"Two men who kissed one another were kicked out of presidential candidate Rick Santorum's rally Friday evening at Christian Liberty Academy in Arlington Heights.This is a very positive way to send a message against those who believe that LGBTQ people are lesser human beings. It is a sign of love, which any reasonable person would never condemn. A kiss is quite simple, and if any straight couple were to do so during the rally, it would go unnoticed. If anything, they might even be praised for demonstrating strong "family" values, or something along those lines.
Santorum was 15 minutes into his speech when the two men shouted and got the attention of the crowd. They exchanged a kiss, prompting guards to eject them and the crowd to chant "U-S-A" while they were leaving the gym.
When asked whether the kiss was a public display of affection or merely a symbolic act, Timothy Tross of Lombard and Ben Clifford of Algonquin, declined to comment.
'I don't think the message should be about what my sexuality is," Tross said. "It's the message that he's saying about sexuality that matters.'"
The Official Website of Spectrum, Concord-Carlisle High School's Gay Straight Alliance.
3/19/2012
An Excellent Example of Protest
From the Huffington Post:
3/14/2012
Book Recommendation of the Week III: Eon by Alison Goodman
Eon (Two Pearls of Wisdom) by Alison Goodman
Eon, unlike the other two books recommended before, is not as directly related to the LGB part of LGBT. It deals more with gender identity and the duality (or lack thereof) between male and female.
Eona is in training to be a Dragoneye in a world where there are twelve dragons, each bonded to an Eye and his apprentice (It is he since all of the Dragoneyes are male). At the start of the novel, Eona is just days away from the ceremony where the Rat Dragon will appear and pick the next Dragoneye. Eona is not known to the public as Eona, though, but as Eon. Only males are allowed to become Dragoneyes, so she and her master conceal her sex from everyone. Making matters worse, she was also partially crippled by an accident. During the ceremony, though, the Mirror Dragon, lost for centuries, reappears and chooses Eona to be its Dragoneye. Eona balances her training, despite some serious setbacks, with her new life at court and the politicians who inhabit it, such as the Emperor and Prince Kyo.
Eona struggles with trying to be male while reconciling herself with her female side throughout the book. However, she is not the only one in an atypical situation. There is a courtier, Lady Dela, who is a Contraire, or a man with a woman's spirit. Her tribe considers her fortunate to have both male and female spirits within her, but Lady Dela is subject to some discrimination at court. In the modern world, she would probably be considered transgender, but such terms do not exist in the setting of the novel. Lady Dela is an excellent character, and her role is crucial to the plot. Also present is Ryko, Lady Dela's bodyguard whose feelings are not exactly platonic.
While the book is certainly not perfect, it is a captivating read, and Goodman's interpretation of the Chinese Zodiac makes for an interesting concept. Eon is followed by Eona, also an excellent novel. This is a young adult novel, but it can certainly be enjoyed by someone of any age.
Eon, unlike the other two books recommended before, is not as directly related to the LGB part of LGBT. It deals more with gender identity and the duality (or lack thereof) between male and female.
Eona is in training to be a Dragoneye in a world where there are twelve dragons, each bonded to an Eye and his apprentice (It is he since all of the Dragoneyes are male). At the start of the novel, Eona is just days away from the ceremony where the Rat Dragon will appear and pick the next Dragoneye. Eona is not known to the public as Eona, though, but as Eon. Only males are allowed to become Dragoneyes, so she and her master conceal her sex from everyone. Making matters worse, she was also partially crippled by an accident. During the ceremony, though, the Mirror Dragon, lost for centuries, reappears and chooses Eona to be its Dragoneye. Eona balances her training, despite some serious setbacks, with her new life at court and the politicians who inhabit it, such as the Emperor and Prince Kyo.
Eona struggles with trying to be male while reconciling herself with her female side throughout the book. However, she is not the only one in an atypical situation. There is a courtier, Lady Dela, who is a Contraire, or a man with a woman's spirit. Her tribe considers her fortunate to have both male and female spirits within her, but Lady Dela is subject to some discrimination at court. In the modern world, she would probably be considered transgender, but such terms do not exist in the setting of the novel. Lady Dela is an excellent character, and her role is crucial to the plot. Also present is Ryko, Lady Dela's bodyguard whose feelings are not exactly platonic.
While the book is certainly not perfect, it is a captivating read, and Goodman's interpretation of the Chinese Zodiac makes for an interesting concept. Eon is followed by Eona, also an excellent novel. This is a young adult novel, but it can certainly be enjoyed by someone of any age.
3/12/2012
Transgender Woman Sues
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/ct-met-transgender-woman-sues-20120312,0,7345902.story
This story is just one of many examples of harassment today against transgender people. It's truly sickening to hear about events like this.
This story is just one of many examples of harassment today against transgender people. It's truly sickening to hear about events like this.
3/11/2012
Gay Person of the Month: Alan Turing
Alan Turing (1912-1954) was an English mathematician, scientist and cryptographer best known as in inventor of the Universal Turing Machine. His work was critical in the later development of the modern computer as we know today. During World War II, he lived in Bletchley Park doing cryptanalysis work, where his work with the Enigma was indispensable. Additionally, he also
created the Turing Test, and his paper "Computing Machinery and Intelligence" published in Mind in 1950 which discussed the possibility of artificial intelligence and thinking machines, is one of the best known and most highly regarded papers on the subject even today.
He had at least discovered he was gay by the time he was eighteen since he developed feelings for a slightly older boy in high school, although the boy, Christopher, soon died.
During the war, he was saved from persecution because of his homosexuality because he talents were so essential to the war efforts. After the war, however, when he reported a break-in to the police, he admitted to have been sexually active with a man, Charles Murray, who had actually assisted with the break-in. Instead of being sent to prison, he elected to receive female hormones (a sort of castration designed to cure him of his homosexuality), since homosexuality was in illegal in the UK in 1952. His security clearance was also stripped, as it was believed that homosexuality was associated with communists.
In 1954, he died of cyanide poisoning. A partially eaten apple was found next to him, and there is some speculation that the apple itself contained the cyanide. While his family refused to believe that he had committed suicide, thinking instead that the apple had become accidentally poisoned because some chemicals he used were stored poorly. Still, one of his favorite fairy tales was Snow White and the Seven Dwarves, and the apple left near him is reminiscent of the way the Queen tried to kill Snow White.
In 2009, Gordon Brown officially apologized for the treatment Turing received post-war. The apology came after a petition signed by 30,000 people went forward asking for an official apology. A statue of him was unveiled in 2001, and his status as one of the most influential people during the war has been recognized. Even more recently, he was featured in a series of stamps which featured "twelve Britons of distinction." He was denied a posthumous pardon, however, because, according to the British government, what he did at the time was illegal, and he knew it was illegal, even though the laws were incredibly cruel and inhumane.
He had at least discovered he was gay by the time he was eighteen since he developed feelings for a slightly older boy in high school, although the boy, Christopher, soon died.
During the war, he was saved from persecution because of his homosexuality because he talents were so essential to the war efforts. After the war, however, when he reported a break-in to the police, he admitted to have been sexually active with a man, Charles Murray, who had actually assisted with the break-in. Instead of being sent to prison, he elected to receive female hormones (a sort of castration designed to cure him of his homosexuality), since homosexuality was in illegal in the UK in 1952. His security clearance was also stripped, as it was believed that homosexuality was associated with communists.
In 1954, he died of cyanide poisoning. A partially eaten apple was found next to him, and there is some speculation that the apple itself contained the cyanide. While his family refused to believe that he had committed suicide, thinking instead that the apple had become accidentally poisoned because some chemicals he used were stored poorly. Still, one of his favorite fairy tales was Snow White and the Seven Dwarves, and the apple left near him is reminiscent of the way the Queen tried to kill Snow White.
In 2009, Gordon Brown officially apologized for the treatment Turing received post-war. The apology came after a petition signed by 30,000 people went forward asking for an official apology. A statue of him was unveiled in 2001, and his status as one of the most influential people during the war has been recognized. Even more recently, he was featured in a series of stamps which featured "twelve Britons of distinction." He was denied a posthumous pardon, however, because, according to the British government, what he did at the time was illegal, and he knew it was illegal, even though the laws were incredibly cruel and inhumane.
3/07/2012
Book Recommendation of the Week II: The Stone Gods
The Stone Gods by Jeanette Winterson
For this book, I'm going to have to talk as Hannah, not as Spectrum, simply because it is my favorite book ever written (that I've read so far, although it would be quite hard to surpass it). Jeanette Winterson is such a fantastic author that I would really recommend any book she's written, particularly Oranges Are Not The Only Fruit and The Passion.
In the start of the novel, we are introduced to Billy Crusoe (a woman, by the way) and a robot, Spike, who has actually evolved and developed emotions. Spike (also a female) is about to be deprogrammed, or essentially erased. Billy and a few others accompany a mission to see Planet Blue, a possible replacement for Orbus, their dying world. On the way over, Billy and Spike fall in love, which might be the end of many books, but not of this one.
Winterson's style is fluid, mosaic and lyrical. Thus, the story continues in different time periods where the characters, though essentially possessing the same personalities, live under different identities and names. They start over each time, not because Winterson has created a sort of samsara where life is a infinite game, but because the force of their love transcends time and identity.
Reading this book was, for me, like being immersed in a strange sort of pool. It took me several minutes to regain my bearings and catch my breath after I finished.
How does this relate to LGBT issues? Well, for one, Billy and Spike are (originally) both female, though the sex of the characters changed once or twice throughout the novel. The overpowering message, besides a rather forceful environmental warning which I have not discussed here, is that love exists regardless of sex, physicality or even time. Winterson herself is gay, so she might be speaking from personal experience. Oranges Are Not The Only Fruit was her first novel, and is perhaps still the most well known, and it directly covers the challenges faced by a young woman discovering her sexuality in a religious family. I chose The Stone Gods simply because I prefer it to Oranges, and also because I read it first. However, both are wonderful books.
I am now reverting to Spectrum.
Have a wonderful week!
CCHS Spectrum
For this book, I'm going to have to talk as Hannah, not as Spectrum, simply because it is my favorite book ever written (that I've read so far, although it would be quite hard to surpass it). Jeanette Winterson is such a fantastic author that I would really recommend any book she's written, particularly Oranges Are Not The Only Fruit and The Passion.
In the start of the novel, we are introduced to Billy Crusoe (a woman, by the way) and a robot, Spike, who has actually evolved and developed emotions. Spike (also a female) is about to be deprogrammed, or essentially erased. Billy and a few others accompany a mission to see Planet Blue, a possible replacement for Orbus, their dying world. On the way over, Billy and Spike fall in love, which might be the end of many books, but not of this one.
Winterson's style is fluid, mosaic and lyrical. Thus, the story continues in different time periods where the characters, though essentially possessing the same personalities, live under different identities and names. They start over each time, not because Winterson has created a sort of samsara where life is a infinite game, but because the force of their love transcends time and identity.
Reading this book was, for me, like being immersed in a strange sort of pool. It took me several minutes to regain my bearings and catch my breath after I finished.
How does this relate to LGBT issues? Well, for one, Billy and Spike are (originally) both female, though the sex of the characters changed once or twice throughout the novel. The overpowering message, besides a rather forceful environmental warning which I have not discussed here, is that love exists regardless of sex, physicality or even time. Winterson herself is gay, so she might be speaking from personal experience. Oranges Are Not The Only Fruit was her first novel, and is perhaps still the most well known, and it directly covers the challenges faced by a young woman discovering her sexuality in a religious family. I chose The Stone Gods simply because I prefer it to Oranges, and also because I read it first. However, both are wonderful books.
I am now reverting to Spectrum.
Have a wonderful week!
CCHS Spectrum
3/01/2012
Book Recommendation of the Week: Annie on My Mind
Annie on My Mind by Nancy Garden
Summary:
Written in 1982, this wonderful novel details the friendship and relationship between Liza Winthrop and Annie Kenyon. Liza goes to a private school in Brooklyn, and Annie goes to a shabby public school, yet when the two meet in the Met, they become friends. Their feelings move beyond friendship, and when their relationship is discovered by Liza's school, it has consequences. Annie on My Mind is a classic book in young adult literature, and it is engaging, well written, and poignant.
Controversy:
The book holds the #48 spot on the list of books most frequently challenged from 1990 to 2000. Copies of the book were burned by high schools in Kansas City in 1993. When the superintendent tried to remove the book from the library, a court case ensued, resulting in the verdict that a school cannot remove a book from library shelves unless it has been deemed "educationally unsuitable." It was added in that statement that Annie on My Mind was not educationally unsuitable.
Awards:
Nancy Garden was awarded the Margaret A. Edwards for Lifetime Achievement in 2003 for Annie on My Mind. The book itself has received glowing reviews from literary magazines, journals, and book reviewers.
Summary:
Written in 1982, this wonderful novel details the friendship and relationship between Liza Winthrop and Annie Kenyon. Liza goes to a private school in Brooklyn, and Annie goes to a shabby public school, yet when the two meet in the Met, they become friends. Their feelings move beyond friendship, and when their relationship is discovered by Liza's school, it has consequences. Annie on My Mind is a classic book in young adult literature, and it is engaging, well written, and poignant.
Controversy:
The book holds the #48 spot on the list of books most frequently challenged from 1990 to 2000. Copies of the book were burned by high schools in Kansas City in 1993. When the superintendent tried to remove the book from the library, a court case ensued, resulting in the verdict that a school cannot remove a book from library shelves unless it has been deemed "educationally unsuitable." It was added in that statement that Annie on My Mind was not educationally unsuitable.
Awards:
Nancy Garden was awarded the Margaret A. Edwards for Lifetime Achievement in 2003 for Annie on My Mind. The book itself has received glowing reviews from literary magazines, journals, and book reviewers.
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