The chair that makes you gay
On August 15th, , X [4] reshared the video with the caption "Man I sure hope I don't get hit by the chair that makes you gay," mocking Hetsroni 's reaction after being hit with the chair and touching the other man's breast. Remember, nobody chooses to be gay. The man with the chair that turns people gay does. The chair that makes you gay 🪑 ᴄᴏɴꜱᴘɪʀɪɴᴀᴛᴏʀ subscribers Subscribed.
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July 1, marks the 25th anniversary of civil unions in Vermont. This legal alternative to marriage was the first of its kind in the United States. In the Vermont Supreme Court case Baker v. Vermont , the court ruled that the state had no legal basis to discriminate against same-sex couples. If the Legislature would not allow same-sex couples to get marriage licenses, lawmakers would have to figure out a legal alternative.
The result: civil unions. They were likely too young at the time to be thinking about marriage for themselves, but old enough to know what was going on and how it might affect them one day. Another rainy Saturday in Vermont, who woulda thought? Despite the showers, spirits are still high inside the art market. Ari Spatola: Good, Amy has sold a good amount of prints. Andrea Laurion: At the other end of the park, drag performer and host Katniss Everqueer is keeping the crowd engaged in the Performance Pavilion.
Not one, not two, not three, not four, but five people coming to the stage! But first I want to thank our sponsors…. Andrea Laurion: Joyful Pride events like these are pretty commonplace in Vermont. The Vermont Supreme Court ruled in Baker v. Vermont that the state had to allow same-sex marriage or a legal alternative. Howard Dean, at a press conference after signing the civil unions bill in April of Howard Dean: I choose to sign this bill because I fundamentally believe that it's the right thing to do, and I fundamentally believe it's the right thing to do for the state of Vermont and the United States of America.
I believe that, because until every human being is treated with dignity because they are a human being, and not because they belong in some category, then every American and every Vermonter is poorer because of that. But reality is often a bit more complicated. Andrea Laurion: Rain, OK, you are my friend. And one of the first people I met here. Andrea Laurion: It was through my friendship with Rain that I first got an idea of what it was like to grow up as a queer kid in Vermont during the turn of the millennium.
Rain went to elementary school in Middlebury then middle and high school in Montpelier. Rain Nissen-Reilly: When I was a teenager, like almost no one in high school was out. It was the early and mids, so it was when the word gay was like the pejorative du jour, you know, everything that you didn't like was gay. You know, a conflicting, weird time to be a queer youth, I would say.
Not the worst place, but, you know, not the best either. Rain Nissen-Reilly: From my understanding, Take Back Vermont was a reactionary response to, or it felt at the time like a reactionary response to civil unions and gay rights. I think there were certain segments of the state that felt there were certain population segments of the state that really felt like things were getting too progressive too fast, and it made them, I think, mad and scared.
And so around the time that civil unions got passed, these big black and white signs started popping up all over the state, like white backgrounds, big black block letters that just said, Take Back Vermont. It was sad and it sucked.