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Is 2,000 Km (1,300 Miles) Too Far To Travel In ~50 Hours? Find Out In Zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
is 2,000 km (1,300 miles) too far to travel in ~50 hours? find out in zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
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Stonewall History
To kick off the beginning of Pride Month, I thought I’d share my favorite articles about the Stonewall Riots.
The first is actually a collation of several accounts from 1969 that describe the events of those nights, compiled and edited by Stonewall historian David Carter. Clicking this link will download it as a word doc. This collation goes into a lot of detail, and Carter attempts to resolve some of the apparent inconsistencies between accounts (see the footnotes). While it takes a decent amount of time to read through, I think it’s worth it for the thorough coverage of the initial riot and following nights.
The texts document how the raid on Stonewall–the second within a week–came after a series of raids and closures of gay bars during the past several weeks. Bars such as the Stonewall were targeted by the police for operating without a license, which the State Liquor Authority denied to establishments that catered to gay clientele. After confiscating cases of liquor, the police began arresting the management and some employees, and checking patrons for IDs and (as I understand it) gender-suitable attire. As patrons were released one by one, a crowd began to gather outside, which became more defiant after a police van showed up and employees and drag queens were loaded inside. Multiple reports cite a butch lesbian resisting arrest as a turning point in the mood of the crowd. The police vehicles left to take away those who’d been arrested, leaving the police at the bar unguarded. More objects began to be thrown and the police that remained retreated to the bar and barricaded inside. Windows were smashed, a fire was started inside the bar, and the door was forced open–reports say that a parking meter was used as a battering ram. Police had begun pointing guns at the crowd from the open door by the time backup arrived, at which point the crowds were dispersed.
The second article is called “Movements and Memory: The Making of the Stonewall Myth” by Elizabeth A Armstrong and Suzanna M Crage. This is an academic article that analyzes how Stonewall came to achieve a central place in gay collective memory. (Try not to be put off by the first few pages that deal with theoretical concepts and research design.) It looks at other events that failed to gain similar annual commemoration–the San Francisco New Year’s Ball Raid (January 1965), the Compton’s Cafeteria Riot (San Francisco, August 1966), the Black Cat Raid (Los Angeles, January 1967), and the Snake Pit Bar Raid (New York, Mary 1970)–and discusses how Stonewall came to be successfully recognized as worthy of annual, national, public commemoration. The authors reveal that this was not a spontaneous occurrence, but “spread through the numerous, deliberate activities of individuals and groups.”
Reading these gave me a better understanding of what occurred at Stonewall and how we came to celebrated Pride, so I wanted to share them with anyone else who might be interested.
![2022 July 28](https://64.media.tumblr.com/b17456fc8a5142709cc922e378e7ac28/96e4bf265b625067-d3/s500x750/b06c8371e4ecabee353a9895a19f9b5e6424d289.jpg)
2022 July 28
North Celestial Tree Image Credit & Copyright: Jeff Dai (TWAN)
Explanation: An ancient tree seems to reach out and touch Earth’s North Celestial Pole in this well-planned night skyscape. Consecutive exposures for the timelapse composition were recorded with a camera fixed to a tripod in the Yiwu Desert Poplar Forests in northwest Xinjiang, China. The graceful star trail arcs reflect Earth’s daily rotation around its axis. By extension, the axis of rotation leads to the center of the concentric arcs in the night sky. Known as the North Star, bright star Polaris is a friend to northern hemisphere night sky photographers and celestial navigators alike. That’s because Polaris lies very close to the North Celestial Pole on the sky. Of course it can be found at the tip of an outstretched barren branch in a postcard from a rotating planet.
∞ Source: apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap220728.html
i read a few interesting articles about fevers, most notably this one, that argue fevers are generally good. so today i’m “letting it ride.” maybe if i get back up to a high fever i’ll reconsider, but so far i haven’t crossed above 38.9C (102F).
after all, who am i to defy hundreds of millions of years of evolution? 🤔
i never do these PSA posts because most PSA stuff isn’t actually actionable, but, uh, this one is:
tl;dr: there are now a bunch of drugs that are really damn good at treating COVID. if you or a loved one get COVID, especially if you have extra risk factors, you should ask your health provider about them (and, if you’re in the US, you can even use this handy dandy website to see what’s in stock near you). also, consider telling people (esp. older people) about this, i guess? so that they know too?
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