Mondauk Common:
Michael-Patrick Harrington's Blog

This Week’s Turntable…

  1. St. Vincent by St, Vincent (2014)
  2. English Oceans by Drive-By Truckers (2014)
  3. High Hopes by Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band with Tom Morello (CD/DVD; 2014)
  4. Loud, Fast & Out of Control: The Wild Sounds of ’50s Rock by various artists {compilation} (4 CDs; 1999)
  5. Sister by Sonic Youth (1987)
  6. Tim by the Replacements (1985)
  7. A Quick One by the Who (1966)
  8. The Essential Fishbone by Fishbone {compilation} (2003)
  9. Hunky Dory by David Bowie (1971)
  10. Icky Thump by the White Stripes (2007)

What are you listening to?

 

St. Vincent, “Digital Witness”

 

Fishbone, “Freddie’s Dead”

Child goes on ‘bucket list’ trip before he goes blind

From CNN.Com:

Child goes on ‘bucket list’ trip before he goes blind
By Kevin Conlon, CNN

(CNN) — Just like any other night in the NBA, the starting lineups of the Boston Celtics and visiting Golden State Warriors were introduced over the public address system.

 
But Wednesday wasn’t just any night at Boston’s TD Garden. And the loudest ovations were not for members of either team.

 
Louis “Louie” Corbett, 12, who is rapidly losing his eyesight due to retinitis pigmentosa, was in the house to fulfill his final seeing wish: watch his beloved Boston Celtics play a game.

 
“Welcome Louis!” flashed on all four sides of the Jumbotron to thunderous applause.

 
“I’m quite excited to be here for the game,” Louie told CNN affiliate WCVB.

 
While the reason for his long journey from Auckland, New Zealand, was distressing, the circumstances that brought two communities on opposite sides of the planet together were extraordinary.

 
Louie’s progressive disorder will eventually deteriorate his vision.

 
Faced with the grim reality that he will soon lose the ability to see the world around him, his parents wanted to give their youngest of five children an international sightseeing tour.

 
“This year we’re going to try and fill his world with as many beautiful images as we can,” his mother, Catherine Corbett, told CNN.

 
Louie was instructed to make something of an ocular bucket list — things and places he’d like to see for the first, only and likely last time.

 
He picked places such as the Grand Canyon, Niagara Falls, the Empire State Building and, in a sign of the times, Google headquarters in California.

 
But the thing he wanted to experience the most wasn’t a landmark or a national park. An avid sports fan, Louie wanted to take in a game. And not just any game — the Boston Celtics.
“For some reason, he really got hooked on American basketball,” his mom said. “He cares about nothing else. He is really quite passionate about it.”

 
Making the list was the easy part. Getting there, however, would be trickier. With Louie’s eyesight rapidly fading — by 50% in the past year alone — the trip was going to have to be soon. Like, matter-of-weeks soon.

 
Warren Casey, the CEO of a Boston-based software firm, stepped in with a hefty donation and the promise to raise even more.

 
The fact that Casey’s company is based in Boston — the very place Louie was headed — had nothing to do with why he got involved.

 
“That was a random coincidence,” he told CNN. “I did it because the Corbetts are my next-door neighbors.”

 
Casey makes the 24-hour-plus trek from his Auckland home to his office in downtown Boston every six weeks. He got Air New Zealand to pick up Louie’s airfare tab and donated his own points as well.
Casey and his partners at Ceiba Solutions agreed to pay for the trip no matter how much was raised while friends and strangers from opposite sides of the planet donated about $25,000 in just four weeks.

 
“It is so touching,” Catherine Corbett said. “People are just so supportive.”

 
The fundraising campaign soon picked up steam on social media, reaching strangers far and wide.
“Somebody Tweeted me an article about this boy in New Zealand and told me I should read it,” said Corinne Grousbeck, who lives outside of Boston.

 
Grousbeck is the incoming chair of the trustees at the Perkins School for the Blind, one of the oldest schools for the visually impaired in the country. Her son, 21-year-old Campbell, was blinded by a condition similar to Louie’s.

 
“I completely understood where the Corbetts were coming from in wanting to build a visual memory bank for (Louie),” Grousbeck said. “It’s an incredibly difficult thing to have to go through.”
But that wasn’t the only coincidence; Grousbeck’s husband just so happens to own the Boston Celtics.

 
“Of course when I read about how he was a big Celtics fan, I knew that we had to have him come for a game,” she said.

 
The coincidences didn’t end there.

 
When Grousbeck learned that the Corbetts would be coming to Boston for their game on March 5, she realized she would be unable to give Louie her seats because she had given them away.
“March 5th had coincidentally been scheduled as Perkins School for the Blind Night at the TD Garden (home of the Celtics),” she said. “We’d already given away our seats to the school’s students, families and donors.”

 
While Grousbeck made sure Louie and his family had great seats — practically on the Celtics bench — she says the real show was the Perkins chorus singing the national anthem.

 
“I think for a 12-year-old like Louie, for him to be able to watch visually-impaired kids perform the national anthem on a national stage, for him to see what blind people can achieve, that’s going to give him the lasting memory,” she said.

 
And his Boston trip was filled with other coincidences as well.

 
He spent the day Tuesday at the Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary, whose cutting-edge ocular research may one day turn Louie’s “farewell to vision” tour into simply one heck of a trip.
Those odds might be long, but smart money wouldn’t bet against Louie. He seems to have serendipity on his side.

This Week’s Turntable…

  1. High Hopes by Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band with Tom Morello (CD/DVD; 2014)
  2. Rubber Soul by the Beatles (1965)
  3. Unchained by Johnny Cash with Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers (1996)
  4. The Trinity Sessions by the Cowboy Junkies (1988)
  5. When the Pawn… by Fiona Apple (1999)
  6. Parade by Prince & the Revolution (1986)
  7. Icky Thump by the White Stripes (2007)
  8. Hallowed Ground by the Violent Femmes (1984)
  9. Let’s Dance by David Bowie (1983)
  10. Delta Machine by Depeche Mode (2013)

What are you listening to?

 

David Bowie, “Modern Love”

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1hDbpF4Mvkw

 

Fiona Apple, “Paper Bag”

 

Arizona Gov. vetoes anti-gay bill!

From CNN.com:

Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer vetoes controversial anti-gay bill, SB 1062
By Catherine E. Shoichet and Halimah Abdullah, CNN
updated 11:13 PM EST, Wed February 26, 2014

(CNN) — Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer vetoed a bill Wednesday that would have allowed businesses that asserted their religious beliefs the right to deny service to gay and lesbian customers.

The controversial measure faced a surge of opposition in recent days from large corporations and athletic organizations, including Delta Air Lines, the Super Bowl host committee and Major League Baseball.

Fiercely divided supporters and opponents of the bill ramped up pressure on Brewer after the state’s Republican-led Legislature approved it last week.

On Wednesday, the governor said she made the decision she knew was right for Arizona.

“I call them as I see them, despite the cheers or the boos from the crowd,” Brewer said, criticizing what she described as a “broadly worded” bill that “could result in unintended and negative consequences.”

Brewer said she’d weighed the arguments on both sides before vetoing the measure, which is known as SB 1062.

Read Gov. Brewer’s full statement

“To the supporters of the legislation, I want you to know that I understand that long-held norms about marriage and family are being challenged as never before. Our society is undergoing many dramatic changes,” she said. “However, I sincerely believe that Senate Bill 1062 has the potential to create more problems than it purports to solve. It could divide Arizona in ways we cannot even imagine and no one would ever want.

“Religious liberty is a core American and Arizona value. So is non-discrimination.”

Her announcement spurred cheering and hugs by protesters of the bill outside the state Capitol in Phoenix.

Banners urging Brewer to veto the bill were quickly swapped for signs praising her decision.

“Thank you Governor Brewer,” they said. “Arizona is open for business to everyone!”

Brewer’s veto drew swift praise from gay rights advocates.

“Discrimination has no place in Arizona, or anywhere else,” said Alessandra Soler, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Arizona. “We’re grateful that the governor has stopped this disgraceful law from taking effect, and that Arizona will remain open for business to everyone.”

Doug Napier, an attorney representing the Alliance Defending Freedom, which helped craft the bill, criticized the governor’s decision.

“Freedom loses when fear overwhelms facts and a good bill is vetoed,” he said in a statement. “Today’s veto enables the foes of faith to more easily suppress the freedom of the people of Arizona.”

Cathi Herrod, president of the Center for Arizona Policy, accused opponents of the measure of distorting facts.

“The religious beliefs of all Arizonans must be respected and this bill did nothing more than affirm that,” said Herrod, whose conservative organization lent a hand in creating the bill. “It is truly a disappointing day in our state and nation when lies and personal attacks can overshadow the truth.”

Rep. Demion Clinco, the only openly gay member of Arizona’s House of Representatives, said he hoped the governor’s decision would start a new chapter after what he called a setback for the state’s lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community.

“In her vetoing the bill, I really feel like there’s a possible hope for reconciliation within our state, and we can move forward,” he told CNN’s AC360.

Brewer returned home on Tuesday from a weekend in Washington with her state roiling over a values clash between arch conservatives and gay rights advocates. The state battle has national implications, as the issues it deals with play out in different ways in courts, state legislatures and on Main Street across the country.

The Arizona measure was particularly pointed and had vocal supporters behind it. They contended it was their legal right to oppose what they see as a gay-rights agenda nationally, and argued the bill allowed for religious freedom.

In addition to gay rights organizations, many businesses sharply criticized the measure, saying it would be bad for Arizona’s economy and could lead to discrimination lawsuits, boycotts and other disruptions.

Large businesses including Apple, American Airlines, AT&T and Intel voiced opposition to the measure, and the Arizona Super Bowl Host Committee expressed concerns.

The bill also drew fire from some Republican lawmakers with generally social conservative beliefs.

Arizona Sens. John McCain and Jeff Flake publicly urged Brewer to veto the measure, citing worries about the economic impact on the state’s businesses.

McCain praised Brewer’s decision.

“I hope that we can now move on from this controversy and assure the American people that everyone is welcome to live, work and enjoy our beautiful state of Arizona,” he said in a written statement.

Former Massachusetts governor and Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney recently tweeted that a veto of the bill was the right course.

Supporters of the bill were just as vocal. They say federal courts have increasingly pushed a pro-gay rights agenda.

Freedom or oppression? That’s the question for Arizona’s SB 1062

Conservative radio host Rush Limbaugh said on his show that Brewer was “being bullied by the homosexual lobby in Arizona and elsewhere.”

Supporters said they saw, in the opposition, a double standard in how the rights of gays and lesbians are supported versus those who have conservative religious views.

“I think what we need to do is respect both sides. We need to respect both opinions,” Minnesota Republican Rep. Michele Bachmann said Wednesday. “Just like we need to observe tolerance for the gay and lesbian community, we need to have tolerance for the community of people who hold sincerely held religious beliefs.”

 

 

Federal Judge Strikkes Down Texas’ Ban on Gay Marriage (otherwise known as the HATE law)

Texas! Of all places! Wow! To all the people who want to prevent homosexuals from being married because of fear or because their god told them it was wrong: You are going to lose. If not today, then tomorrow, because in this country, equality is something worth fighting for – it’s freedom. The Civil Right Act, the 19th Amendment, which guaranteed women the right to vote. And now this…

From CNN.com:

(CNN) — Texas on Wednesday became the latest state in which a federal judge struck down a ban on same-sex marriage, setting the stage for gay and lesbian couples to wed in one of the nation’s most conservative states.

The ruling, by San Antonio-based Judge Orlando Garcia, will not take affect immediately: It stays enforcement of his decision pending appeal, meaning same-sex couples in Texas for the time being cannot get married.

Still, the judgment — because of what it says, where it happened and how it follows similar rulings in other states — carries special significance.

“We look forward to the day in Texas when everyone can marry who they love,” said state Democratic Party chairman Gilberto Hinojosa. “This is a historic day for the LGBT community and the state of Texas.”

Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott — a member of the Republican Party, which has been more likely to back gay marriage bans — said his office would appeal the ruling.

“The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled over and over again that sates have the authority to define and regulate marriage,” said Abbott, who is running for governor. “The Texas Constitution defines marriage as between one man and one woman.”

Garcia, in his decision issued Wednesday, said the ban had no “rational relation to a legitimate government purpose.”

“One of the court’s main responsibilities is to ensure that individuals are treated equally under the law,” said Garcia. “Equal treatment of all individuals under the law is not merely an aspiration it is a constitutional mandate.”

“Supreme Court precedent prohibits states from passing legislation born out of animosity against homosexuals, has extended constitutional protection to the moral and sexual choices of homosexuals, and prohibits the federal government from treating state-sanctioned opposite-sex marriages and same-sex marriages differently,” he said.

Two same-sex couples filed the original lawsuit: Cleopatra De Leon and Nicole Dimetman of Austin; and Mark Phariss and Victor Holmes of Plano.

State officials are expected to now take their case to a federal appeals court in New Orleans.

Garcia’s decision follows similar conclusions in recent weeks by federal courts in Utah, Oklahoma, Kentucky and Virginia.

The renewed legal, political, and social momentum on the issue comes eight months after the U.S. Supreme Court struck down part of a federal Defense of Marriage Act that did not recognize for federal purposes legally married same-sex couples. Seventeen states now allow such legal unions.

The Texas case is De Leon v. Perry (5:13-cv-982).