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Mayor Ras J. Baraka, the City’s Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Intersex, and Questioning (LGBTQ) Advisory and Concerns Commission, and other dignitaries held the LGBTQ Pride Flag-Raising ceremony as part of Newark Gay Pride Week on Thursday, July 14, 2016, at 5 p.m. in the City Hall First Floor Rotunda.
The rainbow flag, a universal symbol of LGBTQ pride, will fly outside City Hall for the duration of the 11th annual Newark Pride Week. Mayor Baraka has made a firm commitment to supporting the needs and equality of the LGBTQ community. The City of Newark created its first-ever LGBTQ Commission seven years ago. This year marks the 11th anniversary of Newark Gay Pride.
This year’s events celebrate the last 11 years of accomplishments in Newark’s LGBTQ Community as well as in the global LGBTQ Community. The event will also honor the 49 victims of the recent mass shooting in Orlando, Florida, which targeted that City’s LGBTQ community.
This official City of Newark photograph is being made available only for publication by news organizations and/or for personal use printing by the subject(s) of the photograph. The photograph may not be manipulated in any way and may not be used in commercial or political materials, advertisements, emails, products, promotions that in any way suggests approval or endorsement of the Mayor of Newark, the City of Newark, or Newark City Hall.
Any use or reprinting of official City of Newark photos must use the following credit language and style: Newark Press Information Office.
Monday wash day!
Questioning the status of ordinary washing places, Caroline Jacob has shifted the usual location of the laundrette and will transform Mediamatic into a laundrette to present wASH. Preserving the social aspect of the laundrette, Monday Washday Laundrette is an opportunity to gather, try out wASH, as well as tell the stories emerging its creation. As an homage to the heirloom custom and the recipe embodied in the laundry detergent, visitors will be invited to wash their laundry in the space. The laundrette will open its doors every Monday and will be available for free use all day long. Visitors might become performers, clothes gesticulated, machines resonated.
Questioning whether to add this neckline detail.
My second dress for The Summer of No Pants. Blogged here: tharshesews.blogspot.com/2011/06/second-dress-for-summer-...
Mayor Ras J. Baraka, the City’s Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Intersex, and Questioning (LGBTQ) Advisory and Concerns Commission, and other dignitaries held the LGBTQ Pride Flag-Raising ceremony as part of Newark Gay Pride Week on Thursday, July 14, 2016, at 5 p.m. in the City Hall First Floor Rotunda.
The rainbow flag, a universal symbol of LGBTQ pride, will fly outside City Hall for the duration of the 11th annual Newark Pride Week. Mayor Baraka has made a firm commitment to supporting the needs and equality of the LGBTQ community. The City of Newark created its first-ever LGBTQ Commission seven years ago. This year marks the 11th anniversary of Newark Gay Pride.
This year’s events celebrate the last 11 years of accomplishments in Newark’s LGBTQ Community as well as in the global LGBTQ Community. The event will also honor the 49 victims of the recent mass shooting in Orlando, Florida, which targeted that City’s LGBTQ community.
This official City of Newark photograph is being made available only for publication by news organizations and/or for personal use printing by the subject(s) of the photograph. The photograph may not be manipulated in any way and may not be used in commercial or political materials, advertisements, emails, products, promotions that in any way suggests approval or endorsement of the Mayor of Newark, the City of Newark, or Newark City Hall.
Any use or reprinting of official City of Newark photos must use the following credit language and style: Newark Press Information Office.
Some "buzz phrases" make me come up with weird images... maybe its my previous profession!
These PD sessions always assume that the audience is dumb and stupid... rather annoys me!
music festival, kalliokukkii, celebrating its 25 years with the usual samba carnival parade from papagayo.
Dish always gets this perplexed look after she comes to find me, almost as if she doesn't recognize who I am!
First Day Challenge in Int/Adv Sculpture. Materials: Yarn, Scissors, Space, and instigated, loosely organized play. Conclusion: Maybe it was the sun, but we may make better antagonists when making together. University of Idaho
Sen. Landrieu questions Sec. Geithner about the Small Business Lending Fund. "Until this recession is at a distance in the rearview mirror, I believe that we have an obligation to turn out time-tested, as well as new and innovative, ideas to get capital into the hands of small businesses."
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Sooooooo, recently i've been going through this thing where i'm just questioning who i am. Like do i actually know myself? Do people actually know themselves.. and i rised to the conclusion that we dont. Why is it that when you see yourself in a video or hear yourself you dont realize that, that is actually who you are or that's what you sound like i guess.. But we never actually know ourselves. You may know what you want to be or what your goals or moral is but other people dont. We act differently and have different personas for everything. I mean after some time of living, you start to grasp who you really are but never 100%? We do things we arent proud of, or we make mistakes and forget about them, but other people dont try to block those memories, they may remember you based off of those events..
gahh i dont know i thought it was interesting. But for the longest time, i seemed to of forgotten who i am.
and i was wondering if other people actually knew who they were. Like there true selves, not who they invision themselves to be but the person that they actually are. We arrange our memories in whatever we see fit, but that means we leave out some parts. duuuudeee and liikeee you knoww like when you look in a mirror and you think that liek you look swaggerlicious but then you go outside and like a wind slaps you in the face and then you look like shieett but then you dont know that so then you stil think your swaggerlicious and like youre not but you dont know that and you go on acting normally while everyone thinks bad things about you. o_o ok maybe not that far but i hope you get the gist of it..
#Sharia in action in France: Journalist faces criminal trial for questioning Islam during radio debate - #Jihad Watch ow.ly/pHLmv Rioufol: Truth is his defense "The future must not belong to those who slander the prophet of Islam," said Barack Obama, and judging by how those...
Questioning about polygyny vs polygamy? Sisterwives.com is the must-see online place that clearly explains polygamy and polygyny simply and easily with lots of stories. Keep in touch with us if you need more information.
Park County Precinct Committeewoman Cherie Fisher and a Big Horn County Precinct Committeeman ask Sen. Sam Brownback about multiple use as it relates to Yellowstone National Park's winter use plan.
The Legendary House of Ninja vogue performance at the Goldman-Sonnenfeldt Auditorium in new york city march 17 2009.
The only way to make democracy real is to begin a process of constant questioning, permanent provocation, and continuous public conversation between citizens and the State.
That conversation is quite different from the conversation between political parties. (Representing the views of rival political parties is what the mass media thinks of as "balanced" reporting.)
Patrolling the borders of our liberty is the only way we can guard against the snatching away of our freedoms. All over the world today, freedoms are being curbed in the name of protecting freedom. Once freedoms are surrendered by civil society, they cannot be retrieved without a struggle. It is so much easier to relinquish them than to recover them.
It is important to remember that our freedoms, such as they are, were never given to us by any government, they have been wrested by us. If we do not use them, if we do not test them from time to time, they atrophy. If we do not guard them constantly, they will be taken away from us. If we do not demand more and more, we will be left with less and less.
~ Arundhati Roy, An Ordinary Person's Guide to Empire
Mayor Ras J. Baraka, the City’s Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Intersex, and Questioning (LGBTQ) Advisory and Concerns Commission, and other dignitaries held the LGBTQ Pride Flag-Raising ceremony as part of Newark Gay Pride Week on Thursday, July 14, 2016, at 5 p.m. in the City Hall First Floor Rotunda.
The rainbow flag, a universal symbol of LGBTQ pride, will fly outside City Hall for the duration of the 11th annual Newark Pride Week. Mayor Baraka has made a firm commitment to supporting the needs and equality of the LGBTQ community. The City of Newark created its first-ever LGBTQ Commission seven years ago. This year marks the 11th anniversary of Newark Gay Pride.
This year’s events celebrate the last 11 years of accomplishments in Newark’s LGBTQ Community as well as in the global LGBTQ Community. The event will also honor the 49 victims of the recent mass shooting in Orlando, Florida, which targeted that City’s LGBTQ community.
This official City of Newark photograph is being made available only for publication by news organizations and/or for personal use printing by the subject(s) of the photograph. The photograph may not be manipulated in any way and may not be used in commercial or political materials, advertisements, emails, products, promotions that in any way suggests approval or endorsement of the Mayor of Newark, the City of Newark, or Newark City Hall.
Any use or reprinting of official City of Newark photos must use the following credit language and style: Newark Press Information Office.
Mayor Ras J. Baraka, the City’s Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Intersex, and Questioning (LGBTQ) Advisory and Concerns Commission, and other dignitaries held the LGBTQ Pride Flag-Raising ceremony as part of Newark Gay Pride Week on Thursday, July 14, 2016, at 5 p.m. in the City Hall First Floor Rotunda.
The rainbow flag, a universal symbol of LGBTQ pride, will fly outside City Hall for the duration of the 11th annual Newark Pride Week. Mayor Baraka has made a firm commitment to supporting the needs and equality of the LGBTQ community. The City of Newark created its first-ever LGBTQ Commission seven years ago. This year marks the 11th anniversary of Newark Gay Pride.
This year’s events celebrate the last 11 years of accomplishments in Newark’s LGBTQ Community as well as in the global LGBTQ Community. The event will also honor the 49 victims of the recent mass shooting in Orlando, Florida, which targeted that City’s LGBTQ community.
This official City of Newark photograph is being made available only for publication by news organizations and/or for personal use printing by the subject(s) of the photograph. The photograph may not be manipulated in any way and may not be used in commercial or political materials, advertisements, emails, products, promotions that in any way suggests approval or endorsement of the Mayor of Newark, the City of Newark, or Newark City Hall.
Any use or reprinting of official City of Newark photos must use the following credit language and style: Newark Press Information Office.
The bird I'm questioning is standing near the sandbar in this photo. My guess is juvenile Cormorant or Anhinga, but I am not sure.
I was quite a distance away and this is heavily cropped.
The photo was taken June 22, 2015 (summer) at Huntington Beach State Park, Murrells Inlet, South Carolina, United States of America.
A questioning of male beauty drawn in nature's most beautiful program: MS Paint. Edited in Adobe Premier. Music Copyright Tune Yards.
Watch this video on Vimeo. Video created by Marie Richer.
Questioning? Wondering? Staring...whatever Boots was doing, he was in his own 'world'! :) I can relate sometimes - but I recently read that daydreaming is an important component of learning, that concentrated focus alone just doesn't cut it. So, there you go, Boots - learning from a cat! :) Sanibel Island, FL
Ikenna Azuike questioning David De Armey (Water for Good), Liza Rivera (Water For People) and Vida Duti (IRC) on One For All.
Learn more:
All Systems Connect | International Symposium May 2023 @ World Forum, The Hague | Photographer: Robert Tjalondo
Mayor Ras J. Baraka, the City’s Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Intersex, and Questioning (LGBTQ) Advisory and Concerns Commission, and other dignitaries held the LGBTQ Pride Flag-Raising ceremony as part of Newark Gay Pride Week on Thursday, July 14, 2016, at 5 p.m. in the City Hall First Floor Rotunda.
The rainbow flag, a universal symbol of LGBTQ pride, will fly outside City Hall for the duration of the 11th annual Newark Pride Week. Mayor Baraka has made a firm commitment to supporting the needs and equality of the LGBTQ community. The City of Newark created its first-ever LGBTQ Commission seven years ago. This year marks the 11th anniversary of Newark Gay Pride.
This year’s events celebrate the last 11 years of accomplishments in Newark’s LGBTQ Community as well as in the global LGBTQ Community. The event will also honor the 49 victims of the recent mass shooting in Orlando, Florida, which targeted that City’s LGBTQ community.
This official City of Newark photograph is being made available only for publication by news organizations and/or for personal use printing by the subject(s) of the photograph. The photograph may not be manipulated in any way and may not be used in commercial or political materials, advertisements, emails, products, promotions that in any way suggests approval or endorsement of the Mayor of Newark, the City of Newark, or Newark City Hall.
Any use or reprinting of official City of Newark photos must use the following credit language and style: Newark Press Information Office.
Polling is based on questioning a sampling of people and extrapolating their responses to a larger population. In order to do that, you have to make assumptions about the population based on past behavior -- especially when it comes to elections. Given the unique nature of the Wisconsin recall, that's difficult, if not impossible. There's no baseline, no pattern of past voting experience for the different voter demographics based on similar elections. There aren't any.
The recall was driven by a surge of grassroots action unprecedented not only locally, but also nationally. The percentage of the population that signed the recall petitions was the highest in Wisconsin history and also in U.S. history. For example, as a proportion of population, four times as many people signed the Wisconsin recall as signed the petitions to recall Gray Davis, which resulted in his being replaced by Arnold Schwarzenegger as governor of California.
From the beginning, a lot of people wanted a do-over after they found out that Tom Barre's defeat was a the result of a deliberate campaign of deceit and deception by Scott Walker. I took this photo on Feb. 19, 2011. People were passionate about this issue. That's why hundreds of thousands of people demonstrated in mindwinter at the Wisconsin state Capitol. Passion like that wins elections and is almost impossible to measure in polls.
Passion will be important on both sides. Certainly hard-core Walker supporters are also passionate about their candidate. They made an effort to turn out large numbers in the primary to demonstrate their strength. But even more Walker opponents cared enough to show up and vote in the primary. Those turnout figures might be a better indication of the outcome of the June 8th election than any amount of polling at this stage.
Despite all the flimflam and distractions Walker and the GOP try to throw at us, the only question as we go into the final weeks of the campaign is whether Wisconsin voters are as passionate about getting rid of Scott Walker as they were last year. If they are, and demonstrate their passion by going to the polls, Tom Barrett will be our next governor. I'm betting he will.