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Author Archives: Jaye Little
Posts: 5 (archived below)
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Bombings in Syria
There was an article in the paper yesterday about Israel bombing Syria. The title is “Israel Bombs Syria as U.S. Considers Its Own Military Options.” I think this is important because it shows how hard Obama is trying to stay civil with everyone and in every aspect. Obama stated that he wanted to remain out of the situation, and when asked if things went further, what he would do, he went on to explain there needed to be several questions answered, even at that point, he probably wouldn’t resort to any sort of military action. It also shows how difficult bombings and wars can be; as well as how easily the US can be dragged in…
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/04/world/middleeast/syria.html?ref=todayspaper&_r=0
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Gay Marriage: Japan, China, the US
According to Japantoday, Japan mainly focuses on gay marriage in other countries. For example, they have articles about the protesters in France, Obama attempting to overturn the gay marriage ban and New Zealand looking and working their way to legalizing gay marriage.
The Japantimes is very similar, mainly focuses on the progress of other countries. However, they did contain an additional piece on Uruguay “ok-ing” same sex marriages. There is a small piece on the senator announcing his change of heart due to his son being gay; however, that is a US story, simply covered in Japan. There is also another small piece about a gay rights movie being blurred on Japanese TV. Overall, there isn’t much information on gay marriage or rights specifically in Japan.
I wondered if this was the only country to let gay rights fly under the radar, so I read through ChinaDaily. Very, very similar news stories. This newsite focused on New Zealand supporting gay marriage, the parliament voting in favor of fay rights and is the first country in the Asia-Pacific to do so.
However, the US focuses more on the actual rights progress. The Huffington Post also contains the same stories that the international newsites contained, but has a view additional ones. Such as the gay rallies outside the supreme court. Or about how the LGBT community is looking toward Obama hoping that he would take additional measures, wanting him to be more active.
CNN on the otherhand, simply focuses on their arguments. They don’t sway one way or another, they simply put all sides of the argument to be known.
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While reading through the various gay rights articles on the five new srouces that I chose, I realized that there is a wide range of ways to handle the issue. One of the conservation sites I had chosen, The Weekly Standard, doesn’t have an article focusing on gay rights since December of 2012. The most recent article that the other conservative site that I chose, National Review Online, wrote was on February 26th 2013, focusing on why the CPAC should accept the gay conservative groups. (http://www.nationalreview.com/articles/341420/goproud-or-go-home-daniel-foster). Ironically, this article seemed to be in favor of homosexuals, given that they are conservatives as well.
What surprised me the most was one of the liberal sources that I chose: CNN. CNN focuses on the more renowned gay rights issues. For example, there was an article about Carly Rae Jepsen dropping her boy scouts performance (http://marquee.blogs.cnn.com/2013/03/05/carly-rae-jepsen-drops-boy-scouts-performance-over-gay-rights/?iref=allsearch), there’s an article about Obama and the nation coming to a general positive consensus about same-sex marriage (http://www.cnn.com/2013/03/01/politics/same-sex-marriage-shift/index.html?iref=allsearch), but for the most part, that’s as far as CNN goes. They focus on the big stories, with a few opinion articles here and there.
On the other hand, there is the Huffington Post. While roaming around the Huffington Post website, I realized that they are an extremely liberal source. Searching for various articles on gay rights, I found enough to peak my curiosity for weeks. Any little thing that one could think of, The Huffington Post covered. Aside from the articles that ranged from rumors, such as the article: “Manti Te’o Gay? NFL Teams Want To Know About Linebacker’s Sexuality, Says Mike Florio” (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/25/manti-teo-gay-nfl-combine-florio_n_2760515.html), to various different polls or opinions such as the article/video “Straight Guys React To Gay Porn” (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/19/straight-guys-react-to-gay-porn_n_2717600.html), they also had all the way to important gay marriage news such as the article “Mississippi Newspaper Defends Gay Wedding Coverage After Homophobic Readers Complain” (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/22/mississippi-newspaper-defends-gay-wedding-coverage_n_2735503.html). Unlike CNN, they didn’t just focus on the big important articles, they focused on the small things as well.
Each of these articles or videos have an importance. The Huffington Post takes a positive stand point and tries to convey the importance of Gay rights. Admittedly, they have their fun by making others squirm in their chair while discussing “taboo” subjects and playing into potential rumors, but they do their best to keep the topics light and informative. These articles lean towards the granting of equal rights.
Good As You, is an opinion based blog page that I had found. The author uses various articles or instances in the news and reveals her opinion, support, and disagreement on whatever the issue may be. The author has a wide variety of topics and opinions; however, they all support gays and their rights.
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Jaye Little: 5 sources for Gay Rights
The Huffington Post
CNN
The Weekly Standard
National Review Online
Good As You
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