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      <title>The Bilerico Project</title>
      <link>http://www.bilerico.com/</link>
      <description>Daily experiments in LGBTQ</description>
      <language>en</language>
      <copyright>Copyright 2013</copyright>
      <lastBuildDate>Fri, 29 Sep 2006 23:57:12 -0500</lastBuildDate>
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      <item>
         <title>Would you like coffee with your pastry?</title>
         <author>Seth Kreigh</author>
         <description><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.bilerico.com/images/starbucks.jpg" class="thickbox"><img alt="starbucks.jpg" src="http://static.bilerico.net/images/starbucks-thumb.jpg" width="200" height="266" style="float:left;" /></a>For those who are behind on their <a href="http://www.starbucks.com">Starbucks</a> gossip, let me fill you in on <a href="http://blogging.la/archives/2006/09/naked_man_run_through_starbuck.phtml">an incident that occured a few days ago</a> on 25 September 2006.  </p>

<p>Police were called at 5:00a and had to take down a nude customer at the Whitley Heights Starbucks in Hollywood.  Fellow blogger <a href="http://blogging.la/profile.phtml?author=863">David Markland</a> gives the following details:  </p>

<blockquote>

<p>At 5am this morning, a "drunken naked guy" used a sock full of rocks to shatter the glass on the front door, and stormed inside to eat "all the pastries". Police responded and found the guy running around the store, resisting arrest. He had feathers in his hair and an American flag... although it wasn't explained to me if this was a large or small flag, or where it was placed (or, perhaps, raised). The cops had to use rubber bullets and a beanbag shotgun to subdue him.</p>

</blockquote>  

<p>In addition, the customer actually tried to serve the first customer of the day by offering coffee and pastries as he ran around naked.</p>

<p>Evidently, this particular Starbucks location has seen more than it's share of "unique" customers.  The store has, in the past, had to run off porno production companies trying to film out in front of the store.</p>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.bilerico.com/2006/09/would_you_like.php</link>
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         <category>Living</category>
         <pubDate>Fri, 29 Sep 2006 23:57:12 -0500</pubDate>
         <comments>http://www.bilerico.com/2006/09/would_you_like.php#comments</comments>
      </item>
      
      <item>
         <title>Songs for Sunday</title>
         <author>Seth Kreigh</author>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>1. Reccuring - Bonobo<br />
2. Patrick Wolf Remix 7 - Patrick Wolf<br />
3. At Least I'm Honest - Tiger Baby<br />
4. Boy From School - Hot Chip<br />
5. Daft Punk Is Playing At My House - LCD Soundsystem<br />
6. Momentum - The Hush Sound<br />
7. Fearless - The Bravery<br />
8. Animal Nitrate - Suede<br />
9. The Vampire Club - Voltaire<br />
10. The Waitress - Tori Amos</p>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.bilerico.com/2006/09/songs_for_sunda_53.php</link>
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         <category>Entertainment</category>
         <pubDate>Sun, 24 Sep 2006 20:21:45 -0500</pubDate>
         <comments>http://www.bilerico.com/2006/09/songs_for_sunda_53.php#comments</comments>
      </item>
      
      <item>
         <title>Songs for Sunday</title>
         <author>Seth Kreigh</author>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>1. Never Win - Fischerspooner<br />
2. Galang - M.I.A.<br />
3. Pass That - DJ Steady B.<br />
4. Ha Ha - Mates of State<br />
5. Mojo - Peeping Tom<br />
6. Out of Control - She Wants Revenge<br />
7. Isolophobia Rough Takes - Sean O'Leary and the Rendezvous<br />
8. Deep Freeze - DJ Shiva<br />
9. Quiet as a Mouse - Margot & the Nuclear So and So's<br />
10. Haunted by You - Gene</p>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.bilerico.com/2006/09/songs_for_sunda_48.php</link>
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         <category>Entertainment</category>
         <pubDate>Sun, 17 Sep 2006 03:06:23 -0500</pubDate>
         <comments>http://www.bilerico.com/2006/09/songs_for_sunda_48.php#comments</comments>
      </item>
      
      <item>
         <title>Songs for Sunday</title>
         <author>Seth Kreigh</author>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>1. Up in the Air - Skidmore Fountain<br />
2. Georgetown - Dandelion Junk Queens<br />
3. So Into You - Atlanta Rhythm Section<br />
4. Destroy - Ladytron<br />
5. Super Trouper - ABBA<br />
6. Conceived - Beth Orton<br />
7. Cheated Hearts - Yeah Yeah Yeahs<br />
8. Hate Me - Blue October<br />
9. A Lack of Color - Death Cab for Cutie<br />
10. How to Save a Life - The Fray</p>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.bilerico.com/2006/09/songs_for_sunda_46.php</link>
         <guid isPermalink="True">http://www.bilerico.com/2006/09/songs_for_sunda_46.php</guid>
         <category>Entertainment</category>
         <pubDate>Sun, 10 Sep 2006 05:31:03 -0500</pubDate>
         <comments>http://www.bilerico.com/2006/09/songs_for_sunda_46.php#comments</comments>
      </item>
      
      <item>
         <title>Crikey! Crocodile Hunter Died This Morning</title>
         <author>Seth Kreigh</author>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>For those who haven't heard, Steve "Crocodile Hunter" Irwin, 44, was killed this morning by a stingray near <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Port_Douglas%2C_Queensland">Port Douglas, Australia</a>, while filming for his daughter's TV show.  Irwin was evidently snorkeling when he passed over a stingray that was burried in the sand when the barb came up piercing his heart.  Attacks on humans are a rarity - only one other person is known to have died in Australia from a stingray attack, at St Kilda, Melbourne in 1945.</p>

<p>Irwin was famous for his enthusiasm for wildlife and his catchword "Crikey!" in his television program "<a href="http://animal.discovery.com/fansites/crochunter/crochunter.html">Crocodile Hunter</a>." First broadcast in Australia in 1992, the program was picked up by the Discovery network, pushing him to international celebrity.  He was the star of the 2002 film <a href="http://www.netflix.com/MovieDisplay?movieid=60022993&trkid=189530&strkid=852898518_0_0"><u>The Crocodile Hunters: Collision Course</u></a> and developed his parents' wildlife park, <a href="http://www.crocodilehunter.com/australia_zoo/">Australia Zoo</a>, into a major tourist attraction.</p>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.bilerico.com/2006/09/crikey_crocodil.php</link>
         <guid isPermalink="True">http://www.bilerico.com/2006/09/crikey_crocodil.php</guid>
         <category>Entertainment</category>
         <pubDate>Mon, 04 Sep 2006 16:57:23 -0500</pubDate>
         <comments>http://www.bilerico.com/2006/09/crikey_crocodil.php#comments</comments>
      </item>
      
      <item>
         <title>Songs for Sunday</title>
         <author>Seth Kreigh</author>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>In celebration of <a href="http://www.southerndecadence.net/">Southern Decadence</a>, this week's songs are inspired by <a href="http://www.bourbonpub.com/">The Bourbon Pub and Parade</a> - New Orlean's largest gay bar and nightclub and the longest continuously operating gay nightclub in the country.</p>

<p>1. I Just Want To F***ing Dance - DJ Jayskee (This year's theme song)<br />
2. Pump It - Black Eyed Peas<br />
3. Dark Lady - Cher<br />
4. Promiscuous Girl - Nelly Furtado<br />
5. Believe - Cher<br />
6. Don't Cha - Pussycat Dolls<br />
7. Pump It Up - Danzel<br />
8. I'll Be Your Light - Kristine W.<br />
9. You've Got The Love - Candi Staton<br />
10. I Turn To You - Melanie C</p>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.bilerico.com/2006/09/songs_for_sunda_43.php</link>
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         <category>Entertainment</category>
         <pubDate>Sun, 03 Sep 2006 04:48:42 -0500</pubDate>
         <comments>http://www.bilerico.com/2006/09/songs_for_sunda_43.php#comments</comments>
      </item>
      
      <item>
         <title>Songs for Sunday</title>
         <author>Seth Kreigh</author>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>1. Mushaboom - Feist<br />
2. Age of Consent - New Order<br />
3. Let Go - Frou Frou<br />
4. Go-Go Gadget Gospel - Gnarls Barkley<br />
5. New Amsterdam - Elvis Costello<br />
6. Hide and Seek - Imogen Heap<br />
7. Emerge - Fischerspooner<br />
8. Just Breathe - Telepopmusik<br />
9. Eyes - Rogue Wave<br />
10. Someone - Ascencion</p>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.bilerico.com/2006/08/songs_for_sunda_42.php</link>
         <guid isPermalink="True">http://www.bilerico.com/2006/08/songs_for_sunda_42.php</guid>
         <category>Entertainment</category>
         <pubDate>Sun, 27 Aug 2006 15:12:10 -0500</pubDate>
         <comments>http://www.bilerico.com/2006/08/songs_for_sunda_42.php#comments</comments>
      </item>
      
      <item>
         <title>Out In Scripture</title>
         <author>Seth Kreigh</author>
         <description><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.hrc.org">The Human Rights Campaign</a> has recently launched a new website, <a href="http://www.hrc.org/scripture/">Out In Scripture</a>.  This site provides distinctive insights into the Bible from an LGBT and straight-supportive perspective.  HRC's goal is to provide faithful and thoughtful help for preachers and other persons of faith as they work for a more compassionate, just and inclusive society.  Out In Scripture is developed by teams of skilled and prayerful scholars comprised of a diverse group of professors of Bible, ethics and preaching from leading theological schools...including <a href="http://www.cts.edu/">Christian Theological Seminary</a> here in Indianapolis.</p>

<p>One of the writers is <a href="http://www.therevdrcharleswallen.com/">Dr. Charles Allen</a>, an out gay Episcopal priest who serves as chaplain for <a href="http://www.indylutheran.org/campusministry/">Grace Unlimited</a>, a Lutheran-Episcopal university ministry.  Likewise, another contributing writer, <a href="http://www.cts.edu/Community/StaffProfile.cfm">Dr. Michael Miller</a>, is a straight man and ally who teaches philosophical and systematic theology</p>

<p>HRC also provides resources on the site to organizations such as <a href="http://www.jewishmosaic.org/torah/show_torah">Jewish Mosaic: The National Jewish Center for Sexual and Gender Diversity</a> and to events such as a historic interfaith transgender conference being held in Corvallis, Oregon this October.</p>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.bilerico.com/2006/08/out_in_scriptur.php</link>
         <guid isPermalink="True">http://www.bilerico.com/2006/08/out_in_scriptur.php</guid>
         <category>Living</category>
         <pubDate>Wed, 23 Aug 2006 01:46:25 -0500</pubDate>
         <comments>http://www.bilerico.com/2006/08/out_in_scriptur.php#comments</comments>
      </item>
      
      <item>
         <title>Songs for Sunday</title>
         <author>Seth Kreigh</author>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>1. Wraith Pinned to the Mist and Other Games - Of Montreal<br />
2. El Salvador - Athlete<br />
3. Best Looking Boys - The Promise Ring<br />
4. The Sound of Settling - Death Cab for Cutie<br />
5. When They Really Get to Know You They Will Run - Pedro the Lion<br />
6. Black and White Town - The Doves<br />
7. Forget Myself - Elbow<br />
8. Nancy Boy - Placebo<br />
9. Mein Teil - Rammstein<br />
10. Future - Cut Copy</p>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.bilerico.com/2006/08/songs_for_sunda_38.php</link>
         <guid isPermalink="True">http://www.bilerico.com/2006/08/songs_for_sunda_38.php</guid>
         <category>Entertainment</category>
         <pubDate>Sun, 20 Aug 2006 08:42:34 -0500</pubDate>
         <comments>http://www.bilerico.com/2006/08/songs_for_sunda_38.php#comments</comments>
      </item>
      
      <item>
         <title>Songs for Sunday</title>
         <author>Seth Kreigh</author>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>I decided to dedicate this Songs for Sunday post to <a href="http://www.mixdepot.net/djtaylornorris">Taylor Norris</a> since I wasn't able to see him spin at <a href="http://www.therapy-indy.com/">Therapy </a>last night.  Taylor is a very talented DJ who is actually still in school at the <a href="http://www.sae.edu">SAE Institute</a> in Nashville.  The following is the tracklist for his latest mix, <a href="http://www.mixdepot.net/DJTaylorNorris/TheSightofSound">The Sight of Sound</a>.  You can also visit one of his links above to download a free copy of this newest mix.</p>

<p>1. Leia - Martin H<br />
2. Ride (Mashtronic Remix) - Chable & Bonnici <br />
3. In Your Brain (MD & Benz "Brainwash" Remix) - Ashbury & Haight<br />
4. Where's the Fun (Jesper D Output) - DK7<br />
5. Insomnia (Sasha's Unreleased Remix) - Faithless<br />
6. Something to Live For (Rhythm Code Techy Affair Mix) - Open Air<br />
7. Aspiring Angel - Lonestar featuring Bari Koral<br />
8. Saddle Funk - Chris Cargo<br />
9. Overclockers (Presslaboys Mix) - God's Uncle<br />
10. In Beat (Punk People Remix) - Fuzzy Hair vs. Steve Angello<br />
11. Voices (Eric Prydz Remix) - Steve Angello<br />
12. Nile - Pryda<br />
13. You're a Star - D-Nox & Beckers</p>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.bilerico.com/2006/08/songs_for_sunda_39.php</link>
         <guid isPermalink="True">http://www.bilerico.com/2006/08/songs_for_sunda_39.php</guid>
         <category>Entertainment</category>
         <pubDate>Sun, 13 Aug 2006 21:09:05 -0500</pubDate>
         <comments>http://www.bilerico.com/2006/08/songs_for_sunda_39.php#comments</comments>
      </item>
      
      <item>
         <title>Cheap Solutions for HIV/AIDS Prevention</title>
         <author>Seth Kreigh</author>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>I read an interesting <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2006/08/06/world/africa/06aids.html?ex=1155614400&en=b980c10ee21cb619&ei=5070&emc=eta1">article </a>by <a href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/d/celia_w_dugger/index.html">Celia Dugger</a> in <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/">The New York Times</a> yesterday about a $1 million study conducted by MIT's <a href="http://www.povertyactionlab.com/">Poverty Action Lab</a> and financed by <a href="http://www.child-development.org/">The Partnership for Child Development</a>, based in London.  The <a href="http://www.povertyactionlab.com/projects/project.php?pid=5">study </a>took place in 360 primary schools in Western Kenya from July 2002 to July 2006 and will be used to determine effective spending of future HIV/AIDS prevention funding and the most effective way to combat AIDS in Africa. The study randomly divided schools into 4 different groups.  The first group continued participating in the national HIV/AIDS education program only.  The second group participated in the national program and received teacher training reinforcement.  The third group participated in the national program and received support to reduce the cost of education.  The final group particpated in all three plans, combining the national program with teacher training and reduced education costs.</p>]]><![CDATA[<p>The researchers found that when girls from impoverished rural areas were given their $6 uniforms for free, they were significantly less likely to drop out of school and become pregnant.  Likewise, when told that older men are much likelier to be infected with HIV than their teen counterparts, rates peak at about 9% for men aged 40-44 versus less than .5% for teenage boys, the girls were far less likely to become pregnant by sugar daddies.</p>

<p>President Bush's <a href="http://www.cdc.gov/nchstp/od/gap/">Global AIDS Program</a> spent $141 million worldwide last year to prevent sexually transmitted HIV.  However, Warren W. Buckingham, the Kenya coordinator for the Bush AIDS plan said that some American-financed programs such as the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Girl_Guides">Girl Guides</a>, the international version of the Girl Scouts, generally didn't provide statistics on the rising infection rates with age, though they did warn girls about having sex with older men.</p>

<p>The study also found that Kenya's AIDS cirriculum, which provides only general information about how HIV is spread and emphasizes abstinence until marriage, had little or no impact on students' practical knowledge about condoms or teen pregnancy.  On the other hand, the study found that teachers who held classroom debates and essay-writing contests on whether students should be taught about condoms to prevent the spread of HIV increased the use of condoms without increasing sexual activity.</p>

<p>Perhaps this is one more reason why the Sexuality Information and Education Council of the United States (<a href="http://www.siecus.org/">SIECUS</a>) may be on the right track.  SIECUS believes that our students deserve comprehensive sexuality education that provides unbiased, accurate infromation about sexuality and relationships including vital information on such important topics as STDs, HIV, and pregnancy prevention.  SIECUS does not support teaching young people only about abstinence - primarily because scientific evaluations have never proven that abstinence-only-until-marriage programs are effective.</p>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.bilerico.com/2006/08/cheap_solutions.php</link>
         <guid isPermalink="True">http://www.bilerico.com/2006/08/cheap_solutions.php</guid>
         <category>Living</category>
         <pubDate>Mon, 07 Aug 2006 03:13:10 -0500</pubDate>
         <comments>http://www.bilerico.com/2006/08/cheap_solutions.php#comments</comments>
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      <item>
         <title>Paintings From A Birdcage</title>
         <author>Seth Kreigh</author>
         <description><![CDATA[<p><img alt="SnowonSusansSunday.jpg" src="http://static.bilerico.net/images/SnowonSusansSunday.jpg" width="450" height="552" /></p>

<p>On Saturday, 19 August, one of my favorite Hoosier gay artists, <a href="http://www.blackrabbitboy.com/">Paul Moschell</a>, will be opening "Paintings From A Birdcage" at <a href="http://www.marsgallery.com/index.html">Mars Gallery</a> in Chicago from 7:00p - 11:00p.  The show will be on display from 19 August through 7 September.</p>

<p>In addition to supporting one of my favorite artists, I'm also trying to encourage support for a good cause.  The Opening Night Gala will feature complimentary cocktails and a cash martini bar to benefit the <a href="http://www.reddoorshelter.org/">Red Door Animal Shelter</a>, a multi-species, cage-free, no-kill animal shelter.</p>

<p>Also, <a href="http://www.prettydarnswell.com/index.htm">pretty:darn:swell</a> has a print of "<a href="http://www.prettydarnswell.com/print2.htm">Snow on Susan's Sunday</a>" (featured above) available for a limited time.  Again, a portion of the profits will go to the <a href="http://www.reddoorshelter.org/">Red Door Animal Shelter</a>.</p>

<p>If you're going to be in Chicago, stop by Mars Gallery to check out Paul's work, or swing by pretty:darn:swell to pick up a print for yourself and save the life of an abandoned pet.</p>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.bilerico.com/2006/08/paintings_from.php</link>
         <guid isPermalink="True">http://www.bilerico.com/2006/08/paintings_from.php</guid>
         <category>Entertainment</category>
         <pubDate>Sun, 06 Aug 2006 02:59:25 -0500</pubDate>
         <comments>http://www.bilerico.com/2006/08/paintings_from.php#comments</comments>
      </item>
      
      <item>
         <title>Songs for Sunday</title>
         <author>Seth Kreigh</author>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>1. Season of Love - Cast of Rent<br />
2. Home - Marc Broussard<br />
3. Good Luck - Basement Jaxx & Lisa Kekaula<br />
4. And I Am Telling You I'm Not Going - Jennifer Holliday<br />
5. Coffee Girl - Johnny Socko<br />
6. Scary World Theory - Lali Puna<br />
7. Tainted Love - Soft Cell<br />
8. Sweet Dreams - Marilyn Manson<br />
9. Mutter - Rammstein<br />
10. Super Trouper - ABBA</p>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.bilerico.com/2006/07/songs_for_sunda_28.php</link>
         <guid isPermalink="True">http://www.bilerico.com/2006/07/songs_for_sunda_28.php</guid>
         <category>Entertainment</category>
         <pubDate>Sun, 09 Jul 2006 22:50:31 -0500</pubDate>
         <comments>http://www.bilerico.com/2006/07/songs_for_sunda_28.php#comments</comments>
      </item>
      
      <item>
         <title>Songs for Sunday</title>
         <author>Seth Kreigh</author>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>As some of you may be aware, I'm in the process of moving; hence, I've been listening to a lot of music from my collection while I pack boxes.  The following are my 12 (I couldn't decide which two to leave out) Rainy Sunday Packing songs.</p>

<p>1. Cherry Blossom Girl - Air<br />
A French electronica duo</p>

<p>2. Beautiful - Christina Aguilera</p>

<p>3. Fight Test - The Flaming Lips<br />
The eclectic group from Oklahoma City...I'm still disappointed that I missed their last show at The Vogue.</p>

<p>4. Gold In The Air Of Summer - Kings of Convenience<br />
An excellent, mellow duo from Norway</p>

<p>5. Scary World Theory - Lali Puna<br />
An electro-pop group from Munich, Germany</p>

<p>6. Part of the Process - Morcheeba<br />
British brothers Paul and Ross Godfrey are pioneers of trip-hop. Last year, Skye Edwards was replaced by Daisy Martey...not sure how I feel about the change, but we'll see...</p>

<p>7. Of Minor Prophets And Their Prostitute Wives - Pedro the Lion<br />
FYI - The name comes from one of, Seattle native and former hardcore punk, David Bazan's potential children's book characters.</p>

<p>8. Teenage Angst - Placebo<br />
This androgynous, British punk band is one of my all time favorites...I'm a very loyal fan.</p>

<p>9. The District Sleeps Alone - The Postal Service<br />
FYI - This band's name comes from the fact that member Jimmy Tamborello (Los Angeles) would send Ben Gibbard (Seattle) CD-Rs with electronic music via the US Postal Service.  Gibbard would then write melodies and lyrics and record vocals.</p>

<p>10. Mistress - Red House Painters<br />
Their music is like a tortoise on quaaludes; however, I really miss this band...Mark Kozelek just isn't the same with Sun Kil Moon.</p>

<p>11. Welcome To My Party - Rusted Root<br />
Sounding as though they come from Africa, most people are surprised to learn that this group is actually from Pittsburgh. They have strong African and Latin American influences in their music.</p>

<p>12. Adagio - Safri Duo <br />
I found this band while I was in Germany about 5 years ago.  With the exception of my music collection, I hadn't heard this band since that summer...until this past Memorial Day when I was at Kings Island and heard their song Played-A-Live as the soundtrack on one of the games in the arcade. Who would've thought?</p>

<p><br />
By the way, I'm well aware of the fact that I'm a complete nerd for knowing most of the information that I know.  To be fair, I did do some fact checking on bands' websites to make sure that my stories were correct and I was spelling names correctly...but how can I not be a fan of Pedro the Lion or The Postal Service and not be curious about where their names came from? Likewise, how can I not be interested to know how a Pittsburgh group sounds like they've just come from an African tribal village? Regardless, enjoy!</p>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.bilerico.com/2006/06/songs_for_sunda_25.php</link>
         <guid isPermalink="True">http://www.bilerico.com/2006/06/songs_for_sunda_25.php</guid>
         <category>Entertainment</category>
         <pubDate>Sun, 11 Jun 2006 22:23:42 -0500</pubDate>
         <comments>http://www.bilerico.com/2006/06/songs_for_sunda_25.php#comments</comments>
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      <item>
         <title>Linkalicious</title>
         <author>Seth Kreigh</author>
         <description><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.kozyndan.com/">Kozy n Dan</a> -- They have done the album artwork for two of my favorite groups, <a href="http://www.postalservicemusic.net/">The Postal Service</a> and <a href="http://www.dublab.com/index.asp">dublab</a>.  The detail in these LA based artists' panoramics is quite impressive.</p>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.bilerico.com/2006/05/linkalicious_7.php</link>
         <guid isPermalink="True">http://www.bilerico.com/2006/05/linkalicious_7.php</guid>
         <category>You Gotta See This</category>
         <pubDate>Mon, 22 May 2006 01:30:05 -0500</pubDate>
         <comments>http://www.bilerico.com/2006/05/linkalicious_7.php#comments</comments>
      </item>
      
      <item>
         <title>The Pressure to Cover</title>
         <author>Seth Kreigh</author>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>In <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/pages/magazine/">New York Times Magazine</a> on Sunday, January 15, 2006:</p>

<p><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2006/01/15/magazine/15gays.html">The Pressure to Cover</a><br />
By <a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/redirect?link_code=ur2&tag=bilersethkrei-20&camp=1789&creative=9325&path=external-search%3Fsearch-type=ss%26index=books%26keyword=Kenji%20Yoshino">Kenji Yoshino</a></p>

<p>When I began teaching at Yale Law School in 1998, a friend spoke to me frankly. "You'll have a better chance at tenure," he said, "if you're a homosexual professional than if you're a professional homosexual." Out of the closet for six years at the time, I knew what he meant. To be a "homosexual professional" was to be a professor of constitutional law who "happened" to be gay. To be a "professional homosexual" was to be a gay professor who made gay rights his work. Others echoed the sentiment in less elegant formulations. Be gay, my world seemed to say. Be openly gay, if you want. But don't flaunt.</p>]]><![CDATA[<p>I didn't experience the advice as antigay. The law school is a vigorously tolerant place, embedded in a university famous for its gay student population. (As the undergraduate jingle goes: "One in four, maybe more/One in three, maybe me/One in two, maybe you.") I took my colleague's words as generic counsel to leave my personal life at home. I could see that research related to one's identity - referred to in the academy as "mesearch" - could raise legitimate questions about scholarly objectivity.</p>

<p>I also saw others playing down their outsider identities to blend into the mainstream. Female colleagues confided that they would avoid references to their children at work, lest they be seen as mothers first and scholars second. Conservative students asked for advice about how open they could be about their politics without suffering repercussions at some imagined future confirmation hearing. A religious student said he feared coming out as a believer, as he thought his intellect would be placed on a 25 percent discount. Many of us, it seemed, had to work our identities as well as our jobs.</p>

<p>It wasn't long before I found myself resisting the demand to conform. What bothered me was not that I had to engage in straight-acting behavior, much of which felt natural to me. What bothered me was the felt need to mute my passion for gay subjects, people, culture. At a time when the law was transforming gay rights, it seemed ludicrous not to suit up and get in the game.</p>

<p>"Mesearch" being what it is, I soon turned my scholarly attention to the pressure to conform. What puzzled me was that I felt that pressure so long after my emergence from the closet. When I stopped passing, I exulted that I could stop thinking about my sexuality. This proved naive. Long after I came out, I still experienced the need to assimilate to straight norms. But I didn't have a word for this demand to tone down my known gayness.</p>

<p>Then I found my word, in the sociologist <a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/redirect?link_code=ur2&tag=bilersethkrei-20&camp=1789&creative=9325&path=external-search%3Fsearch-type=ss%26index=books%26keyword=Erving%20Goffman">Erving Goffman's</a> book "<a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/redirect?link_code=ur2&tag=bilersethkrei-20&camp=1789&creative=9325&path=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.com%2Fgp%2Fproduct%2F0671622447%2Fqid%3D1137571473%2Fsr%3D2-1%2Fref%3Dpd_bbs_b_2_1%3Fs%3Dbooks%26v%3Dglance%26n%3D283155">Stigma</a>." Written in 1963, the book describes how various groups - including the disabled, the elderly and the obese - manage their "spoiled" identities. After discussing passing, Goffman observes that "persons who are ready to admit possession of a stigma. . .may nonetheless make a great effort to keep the stigma from looming large." He calls this behavior covering. He distinguishes passing from covering by noting that passing pertains to the visibility of a characteristic, while covering pertains to its obtrusiveness. He relates how F.D.R. stationed himself behind a desk before his advisers came in for meetings. Roosevelt was not passing, since everyone knew he used a wheelchair. He was covering, playing down his disability so people would focus on his more conventionally presidential qualities.</p>

<p>As is often the case when you learn a new idea, I began to perceive covering everywhere. Leafing through a magazine, I read that Helen Keller replaced her natural eyes (one of which protruded) with brilliant blue glass ones. On the radio, I heard that Margaret Thatcher went to a voice coach to lower the pitch of her voice. Friends began to send me e-mail. Did I know that Martin Sheen was Ramon Estevez on his birth certificate, that Ben Kingsley was Krishna Bhanji, that Kirk Douglas was Issur Danielovitch Demsky and that Jon Stewart was Jonathan Leibowitz?</p>

<p>In those days, spotting instances of covering felt like a parlor game. It's hard to get worked up about how celebrities and politicians have to manage their public images. Jon Stewart joked that he changed his name because Leibowitz was "too Hollywood," and that seemed to get it exactly right. My own experience with covering was also not particularly difficult - once I had the courage to write from my passions, I was immediately embraced.</p>

<p>It was only when I looked for instances of covering in the law that I saw how lucky I had been. Civil rights case law is peopled with plaintiffs who were severely punished for daring to be openly different. Workers were fired for lapsing into Spanish in English-only workplaces, women were fired for behaving in stereotypically "feminine" ways and gay parents lost custody of their children for engaging in displays of same-sex affection. These cases revealed that far from being a parlor game, covering was the civil rights issue of our time.</p>

<p>The New Discrimination</p>

<p>In recent decades, discrimination in America has undergone a generational shift. Discrimination was once aimed at entire groups, resulting in the exclusion of all racial minorities, women, gays, religious minorities and people with disabilities. A battery of civil rights laws - like the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 - sought to combat these forms of discrimination. The triumph of American civil rights is that such categorical exclusions by the state or employers are now relatively rare.</p>

<p>Now a subtler form of discrimination has risen to take its place. This discrimination does not aim at groups as a whole. Rather, it aims at the subset of the group that refuses to cover, that is, to assimilate to dominant norms. And for the most part, existing civil rights laws do not protect individuals against such covering demands. The question of our time is whether we should understand this new discrimination to be a harm and, if so, whether the remedy is legal or social in nature.</p>

<p>Consider the following cases:</p>

<p>~ Renee Rogers, an African-American employee at American Airlines, wore cornrows to work. American had a grooming policy that prevented employees from wearing an all-braided hairstyle. When American sought to enforce this policy against Rogers, she filed suit, alleging race discrimination. In 1981, a federal district court rejected her argument. It first observed that cornrows were not distinctively associated with African-Americans, noting that Rogers had only adopted the hairstyle after it "had been popularized by a white actress in the film '10.' " As if recognizing the unpersuasiveness of what we might call the Bo Derek defense, the court further alleged that because hairstyle, unlike skin color, was a mutable characteristic, discrimination on the basis of grooming was not discrimination on the basis of race. Renee Rogers lost her case.</p>

<p>~ Lydia Mikus and Ismael Gonzalez were called for jury service in a case involving a defendant who was Latino. When the prosecutor asked them whether they could speak Spanish, they answered in the affirmative. The prosecutor struck them, and the defense attorney then brought suit on their behalf, claiming national-origin discrimination. The prosecutor responded that he had not removed the potential jurors for their ethnicity but for their ability to speak Spanish. His stated concern was that they would not defer to the court translator in listening to Spanish-language testimony. In 1991, the Supreme Court credited this argument. Lydia Mikus and Ismael Gonzalez lost their case.</p>

<p>~ <a href="http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/cgi-bin/getcase.pl?court=8th&navby=case&no=962774p">Diana Piantanida</a> had a child and took a maternity leave from her job at the Wyman Center, a charitable organization in Missouri. During her leave, she was demoted, supposedly for previously having handed in work late. The man who was then the Wyman Center's executive director, however, justified her demotion by saying the new position would be easier "for a new mom to handle." As it turned out, the new position had less responsibility and half the pay of the original one. But when Piantanida turned this position down, her successor was paid Piantanida's old salary. Piantanida brought suit, claiming she had been discharged as a "new mom." In 1997, a federal appellate court refused to analyze her claim as a sex-discrimination case, which would have led to comparing the treatment she received to the treatment of "new dads." Instead, it found that Piantanida's (admittedly vague) pleadings raised claims only under the Pregnancy Discrimination Act, which it correctly interpreted to protect women only while they are pregnant. Diana Piantanida lost her case.</p>

<p>~ <a href="http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/cgi-bin/getcase.pl?court=11th&navby=case&no=939345opa">Robin Shahar</a> was a lesbian attorney who received a job offer from the Georgia Department of Law, where she had worked as a law student. The summer before she started her new job, Shahar had a religious same-sex commitment ceremony with her partner. She asked a supervisor for a late starting date because she was getting married and wanted to go on a celebratory trip to Greece. Believing Shahar was marrying a man, the supervisor offered his congratulations. Senior officials in the office soon learned, however, that Shahar's partner was a woman. This news caused a stir, reports of which reached Michael Bowers, the attorney general of Georgia who had successfully defended his state's prohibition of sodomy before the United States Supreme Court. After deliberating with his lawyers, Bowers rescinded her job offer. The staff member who informed her read from a script, concluding, "Thanks again for coming in, and have a nice day." Shahar brought suit, claiming discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation. In court, Bowers testified that he knew Shahar was gay when he hired her, and would never have terminated her for that reason. In 1997, a federal appellate court accepted that defense, maintaining that Bowers had terminated Shahar on the basis of her conduct, not her status. Robin Shahar lost her case.</p>

<p>~ <a href="http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?court=us&vol=475&invol=503">Simcha Goldman</a>, an Air Force officer who was also an ordained rabbi, wore a yarmulke at all times. Wearing a yarmulke is part of the Orthodox tradition of covering one's head out of deference to an omnipresent god. Goldman's religious observance ran afoul of an Air Force regulation that prohibited wearing headgear while indoors. When he refused his commanding officer's order to remove his yarmulke, Goldman was threatened with a court martial. He brought a First Amendment claim, alleging discrimination on the basis of religion. In 1986, the Supreme Court rejected his claim. It stated that the Air Force had drawn a reasonable line between "religious apparel that is visible and that which is not." Simcha Goldman lost his case.</p>

<p>These five cases represent only a fraction of those in which courts have refused to protect plaintiffs from covering demands. In such cases, the courts routinely distinguish between immutable and mutable traits, between being a member of a legally protected group and behavior associated with that group. Under this rule, African-Americans cannot be fired for their skin color, but they could be fired for wearing cornrows. Potential jurors cannot be struck for their ethnicity but can be struck for speaking (or even for admitting proficiency in) a foreign language. Women cannot be discharged for having two X chromosomes but can be penalized (in some jurisdictions) for becoming mothers. Although the weaker protections for sexual orientation mean gays can sometimes be fired for their status alone, they will be much more vulnerable if they are perceived to "flaunt" their sexuality. Jews cannot be separated from the military for being Jewish but can be discharged for wearing yarmulkes.</p>

<p>This distinction between being and doing reflects a bias toward assimilation. Courts will protect traits like skin color or chromosomes because such traits cannot be changed. In contrast, the courts will not protect mutable traits, because individuals can alter them to fade into the mainstream, thereby escaping discrimination. If individuals choose not to engage in that form of self-help, they must suffer the consequences.</p>

<p>The judicial bias toward assimilation will seem correct and just to many Americans. Assimilation, after all, is a precondition of civilization - wearing clothes, having manners and obeying the law are all acts of assimilation. Moreover, the tie between assimilation and American civilization may be particularly strong. At least since <a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/redirect?link_code=ur2&tag=bilersethkrei-20&camp=1789&creative=9325&path=external-search%3Fsearch-type=ss%26index=books%26keyword=Hector%20St.%20John%20de%20Crevecoeur">Hector St. John de Crevecoeur's</a> 1782 "<a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/redirect?link_code=ur2&tag=bilersethkrei-20&camp=1789&creative=9325&path=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.com%2Fgp%2Fproduct%2F0140390065%3Fv%3Dglance%26n%3D283155">Letters from an American Farmer</a>," this country has promoted assimilation as the way Americans of different backgrounds would be "melted into a new race of men." By the time Israel Zangwill's play "The Melting Pot" made its debut in 1908, the term had acquired the burnish of an American ideal. Theodore Roosevelt, who believed hyphenations like "Polish-American" were a "moral treason," is reputed to have yelled, "That's a great play!" from his box when it was performed in Washington. (He was wrong - it's no accident the title has had a longer run than the play.) And notwithstanding challenges beginning in the 1960's to move "beyond the melting pot" and to "celebrate diversity," assimilation has never lost its grip on the American imagination.</p>

<p>If anything, recent years have seen a revival of the melting-pot ideal. We are currently experiencing a pluralism explosion in the United States. Patterns of immigration since the late 1960's have made the United States the most religiously various country in the history of the world. Even when the demographics of a group - like the number of individuals with disabilities - are presumably constant, the number of individuals claiming membership in that group may grow exponentially. In 1970, there were 9 disability-related associations listed in the Encyclopedia of Associations; in 1980, there were 16; in 1990, there were 211; and in 2000, there were 799. The boom in identity politics has led many thoughtful commentators to worry that we are losing our common culture as Americans. Fearful that we are breaking apart into balkanized fiefs, even liberal lions like Arthur Schlesinger have called for a recommitment to the ethic of assimilation.</p>

<p>Beyond keeping pace with the culture, the judiciary has institutional reasons for encouraging assimilation. In the yarmulke case, the government argued that ruling in favor of the rabbi's yarmulke would immediately invite suits concerning the Sikh's turban, the yogi's saffron robes and the Rastafarian's dreadlocks. Because the courts must articulate principled grounds for their decisions, they are particularly ill equipped to protect some groups but not others in an increasingly diverse society. Seeking to avoid judgments about the relative worth of groups, the judiciary has decided instead to rely on the relatively uncontroversial principle of protecting immutable traits.</p>

<p>Viewed in this light, the judiciary's failure to protect individuals against covering demands seems eminently reasonable. Unfortunately, it also represents an abdication of its responsibility to protect civil rights.</p>

<p>The Case Against Assimilation</p>

<p>The flaw in the judiciary's analysis is that it casts assimilation as an unadulterated good. Assimilation is implicitly characterized as the way in which groups can evade discrimination by fading into the mainstream - after all, the logic goes, if a bigot cannot discriminate between two individuals, he cannot discriminate against one of them. But sometimes assimilation is not an escape from discrimination, but precisely its effect. When a Jew is forced to convert to Protestantism, for instance, we do not celebrate that as an evasion of anti-Semitism. We should not blind ourselves to the dark underbelly of the American melting pot.</p>

<p>Take the cornrows case. Initially, this case appears to be an easy one for the employer, as hairstyle seems like such a trivial thing. But if hair is so trivial, we might ask why American Airlines made it a condition of Renee Rogers's employment. What's frustrating about the employment discrimination jurisprudence is that courts often don't force employers to answer the critical question of why they are requiring employees to cover. If we look to other sources, the answers can be troubling.</p>

<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/redirect?link_code=ur2&tag=bilersethkrei-20&camp=1789&creative=9325&path=external-search%3Fsearch-type=ss%26index=books%26keyword=John%20T.%20Molloy">John T. Molloy's</a> perennially popular self-help manual "<a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/redirect?link_code=ur2&tag=bilersethkrei-20&camp=1789&creative=9325&path=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.com%2Fgp%2Fproduct%2F0446385522%2Fqid%3D1137569157%2Fsr%3D1-2%2Fref%3Dsr_1_2%3Fs%3Dbooks%26v%3Dglance%26n%3D283155">New Dress for Success</a>" also tells racial minorities to cover. Molloy advises African-Americans to avoid "Afro hairstyles" and to wear "conservative pinstripe suits, preferably with vests, accompanied by all the establishment symbols, including the Ivy League tie." He urges Latinos to "avoid pencil-line mustaches," "any hair tonic that tends to give a greasy or shiny look to the hair," "any articles of clothing that have Hispanic associations" and "anything that is very sharp or precise."</p>

<p>Molloy is equally frank about why covering is required. The "model of success," he says, is "white, Anglo-Saxon and Protestant." Those who do not possess these traits "will elicit a negative response to some degree, regardless of whether that response is conscious or subconscious." Indeed, Molloy says racial minorities must go "somewhat overboard" to compensate for immutable differences from the white mainstream. After conducting research on African-American corporate grooming, Molloy reports that "blacks had not only to dress more conservatively but also more expensively than their white counterparts if they wanted to have an equal impact."</p>

<p>Molloy's basic point is supported by social-science research. The economists Marianne Bertrand and Sendhil Mullainathan recently <a href="http://post.economics.harvard.edu/faculty/mullainathan/papers/emilygreg.pdf">conducted a study</a> in which they sent out resumes that were essentially identical except for the names at the top. They discovered that resumes with white-sounding names like Emily Walsh or Greg Baker drew 50 percent more callbacks than those with African-American-sounding names like Lakisha Washington or Jamal Jones. So it seems that even when Americans have collectively set our faces against racism, we still react negatively to cultural traits - like hairstyles, clothes or names - that we associate with historically disfavored races.</p>

<p>We can see a similar dynamic in the termination of Robin Shahar. Michael Bowers, the state attorney general, disavowed engaging in first-generation discrimination when he said he had no problem with gay employees. This raises the question of why he fired Shahar for having a religious same-sex commitment ceremony. Unlike American Airlines, Bowers provided some answers. He argued that retaining Shahar would compromise the department's ability to deny same-sex couples marriage licenses and to enforce sodomy statutes.</p>

<p>Neither argument survives scrutiny. At no point did Shahar seek to marry her partner legally, nor did she agitate for the legalization of same-sex marriage. The Georgia citizenry could not fairly have assumed that Shahar's religious ceremony would entitle the couple to a civil license. Bowers's claim that Shahar's wedding would compromise her ability to enforce sodomy statutes is also off the mark. Georgia's sodomy statute (which has since been struck down) punished cross-sex as well as same-sex sodomy, meaning that any heterosexual in the department who had ever had oral sex was as compromised as Shahar.</p>

<p>Stripped of these rationales, Bowers's termination of Shahar looks more sinister. When she told a supervisor she was getting married, he congratulated her. When he discovered she was marrying a woman, it wasn't long before she no longer had a job. Shahar's religious ceremony was not in itself indiscreet; cross-sex couples engage in such ceremonies all the time. If Shahar was flaunting anything, it was her belief in her own equality: her belief that she, and not the state, should determine what personal bonds are worthy of celebration.</p>

<p>The demand to cover is anything but trivial. It is the symbolic heartland of inequality - what reassures one group of its superiority to another. When dominant groups ask subordinated groups to cover, they are asking them to be small in the world, to forgo prerogatives that the dominant group has and therefore to forgo equality. If courts make critical goods like employment dependent on covering, they are legitimizing second-class citizenship for the subordinated group. In doing so, they are failing to vindicate the promise of civil rights.</p>

<p>So the covering demand presents a conundrum. The courts are right to be leery of intervening in too brusque a manner here, as they cannot risk playing favorites among groups. Yet they also cannot ignore the fact that the covering demand is where many forms of inequality continue to have life. We need a paradigm that gives both these concerns their due, adapting the aspirations of the civil rights movement to an increasingly pluralistic society.</p>

<p>The New Civil Rights</p>

<p>The new civil rights begins with the observation that everyone covers. When I lecture on covering, I often encounter what I think of as the "angry straight white man" reaction. A member of the audience, almost invariably a white man, almost invariably angry, denies that covering is a civil rights issue. Why shouldn't racial minorities or women or gays have to cover? These groups should receive legal protection against discrimination for things they cannot help. But why should they receive protection for behaviors within their control - wearing cornrows, acting "feminine" or flaunting their sexuality? After all, the questioner says, I have to cover all the time. I have to mute my depression, or my obesity, or my alcoholism, or my shyness, or my working-class background or my nameless anomie. I, too, am one of the mass of men leading lives of quiet desperation. Why should legally protected groups have a right to self-expression I do not? Why should my struggle for an authentic self matter less?</p>

<p>I surprise these individuals when I agree. Contemporary civil rights has erred in focusing solely on traditional civil rights groups - racial minorities, women, gays, religious minorities and people with disabilities. This assumes those in the so-called mainstream - those straight white men - do not also cover. They are understood only as obstacles, as people who prevent others from expressing themselves, rather than as individuals who are themselves struggling for self-definition. No wonder they often respond to civil rights advocates with hostility. They experience us as asking for an entitlement they themselves have been refused - an expression of their full humanity.</p>

<p>Civil rights must rise into a new, more inclusive register. That ascent makes use of the recognition that the mainstream is a myth. With respect to any particular identity, the word "mainstream" makes sense, as in the statement that straights are more mainstream than gays. Used generically, however, the word loses meaning. Because human beings hold many identities, the mainstream is a shifting coalition, and none of us are entirely within it. It is not normal to be completely normal.</p>

<p>This does not mean discrimination against racial minorities is the same as discrimination against poets. American civil rights law has correctly directed its concern toward certain groups and not others. But the aspiration of civil rights - the aspiration that we be free to develop our human capacities without the impediment of witless conformity - is an aspiration that extends beyond traditional civil rights groups.</p>

<p>To fulfill that aspiration, we must think differently both within the law and outside it. With respect to legal remedies, we must shift away from claims that demand equality for particular groups toward claims that demand liberty for us all. This is not an exhortation that we strip protections from currently recognized groups. Rather, it is a prediction that future courts will be unable to sustain a group-based vision of civil rights when faced with the broad and irreversible trend toward demographic pluralism. In an increasingly diverse society, the courts must look to what draws us together as citizens rather than to what drives us apart.</p>

<p>As if in recognition of that fact, the Supreme Court has moved in recent years away from extending protections on the basis of group membership and toward doing so on the basis of liberties we all possess. In 2003, the court struck down a Texas statute that prohibited same-sex sodomy. It did not, however, frame the case as one concerning the equality rights of gays. Instead, it cast the case as one concerning the interest we all - straight, gay or otherwise - have in controlling our intimate lives. Similarly, in 2004, the court held that a state could be required by a Congressional statute to make its courthouses wheelchair accessible. Again, the court ruled in favor of the minority group without framing its analysis in group-based equality rhetoric. Rather, it held that all people - disabled or otherwise - have a "right of access to the courts," which had been denied in that instance.</p>

<p>In these cases, the court implicitly acknowledged the national exhaustion with group-based identity politics and quieted the anxiety about pluralism that is driving us back toward the assimilative ideal. By emphasizing the interest all individuals have in our own liberty, the court focused on what unites us rather than on what divides us. While preserving the distinction between being and doing, the court decided to protect doing in its own right.</p>

<p>If the Supreme Court protects individuals against covering demands in the future, I believe it will do so by invoking the universal rights of people. I predict that if the court ever recognizes the right to speak a native language, it will protect that right as a liberty to which we are all entitled, rather than as a remedial concession granted to a particular national-origin group. If the court recognizes rights to grooming, like the right to wear cornrows, I believe it will do so under something akin to the <a href="http://www.psr.keele.ac.uk/docs/german.htm">German Constitution's</a> right to personality* rather than as a right attached to racial minorities. And I hope that if the court protects the right of gays to marry, it will do so by framing it as the right we all have to marry the person we love, rather than defending "gay marriage" as if it were a separate institution.</p>

<p>A liberty-based approach to civil rights, of course, brings its own complications, beginning with the question of where my liberty ends and yours begins. But the ability of liberty analysis to illuminate our common humanity should not be underestimated. This virtue persuaded both Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X to argue for the transition from civil rights to human rights at the ends of their lives. It is time for American law to follow suit.</p>

<p>While I have great hopes for this new legal paradigm, I also believe law will play a relatively small part in the new civil rights. A doctor friend told me that in his first year of medical school, his dean described how doctors were powerless to cure the vast majority of human ills. People would get better, or they would not, but it would not be doctors who would cure them. Part of becoming a doctor, the dean said, was to surrender a layperson's awe for medical authority. I wished then that someone would give an analogous lecture to law students and to Americans at large. My education in law has been in no small part an education in its limitations.</p>

<p>As an initial matter, many covering demands are made by actors the law does not - and in my view should not - hold accountable, like friends, family, neighbors, the "culture" or individuals themselves. When I think of the covering demands I have experienced, I can trace many of them only to my own censorious consciousness. And while I am often tempted to sue myself, I recognize this is not my healthiest impulse.</p>

<p>Law is also an incomplete solution to coerced assimilation because it has yet to recognize the myriad groups that are subjected to covering demands even though these groups cannot be defined by traditional classifications like race, sex, orientation, religion and disability. Whenever I speak about covering, I receive new instances of identities that can be covered. The law may someday move to protect some of these identities. But it will never protect them all.</p>

<p>For these and other reasons, I am troubled that Americans seem increasingly inclined to turn toward the law to do the work of civil rights precisely when they should be turning away from it. The primary solution lies in all of us as citizens, not in the tiny subset of us who are lawyers. People confronted with demands to cover should feel emboldened to seek a reason for that demand, even if the law does not reach the actors making the demand or recognize the group burdened by it. These reason-forcing conversations should happen outside courtrooms - in public squares and prayer circles, in workplaces and on playgrounds. They should occur informally and intimately, in the everyday places where tolerance is made and unmade.</p>

<p>What will constitute a good-enough reason to justify assimilation will obviously be controversial. We have come to some consensus that certain reasons are illegitimate - like racism, sexism or religious intolerance. Beyond that, we should expect conversations rather than foreordained results - what reasons count, and for what purposes, will be for us all to decide by facing one another as citizens. My personal inclination is always to privilege the claims of the individual against countervailing interests like "neatness" or "workplace harmony." But we should have that conversation.</p>

<p>Such conversations are the best - and perhaps the only - way to give both assimilation and authenticity their due. They will help us alleviate conservative alarmists' fears of a balkanized America and radical multiculturalists' fears of a monocultural America. The aspiration of civil rights has always been to permit people to pursue their human flourishing without limitations based on bias. Focusing on law prevents us from seeing the revolutionary breadth of that aspiration. It is only when we leave the law that civil rights suddenly stops being about particular agents of oppression and particular victimized groups and starts to become a project of human flourishing in which we all have a stake.</p>

<p>I don't teach classes on gay rights any more. I suspect many of my students now experience me as a homosexual professional rather than as a professional homosexual, if they think of me in such terms at all. But I don't experience myself as covering. I've just moved on to other interests, in the way scholars do. So the same behavior - not teaching gay rights - has changed in meaning over time.</p>

<p>This just brings home to me that the only right I have wanted with any consistency is the freedom to be who I am. I'll be the first to admit that I owe much of that freedom to group-based equality movements, like the gay rights movement. But it is now time for us as a nation to shift the emphasis away from equality and toward liberty in our debates about identity politics. Only through such freedom can we live our lives as works in progress, which is to say, as the complex, changeful and contradictory creatures that we are.</p>

<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/redirect?link_code=ur2&tag=bilersethkrei-20&camp=1789&creative=9325&path=external-search%3Fsearch-type=ss%26index=books%26keyword=Kenji%20Yoshino">Kenji Yoshino</a> is a professor at <a href="http://www.law.yale.edu/outside/html/home/index.htm">Yale Law School</a>. This article is adapted from his book,"<a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/redirect?link_code=ur2&tag=bilersethkrei-20&camp=1789&creative=9325&path=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.com%2Fgp%2Fproduct%2F0375508201%2Fqid%3D1137554390%2Fsr%3D1-1%2Fref%3Dsr_1_1%3Fs%3Dbooks%26v%3Dglance%26n%3D283155">Covering: The Hidden Assault on Our Civil Rights</a>," which will be published by <a href="http://www.randomhouse.com">Random House</a> later this month.</p>

<p>Copyright 2006The New York Times Company</p>

<p>* Basic Rights<br />
Article 2 (Rights of liberty).<br />
1.  Everyone has the right to the free development of his personality insofar as he does not violate the rights of others or offend against the constitutional order or the moral code.<br />
2.  Everyone has the right to life and to inviolability of his person. The freedom of the individual is inviolable. These rights may only be encroached upon pursuant to a law. </p>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.bilerico.com/2006/01/the_pressure_to.php</link>
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         <category>The Movement</category>
         <pubDate>Tue, 17 Jan 2006 20:15:52 -0500</pubDate>
         <comments>http://www.bilerico.com/2006/01/the_pressure_to.php#comments</comments>
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      <item>
         <title>Training the Mind</title>
         <author>Seth Kreigh</author>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>Bil's <a href="http://www.bilerico.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-tb.cgi/994">quote of the day</a> reminded me of some of  the Buddhist teachings that I have obviously forgotten.  One that seems to be particularly relevant to me is from His Holiness the Dalai Lama's commentary on Verse 1 of Training the Mind.  Verse 1 states <strong>"By thinking of all sentient beings as even better than the wish-granting gem for accomplishing the highest aim may I always consider them precious."</strong></p>]]><![CDATA[<blockquote>...Our feelings of comfort and sense of security are dependent upon other people's perceptions of us and their affection for us. It is almost as if human affection is the very basis of our existence. Our life cannot start without affection, and our sustenance, proper growth, and so on all depend on it. In order to achieve a calm mind, the more you have a sense of caring for others, the deeper your satisfaction will be. I think that the very moment you develop a sense of caring, others appear more positive. This is because of your own attitude. On the other hand, if you reject others, they will appear to you in a negative way. Another thing that is quite clear to me is that the moment you think only of yourself, the focus of your whole mind narrows, and because of this narrow focus uncomfortable things can appear huge and bring you fear and discomfort and a sense of feeling overwhelmed by misery. The moment you think of others with a sense of caring, however, your mind widens. Within that wider angle, your own problems appear to be of no significance, and this makes a big difference. If you have a sense of caring for others, you will manifest a kind of inner strength in spite of your own difficult situations and problems. With this strength, your problems will seem less significant and bothersome. By going beyond your own problems and taking care of others, you gain inner strength, self-confidence, courage, and a greater sense of calm. This is a clear example of how one's way of thinking can really make a difference.</blockquote>

<p>More about His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama can be found at His Holiness' <a href="http://www.dalailama.com">website</a>.</p>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.bilerico.com/2006/01/training_the_mi.php</link>
         <guid isPermalink="True">http://www.bilerico.com/2006/01/training_the_mi.php</guid>
         <category>Living</category>
         <pubDate>Sat, 07 Jan 2006 20:00:37 -0500</pubDate>
         <comments>http://www.bilerico.com/2006/01/training_the_mi.php#comments</comments>
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