GOP Presses State Bills Limiting Gay Rights Before Supreme Court Ruling

ATLANTA (AP) — A Texas lawmaker would strip the salaries from government officials who honor same-sex marriage licenses.

Other states would protect government officials who opt out of performing gay nuptials. In Georgia, where lawmakers are considering a bill that critics fear could allow businesses to discriminate against gay customers, the former head of the country’s largest Protestant denomination recently urged lawmakers to reign in “erotic liberty.”

The U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments in April and could decide by June whether gay couples can marry, and national opinion polls show U.S. voters increasingly unopposed to gay rights. Yet lawmakers in a handful of states are backing longshot legislation targeting gay rights, doubling down on the culture wars. Most, if not all, of the efforts are led by Republicans.

The bills are more political theatre than serious policy. Few seem to have widespread support among lawmakers, and senior Republicans are not adopting these efforts as their own. In Georgia, well-funded business groups oppose them.

Still, the legislation remains popular with vocal and organized voting blocks in states or parts of the states where they’ve been proposed. But any political points they score could come at a price.

If the bills’ backers manage to force a sharp debate in coming weeks, and the Supreme Court rules in favor of gay marriage a few months later, supporters of the bills would be exposed to criticism that they’ve been fighting for a fringe issue.

“On no issue during my 40-year career have opinions moved as rapidly as they have on the issue of the morality of gay relationships and ultimately gay marriage,” said Whit Ayres, a Republican consultant for Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, Tennessee Gov. Bill Haslam and the National Rifle Association. “When you have conservative organizations like the U.S. military and the Boy Scouts openly accepting gay members, the debate is close to being over.”

Not in Georgia. In a devotional delivered to newly convened lawmakers, the former president of the Southern Baptist Convention urged them to defend the freedom to act on religious beliefs, though he stopped short of endorsing legislation that supporters say would do precisely that.

“We are a living in a society that is on a collision course with a choice between erotic liberty and religious liberty,” the Rev. Bryant Wright told lawmakers. “… Your role in government is about restraining sin.”

Georgia politicians rejected tougher legislation last year, avoiding a showdown that occurred over a similar bill in Arizona, where Gov. Jan Brewer vetoed a measure the Republican-controlled Statehouse had adopted.

This year, the toughest measure comes in Texas, where Republican state Rep. Cecil Bell has proposed stripping state and local officials of their salaries if they issue or honor same-sex marriage licenses. In 2005, Texas voters approved an amendment to the state constitution banning gay marriage, but a federal judge struck it down last year. The judge stayed his ruling until an appeals court could consider the issue.

Republican lawmakers in South Carolina, Virginia and Utah have proposed giving government officials or wedding celebrants the right to opt out of gay nuptials if participating violates their religious beliefs.

In Georgia, the debate flared this month when Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed fired the city’s fire chief after learning the chief self-published a book describing homosexuality as a perversion. Reed, a Democrat, said the fire chief never got city permission to publish the book, but the fire chief said he did.

The Washington-based Family Research Council and others have used the firing to rally support for the latest legislation in Georgia, though it’s unclear the proposed law would have made a difference. The legislation would forbid the state government from infringing on a person’s religious beliefs unless the government can prove it has a compelling interest.

Unlike legislation in other states, the bill in Georgia makes no reference to same-sex relationships, though critics fear it would allow businesses to discriminate against gay customers. Other states have passed similar acts.

Republican Rep. Sam Teasley, the bill’s sponsor, denied the bill is about gay marriage.

“This is a modest protection for people of faith,” he said.

The Georgia Chamber of Commerce says it will oppose any bill that allows discrimination. Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal, a Republican, voted for a federal version of the legislation in Congress, though it was before gay marriage began in the United States.

“It’s not a bill that I’m going to be pushing on my own initiative, but it is one that I have sentiment for,” Deal said.

The Republican speaker of Georgia’s House of Representatives, Rep. David Ralston, has signaled his skepticism.

“This is obviously something that was important to the drafters of the constitution because they put religious freedom in the constitution,” Ralston told reporters. “I want to know what this bill does that the constitution doesn’t do.”

___

Associated Press reporters David Crary in New York, Will Weissert in Austin, Texas, and Seanna Adcox in Columbia, South Carolina, contributed to this report. Follow Ray Henry on Twitter: http://twitter.com/rhenryAP. Follow Kathleen Foody at http://twitter.com/katiefoody.

8 Critical Facts About The State Of Transgender America​

In May, “Orange is the New Black” transgender star Laverne Cox appeared on the cover of Time. Earlier this month, Amazon’s “Transparent,” which focuses on a family with a transgender father, won the Golden Globe for best comedy series. And on Tuesday night, for the first time ever, a president said the word “transgender” in the State of the Union address:

Achieving Inclusive Growth in the Digital Age: A Global Imperative

All around us, we can see how digital technologies are transforming the economies in which we live, the cities we inhabit, the way we learn, and the lives we lead. Experience shows that growth and change in the digital age are faster and more pervasive than ever before, affecting more people at greater speed than was possible with previous generations of technology.

However, as the global economic recovery continues, a concern has begun to emerge in countries across the world. It’s that while growth — supported by digital technologies — has returned, many people feel the resulting benefits are passing them by, and failing to directly affect them and their families. The underlying risk is that exclusion from digital advances may extend into exclusion from social and economic opportunities, leaving millions of people effectively locked out of the next phase of global growth and development.

In my view, ensuring that growth in the digital age benefits populations across the world is one of the biggest issues facing mankind today. It’s also a challenge that I believe global business and governments have a responsibility to address. Success will demand sustained effort from many parties worldwide, and while we at PwC don’t pretend to have all the answers, we’re determined to play our part. And our shared goal should be to create a world where everyone has the opportunity to benefit from the digital age on more equal terms.

It’s an objective that’s easy to state, but whose boundaries are hard to define — owing to the vast array of elements it involves. From microfinance to mobile communications in emerging countries; from eHealthcare to mobile banking; from smart cities to government services delivered over the web — all these components will play a role. But arguably the most important factor in creating equal access to digital opportunities is education, a space where technology is opening up new possibilities and capabilities by the day.

This is an area that we at PwC take extremely seriously — and where we’re devoting substantial time and resources worldwide. Take the US, where youth education is a huge issue. In 2012 our US firm launched ‘Earn Your Future,’ a multi-year US$160 million investment consisting of US$60 million in cash and one million service hours, devoting the time and talents of our 39,000 people across the US to benefit more than 2.5 million students and educators.

This is just one of many educational initiatives that we’re undertaking. And a common focus of these efforts is around finding new and better ways to harness, apply and fund digital technologies in education — and then to carry the benefits forward as students graduate into the workforce. With this latter goal in mind, our global ‘Adapt to Survive’ project has united the two most comprehensive sources of talent data in the world — the real-time behaviors drawn from LinkedIn’s 277 million members, and employer information from PwC’s Saratoga database of people and performance metrics — to create a ‘Talent Adaptability Score’ that evaluates a country’s ability to match talent with opportunity.

So, what have our efforts to improve access to education and opportunity taught us? I’d like to highlight three insights. The first is that the next step in the evolution of education will be the weaving-in of technology into the social fabric of the educational process, with all stakeholders — teachers, administration and parents — fully committed to improving access and outcomes through digital integration. This advance is more imminent in some countries than others, but needs to be pursued everywhere.

The second insight is around the resources needed to enable digital progress. As my ongoing conversations with people across education and technology consistently underline, the full power of digital technology to support learning and equality of opportunity can only be realized if sufficient investment is forthcoming. And this investment requires a clear and robust business case. So an ability to measure the tangible impacts of investments in education — including the benefits both for business and also for society as a whole — is critical. Again, this is an area where we’re actively developing new tools and approaches.

Third, as digitization continues to advance, the working environment that today’s students will join is changing radically and irreversibly — heralding sweeping change in employment opportunities and major dilemmas for employers. For example, millennial recruits are ambitious, tech-savvy and self-confident, expecting to advance rapidly to senior management positions. But their older colleagues are working longer. So, as companies grow and opportunities emerge, who’ll get the top jobs? Organizations need to work out how they’ll answer such questions.

As the world faces up to a new era of digitally-enabled growth, it’s entering uncharted territory — and the danger is that the benefits will flow to the few at the expense of the many. In my view, such a world would be neither fair nor sustainable. Across education and a host of other fields, let’s work together to ensure that growth in the digital age is inclusive — for the good of us all.

This post is part of a series produced by The Huffington Post and The World Economic Forum to mark the Forum’s Annual Meeting 2015 (in Davos-Klosters, Switzerland, Jan. 21-24). The Forum’s Strategic Partner community comprises a select group of leading global companies representing diverse regions and industries that have been selected for their alignment with the Forum’s commitment to improving the state of the world. Read all the posts in the series here.

Victor Thompson, Man Whose Head Is Covered In Patriots Tattoos, Wanted On Narcotics Charge

Wonder if this guy’s pride is currently deflated.

Victor Thompson, whose head is thoroughly covered in New England Patriots tattoos, had an arrest warrant issued by a Florida judge after failing to show up in court on Thursday, The Smoking Gun reports.

victor thompson mug

The 46-year-old, who is facing a charge of felony narcotics possession, had also skipped out on a hearing about the case on January 8.

Thompson’s tats — which include the brand name of Tom Brady’s helmet plastered across his forehead — have helped him make headlines before.

Thompson was arrested in St. Petersburg, Florida in September for possession of Spice, or synthetic marijuana. Thompson allegedly told cops he thought it was OK to have the fake weed because it was legal in his home state of New Hampshire and he had only been in Florida for three weeks, according to WMUR.

However, synthetic marijuana has actually been illegal in New Hampshire since 2011. He pleaded “no contest” to the charge in early January and had to pay a $118 fine. The synthetic marijuana case is not related to his present charges of felony narcotics possession.

The hardcore Patriots fan also appeared on TV back in 2008 to talk about his ink:

“I was watching the game, and I said, ‘I want my head to look like Tom Brady’s helmet,'” he told WMUR-TV.

But seriously, go Seahawks.

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Rebuilding The House of Mirth: A Blog for Edith Wharton's Birthday

Singing about marriage, two of Steven Sondheim’s characters in A Little Night Music condemn it for inflicting so much pain: “Every day a little death….every day a little sting.”

I felt a bit like like that in college, not because I was married, but because I was an English major. Time after time, I’d find a book I was reading and enjoying stung me because of an anti-Semitic portrait. There was Meyer Wolfsheim in The Great Gatsby, a Jewish antiques dealer in The Golden Bowl, and many more, too many to remember, but I met them at every turn in English and American books.

I understood that the authors were products of their society and a western culture that was ingrained with Jew-hatred, but it still pushed me out of the book the way a plot implausibility can make you lose faith in a movie. I don’t remember ever not finishing a book that had a Jewish stereotype or slur, but I’d continue reading under a cloud.

Perhaps most disturbing of all for me was Edith Wharton’s The House of Mirth. I had first read her Pulitzer-prize winner The Age of Innocence and fallen in love, so I worked my way devotedly through her oeuvre in paperback. The House of Mirth was my favorite then and still is now. It’s a stunning book about the vanity of human wishes and the damage a superficial culture can inflict on those who won’t play by its rules. Reading it for the first time in my senior year at Fordham’s Lincoln Center campus, I was in awe: Wharton displayed an uncanny understanding of the power of shame to control behavior and crush hope. The novel was so beautifully written, so witty and sharp-edged, such an indictment of Gilded Age New York.

2015-01-24-220pxHouse_of_Mirth_1.jpg
(Lily Bart from an illustration of the original edition)

And very unpleasant to read-as a Jew. Every time the Jewish financier Simon Rosedale appeared in the book, I winced. He was showy, loud, vulgar, spoke bad English, and came off as a buffoon when he wasn’t insidious. Gentiles loved his money but rightly despised him, and his eye was always on the main chance.

Wharton actually pays special attention to his eyes the first time he appears, telling us he had “small sidelong eyes which gave him the air of appraising people as if they were bric-a-brac.” How ironic that Wharton’s contempt for Jews is projected onto him, turning him into someone for whom others are merely items to assess and purchase.

Simon Rosedale does show a less mercenary side, but it’s always connected to his fierce drive to get ahead by any means necessary. In the same way that assertive women today are seen by some people as bitches, Rosedale wanting success the way any other American might is condemned as vulgar and almost disgusting.

I hadn’t written much fiction of my own at the time, but in the following years, Jewish themes would predominate. I often found myself returning to writers who inspired me in college, writers like Henry James and Lawrence Durrell who were hardly philo-Semitic, and yes, Edith Wharton. The sting became duller each time, but it never went away.

And then back around 2007 or so, perhaps because I’d been re-reading Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead, an idea hit me. What if I did a Stoppard? What if I told Edith Wharton’s story in The House of Mirth from Rosedale’s perspective, entered his mind, his past, his dreams, his fears? What if I made him a person, in other words, and not a stereotype?

Rosedale in Love was born, and it bore me along with it on massive amounts of reading about The Gilded Age and turn-of-the-century New York, all of it deepening my appreciation of what Wharton had accomplished in the rest of her novel. And helping me let go of my regrets for the ways in which Wharton had lost the chance to make Simon Rosedale a real human being.

Because she left me a whole world to explore and whole book to write: Rosedale in Love.

2015-01-24-rosedale300.jpg

At Davos, Technology CEOs Discuss the Digital Economy

Davos: One of the most anticipated discussions at this year’s meeting was the plenary session on The Digital Economy. Given that I wrote the book that coined that term 20 years ago, I attended with great interest.

On the panel were Google chairman Eric Schmidt, Vodafone CEO Vittorio Colao, Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg, and Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella.

Unfortunately, the group didn’t really explore the state of the digital economy, but rather centered on all the great things technology is doing around the world. The discussion started on this bright note when the moderator asked whether each panelist was optimistic or pessimistic about the impact of technology on society. To this group the question was a rhetorical one, and predictably all panelists expressed great enthusiasm for what has been accomplished and the great strides the future holds in store.

They said that digital technologies used in areas from education to farming to healthcare have transformed communities and raised living standards around the world. As broadband capacity is rolled out to the four corners of the world, standards of living will increase even more.
Facebook’s Sandberg talked about two brothers in a village in India where they could not go to hospitals, but once they got access to the Internet their lives improved. “There are many other stories and therefore I am optimistic. Technology is both creator and destroyer of jobs but I am a huge optimist,” she said.

Sandberg did warn that without the proper measures, there is no guarantee that the benefits of technology would be distributed evenly. Policy-makers must take action to promote inclusion, otherwise women will not get the same opportunities. She noted that currently more than half the Internet’s content is in English and that women typically receive access to smartphones later than men.

During the session I frequently felt that that neither the optimistic statements of hope or anecdotes of those whose lives have improved adequately dealt with the challenge of the digital economy. I was tempted to quote Bill Clinton: “It’s the economy, stupid.”

The Digital Economy has become THE Economy. Yes, technology has created many wonders, but if we look at the macro level, the scorecard on economic results of technology are so far troublesome. Technology has unquestionably been at the heart of some negative developments including massive structural unemployment; growing social inequality where the benefits and wealth generated by technology have been asymmetrical; a fracturing of public discourse; and the loss of privacy and the rise of a surveillance society to name a few.

The panel touched superficially on several issues, such as unemployment. For the first time in history, economic growth is not generating a meaningful number of new jobs. Factor in the hangover from the financial collapse of 2008 and we’re witnessing youth unemployment levels across the western world from 15 to 60 percent.

But panelists said that this was a temporary problem and not a structural problem. Such creative destruction has happened at various junctures in history. Google’s Eric Schmidt argued that: “Almost all of the problems we debate can be solved by more broadband connectivity.” He cited broadband as the key public policy initiative that can promote social benefits ranging from good governance to education to human rights.

Microsoft’s Nadella agreed, saying that in the industry “there’s a consensus that low-cost bandwidth is a must.”

Vodaphone’s Colao likened the digital economy to a movie. “I can tell you that this is just the beginning of a great story, it is like a movie. We are at the beginning of something amazing. In Turkey, we have farmers who are using our technology and 50 per cent of them are women. Then there is education of teachers in Africa..

“The last scene of this movie should be around 10-15 years,” he added, but that steps must be taken to ensure all members of society benefit from technology’s arrival. “We need to see the benefit of technology and make sure that this movie gets a happy ending.”

Looking ahead, Schmidt offered one prediction regarding the future of the Internet, namely that “the Internet will disappear.” He predicted that the growth of smart devices and the Internet of things in the years ahead will eliminate the barrier between being online and offline.

Schmidt, a thoughtful observer of the big changes on the digital age compared the current disruptions to jobs and the economy with other convulsive technology revolutions in history that have caused massive, if temporary problems in society. “Is it different this time?” That would have been a great question to debate.

We need the leaders of the technology industry to step up and start to frankly address the big problems of the digital economy — problems that are rooted in technology. Enough extolling the virtues of technology. Let’s start to build the partnerships between business, government and the civil society that can forge a new framework and action plan for ensuring that the smaller world our kids inherit is a better one.

Don Tapscott is with the Rotman School of Management, University of Toronto and CEO of The Tapscott Group. His most recent book is The Digital Economy: Anniversary Edition and he is a senior adviser to the World Economic Forum.

Taylor Swift Finally Reveals Her Belly Button In A Bikini Because She's Fearless

Welcome to New York, Taylor Swift’s belly button! Well, welcome to Instagram, anyway.

For a long time now, Swift’s belly button has been shrouded in mystery. Is it an inny? Is it an outy? Does it even exist? Now, all your burning questions have been answered. While hanging out in Maui with the ladies of Haim, Swift posted this bikini picture revealing her belly button for the first time:

Greetings from Maui! @haimtheband

Een foto die is geplaatst door Taylor Swift (@taylorswift) op Jan 23, 2015 at 5:20 PST

OK, maybe it’s not the first time we’ve ever seen Swift’s elusive navel, but it’s certainly the first time in a while. The singer previously told Lucky Magazine there’s a reason she keeps her belly button hidden. “When you start showing your belly button then you’re really committing to the midriff thing. I only partially commit to the midriff thing,” Swift said.

Besides dropping her fear of commitment to the midriff, the singer also got in some “hiking with the squad” …

Hiking with the Squad in Hawaii. @haimtheband

A photo posted by Taylor Swift (@taylorswift) on Jan 23, 2015 at 5:23pm PST

Got her whale watching on …

When we were whale watching and didn’t see whales for 5 minutes and got all moody. @haimtheband

A photo posted by Taylor Swift (@taylorswift) on Jan 23, 2015 at 5:35pm PST

(Oh, so that’s how you whale watch.)

… And then decided her midriff had enough fun for one day.

“She’s always wearing, like, a 1950’s bathing suit.”

Uma foto publicada por Taylor Swift (@taylorswift) em Jan 23, 2015 at 6:22 PST

It’s the perfect end to a long day of showing her belly button incredible things.

Chris Christie Brings New Jersey Candor To Iowa Evangelicals

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — After years of campaigning in Iowa for others, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie is venturing into new territory as a potential White House candidate appealing to social conservatives who hold sway in the early-voting state.

“He has the opportunity to open some eyes there,” says GOP state Rep. Chip Baltimore. Few would pick him to emerge as the 2016 favorite in the Iowa caucuses among the state’s robust Christian right.

To understand why, just look at some of the potential rivals sharing the stage Saturday at the Iowa Freedom Summit: Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, former Pennsylvania Rick Santorum, former Texas Gov. Rick Perry and others who more naturally resonate with evangelical voters.

Yet Christie sees the gathering hosted by U.S. Rep. Steve King, R-Iowa, as a chance to set him apart from the likely candidates to whom he most is often compared: former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and 2012 presidential nominee Mitt Romney.

“Do you believe that the next president of the United States is going to be speaking to you today?” King opened the event by asking the crowd, which erupted in applause. “As do I.”

Bush and Romney are skipping the forum, billed as the first big event of the unfolding 2016 campaign.

“If I do run, I’ll be myself and we’ll see how Iowans like that,” Christie told reporters last week while in Iowa for Gov. Terry Branstad’s inauguration.

Christie got a taste of some of the state’s more conservative voters at King’s annual pheasant hunt luncheon in October.

While Christie has opposed abortion rights for 20 years and is against gay marriage, he said in 2011 that his Roman Catholic faith “does not rule who I am.” He has said homosexuality is not a sin and that he believes people who are gay are “born with a predisposition.”

Those are statements could haunt him in a state where the past two caucus winners, Santorum and Huckabee, closely aligned themselves with Iowa’s evangelical pastors and Christian home-school network.

“It’s going to be tough for him here,” said Justin Arnold, a Republican strategist in Iowa. “There’s an image of him as a moderate.”

Christie has responded by working over the past five years to build connections with the state’s political players, and that includes raising money for King’s re-election campaigns.

The two have a relationship that dates to 2009, when King defended Christie before the House Judiciary Committee, where he was called to testify as a U.S. attorney while in the final weeks of his winning campaign for governor.

Christie’s big Iowa debut came the next year, when he headlined a fundraiser for Branstad that drew 800 people and netted $400,000 in the closing weeks of Branstad’s comeback campaign for governor.

The following spring, some influential Branstad donors went to New Jersey in hopes of persuading Christie to run for president in 2012.

Those efforts have won Christie the loyalty of some influential Branstad staff, including former chief of staff Jeff Boeyink, who set up meetings between Christie and Republican lawmakers and county GOP leaders last week.

“Republicans are not going to win a national election unless voters have an emotional attachment to our candidate,” said Boeyink, who would be expected to play a key role in Iowa for Christie. “Chris Christie has that ability.”

Gwen Ecklund, the Republican Party chairwoman in a conservative, rural western Iowa county, attended one of those meetings with Christie. Her reaction sums up where Christie stands in Iowa a year before the caucus.

“I was pleasantly impressed with him, more than I thought I would be,” Ecklund said. “Is he the best person? I don’t know yet.”

George Takei Spoofs Controversial TLC Special With 'My Husband's Not Straight'

“Star Trek” icon George Takei playfully skewers TLC’s recent controversy with “My Husband’s Not Straight.”

The parody “homosexual reality show” will follow “three same-sex married couples…with a twist,” Takei quips in the new clip.

“Do I like women? Yeah,” one of the men proclaims. “But I like pizza, too. Do I need pizza? No, no. I can live without pizza if it means I can have this life.”

Adds another, “What’s a little man-on-man action now and then, right? It’s just like acting.”

The clip is, of course, a spoof of “My Husband’s Not Gay,” a TLC special which focused on Mormon men who say they have chosen to marry women despite being attraction to men, which aired Jan. 11.

The pizza reference is a pointed wink at one of the TLC participants who compared gay sex to his love of doughnuts in an ABC News interview.

H/T Towleroad

Convertible Headphone Speakers delivers dual functionality

convertible-headphone-speakersIn life, there are times when you wish that you could have your cake – and eat it, too. Of course, not all times will be binary in nature, where it is a case of either this or that, but rather, it could be inclusive – taking all in. If you would like to have the best of both worlds, and think that having various functions to converge onto a single device, then I am quite sure that the $119.95 Convertible Headphone Speakers is your cup of tea.

The Convertible Headphone Speakers will be headphones that sport a simple twist in order to transform it into stereo speakers. The headphones’ earcups will be able to rotate 180°, where it automatically turns on the built-in, battery powered amplifier in order to have it generate crisp sound through 1.5″ neodymium speakers. When it is in speaker mode, the unit would be able to produce up to 98 decibels of sound, which is a whole lot of volume when it comes to music playback that will be able to cater for an entire room of music enthusiasts. Whenever the earcups are rotated back to headphone position, the amplifier will turn itself off. These headphones make use of proprietary technology so that one can enjoy a crisp, clear high-definition listening experience. There is also the presence of soft memory foam interiors that hug the ears for optimal comfort during extended wear. A 3-hour charge results in up to three hours of playback.
[ Convertible Headphone Speakers delivers dual functionality copyright by Coolest Gadgets ]