Floyd
This is Floyd. He was lost when I met him. No worries, he was returned to his human who was happy to have him back. Despite being lost, he was loyal and stayed next to me until we found his human.
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This is Floyd. He was lost when I met him. No worries, he was returned to his human who was happy to have him back. Despite being lost, he was loyal and stayed next to me until we found his human.
This is Wrigley. He's a 4-month-old Dalmatian. His humans tried to get him to play with a stick for a while but he would always get distracted. But he finally picked one out to chew on.
This is Jackson, also known as Jax. He's a Chocolate Labrador mixed with Husky. His human said this was the best he's ever been with cameras. Jax also jumped on me to give me multiple kisses.
This is Fay. She's a 2 year old Pit Bull Terrier mix. She's a very friendly dog and was open to new humans. Other humans complimented her on her coat.
This is Nigel. He's a 3 year old border terrier. His human told me he loves to chase squirrels. I was able to watch him chase a squirrel up the tree shortly after this photo was taken.
Recently I’ve been homesick
Recent events focusing on conflicts between religious freedoms and the rights of LGBTQA individuals, including the passing of Indiana’s religious freedom law, demonstrate the importance of the problem. It has a long history. Multiple scholars have defended each side of the issue; however, Gidon Sapir and Daniel Statman’s article,” Why Freedom of Religion Does Not include Freedom from Religion” covers the thought process of those who are likely to defend any notion of religious freedom, even at the cost of undermining the freedoms of others. This article includes several sound arguments, but also contains others which are not. Specifically, it should be noted that there are no circumstances where a person will be free from the influences of religion. That is not the point though; the true point is that there should be lines drawn as to what religious authority can or can’t do.
The tastes of today’s culture are very foreign to those of fifty or even twenty years ago. This difference in culture is emphasized on the integration of the stereotypically geeky subculture into the mainstream, and this fact is highlighted by several factors. Multimillion-dollar superhero movies, fantasy epics, and sci-fi adventures flood the theaters and airwaves, and the general public flock to them. Gaming, whether it be through consoles, computers, or on table tops, is becoming a large part of many peoples’ daily lives, including my own. It make sense, then, that this “geek” community crosses over into the LGBTQA community at times. The interesting thing here is that this “geek” community is one of the most accepting places for the LGBTQA community around.
According to an amicus brief submitted to the U.S. Supreme Court with the signatures of 100 scholars, a conference at the Heritage Foundation (a Conservative think tank), and an article published on the Foundation’s online publication The Daily Signal, the legalization of same-sex marriage could lead to 900,000 abortions. Gene Schaerr, who penned the article and presented his conjecture to Heritage on April 20th, is a former law clerk to Justice Antonin Scalia and the lawyer for Utah’s failed case against same-sex marriage. He presents a simple argument: “A reduction in the opposite-sex marriage rate means an increase in the percentage of women who are unmarried and who, according to all available data, have much higher abortion rates than married women. And based on past experience, institutionalizing same-sex marriage poses an enormous risk of reduced opposite-sex marriage rates.”
When asked to describe a gay male, many people will come up with many of the same characteristics. Feminine, fashionable and promiscuous are just some of the many stereotypes that I am associated with because I identify as part of the LGBT community. The issue with these stereotypes is that not only are they not true, but they hurt the acceptance of LGBT members as part of mainstream society, as well the community itself.
I have worked at Ball State for 16 years. I started in Lafollette Square dining as the chef in 1998. From there, I opened the Atrium in 2001, and then came over to the newly remodeled Student Center in 2009. I have a Chef Station that I prepare meals to order every day from 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. I love working at Ball State because of my flexibility with designing menus, the camaraderie with the students, faculty, and staff and also being able to be with my family in the evenings and on the weekends. I worked for a hotel and a country club before coming to Ball State, which were fun, and I gained a lot of experience with the chefs I worked with, but I have had the most fun here.
This is Sydney. He was taking a break with his human by Bracken Library when I met him. His human said he enjoys pulling her on her long board.
This is Callie. She's a 4-year-old Kings Charles Spaniel. I met her in downtown Muncie. She was constantly trying to sniff my camera.
One of the more complicated legal cases involving LGBT issues is that involving Chelsea Manning, who first came into the public eye when she was still going by the name given to her at birth which was Bradley Manning.
I’m queer.
After years of exclusion, the New York City St. Patrick’s Day Parade finally lifted a ban on openly homosexual groups participating. One LGBT group, Out@NBCUniversal, was approved to march on Tuesday and this decision somehow managed to simultaneously upset both the religious community as well as LGBT groups that were not affected by the inclusion this year.
Humanity strives each subsequent generation to grow and flourish; yet we expect those desires to be balanced against the need to preserve and protect. For the international tourist visiting the beautiful tropical resorts of small island nations, such as the Bahamas, it is easy to forget that others live there year round and that even a small rise in sea level may make a significant difference.
If there’s anything good about a two-year contract, it’s the new phone that comes at the end. When time came for my iPhone 5 to enjoy an easy retirement as an MP3 player, it was an opportunity for something new. After all, winding up with something novel and different is half the fun of upgrading.
Words are weird, just in that statement alone there lives a contradiction to one of the age old rhyming rules of English; ‘I’ before e except after ‘c’. However, as we see with the word “weird” that doesn’t always happen. We receive these rules yet they are continuously broken. Did you catch that one? The word receive is yet another contradiction within the English language where the “e” comes before the “i” even after following the letter c. So why do certain rules commonly get referenced even though they seem to contradict themselves a majority of the time? The same could be asked about certain beliefs and ideas that individuals hold.
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