WATCH: Stunning Time Lapse Shows The White House Light Up With Rainbow Colors

WATCH: Stunning Time Lapse Shows The White House Light Up With Rainbow Colors

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You’ve most likely seen the stunning image of The White House lit up in the colors of the rainbow to celebrate the Supreme Court’s historic ruling legalizing same-sex marriage nationwide (and you certainly have if you’re reading this post).

But now a new time-lapse video from NBC News shows the People’s House erupting in color as night fell on the nation’s capitol Friday night, forever capturing a moment we will never forget.

Watch the below:

And in case you missed it, check out other national Landmarks that got rainbow-ified on Friday.

(Photo via The White House / Twitter)

The post WATCH: Stunning Time Lapse Shows The White House Light Up With Rainbow Colors appeared first on Towleroad.


Sean Mandell

WATCH: Stunning Time Lapse Shows The White House Light Up With Rainbow Colors

A Good Rule of Law: Mind Your Own Business

A Good Rule of Law: Mind Your Own Business
Friday’s U.S. Supreme Court decision was a great victory for LGBT rights. But it also was a great victory for something that rests right at the heart of the human experience, the paramount legal doctrine of M.Y.O.B.

Mind Your Own Business.

Reporters love to generate controversy. In a TV interview on Friday, a reporter asked me, “What do you have to say to all of the millions of opponents of gay marriage?”

I replied thusly: “Mind your own business.”

OK, I’ll admit that that response will not earn me the Nobel Peace Prize. But I’m making an important point here. What difference does it make to Person X if Person Y marries Person Z? Seriously.

I sometimes give a speech where I go through a mock agenda for a Tea Party conference. One of the items on the agenda, from 2 p.m. to 3 p.m., is a colloquium on “How Gay Marriage Destroyed My Straight Marriage,” moderated by No One. And attended by No One.

(Now that I think about it, most Tea Partiers who might attend that colloquium wouldn’t know what a colloquium is. And for sure, they couldn’t spell it. Or as they would write, “spel it.”)

Let’s face it: Whenever anyone sticks his nose into other people’s business, something bad happens. The war in Iraq. The NSA spying on everyone because I-don’t-know-why. Chinese cyberattacks. Even the Patriots stealing opponents’ signals. Hey, everyone, just mind your own business!

One of the basic functions of the U.S. Supreme Court, which we just saw in spades, is to prevent a prejudiced majority from employing the law as a device to stick their noses into the business of “discrete, insular minorities.” That phrase comes from the most famous footnote in U.S. Supreme Court history, footnote 4 of the decision United States v. Carolene Products Co., 304 U.S. 144 (1938). Here’s the good part:

“[P]rejudice against discrete and insular minorities may be a special condition, which tends seriously to curtail the operation of those political processes ordinarily to be relied upon to protect minorities, and which may call for a correspondingly more searching judicial inquiry…”

(Congratulations, you just passed the bar exam. Now good luck finding a job.)

In Carolene terms, the LGBT community is a discrete, insular minority. Prejudice against gays means that they cannot rely exclusively on political processes to protect them from prejudice and inequality. Therefore, in Friday’s decision, after a “searching judicial inquiry,” the U.S. Supreme Court did so. Q.E.D.

So Friday’s decision was not merely a victory for our LGBT friends. It was a quantum leap forward in how we see each other- – with a very healthy respect. We mind our own business.

Or, as Pope Francis put it, “Who am I to judge?” A very good question, for all of us.

Courage,

Rep. Alan Grayson

“It doesn’t matter much to me.”

— The Beatles, “Strawberry Fields Forever.” (1968).

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Bobby Jindal: It’s Offensive To Equate Interracial Marriage and Gay Marriage Opposition – VIDEO

Bobby Jindal: It’s Offensive To Equate Interracial Marriage and Gay Marriage Opposition – VIDEO

Bobby JindalOn Sunday’s Meet the Press, host Chuck Todd interviewed Louisiana Governor and Republican Presidential hopeful Bobby Jindal about his views on the Supreme Court’s ruling on same-sex marriage.

Todd focused on whether opposition to same-sex marriage can be equated to past opposition to interracial marriage. Specifically, he referenced President Harry Truman’s opposition to interracial marriage, opposition that was rooted in his interpretation of the Bible, and asked whether Jindal was similarly “comfortable using religion as a way to defend [his] position on marriage?”

As Mediaite reports, the governor took umbrage to this comparison:

“…exactly three times, Jindal said he took offense at that line of questioning, saying “it’s offensive to equate evangelical Christians, Catholics, and others who view marriage as between a man and a woman” with racists.

He said gay marriage opponents still love their fellow man, they just have firmly-held beliefs that marriage should stay between a man and a woman.”

The post Bobby Jindal: It’s Offensive To Equate Interracial Marriage and Gay Marriage Opposition – VIDEO appeared first on Towleroad.


Sean Mandell

Bobby Jindal: It’s Offensive To Equate Interracial Marriage and Gay Marriage Opposition – VIDEO

'Pink Moon,' Film Starring Brandon Tyler Harris, Streaming Free Online

'Pink Moon,' Film Starring Brandon Tyler Harris, Streaming Free Online
An intriguing film that we began covering last year is now available online — and completely for free.

From writer and director Sal Bardo comes “Pink Moon,” a short film following two straight teenagers dealing with an unwanted pregnancy in a world where heterosexuals are under attack and the right to procreate is tightly controlled. The film stars Brandon Tyler Harris, a straight ally who has appeared in “The Big C,” “Smash” and “Law & Order: SVU.”

“There’s an all-out assault on reproductive rights in this country, and the same thing is happening with LGBT rights,” Barado told Interview magazine. “Both of those issues are about personal freedom, and they’re fundamentally connected.” A feature-length version of the film, as well as a music video for “Great Escape,” an original song from the film featuring Cat Martino of synth-pop duo Stranger Cat, are both currently in the works.”

Check out the film for yourself above.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

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Get Your Marriage On At These Five Perfect San Francisco Places

Get Your Marriage On At These Five Perfect San Francisco Places

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Summer means wedding season. With the conservative Supreme Court putting the ultimate stamp of approval on the freedom to marry, the time could not be better to tie the knot in the LGBT capitol of America, San Francisco, the city of love.

In celebration of equality under the law, we rounded up some unique spots to exchange vows and make it official.

Steps Of History

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City Hall is the most historical place for same-sex couples to tie the knot in the City By The Bay–in some ways the birth of the marriage equality movement (inspired in part by former SF mayor Gavin Newsom). Say I do on the front lines of the same-sex marriage battleground registering online.

A great place for the reception is at one of the swanky cool nearby hotels.

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Ocean Backdrop

Always dreamed of getting married on the ocean at sunset? Well, you can do both in San Francisco. For a reception and ceremony, dip your toes in the sand at public Ocean Beach. If you want something a little more private with the same breathtaking views, hop up the road at the lovely Park Chalet or famous Cliff House. A lesser symbolic venue is across the Bay in Oakland on Lake Chalet.

 

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Urban Wilderness

Just because you’re in the middle of a city doesn’t mean you discover a peacefully serene location. Get married in the wilderness of San Francisco by holding the ceremony in the Presidio or expansive Golden Gate Park. In the Presidio, you can put guests up at the Inn At The Presidio and even get the Golden Gate Bridge in your photo backdrop if you stage it just right. In Golden Gate Park, reserve unique space for receptions at the de Young Museum or California Academy Of Sciences.

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Wine Country

If rolling hills and/or the best wine in the world is your thing, then look no further than the North Bay Area. The resorts and vineyards eager to host your reception and ceremony are endless. Peruse GayCities’ user favorites and the best according to San Francisco Travel. These include Domaine Carneros, V SattuiBuena Vista Winery, Vintner’s InnChateau St. Jean WineryAuberge du Soleil and Farmstead at Longmeadow Ranch.

If you really want to gay it up though, plan it around an Out In The Vineyard event or commission the gay wine country experts to help plan one of your own. You’ll want to spend plenty of time in San Francisco on your way there and back, of course.

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Take A Cruise

Yes, on a boat. For an intimate nautical experience, charter your own yacht or private boat for ceremony and/or reception. The views are be ever changing and the absolute best of the entire Bay. (Just make sure nobody in the party gets seasick!) There’s several companies to charter through, and nearby bars and clubs to after you dock.

Find a gay-approved wedding vendor in the Bay Area and beyond through Purple Unions. Or, browse San Francisco Travel and the GayCities San Francisco Guide to find places and businesses for planning  one of your own.

Gabe Cooper

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Unmanned SpaceX Rocket Explodes Moments After Liftoff: VIDEO

Unmanned SpaceX Rocket Explodes Moments After Liftoff: VIDEO

SpaceX

An unmanned SpaceX rocket headed to the International Space Station launched from Cape Canaveral, Florida exploded mid-air Sunday morning as the result of a major malfunction.

TIME reports:

The shipment was carrying more than 4,000 pounds of cargo, including food for astronauts, spare parts and an adapter built to allow future manned missions to dock at the space station.

The adapter, which weighs more than 1,000 pounds by itself, was built by Boeing and plays an essential role in the government’s plan to send astronauts to space via manned rockets instead of shuttles.

The New York Times adds:

It was first failure in 19 launchings of the Falcon 9 rocket built by Space Exploration Technologies of Hawthorne, Calif., better known as SpaceX.

This episode follows the failures of two other cargo rockets. In October, an Antares rocket, built by Orbital ATK, exploded on the launching pad in Virginia. In May, a Russian Progress rocket spun out of control, unable to reach the space station.

The six astronauts on the space station are not in any immediate danger, with several months of supplies.

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Sean Mandell

Unmanned SpaceX Rocket Explodes Moments After Liftoff: VIDEO