Sunday, May 31, 2009

ACLU: SCHOOL CENSORED STUDENT'S HARVEY MILK REPORT


The American Civil Liberties Union is threatening to sue a San Diego County school that refused to let a student present a report on slain gay rights leader Harvey Milk until her classmates got their parents’ permission to hear it.David Blair-Loy, legal director of the ACLU of San Diego County, said the principal of Mt. Woodson Elementary School in Ramona violated the free speech rights of 6th-grader Natalie Jones, who was the only student in her class prevented from giving an in-class presentation.Principal Theresa Grace concluded last month that the subject of the girl’s project triggered a district policy requiring parents to be notified in writing before their children are exposed to lessons dealing with sex, according to Blair-Loy and Natalie’s mother.After the principal sent letters to alert parents about the “sensitive topic,” Natalie was allowed to give her 12-page PowerPoint report during the May 8 lunch recess, but not in class, Blair-Loy said. Eight of the 13 students in her class attended, he said.In a letter to the Ramona Unified District on May 20, the ACLU demanded that school officials apologize to Natalie and clarify its sex education policy. It also wants the girl to be given the chance to present her biographical account of Milk’s life and death in class.“It’s not about sex, it’s not about sex education. It’s a presentation about a historical figure who happened to be gay,” Blair-Loy said.Milk became one of the first gay men elected to political office in the United States in 1977 when he won a seat on the San Francisco Board of Supervisors. He was assassinated a year later along with Mayor George Moscone. Former supervisor Dan White was convicted of voluntary manslaughter for the killings.

Saturday, May 30, 2009

ADVICE FROM POPE BENEDICT


(Vatican City) Marital fidelity and a “moral view” of sexuality are the best strategies to stop the spread of AIDS, Pope Benedict said Friday, addressing the issue for the first time since his comments on condoms during a trip to Africa caused a stir.

Benedict did not mention condoms in speeches welcoming Namibia’s and South Africa’s new ambassadors to the Vatican, but reiterated the Catholic Church’s position on the disease, which is pandemic in Africa.
“Only a strategy based on education to individual responsibility in the framework of a moral view of human sexuality, especially through conjugal fidelity, can have a real impact on the prevention of this disease,” the Pope said.
Addressing the South African ambassador, Benedict said the church would continue to campaign against the spread of AIDS “by emphasizing fidelity within marriage and abstinence outside of it.”
Benedict drew unprecedented criticism from European governments, international organizations and scientists in March when he said that distributing condoms was not the answer to Africa’s AIDS problem and could make it worse. He said a moral attitude toward sex would help fight the disease.
Though the position was not new, the questioning of the usefulness of condoms and the fact that the Pope made the comments on the plane carrying him to AIDS-plagued Africa sparked a storm of criticism.
France, Germany, the United Nations’ AIDS-fighting agency and the British medical journal The Lancet called the remarks irresponsible and dangerous.
The Vatican countered that critics were trying to intimidate Benedict and dissuade him from expressing himself on moral issues.

Friday, May 29, 2009

OBAMA BRINGING G-20 SUMMIT TO PITTSBURGH, NO JOKE


President Obama will host the next G-20 summit at the David L. Lawrence Convention Center in downtown Pittsburgh, where he and other world leaders will gather to discuss major global economic issues.
Obama had suggested Pittsburgh as a venue for the upcoming Sept. 24-25 forum at the end of the most recent G-20 in London last month, spokesman Robert Gibbs said.
The announcement of Pittsburgh as the host city drew some chuckles from the White House press corps Thursday in Washington, D.C.
One reason Pittsburgh was chosen to host the G-20 is that Obama would like to highlight the city's continuing financial recovery, Gibbs said.
Joe McGrath, president of the Greater Pittsburgh Convention and Visitors Bureau, estimated the potential economic impact at "something north of $8 million" associated with the G-20 coming to Pittsburgh.

No joke!

Thursday, May 28, 2009

FARRAH DECLINES FURTHER TREATMENT


Farrah Fawcett's battle with stage 4 cancer has taken a turn for the worst, according to medical personnel, as the disease has spread to her liver.
Fawcett has refused further treatment and is surrounding herself with friends and family.
First diagnosed in 2006, Fawcett was offered an invasive, intensive and potentially ineffective surgical procedure to fight the cancer, but chose instead to embrace natural treatments outside the United States. Doctors have said they are unsure whether accepting local treatment would have made any difference to her situation.
Sadly, as Farrah moves towards her final curtain call, friends and colleagues have already begun fighting over her wishes.
A documentary Fawcett chose to create chronicling her fight against cancer has been seen by nearly 9 million people on NBC and may well earn the actress a posthumous Emmy award, but a follow-up documentary has been stopped by Fawcett's long-time companion, Ryan O'Neal.
O'Neal's crew continues to film Fawcett's fight against the inevitable, but where that footage will end up is uncertain.
Meanwhile, the director of the original documentary, Craig Nevius, is suing O'Neal for allegedly taking creative control of the project and ignoring Fawcett's instructions to angle the piece as a criticism of the U.S. health care industry.
Nevius also alleges Fawcett didn't want her son to be a part of the project, yet the documentary features footage of him in prison.
Adding to the perception that jackals are stalking Fawcett in her final hours is Larry Hackett, editor of People magazine, who told the New York Times, “We’re also on Farrah watch,” he said. “At this point Farrah has to die. It’s the only cover left for her.”

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

WE AREN'T DONE YET


One of the most misunderstood stories in the Western moral tradition involves the "judgment of Solomon," which usually is taken as a metaphor for splitting the difference. But that's wrong. The story, for those who have forgotten, involves two harlots who came to King Solomon to resolve a dispute. Both recently had given birth, but one women's baby lived and the other's died. The woman who went to sleep with a living child and awoke to find a dead baby in her arms claimed that the other had switched their infants. Solomon listened to both and then announced that he would "cut the living child in two, and give half to one woman and half to the other." When one of the women renounced her claim "in anguish" and the other accepted the verdict, the king gave the anguished harlot the living child, for she had reacted as only the true mother would. The point, in other words, is that Solomon didn't split the baby. Justice divided is no justice at all.That's essentially the problem with the California Supreme Court's ruling Tuesday, upholding Proposition 8's ban on same-sex marriage while leaving legally intact the 18,000 or more unions the state already has sanctioned.Legal precedents notwithstanding -- and the six clearly nervous justices who made up the majority in this case reached all the way back to the state Constitution of 1849 for those -- Tuesday's decision was intellectually and morally incoherent. It essentially tells Californians that a right as fundamental as the ability to choose the marital partner of your choice is a kind of judicial lottery ticket -- if you got in early, you win, but those who arrived a few days late lose. Sorry.You could feel the justices straining for their convoluted result in every tortured sentence of Tuesday's 6-1 opinion, and it was impossible not to draw comparisons with the moral and legal clarity of the court's ruling last year that the state Constitution guaranteed gays and lesbians the right to wed the partner of their choice.That ruling, also written by Chief Justice Ronald M. George, drew deeply -- in spirit, at least -- on the philosopher Michael Walzer's insight that the American conception of moral progress consists not in the creation of novel rights but in the extension of those recognized as fundamental to those people to whom they've been denied. As such, the earlier decision stood in a distinguished line that includes Griswold vs. Connecticut and Brown vs. Board of Education -- in which courageous judges undertook to synchronize the law with the social conscience of their age.Tuesday's ruling stands in the line of moral retreat and expedient retrenchment that includes Dred Scott vs. Sandford, Plessy vs. Ferguson and Korematsu vs. the United States. Consider this passage from George's latest majority opinion, asserting -- against all reason -- that Proposition 8 did not entirely repeal or abrogate same-sex couples' right to privacy and due process or the "constitutional right of same-sex couples to 'choose one's life partner and enter with that person into a committed, officially recognized and protected family relationship.' " Instead, George wrote, "the measure carves out a narrow and limited exception to these state 'constitutional rights.' " George went on to argue that Proposition 8 did not abrogate "all of the other extremely significant substantive aspects of a same-sex couple's state constitutional right to establish an officially recognized and protected family relationship and the guarantee of equal protection under the laws."In other words, gay and lesbian Californians can board the marital bus but must take seats at the rear.Moreover, denying an entire class of people the right to marry the partner of their choice is a "narrow exception" to the equal protection clause? And it's morally permissible to carve out exceptions to constitutional rights for specific groups, as long as it's done by majority vote?So, if a majority of Californians voted to "carve out a narrow exception" to California's right to privacy and applied it only to Jews, would it be constitutionally acceptable? If Native Americans were accorded all the protections of the law by a ballot proposition, except the right to marry a non-Indian, would that be legal? This is social and moral nonsense. The court tried Tuesday to cover itself with a fig leaf of decency by allowing the 18,000 existing same-sex marriages to stand. It won't work. This is a logically and morally incoherent decision that simply will plunge the state into another round of bitterly divisive initiative politics, while adding fuel to the growing sense that all three branches of California's government have lost the ability to function in the public interest.

NORTH AMERICAN FLU


Really interesting and ironic to see so many Asians @ Niagara Falls last weekend wearing gloves and masks. Hasn't it always been the crazy Americans who are worried they are going to catch some deadly illness when traveling overseas? This fellow is on the "Rainbow Bridge", near the international boundary between the U.S. and Canada. Wish I would have taken more pics of some of the others, like the Japanese woman who was pratically mummified. She had mask, scarf, gloves, wrap-around glasses and what looked to be a jumpsuit of some kind. Didn't want to be rude and didn't have time to ask permission for her photo. I think it's a great statement and pokes fun at how cocky we Americans are. People from India are by far the largest group of foreign tourists to be found at the Falls on any given day, a sign of how wealthy people from the sub-continent have become or just an indication of their love for waterfalls and rainbows? None of them had masks. I wonder why?

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

FARRAH'S HAIR


That big wavy lion’s mane of hair was Farrah’s trademark. For years, EVERY WOMAN in the appropriate age bracket wanted her hairstyle. If you know anything at all about hair, you’d realize that it would be a complete impossiblity for most. You’d have to possess a particular thickness, length and degree of manageability that most people just wouldn’t have – and then the maitenance on that style would be killer. But that didn’t stop a lot of girls from trying.
Farrah has changed her hair over the years. She’s gone quite short several times. But she does grow it out and periodically return to a variation of the style that she made famous. She should find a similar style and stick with it. It was a look that really suited her.

Friday, May 22, 2009

GLAMOROUS FARRAH


Early Farrah glamour shot.

I DREAM OF FARRAH


It's Farrah time! Exploring everything Farrah. Be it her iconic beauty, "Farrah Fawcett-Majors" period, films, TV episodes, interviews, posters, pictures, art and personal philosophy...so let's go!