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Author Topic: In the News (with pictures & videos)  (Read 83770 times)

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Offline Robyn Jodie

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Re: In the news
« Reply #180 on: May 23, 2017, 12:41:58 AM »
Any time a politician says he is doing something "to protect the children," hang on tightly to your wallet and your civil rights; you can be sure he is after one or the other.


Offline Betty

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I Am Jazz returns June 28
« Reply #181 on: May 30, 2017, 05:05:18 PM »
When the TLC reality show, "I Am Jazz" returns in June for its third season, audiences will watch 16-year-old Transgender Jennings learn to drive, date and break down from the pressures of being a transgender teen.

In the newly released trailer for the series, Jennings practices driving with her mom, admitting, “I really hate driving,” and also reveals to a friend that she is “for sure” open to dating transgender people.

But viewers will also see the teen confront numerous hardships in the new episodes.

The upcoming season will also document her interview with conservative TheBlaze host, Tomi Lahren.

I Am Jazz returns for season 3 on June 28 at 9 p.m. ET on TLC.

http://buffalobetties.com/news/IAJazz.mp4


Offline Betty

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London Tower Fire could have been prevented
« Reply #182 on: June 14, 2017, 05:09:08 PM »
Highly flammable cheap plastic cladding, materials, trim, & insulation burned like an oil fire. Tenants have been complaining of power surges that caused their appliances to smoke & burn. Witness claimed his refrigerator started smoking & exploded just before the fire. Workers were just working on gas lines earlier too.

Recent & past complaints were made by tenants & neighbors about the fire safety of the building. There were 120 family-sized apartments in the building. Estimates say there may have been 400-500 people living in there. Dozens are reported missing. Many of the tenants were poor, handicapped, disabled, elderly, or immigrants. So nobody will be sure how many are missing until they check the rental records & count the bones.

So why is this on our sissy news? We get more visitors from the London area than any other city in the world (The NYC area is a close second). With 400-500 people occupying that building, there's a good chance that a few are visitors to Betty's, & definitely a few of our visitors had family or friends in the building.

http://buffalobetties.com/news/LondonFire.mp4

*Note: To prevent more than one video or audio from playing at the same time, make sure your browser is not set to "auto-play" & so it doesn't try to play all the media on a page at the same time. With auto-play shut off, you click on the audio or video your want to play so you don't get a mess of stuff trying to load & play all at once.

Google how to shut off auto-play for your specific browser, if it came with it on, or accidentally got turned on by a bad app. Surfing is a lot easier & peaceful with it shut off, & it will block some audio/video ads too. You'll also save a lot of bandwidth & browser overloading it your browser isn't trying to load every audio & video on a page even if you don't want it. You can still view, hear, or download all the media you want by clicking on it instead.

Audio-syc problems can usually be corrected by backtracking or moving ahead a couple seconds in the video.

Offline Betty

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Ireland Gets First Openly Gay Prime Minister
« Reply #183 on: June 14, 2017, 09:11:20 PM »
When Leo Varadkar assumed power in Ireland on Wednesday, he blazed a trail of firsts: At 38 years old, the biracial son of an Indian immigrant father and Irish mother became the country's youngest-ever taoiseach, or prime minister.

He also became the first openly gay man elected to lead the Republic of Ireland, where homosexuality was illegal until just 24 years ago.

Now, as newly elected leader of the ruling Fine Gael party, Varadkar has delivered his first speech to Parliament and received his seal of office from the country's president, Michael D. Higgins.

"The government that I lead will not be one of left or right, because those old divisions don't comprehend the political challenges of today," Varadkar told lawmakers Wednesday.

Despite Varadkar's firsts, Irish media and voters are "not obsessed about his sexuality or his racial origins," The Guardian's Henry McDonald said. Rather, it's the center-right politician's policies that have been the subject of significant debate.

"Some people label him a Thatcherite," McDonald says. "They think he's a kind of a son of Margaret Thatcher, the British prime minister — right of center, very pro-free market, you know, in the style of Thatcher and Ronald Reagan."

These rightward-leaning economic stances stand in contrast with Varadkar's generally liberal positions on abortion rights and other social issues — and they drew criticism from Varadkar's rival for his party's leadership, Simon Coveney. Varadkar, who defeated Coveney earlier this month, appointed him the party's deputy on Tuesday.

Varadkar cemented his win Wednesday, with a confirmation parliamentary vote of 57 to 50, with 47 abstentions.

His predecessor, Enda Kenny, lauded the man he'd nominated as his replacement.

"As the country's youngest holder of this office, he speaks for a new generation of Irish women and Irish men," he said earlier this month, according to the BBC. "He represents a modern, diverse and inclusive Ireland and speaks for them like no other, an Ireland in which each person can fulfill their potential and live their dreams."

Offline Betty

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Roem May Become First Trans State Legislator
« Reply #184 on: June 14, 2017, 09:28:51 PM »
Roem won the Democratic nomination for Virgina State Legislator Tuesday after beating fellow Democrats Steve Jansen, Andrew Adams and Mansimran Kahlon. Now, her focus is on defeating Marshall who has served 13 terms in the legislature and was once called  transgender people “gender confused.” Marshall was also responsible for the Marshall-Newman Amendment which made a ban on same-sex marriage part of the Virginia state constitution until it was overturned by a federal judge.
 
Recently, Marshall has championed legislation that would bar transgender people from using the bathroom that conforms with their gender identity in government buildings. Roem sees her potential victory as a landmark event in transgender acceptance. “Let me make this really clear for you: When the people of the 13th District elect a transgender woman to replace the most anti-LGBT legislator in the South, it will be an act of certainty, and it will be a defining moment that will resonate across the country,” Roem said.
 
“Danica Roem is a leader in a national movement of trans candidates who are determined to become a voice for their community in the halls of power,” Aisha Moodie-Mills, CEO of Victory Fund, a political action committee dedicated to increasing the number of LGBT public officials in government, said. “This historic primary win sets up a general election battle where voters will choose between ‘Bigot Bob’ Marshall—the most anti-LGBTQ member of the Virginia state legislature—or Danica, a proud trans woman who is committed to representing all people in her district. I am confident voters will choose leadership over divisiveness and make Danica the first out trans candidate to win and serve in a state legislature.”
 
Virginia voters will have the opportunity to elect Roem on November 7th.

Offline Betty

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Trans Teachers
« Reply #185 on: June 15, 2017, 02:04:47 PM »
Growing up, Kelly Jenkins spent his spare time playing sports. He was an all-star player on the baseball team at his school in the mountains of east Tennessee. And sometimes, he wore lipstick to practice.

As he grew up, Jenkins felt like he wanted to become a teacher.

"Everybody told me it was a horrible idea," Jenkins remembers. "They said, 'Nobody will ever hire you as a transgender woman.' "

Transgender students have been in the spotlight this year – from President Trump's decision to rescind rules aimed at protecting them, to the Texas legislature battling over a bathroom bill.

There has been less focus, though, on how school can be a difficult place for transgender teachers.

When Jenkins finished college, he picked the most masculine profession he could imagine: firefighting.

He hoped that by battling blazes he'd somehow convince himself that he wasn't transgender. That didn't happen. Instead, Jenkins learned that his favorite part of the job was doing fire safety presentations for kids at schools.

Eventually, Jenkins transitioned to a woman and decided to become a teacher, started using female pronouns and taking hormones. Jenkins knew that she had to be stealth about her gender identity, presenting as a man at work and a woman at home.

"I didn't tell anybody anything," Jenkins recalls in talking about the start of her career more than a decade ago at Knox County Schools in Tennessee.

However, a few months into teaching, Jenkins confided in a coworker. "She went to my principal the next day and told him."

When it came time for the district to renew her contract, Jenkins was not rehired. "They said, 'We're not hiring you because you are transgender,' " Jenkins says.

In a statement, Knox County Schools did not comment on Jenkins's specific situation. However, officials said the district is an equal opportunity employer, which does not discriminate based on sex. The statement did not mention gender.

Experts say it's hard to know exactly how many transgender teachers there are in the country because they often don't disclose their status, fearing discrimination. Across the country, estimates show less than one percent of the population identifies as transgender.

Jenkins says over the next few years a pattern emerged: get a new job, then someone finds out, and — within the year — her contract isn't renewed.

"In some of my classes, like half of my kids were pulled out."

Jenkins says it wasn't just the parents who were concerned that she was transgender. Her colleagues stopped including her in staff meetings.

"It felt like walking into silence," she says. "And the one thing that made it all bearable was the students."

But, it was ultimately too much, and Jenkins left teaching.

"I delivered pizzas for a living, with a bachelor's in forestry and a postgraduate certificate in education."


In Georgia, Nathan Williams taught high school English for more than a decade. Williams always wanted to become Natalie, but one big thing stood in the way.

"I love teaching," Williams says. "And the idea of losing that was so scary."

After years of deliberating and working up the courage, Williams started taking hormones and — like Jenkins — presented as male at school and female at home.

She says she rarely ventures out of her home. Worried about her safety as a transgender woman, she limits outings to the necessary errands. But, one weekend, Williams decided to make a quick trip to a nearby cosmetics store.

She walked in – wearing a dress and makeup – and spotted one of her students across the store.

"She came up to me and I was like, 'Well...uh...' " Williams remembers stuttering, until she managed to get out a question: "Does this freak you out?"

"And without missing a beat, she just said, 'No, you always told us to be who we really are.' "

Soon after, Williams told her school. Although she kept her job, she says she never feels totally secure.

She says some of her colleagues avoid eye contact when passing in the school hallway. "They don't look at me. They turn away if I try and talk with them."

And parents call up with concerns. Williams says she's been summoned to the principal's office four times in the past year and a half. In her ten years teaching as a male, she says she was never called down.

Still, Natalie Williams says it's worth it. She's hoping students see her as a role model.

Kelly Jenkins has found that sense of fulfillment, too. She moved 900 miles away to find it.

The hallways are quiet and the chairs tucked in at Wellesley Middle School outside of Boston. It's early morning – well before the students arrive – and Jenkins is peering into a bucket of dissection frogs.

"So, are these leopard frogs?" Jenkins asks. She's a teaching assistant here, hoping to get licensed soon, prepping for a seventh grade frog dissection.

Carefully picking up a frog, Jenkins inspects it. "They're going to open it up and check the tongue out, which it still has. That's always good!"

When the halls fill with students, Jenkins is busy racing between classes and working with different students. One boy is eager to say he's a big fan of Ms. Jenkins.

David Lussier, superintendent of Wellesley Public Schools, says that Jenkins's young fan is one among many. "Everything that I've heard has been very positive."

He says he hasn't received any pushback from parents or community members. His explanation for this is simple: "First and foremost, Kelly is an excellent educator."

Jenkins has now been teaching in Wellesley for two years. Lussier says she wasn't hired for being transgender, but she has helped the district become more open. "Having Kelly's guidance on that has been a huge help to us."

He says this is particularly true as the district accommodates students who are questioning their gender. Jenkins has spoken with classes, launched a local TV show and mentored students.

Mace, who is now in high school, is one of those students. "It's really nice because it's not really easy to find other trans people out in the world."

For Jenkins, this is the first time in her teaching career that she's not dreading the end of the school year.

"I pinch myself because I've never got to taste this. I get to go home and walk my dogs and not worry, 'Am I going to be fired?' "

Kelly Jenkins says she's saving up in the hopes of getting licensed as a science teacher in her new home state.

Offline Betty

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Re: In the News (with pictures & videos)
« Reply #186 on: June 15, 2017, 02:11:14 PM »
The Israeli Embassy marked LGBT Pride Month with a reception for Jewish and Israeli activists and leaders.

About 100 people attended the event, which featured an address by Talleen Abu Hana, an Arab Christian from Nazareth who won the first Miss Trans Israel beauty pageant in 2016.

The embassy also paid tribute to the 49 victims of last year’s massacre at the gay nightclub Pulse in Orlando, Florida.

“Just as the noxious fumes of anti-Semitism ultimately poison all of society, so too hatred towards the LGBT community threatens all of us,” Ron Dermer, the Israeli ambassador to Washington, said in brief remarks.

He also asserted that Israel is the sole country in the Middle East with the “values that progressives are supposed to champion,” referring to Israel’s legal and popular support for gay rights.

Abu Hana spoke about her experience as a transgender woman in Israel. After winning the beauty pageant, she was runner-up at the Miss Trans Star International Pageant and a contestant on Israel’s “Big Brother.”

As a boy growing up in Nazareth, Abu Hana grappled with an intense internal conflict between “body and soul,” she said. When she showed an interest in women’s clothes and makeup, her father lashed out at her.

“Transforming from the most beloved child to the one everyone hated … I was lost and started thinking of killing myself,” she said.

Abu Hana moved to Tel Aviv, where the LGBT community is known to be strong and accepting. One evening while hanging out with new friends, a transgender woman was talking about her transition.

“I didn’t get what she was talking about,” Abu Hana recalled.

Another male friend said, “She’s transgender, just like you.”

Abu Hana was taken aback and insisted she was not. The male friend then took her face in his hands and said, “You are going to be a woman and a beautiful one.”

In an interview before the Pride event, Talleen emphasized the importance of moving to Tel Aviv, where the support she found as a Christian and an Arab facilitated her transition.

Israel’s universal health service covers the costs of sex-reassignment surgery.

“The law is on your side,” Talleen said, referring to the ease of changing one’s gender and name on government-issued documents.

After winning Miss Trans in 2016, Abu Hana quickly rose to fame in Israel, where she is often mobbed by fans eager to take a selfie. In addition to modeling, she speaks to transgender youth at shelters in Tel Aviv and most recently at Casa Ruby, an LGBTQ community center in Washington. She said she is humbled to be “an ambassador for peace between one’s soul [and] one’s body.”

Abu Hana now lives with her boyfriend, who she met before her transition on a night of dancing at a Tel Aviv club.

“I’m lucky to be an Israeli,” she said. “Being an Israeli means being truly free.”

Offline Robyn Jodie

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Re: In the News (with pictures & videos)
« Reply #187 on: June 15, 2017, 03:44:52 PM »
Autoplay Off??
Ran into a major problem on Youtube with autoplay off.  Clicking on a video no longer worked -- I had to click it, click stop, click it again, or else do a page-reload after the video came up.  So I am back to "autoplay on" and shut off the sound (nice of Firefox to provide that option in tabbed mode).

Offline Betty

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Re: In the News (with pictures & videos)
« Reply #188 on: June 15, 2017, 05:05:31 PM »
That's odd. I have autoplay off in my Firefox, & everything works great... surfing is so much better. I use the Pale Moon browser over 90% of the time though, it's a more streamlined, & more secure version of Firefox, with a lot of the useless fluff removed. But I use Firefox as a hack tool, to download audio/video or streams from sites, & the news where they don't let you download & save the media on the page. So the media must function or I can't use Firefox.

Here's my Autoplay settings for Firefox in about:config

Offline Betty

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Re: In the News (with pictures & videos)
« Reply #189 on: June 15, 2017, 05:13:58 PM »
Here's my autoplay settings for Pale Moon. Almost, but not quite the same thing.

 

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