6.23.13 A bit of theater intermission fun...
Jun 22, 2013 23:12:56 GMT -5
Post by Q3 on Jun 22, 2013 23:12:56 GMT -5
The image in the banner was created by Animated and posted on Adamtopia in May 2013 accompanied by this comment: “So from Idol USA to Idol China... so Adam is on a plane right now to go to Shanghai? Wasn't he there recently. Wow , Adam is global .. I need Google Earth to mark his wanderings...
TITANIUM”
Adam Lambert Help @adamlamberthelp
Screencap by new vine video from Adam Lambert - @edenespinosa and I are pro theatre goers... vine.co/v/huxPTPBaEPI pic.twitter.com/gYDWRUa7f7
For a bit of fun….
click here: @edenespinosa: Intermission Adam Lambert vine.co/v/huxpvFL3iIw
then click here: Adam Lambert @adamlambert @edenespinosa and I are pro theatre goers... vine.co/v/huxPTPBaEPI
Here are the vine video on YouTube...
Vine video FT. Adam - Intermission Adam Lambert
Vine link: https://https://vine.co/v/huxpvFL3iIw
Adam's new Vine - @edenespinosa and I are pro theatre goers
Vine link: vine.co/v/huxPTPBaEPI
*****
Q3 note: This article is a bit off topic for Adamtopia but I read it and was struck by this perspective. I have certainly thought about the similarities between the first for gender equality and gay rights, but I honestly never thought about the need for openness about many issues facing women and men – abortion, abuse, bigotry, hate and most evils live in the shadows. Like mold and slime they die in the sunlight.
I thought many members would also be interested in this article.
I thought many members would also be interested in this article.
The gay rights movement’s key advantage
Gay causes feature public, familiar faces because so many have come out. Abortion groups don't yet have that luxury
By Kerry Eleveld Friday, Jun 21, 2013 03:20 PM EST
In the cascade of comparisons made recently between abortion and same-sex marriage — and the specter of a political backlash arising from a Supreme Court ruling advancing gay marriage — one glaring distinction between the two issues has been largely overlooked by prognosticators: the power of coming out.
Sixty percent of Americans now say they have a close friend or family member who is gay, an 11 percent jump from 2010. In the 1990s, most Americans said exactly the opposite.
Essentially, a progressive societal shift has taken place — what was once considered taboo has now become polite dinner table conversation in a good number of American households. And while civil rights advancements almost always provoke some societal tension, this trend toward a humanization of the subject may largely insulate the LGBT equality movement from the setbacks that have sometimes befallen the reproductive rights movement.
Not everyone agrees with the premise — often raised in association with Justice Ruth Bader Ginsberg — that the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision legalizing certain abortions was a galvanizing moment that fueled the antiabortion movement. Most notably, Linda Greenhouse, the famed Supreme Court reporter for the New York Times, and Yale University Law Professor Reva Siegel, have made a consistent and strong case against that notion.
As they recently noted, “running through commentary” on the two marriage cases, Hollingsworth v. Perry (the Proposition 8 case) and United States v. Windsor (the Defense of Marriage Act case), “are continual references to Roe v. Wade. ‘Watch out! Don’t go there! Look what happened 40 years ago when the Supreme Court granted women the right to abortion.’”
In their writings, Greenhouse and Siegel conclude that a strong antiabortion effort driven by societal movements, religious institutions and political parties was already in the making at the time of the 1973 ruling. But regardless of whether one ascribes to the Roe-backlash theory or the Greenhouse-Siegel premise, public acknowledgment and visibility of the people affected by the laws remains a factor in the politics of the reproductive rights movement.
It was an Achilles’ heel that seemed as obvious to the visionaries at Ms. magazine as it still does to many reproductive advocates today. Ms. debuted in 1972 with a groundbreaking petition in which 53 U.S. women – including Gloria Steinem – declared “We Have Had Abortions” and encouraged other women to join their “campaign for honesty and freedom.” The magazine resurrected the campaign with more than 5,000 signatories in 2006 while activists like Jennifer Baumgardner co-produced the 2005 film “I Had an Abortion,” exploring the varying stories of 11 women ranging from 21 to 85 who’d had abortions.
“[T]he I Had an Abortion Project,” Baumgardner wrote, “is most concerned with creating cultural space for women and men to speak honestly about their lives and their abortion experiences, however complicated they may be.”
Likewise, the fall 2006 issue of Ms. observed, “if a multitude of women step forward publicly, and more and more continue to join us, we will transform the public debate.”
Despite these efforts, women who have had abortions remain less visible to those around them. Although the Guttmacher Institute estimates that 30 percent of U.S. women – or about 15 percent of the total population — will have had abortions by the age of 45, a smaller number feel comfortable publicizing their experiences in the way that LGBT activists have increasingly done over the past several decades.
A 2012 survey of 641 women conducted by University of California research analyst Kate Cockrill found that 64 percent of the women said they’d “withheld information about my abortion to someone I’m close to,” and 45 percent said they’d “lied to someone I’m close to about my abortion.”
“Privacy is very important to women who have abortions,” Cockrill told Salon last year in an article reporting on antiabortion efforts to make public the names of those who have abortions as a way of dissuading women from having the procedure.
By contrast, being gay has become progressively less stigmatized and even increasingly celebrated as lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender activists have made a sustained push to press their case in the court of public opinion.
The first Pride Parade held in New York in 1970, just a couple of years before the Ms. effort, built on gay visibility efforts that had been launched on a smaller scale in the ’50s and ’60s – usually in the form of anti-discrimination rallies.
But the turning point for the movement in many ways arose from the horror of the AIDS epidemic of the ’80s and ’90s. “Silence = Death” became the motto of a generation of LGBT activists and eventually chants of “We’re here, we’re queer, get used to it!” rang through the streets wherever LGBT activists gathered.
Over the past seven years that I have reported on and written about the LGBT community, personal stories about the deleterious effects of inequality have dominated the media even as culture warriors continued to cast gays as a threat to society. Mainstream Americans faced a constant stream of heartbreaking stories about those who lost their careers under “don’t ask, don’t tell,” bullied gay youth who committed suicide, and same-sex couples who were sometimes kept from each other’s side at a hospital bed or have been separated by immigration laws that didn’t recognize their marriages.
All the while, people increasingly learned that these were the stories of their friends, neighbors, sisters and brothers. Over time, homosexuality has transitioned from the inanimate object it once was into the real-life stories of human beings. And while not everyone is ready for same-sex couples to marry, antigay activists will be hard-pressed to demonize those couples in the same way that antiabortion activists seem to still stigmatize abortions today.
Perry and Windsor will not be Roe if for no other reason than the fact that the plaintiffs in these cases have been anything but anonymous. Who could forget the image of Edith Windsor, the plaintiff in the case against DOMA, clad in a pink scarf, blowing kisses to the crowd as she descended down the steps of the Supreme Court following the arguments? Just like Windsor, Kris Perry, her family and her fellow plaintiffs in the case against Proposition 8 have a name and a face — and, in fact, have been the cornerstone of the cases intended to promote and protect their fundamentals rights.
Kerry Eleveld is a freelance writer, consultant and former White House correspondent for The Advocate.
Link to original article: www.salon.com/2013/06/21/gay_rights_has_an_edge_over_reproductive_rights_movement/singleton/
New Bluray version of the Queen 12/7 (2nd London night)
www.queenzone.com/forums/1350277/announce-queen-and-adam-lambert-hammersmith-july-12th-2012-blu-ray.aspx …
Upcoming Events
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June 29, 2013 Adam in concert in Orlando, Florida at Universal Studios Florida.
More info: www.orlandoinformer.com/universal/summer-concert-series-2013/
July 2, 2012 Adam performs in San Diego, CA, San Diego County State Fair
More info: www.sdfair.com/index.php?fuseaction=info.calendar&op=detail&pkid=1379&month=7&year=2013&calCatID=
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July 19, 2012 California Mid-State Fair concert 7:00PM PDT.
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Radio Links
More info: www.orlandoinformer.com/universal/summer-concert-series-2013/
July 2, 2012 Adam performs in San Diego, CA, San Diego County State Fair
More info: www.sdfair.com/index.php?fuseaction=info.calendar&op=detail&pkid=1379&month=7&year=2013&calCatID=
July 3, 2013: Adam performs at the AT&T Live Proud Concert. This concert is for people who won tickets and invited guests.
July 19, 2012 California Mid-State Fair concert 7:00PM PDT.
Purchase tickets here: ev12.evenue.net/cgi-bin/ncommerce3/SEGetEventList?groupCode=FAI&linkID=twvali-msf&RSRC=web&RDAT=msf
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Check out the ALH page for podcast of previous shows.
This is the only weekly Adam Lambert show in the world.
Energy Radio (UK) www.energymusicradio.co.uk/
Energy Music Radio @energy150778: The @adamlambert 1 hour long show starting 1st week of July on Energy Music Radio listen out for more details coming soon!!
Adamtopia News Thread
Adamtopia Daily News & Information thread is for discussing current news. Keep the news focused on Adam news. Please try to follow all the site guidelines. And most importantly, stay glittery and golden.
Birthday greetings may be posted on the first page of comments. After that, please post birthday greetings in the Member News Section or send a PM. Two members have been designated to post birthday greetings whenever they get here -- our Confectioner Extraordinaire (Reihmer) and our Humorist (soeulmate). Birthday thread: atop.proboards.com/board/10/birthday-greetings
Personal news and requests for advice should be posted in the Member News thread: atop.proboards.com/board/21/member-news-advice
Help Keep Adamtopia a Great Place
We don't have a lot of rules here but they are essential. Just as a reminder...
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The Adamtopia guidelines are quite simple. To be a member of Adamtopia...
1. You must be an Adam fan.
2. You must be respectful of other members. Feel free to express your opinion, but be glitterier and golden.
3. Strive to be funny, entertaining or informative when you post. Avoid posting something that has already been posted.
4. Never question anyone's right to post, the appropriateness of a topic or define the proper way for an Adam fan or Adamtopia Member to behave.
Let the moderators do their job.
More rules will be added if the need arises but, if everyone follows these rules, we will not need a lot of rules.
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Happy Birthday
glamagal2, jekku, malcolm and marge!!
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