Tag: gay marriage

  • Untitled post 13197

    Those who disagree with the recent Supreme Court ruling argue that the court should not overturn the will of legislative majorities. Those who favor the Supreme Court ruling argue that the 14th amendment protects rights from legislative majorities.

    Do consenting adults have a right to contract with other consenting adults? Supporters of the Supreme Court’s decision argue yes but they argue no when it comes to economic liberties, such as contracts regarding wages.

    It seems some rights are more equal than others.

    An excerpt from a Rand Paul opinion piece in TIME MAGAZINE where he comes out swinging on the Supreme Court gay marriage ruling..

    More: http://time.com/3939374/rand-paul-gay-marriage-supreme-court/

  • Little did you know the rainbow Facebook profile picture fad would create such controversy

    Little did you know the rainbow Facebook profile picture fad would create such controversy

    By now if you’re on Facebook, WordPress, Tumblr, or any other social med service, your header or banner image was already made into a rainbow..perhaps you went one step further and did it yourself, all in the celebration of the 5-4 Supreme Court ruling allowing gay marriage to take place in all 50 states. But a group called the Radical Faeries has a problem with it. 

    Rory Carroll in San Francisco and Amanda Holpuch in Ann Arbor, Michigan in the UK GUARDIAN report this about the rainbow colored social media trend: 

    Within hours of the supreme court’s Friday decision on same-sex marriage, people with a certain number of progressively minded friends found their Facebook news feeds dominated by rainbow-colored profile pictures created by a special link on the website.

    The gambit successfully put Facebook’s equality credentials in the spotlight. But it was challenged on Saturday at San Francisco Pride, an event the company sponsored.

    The Radical Faeries, one of the more idiosyncratic groups at San Francisco’s Pride, said the festival should dump Facebook as a sponsor because of the company’s ban on adopted names.

    The policy was unfair to LGBT people who use adopted names to avoid homophobia or to express their true identity, they said.

    “I don’t like anybody telling me who I am or have to be,” said Storm Arcana, 42, seated on a rug in the Faerie Freedom Village, a colourful camp near city hall.

    People paying attention to things of this sort may recall this argument brewing for some time–this has been a long standing issue some have had with Facebook. 

    I don’t hold any overall anti or pro opinion on this matter. A  part of me believes that Facebook as a private company that steals everyone’s information, invades their personal lives, tracks their every move, and sells every piece of information to the lowest bidder–not to mention being the easiest and free-est way for law enforcement to track down virtually any person they want–can do what it wants. And people clamoring for the right to have Facebook abuse them even more? They need to probably think twice.

    There are other social media services out there.. 
    I get the point, believe me. But I also think those making the point are missing the point.. There aren’t many nice things about Facebook.. It’s ease of use is one of the few, along with the ability people have to connect. Minus those two things, the policies and privacy issues with the social media service are a little more than atrocious. 
    So..
    That being said, if a person wants an entire life to be monitored, tracked, and traced, I suppose the nicest thing the violating party could do is at least call the person the name the person wishes to be called..

  • Untitled post 13211

    History made. In living color. A White House pool report June 26, 2015, preserved for history:

    As of 7:08 PM, the sunlight made it difficult make out the colors, but red, orange, yellow, green and violet were faintly visible

    As night fell, the Friday night lights were very visible for the world to see.

  • United States Supreme Court votes to legalize gay marriage across the country

    United States Supreme Court votes to legalize gay marriage across the country

    United States Supreme Court votes to legalize gay marriage across the country

    But Chief Justice Roberts dissented…

    More:

    ‘If you are among the many Americans – of whatever sexual orientation – who favor expanding same-sex marriage, by all means celebrate today’s decision,’ Roberts wrote.

    ‘Celebrate the achievement of a desired goal. Celebrate the opportunity for a new expression of commitment to a partner. Celebrate the availability of new benefits. But do not celebrate the Constitution. It had nothing to do with it.’