition of loving relationships, not on the media reduction of the “gay lifestyle”. We’re talking wedding rings, children, Pottery Barn, and “until death do us part” – not leather parties and Dinah Shore.

I personally don’t think we can get it together for a 2010 election. I think it’s going to take a couple of years to gather resources, and most importantly, focus.

We need marriage equality to win big in California, not by two percent, or five percent. We need a landslide, an outpouring of support from people who understand and sympathize. We need unimpeachable language. We need a victory that won’t have to immediately be defended in court, or at the polls, yet again.

And that’s going to take some time, because first we need people to meet us and understand.

They don’t have to love us, but they do have to understand.

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Another Silent Soldier Dies

As the Senate Armed Services Committee announces that it will hold hearings on Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell (DADT) this fall, we’ve lost another gay veteran.

I got word today that an old friend and co-worker died.

She was a retired veteran, an old school butch lesbian, and a proud Portuguesa who had the same name as my Azorian aunt.

She died as the result of many kinds of cancers. I forget what order they came in – first breast, then lung, then liver or brain – because they cropped up like wildfires.

When it all started with a lump in her breast, she explained that she’d been waiting, knowing she was a ticking bomb, having spent part of her military service observing nuclear tests in the Nevada desert.

She told me once how many she’d seen, and while I can’t recall the number, I remember being shocked by it. She described the sight and sound of the blasts, and the hot rush of wind that followed. She said she wouldn’t mourn the loss of her breasts, since she’d always been called “sir” anyway, and joked that after her masectomies, she would have pansies tattooed where she used to have nipples. But within months there was another cancer. One the VA said was unrelated to the one in her breast. And then another…

She served before DADT. She served in silence. She served a country that wouldn’t acknowledge who she was, and kept her silence by threatening the loss of her career.

And, while she didn’t die in the line of duty, she ultimately died for her country, because of the duty for which she had volunteered.

Thanks for everything, A. Rest in peace.

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On The Green: Of Folk Music and Iran

baezwatercolor

Nancy VanReece's watercolor based on the cover of Joan Baez's 2008 recording "Day After Tomorrow". Click on the image to visit Nancy's website and see more of her art.

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I grew up going to folk festivals in Sonoma County.

While my parents weren’t hippies by any means (they were both career newspaper people), my mother’s love of folk music had a big influence on our family.

We went to lots of live performances in places my parents could take their kids. We went to places that no longer exist, and some that still do. The Painted House was a cafe and coffeehouse in Santa Rosa where I ate my first alfalfa sprouts and heard Kate Wolf sing. West of the Laguna was a pizza joint in Sebastopol where kids ran around between the tables and guitar-pickers showed off their syncopation. Dinucci’s family-style Italian restaurant is still in business in the tiny coastal town of Valley Ford, and I remember going there to hear The Irish Rovers sing the unicorn song that made them famous. My parents took me to hear Burl Ives sing “Big Rock Candy Mountain” in Sparks, Nev. (some of you younger types will know him as the voice of the narrator snowman in the original Rudolph the Red-nosed Reindeer Christmas special).

There are singers I’ve never heard live, but only on my mom’s albums – people like Woody Guthrie, Odetta, Pete Seger, Bob Dylan, June Carter Cash, and Phil Ochs. Some of them I’ll never have the chance to hear, because, as the saying goes, heaven has a hell of a band. But I’m still a fan of live music, and I’ve been blessed to hear more wonderful amazing artists live than I could begin to count.

While we heard lots of other kinds of music too – like our local symphony orchestra on Sundays – it’s the voices of these folk singers that feel like old friends.

In the 1970s, the football field of Santa Rosa Junior college became the site of a short-lived regional folk festival. We gathered with other families to spread our blankets out in the sunshine and picnic on celery sticks with organic peanut butter and cheese from local cows. The festival experienced many missing years and reorganizations, but is the forerunner of the now firmly established Kate Wolf Festival, named for folksinger that died in 1986, that happens every year at the end of June at Wavy Gravy’s Black Oak Ranch in Laytonville.

Baezconcert

Joan Baez inspired cheers and tears as she sang "We Shall Overcome" in Farsi under a blue sky in Stern Grove.

This is why I felt right at home yesterday on the lawn in San Francisco’s Stern Grove, listening to Joan Baez.

Joan Baez is one of those voices from my childhood. Now 68, she is a graceful and elegant woman, grown out of the girl sensation that sang on the stage at Woodstock 40 years ago.

She’s made a career of music, but is equally known for her vocal and unflagging support of non-violence, civil and human rights, and the environment. Against war, in support of gay and lesbian rights, against the death penalty, for the planet, and now for Iran, this woman has used her voice to the benefit of so many people.

Just weeks ago, she was moved to post this video on YouTube, recorded in her kitchen, of her singing “We Shall Overcome” in Farsi in support of the people of Iran.

Shortly thereafter, this message appeared on Iranian.com, encouraging Iranian people to come to the Stern Grove concert:

As many of you know, Ms. Baez, who has been a beacon of the American civil rights movement, has already expressed her solidarity with Iranian people’s struggle for civil rights.  Ms. Baez has performed the famous “We shall overcome”, the iconic song of American civil rights in Farsi.

Since those of us who have been following the struggle of Iranian people for their freedom and justice in Iran are looking for venues to express our solidarity with Iranian people in Iran we would like to ask all of you to participate in this concert.  Our presence on Sunday gives a voice to Iranians who have been killed, are currently in jails under the worst unimaginable tortures, and are currently continuing this struggle.

Since the color of green has been recognized internationally as the symbol of current struggles in Iran we would like to suggest to those who decide to participate to consider wearing greens and bring green balloons.

Yesterday, she was joined on stage by Iranian musician Tahmoures Pournazeri, the son of musician Kaykhosro Pournazeri.

Someone who was at the concert made this video. The camera spins around a lot, but you can really get the feeling of the energy of the concert, and all the people on their feet:

Also, present at the concert was Baez’ 96-year-old mother, to whom she dedicated “Forever Young”. A strong woman in her own right, her mother was arrested, along with Baez and nearly 70 other women in October 1967, for blocking the doorways to an Oakland induction center to prevent entrance by young inductees, and in support of young men who refused military induction.

There was so much love in the crowd yesterday. You could feel it hanging in the air the way marijuana smoke hung in the air at the folk festivals of my childhood. You could feel it in the awesome opening act, the popular Bay Area band Blame Sally.

I was in my favorite place, on a blanket on the lawn with a good friend, and surrounded by a great group of women. We were sharing wine and cherries. Everything thing was exactly the way it should be. And, in the minutes before the concert started, the sun broke through the San Francisco fog to shine on Joan Baez – undoubtedly expressing its appreciation for everything she’s done.

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