On the one hand, I wasn't there and you weren't there and none of us know what happened. On the other hand, I sure do travel enough and have had enough weird and slightly unnerving experiences to find this to be completely plausible. This sort of thing is what you get when you have power in the hands of people without enough training in a fear-based culture where no one takes a bloody civics class anymore.
Houston elects openly gay mayor. CNN notes she "has never shied away from, nor made an issue of, her sexual orientation." This sentence makes me want to punch people in the face.
You can order Idol Musings now. I know the prices are high, and I haven't got my contributor's copy yet so I cant give you my theoretically objective opinion (about a volume I have five essay in), but one factor in the price is certainly that the publisher is in NZ. Anyway, there you go. I'm in a thing. Buy a book.
Last night we went to parties for marchek and hofnarr. Both were totally excellent and I had more fun than I usually do at such things (parties and I aren't always so good for all sorts of reasons). That said, 2009 still managed to demonstrate that it's Not Done With Us Yet (I'm glossing over what went down here, because it's not my story to tell, but it cast a long shadow). So while I may have started working on my end of the year recap, I'm probably going to wait right until the end of the year to post it. A decade thing might happen sooner.
Are you a university student who wants to do journalism in Africa? Win a trip.
What irked me in the Houston article was the mention that she was the first openly gay mayor of a major city in the US. *ahem*
I live in Portland, Oregon, and our mayor, Sam Adams, is gay, and so is Gavin Newsome of San Francisco. Are we not major anymore? I missed the memo. Not to mention the previous governor of New Jersey, who is gay even if he was closeted at the time, and the mayor of one of our smaller cities who is trans. I'm sure there are many many more that I'm not recalling at the minute, but really, would it hurt them to do five minutes of research?
no subject
Date: 2009-12-17 04:41 am (UTC)I live in Portland, Oregon, and our mayor, Sam Adams, is gay, and so is Gavin Newsome of San Francisco. Are we not major anymore? I missed the memo. Not to mention the previous governor of New Jersey, who is gay even if he was closeted at the time, and the mayor of one of our smaller cities who is trans. I'm sure there are many many more that I'm not recalling at the minute, but really, would it hurt them to do five minutes of research?
no subject
Date: 2009-12-17 04:43 am (UTC)