2010 Winter Olympics

http://www.theprovince.com/Sports/counting+Olympic+glory/1279555/story.html

  • I believe the Olympics is a great event for all the athletes involved in the games but I also think it’s a down turn on the economy.

 

Perspective Of Privileged:
The 2010 Olympics hosted in Vancouver and Whistler is a great opportunity for all the athletes in the games. For all the athletes who have worked there whole life and trained for several hours a day this is a once in a life time dream to come true. It’s a big money maker for all the restate companies by selling high raised priced homes to the coming tourist and land for the Olympics.  It is a vacation time and luxury for all the wealthy people watching and beating on the games. 

Perspective of the Oppressed:
The Olympics are promoted as a great event yet they are also saying a waste of money.  They are putting out billions of dollars on the 2010 Olympics putting our society more in debt and how are they going to pay it back? By raising the taxes on citizens?  Housing prices is going up as well as everything else including food. People of the lower class and middle the class are already having a problem with the rapidly rising prices as well as myself. I don’t get paid enough money to basically survive with the prices going up and employee hours being cut.  The homeless is basically being forgot about and being put aside. With all the money the government spend on the Olympics they could have used it for better use helping people in need and the disastrous economy. Transit is going to be interesting because the question is are there enough transit links to get everyone around?

What’s your opinion? Are the winter games a good idea for the economy?

Gay but Equal?

AS the country prepares to enter the Obama era, anxiety over the legal status and rights of gays and lesbians is growing. Barack Obama’s invitation to the Rev. Rick Warren, an evangelical pastor who opposes same-sex marriage, to give the invocation at his inauguration comes just as the hit movie “Milk” reminds us of the gay rights activism of the 1970s. Supporters of gay rights wonder if the California Supreme Court might soon confirm the legitimacy of Proposition 8, passed by state voters in November, which declares same-sex marriage illegal — leaving them no alternative but to take to the streets.

To help resolve the issue of gay rights, President-elect Obama should abolish the now moribund Commission on Civil Rights and replace it with a new commission that would address the rights of many groups, including gays.

The fault lines beneath the debate over gay rights are jagged and deep. Federal Social Security and tax benefits from marriage that straight people take for granted are denied to most gays in committed relationships. And because Congress has failed to enact a federal employment nondiscrimination act, bias against gays in the workplace remains a constant threat.

Gays are at risk under the military’s “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy. And people who are only assumed to be homosexual have been subject to hate crimes. José and Romel Sucuzhañay, two brothers, were attacked in New York City last month by men yelling anti-gay and anti-Latino epithets. José Sucuzhañay died from being beaten with a bottle and a baseball bat. Yet the effort in Congress to enact a law that would increase the punishment for hate crimes against gays and lesbians is going nowhere.

The Commission on Civil Rights has been crippled since the Reagan years by the appointments of commissioners who see themselves as agents of the presidential administration rather than as independent watchdogs. The creation of a new, independent human and civil rights commission could help us determine our next steps in the pursuit of freedom and justice in our society. A number of explosive issues like immigration reform await such a commission, but recommendations for resolving the controversies over the rights of gays, lesbians and transgendered people should be its first order of business.

After reading this article I thought that the author was positively correct! It shouldn’t matter how you feel or what others beliefs are. Life is short and you should be able to do anything your heart desires  which meaning being treated how you want to be treated and have the respect towards everyone and their beliefs.  Everyone is different in several ways and we all believe in different things and there is no reason to beat someone up for being gay, would you want to be beaten up? In the article, the man that died  had no reason to be killed, life is always changing and people are always changing and there is no reason for hate.

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