Friday, November 7, 2014

#ProudofEdgars


(via J.M.G.)
"Latvian Foreign Minister Edgars Rinkēvičs announced Thursday that he was gay, breaking a barrier in Eastern Europe’s socially conservative political arena. The declaration, made via a cheerful Twitter posting, immediately gave gay rights advocates a prominent voice in post-Soviet Eastern Europe. The region — where openly gay public figures are a rarity — has significantly lagged behind the United States and Western Europe in its acceptance of same-sex relationships. The announcement came less than two months before Latvia assumes the European Union’s rotating presidency on Jan. 1, giving Rinkevics an even higher-profile platform from which to push for more tolerance for same-sex relationships."

The Advocate's Person of the Year: Little Father

Driving the governmental, religious, and popular disdain for gays and lesbians, the Russian president became the single greatest threat to LGBTs in the world in 2014.
“Imagine a boy who dreams of being a KGB officer, when everyone else wants to be a cosmonaut.”
This quote appears early in The Man Without a Face, Masha Gessen’s 2012 biography of Vladimir Putin. It’s as succinct and illuminating a characterization of the Russian president as you’re likely to find. The KGB, after all, perfected the thuggery, espionage, and aimless bureaucracy that are hallmarks of Putin’s regime. The agency’s crackdown on dissidents offered a blueprint for Putin’s own strongman excesses. That he aspired to such a career as a child tells us something useful about his psychopathology: This is a man hardwired to intimidate.
Nowhere is this tendency more apparent than in his crusade against LGBT Russians. Since winning a third term in 2012, Putin has become ever more autocratic, and his antigay ideology ever more extreme. In June 2013, he signed the infamous antigay propaganda bill that criminalizes the “distribution of information…aimed at the formation among minors of nontraditional sexual attitudes,” with nontraditional meaning anything other than heterosexual. Individual violators are fined anywhere between $120 and $150, while NGOs and corporations can incur fines as high as $30,000. International outrage flared in the months before the Sochi Olympics, in response to which Putin reassured the gay and lesbian community they had nothing to fear as long as they left Russia’s children in peace.
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Read the full article here:  The Advocate's Person of the Year: Vladimir Putin

Wednesday, November 5, 2014

Picture of the Day - 218

Tequila Sunrise
"Tequila Sunrise" by Tomais Ashdene

If you wish to see more of Tomais' photography, please visit his Flickr photostream here.

Damn!

The Democrats were slaughtered in yesterdays midterm elections in the U.S.A. The Republicans won a majority in both the house and the senate.

The above picture comes from the first page of Huffington Post, via J.M.G.

Damn, damn, damn! And did I say damn?

Tuesday, November 4, 2014

Picture of the Day - 217

Rainy days
"Rainy days" by Priscila Olrich

If you wish to see more of Priscila's photography, please visit her Flickr photostream here.

No Hate Speech Movement


The Council of Europe is an international organisation in Strasbourg which comprises 47 countries of Europe. It was set up to promote democracy and protect human rights and the rule of law in Europe.
"Young People Combating Hate Speech Online is a project being run by the Council of Europe’s youth sector between 2012 and 2014. It aims to combat racism and discrimination, as expressed online as hate speech, by mobilizing young people and youth organisations to recognize and act against such human rights violations. The project is a tribute to youth participation and co-management. It was initiated by the youth representatives in the Joint Council on Youth, the committee which brings together youth leaders belonging of the Advisory Council on Youth and the governmental youth representatives of the European Steering Committee on Youth. The project is therefore being carried out by young people with the support of governmental youth institutions.
The campaign is not designed to limit freedom of expression online. Neither is it about everyone being nice to each other online. It is against hate speech online in all its forms, including those that most affect young people, such as cyber-bullying and cyber-hate. The campaign focuses on human rights education, youth participation and media literacy.
The goals of the campaign are:
  • To raise awareness about hate speech online and the risks it poses for democracy and individual young people.
  • To promote media and Internet literacy.
  • To support young people in standing up for human rights, online and offline.
  • To reduce the levels of acceptance of online hate speech.
  • To mobilise, train and create a network of online youth activists to defend human rights.
  • To map hate speech online and develop tools to combat it.
  • To support and show solidarity to people and groups targeted by hate speech online.
  • To advocate the development of and consensus on European policy instruments combating hate speech.
  • To develop youth participation and citizenship online."
Read more about this campaign: http://www.nohatespeechmovement.org/

Tipped by the blog Vanadis ser på saken

Sleep



One of our present Western work-culture's main characteristics is that we are all living under the dictatorship of the early birds. I'm not a worse person because I need to sleep longer in the mornings.