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Monday, January 27, 2014

OSU College Republicans ask about gay marriage

OSU Barometer front page Story College Republicans ask about gay marriage

PHOTO: gay marriage is mentioned in the front page student newspaper article by Sean Bassinger, "College Republicans welcomes GOP candidates," OSU Barometer, Jan. 24, 2014, p. 1, 4 that summarizes the positions on gay marriage of the Oregon Republican candidates for the U.S. Senate, which have surprisingly shifted toward a tacit support of marriage equality, despite words to the contrary by a few Republicans who are still trying to bring religion and German Nazi's into the discussion to paint Republicans as being the "victims" of liberal's "political correctness."

Below are some highlights:

"Republican senator and governor candidates gathered in the Memorial Union lounge Thursday to discuss issues involving higher education, marriage equality and minimum wage benefits. . .

"The Oregon senator candidates present were: Mark Callahan, Jason Conger, Tim Crawley and Jo Rae Perkins. Perkins, Callahan and Cuff are OSU alumni. . .

"The five senator candidates are competing against the current senator, Jeff Merkley, D-Ore.

"Before the event, the College Republicans provided an opportunity for students and community members to submit questions to the candidates.

"College Republicans President Donald Handeland gave each candidate a moment to introduce himself or herself and discuss a broad outline of issues he or she wished to tackle.

"On the issue of marriage equality, multiple candidates said the government should not be in the marriage business.

Cuff, though against same-sex marriage, said he advocated for respect among all individuals regardless of their lifestyle choices.

"My faith tells me that I'm not the judge," Cuff said. "Jesus Christ is the judge."

Perkins, who said she has friends who are gay, bisexual and cross-dressers, also disagrees with same-sex marriage.

"If you want to have a gay marriage, then go live in a state where it's already legalized," Perkins said, "do not impose what you believe and force it on me."

Justesen and Richardson were the only candidates who said they would not oppose the Marriage Equality Act if it were signed into place." " (Quoted from Sean Bassinger, "College Republicans welcomes GOP candidates," OSU Barometer, Jan. 24, 2014, p. 1, 4)

It is heartening to witness the positive shift of Republicans toward supporting gay marriage in the few years since when President George Bush ran for reelection in 2004 and the topic of gay marriage was used to bring out voters with Constitutional Amendments against gay marriage on the Oregon ballot, when it passed. Legal challenges to these bans on same-sex marriage in Oregon and other states are winding their way through the court systems to a possible resolution in the U.S. Supreme Court due to the conflict between various Federal Courts and State court decisions. See the article by Steven DuBois, Associated Press, "Judge consolidates Oregon lawsuits on gay marriage," Gazette-Times, Jan. 23, 2014, p. A4 bigstory.ap.org published online Jan. 22, 2014.

Some other things of interest:

Sunday, January 26, 2014

Still alive after 'upgrade' to Windows 7 HP Workstation and Dream Color Monitor

Old Dell PC (top) replaced by HP workstation

PHOTO: I recently replaced my ten year old Dell PC server tower running the Windows XP operating system, which was built in 2004 (shown top), with a new HP Z220 Workstation PC (shown bottom) running the Windows 7 64-bit Professional operating system. My old Dell Monitor has a 20-inch diagonal 1600 by 1200 pixel display spaced at 100 pixels-per-inch versus my new HP Dreamcolor monitor, which is a 24-inch diagonal monitor with 1920 pixels by 1200 pixels high and the same 100 pixels-per-inch resolution that is large enough to display two full-sized standard pages side by side. Both monitors have much better color depth and screen height than the typical 1920 by 1080 displays that usually only display less than 6-bits per color versus the more than 8 bits per color pixel for my Dell and mew HP monitor. The HP Dreamcolor monitor was designed for businesses requiring high quality color, such as the Dream Works animation studio. I decided to buy one, despite being color blind, because each pixel has a tricolor LED backlight that allows the display to almost match the deep black contrast ratios of old CRT displays, which it helps with my low vision blindness and I can magnify the operating system by 150% to see it better instead of the 125% maximum allowed by Windows with a 1080 pixel high display. The HP Workstation is built for non-stop business and engineering applications (I hope it will last me at least 10 years like the Dell did) and it was custom configured for me with two RAID 1 solid state disc drives, which have no moving mechanical parts instead of the standard old-fashioned mechanical disc drives found in most computers. The RAID 1 configuration writes a mirror image to both drives to increase reliability. Alternately, it could have been configured as a RAID 0 to increase the write speed to a virtual double sized drive, which is important when editing large video and engineering CAD files. What I like the most is the SSD drives can boot up Windows in seconds, which is much more quickly than when using a standard computer mechanical drive.

I had been holding off "upgrading" from Windows XP to Windows 7 even though it seemed like every program I used was griping about Windows XP being obsolete, because I knew it would take me much time to upgrade and relearn a new OS, especially given my low vision blindness. However, I begrudgingly knew that I would have to upgrade my OS eventually because Microsoft had announced they would be quitting the support of it, which would probably result in a security hole being left open that I would not want to worry about.

Based on my few decades of computer engineering design and business experience, I was curious why Microsoft had supported their Windows XP OS so much longer than normal. I was guessing it was because every business I know is still running Windows XP in at least one application, however, I didn't know the scope of this reason until I read the article by Nick Summers, "ATMs Face Deadline to Upgrade From Windows XP," posted Jan. 16, 2014, printed as "ATM's Lurch Into A New Century," BusinessWeek, Jan. 20-26, 2014, p. 37-38:

"When ATMs were introduced more than 40 years ago, they were considered advanced technology. Today, not so much. There are 420,000 ATMs in the U.S., and on April 8, a deadline looms for nearly all of them that underscores how sluggishly the nation's cash delivery system moves forward. That's the day Microsoft (MSFT) cuts off tech support for Windows XP, meaning that ATMs running the software will no longer receive regular security patches and won't be in compliance with industry standards. Most machines that get upgraded will shift to Windows 7, an operating system that became available in October 2009. (Some companies get a bit of a reprieve: For ATMs using a stripped-down version of XP known as Windows XP Embedded, which is less susceptible to viruses, Microsoft support lasts until early 2016.)" (Quoted from Nick Summers, "ATMs Face Deadline to Upgrade From Windows XP," posted Jan. 16, 2014, printed as "ATM's Lurch Into A New Century," BusinessWeek, Jan. 20-26, 2014, p. 37-38)

I was happy to read that every IT manager quoted in the article is moving to Window 7 because this suggests a good probability that my investment in Window 7 will last a decent amount of time, even though the Win 7 operating system is now nearly 4 years old (Win 7 was first released Oct. 2009). I hope to get ten years of use out of it, which might last me until I die.

I have played on computers since the 1950's, when my dad was using a mainframe computer at the University of Illinois for his PhD research in Chemical Engineering, and since 1972 I have been working almost exclusively on HP computers, for scientific and engineering applications, until about ten years ago when I purchased a Dell PC, mostly as a market research experiment. I can't complain because my Dell PC lasted 10 years, although I must note my Dell PC survived this long only because it was a very fast and high-end $4,000 computer when it was new and I also must note it required the replacement or upgrade of the video card, main memory and optical drives during its lifetime to keep it running acceptably.

Today, my new HP Z220 Workstation PC is also a high-end computer system costing nearly $2400 and likewise, costing over $2,000, the HP Dreamcolor is the best monitor you can buy today, even for an Apple Mac, (the HP Dreamcolor monitor is used by professional film animation producers, such as Stephen Spielberg's DreamWorks Studio, who had HP build it for them.)

This begs the question, "Why does a blind man own an HP DreamColor Monitor when he can't see color? Answer, "Because can" and the high contrast ratio of it, which approaches the quality of the old-fashioned CRT screens' deep blacks and whites, and this makes it easier for him to see it with his low vision blindness.

` For the fun of it, and as a market research study, I tried, posing as a real customer and I order my HP computer online through HP's small business sales channel. I was surprised to see their order system is not real-time and it appears to be a Web-based version of a 30 year old HP 3000 computer program. I ordered the HP computer the first week in January and requested two-day Fed-ex shipping. Except for an expected delay due to the configuration of it and an unexpected snow storm in Indianapolis that delayed all Fed-Ex deliveries, the monitor arrived within 2 days, and the workstation arrived a few days after the monitor arrived. However, now that I am nearly blind, it took me two full weeks to set it up and be able to do anything useful.

Prior to me buying the Dell computer ten years ago, I had gotten used to upgrading my computer every 2 to 3 years, starting in the 1960's when my first computer was a plastic mechanical computer that could count in binary from 0 to 7 or three bits. I also grew up playing with my dad's analog computer and one of the first digital computers he used in the 1950's while working on his PhD in Chemical Engineering.

The so-called "upgrade" process has always been difficult, even when you have planned it for it in advance and use systematic methods. I have always hated doing upgrades, which is why I waited so long -- I would have waited longer if it was not for the fact that Microsoft plans to quit supporting Windows XP this year. In fact, I was wondering why Microsoft had supported Windows XP as long as they have, until I confirmed the fact that XP is still inside thousands of ATM machines and other business applications, including one at my dentist's office.

As predicted, this time around the upgrade process was pure hell, but mostly because of the fact that I have lost most of my vision and I have not yet memorized Windows 7 commands and the various windows locations -- it is a pain to have to relearn everything. However, I was delighted to find the HP business computers were still of the quality that I was accustomed to experiencing with HP products.

There are numerous things I want to blog about, but it may take me some time before I am able to do it again. My friends and family are already called me to say they were worried that I had died after they saw my blog's lack of activity, but they all understood why I have posted so little after they learned how I had been spending full-time trying to do a so-called "upgrade" of my computer system.

Hopefully, I can get back up to speed and post some more interesting things in the near future. I am treating every post as potentially my last post, in the event I can't do anymore.

Thursday, January 9, 2014

IRS tax documents belatedly provide low vision accessibility to comply with ADA law

PHOTO: The first large print IRS tax form and instructions for Schedule R (Form 1040A or 1040) that I received only a few days after calling the IRS. I have been promised more large print forms, instructions and publications from the IRS within the next few days, or as soon as they become available. I have also downloaded the IRS PDF tax forms that are supposed to be more accessible for people who are low vision blind. I will be also trying these PDF forms out when I do my taxes this year. I was also impressed to see Braille .brf and text format files available for download. The IRS is trying to go paperless to save money on printing forms and the associated mailing costs by forcing everybody who wants to use paper forms to call and order each one individually. As a result, I bet the cost per form mailed has skyrocketed from the days when the IRS automatically mailed out pre-bound tax packages that included all of the forms required by most taxpayers. I am sure some anti-government-spending people will complain about the cost -- it cost the IRS at least the $5.75 of postage to mail me a large print Schedule R, as seen by the stamp on the hand addressed envelope in the above photograph.

As a person who has low vision blindness and who has filed his own taxes for over half a century, I was disappointed a few years ago to find out the IRS Web site was inaccessible to me because it had added style sheet code that overrides the standard built-in internet browser features that have provided low vision blindness accessibility since 1993, such as text size and wrapping of text to the user's screen width or printer margins, per the original HTML standard. See my previous letter to the editor: Thomas Kraemer, "IRS ignores plea for help,"Gazette-Times, Feb. 5, 2012, p. D5 and also see my previous posts IRS tax forms are not low vision accessible and violate ADA law (1/5/12), Filing paperless tax return is not free for all (12/9/ 10) and I am still alive (2/26/11).

Here is my latest letter to the editor on IRS accessibility issues:

In 2014, taxpayers will belatedly receive Internal Revenue Service tax instructions with larger text sizes via standard tablet readers or Internet browsers, perhaps thanks to a congressional inquiry made by U.S. Rep. Peter DeFazio at my request, which asked why IRS tax forms, instructions and publications were not accessible to people with low vision blindness, as required by the Americans With Disabilities Act (the ADA law).

Last month, when I tried out the newly accessible IRS documents, I encountered only a few minor usability issues and software defects.

Still unconfirmed is if all taxpayers will be able to file paperless electronic tax returns for free, even if required by the IRS to use the "Free File Fillable (sic) tax forms," instead of the "Free e-File" method, and paper returns are eliminated.

(Quoted from Thomas Kraemer, "Letter: IRS finally has forms that are usable by low-vision taxpayers," gazettetimes.com posted Jan. 8, 2014, p. A9)

Because tax filing time is coming up again this year, I have been checking with the IRS periodically and here are the links I noticed for the new IRS accessible pages:

Saturday, December 21, 2013

Utah judge cites 1972 Baker gay marriage case

newspaper headline Utah judge approves gay marriage followed by Family Circus cartoon's Merry Christmas 12/25/13

PHOTO: (click photo to enlarge) UPDATE 12/25/13: An old-fashioned physical newspaper featured a headline about the Utah Judge's approval of gay marriage followed on the next page in same position with the "Merry Christmas" greeting from "The Family Circus" cartoon by Bil Keane. I am sure some gay children, who are still reading the "comic pages," were inspired by this headline on their way to a "Merry Christmas." (Photo of Corvallis Gazette-Times, Dec. 25, 2013, p. B5 and p. B7)

Recent selfie by Jack Baker and Michael McConnell shown by Oprah Winfrey Oct. 27, 2013

PHOTO: A recent selfie photo of Jack Baker and Michael McConnell was shown by Oprah Winfrey as she expressed her amazement over how "brave" they had to be in the 1970's to fight for the right to gay marriage. see previous posts Oprah impressed by Jack Baker's gay marriage activism in 1970s (10/28/13) and Gay marriage discussion in 1953 vs. 1963 and today (12/16/13)

Utah's State Constitutional ban on same-sex marriage was struck down by a Federal court ruling that addressed the U.S. Supreme Court's 1972 decision in the Baker v. Nelson case of Jack Baker and Michael McConnell. Here are are two comments on it by legal experts Arthur S. Leonard, a professor at New York Law School since 1982, and Bloomberg's Lyle Denniston:

"Shelby found that Windsor made clear, as cumulative to prior Supreme Court decisions, that the Supreme Court's 1972 ruling in Baker v. Nelson holding that the issue of same-sex marriage did not present a substantial federal question was no longer a binding precedent on lower courts. He pointed out that the Supreme Court has said that a disposition on that ground ceases to be binding on lower courts when subsequent developments in case law render it obsolete. Shelby found that many Supreme Court cases decided since the 1970s, considered cumulatively, have created a substantial federal question." (Quoted from Arthur S. Leonard, a professor at New York Law School since 1982, "Utah May Be the 18th Marriage Equality State," artleonardobservations.com posted Dec. 20, 2013)

"Along the way toward his ultimate conclusion, Judge Shelby ruled that the issue of state authority to outlaw same-sex marriage is no longer controlled by a one-line 1972 Supreme Court decision in a Minnesota case, Baker v. Nelson. Opponents of same-sex marriage have often relied on that ruling, which said simply that such a ban did not raise a "substantial federal question."While some other courts have found that the Baker precedent still determines the issue, Judge Shelby said that all of those rulings had been issued before the Supreme Court ruled in the Windsor case last June. In that decision, the Court found that the Defense of Marriage Act's provision that all federal benefits keyed to marriage were limited to opposite-sex marriages violated already-married gay and lesbian couples' right to equality." (Quoted from Lyle Denniston, "Utah's same-sex marriage ban falls (FURTHER UPDATED)," scotusblog.com posted Dec. 21, 2013, accessed 11:49 AM)

The Rachel Maddow Show on MSNBC last night (Dec. 20, 2013) did a good job explaining the issue of how marriage laws have been traditionally treated as a matter of State law and the issues surrounding legal problems that can occur when State laws conflict with the U.S. Constitution and Federal laws, which is an issue with the Utah State Constitutional Amendment against same-sex marriage. Hopefully, this will not be a call to action from anti-gay theocrats for a U.S. Constitutional Amendment to ban same-sex marriage -- I haven't heard of anybody trying to propose doing such a drastic thing, except during the 2004 Bush Presidential campaign, when anti-gay marriage ballot measures were used as a wedge issue to get conservative voters out to reelect President Bush, including one on the 2004 Oregon ballot that that ended up creating a State of Oregon Constitutional Amendment against gay marriage.

UPDATE 12/25/13: Art Leonard, "What Happened Yesterday in Utah," artleonardobservations.com posted December 25, 2013 details the importance of the expedited ruling and the irony of the Mormon Church's participation in the creation of the issues in this case.

Citizenship objective set by HP company founders Bill and Dave

cover and table of contents

PHOTO: (click on photo to enlarge) Magazine article by Thomas Kraemer, "Printing Enters the Jet Age, How today's computer printers came to eject microscopic dots with amazing precision," American Heritage Invention & Technology, Spring 2001, Vol. 6, No. 4, pp. 18-27, cover and table of contents. The inkjet printer was originally developed at Hewlett-Packard in Corvallis, Oregon to provide a battery-powered printer that could also work with the battery-powered portable computers and calculators also designed at HP in Corvallis in the late 1970's and early 1980's. See previous posts: History of HP inkjet printers in American Heritage Invention & Technology (2/19/12), OSU Linus Pauling using HP calculator in PBS documentary (8/2/12), Computer mouse inventor dies after inspiring Xerox PARC, Apple and HP (7/9/13), Google Android Sony SmartWatch apes HP-01 LED watch from 1977 (7/1/12)

The local newspaper story by Bennett Hall, "Hewlett-Packard raises its local profile," Gazette-Times, Dec. 14, 1023, p. A2 prompted me to write the following letter to the editor:

Bennett Hall's Dec. 14 story, "Hewlett-Packard raises its local profile," provided a quintessential example of the HP corporate objective to be a good citizen. Decades ago, I was fortunate to witness company founders Bill and Dave (as they humbly asked to be called) hold managers accountable for citizenship while attending company division reviews with them around the world. I am heartened that Corvallis is continuing to benefit from their timeless leadership.(Quoted from (as submitted without the minor edits contained in printed version) Thomas Kraemer, "Letter: Good to see HP continue tradition of involvement," Gazette-Times, Dec. 20, 2013, p. A9)

It is truly encouraging to see good citizenship being valued again at HP, at least in Corvallis, after the series of questionable company CEO Managers selected in recent years by the HP Board of Directors.

Monday, December 16, 2013

Gay marriage discussion in 1953 vs. 1963 and today

ONE Magazine Aug. 1953 'Homosexual marriage?' cover headline PHOTO: ONE Magazine was ahead of its time when it mentioned the idea of "homosexual marriage" in 1953 long before "same-sex marriage" or "gay marriage" became a cause of some gay liberationists in the 1960s. The first article was by E. B. Saunders (pseudonym), "Reformer's Choice: Marriage License or Just license?" ONE, Aug. 1953, cover, p. 10-12. It was edited by the former Oregon State University Professor W. Dorr Legg and warned that if homosexuals obtained equal rights and acceptance of society, then they would be expected to follow the existing social conventions of marriage, including complying with the then common state laws forbidding cohabitation (living together without being legally married) and laws against adultery and extramarital (having sex outside your own marriage) or premarital sex, including sodomy, which under Oregon law forbid all oral and anal sex even for heterosexual married couples. Ten years later, the same ONE publication, also edited by Legg, featured an essay by Randy Lloyd (pseudonym), "Let's Push Homophile Marriage," Jun. 1963, cover, p. 5-10. It advocated a more proactive agenda to promote the advantages of "homophile marriage" to "gain the acceptance of society" and it described the author's personal experiences and advice on how to meet another "homophile" to marry, other than by using the "Pen Pal" classified advertising section of ONE magazine that was often used by men to solicit sex partners in their hometown (which was also the feature of "The Advocate" magazine's classified section that paid most of their bills to print this early gay rights magazine). Both of these articles are consistent with the conservative philosophy of its editor, W. Dorr Legg, who later founded the present-day Log Cabin Republicans, and therefore I suspect that Legg was very influential in the writing of both articles (if not actually writing them himself) and the articles probably represented Legg's own learning and evolution about the joys of being married during the ten years between the articles. (See James T. Sears, PhD, "1953: When ONE Magazine, Headlined 'Homosexual Marriage,'" GayToday.com posted Aug. 11, 2003 and my previous posts OSU W. Dorr Legg homosexual marriage 1953 vs. CA Prop 8 2010 (8/22/10), Gay free speech victory 50th anniversary (1/18/08), Jack Baker gay marriage theory was right (4/8/09)) and Slippery slope argument against marriage equality is predictable (6/22/12)

On Sept. 3 1971, Jack Baker and Michael McConnell were the first same-sex couple in history to be legally married. They married under the State of Minnesota marriage laws that did not specify gender at the time and despite court challenges to validate their marriage, no court has ever ordered the annulment of their legally performed marriage, including a 1972 decision by the U.S. Supreme Court that marriage laws are only a matter of state law with no Federal interest.

A few months ago, in an email communication, Jack Baker mentioned that he and Mike had not been inspired by the 1963 ONE article advocating gay marriage and did not read it until much later. I only recalled reading the 1953 article, which today, in hindsight, was clearly written in a way that would satisfy both the conservative readers of ONE, who believed in marriage, and their readers who mostly used the magazine as a means of finding "pen-pals" nearby their hometown they could hookup with for sex.

UPDATE Dec. 21, 2013: quoted below is from an email Jack baker sent me with corrections or clarifications:

"(Jack quoted my post, added corrections and a comment:) "In Sept. 1971, Jack Baker and Michael McConnell were the first same-sex couple in history to be legally married. They married under the State of Minnesota marriage laws that did not specify gender at the time and despite [two] challenges to [invalidate] their marriage, no court has ever ordered the annulment of their legally performed marriage . . ." Comment - That marriage ignited a contentious political debate and defined the gay agenda worldwide for 40+ years. Proof is in the pudding. " (Quoted from Jack Baker, "Related articles: What others say," Now is the time blog box8661.blogspot.com posted Mar. 19, 2012 and as edited Dec. 18, 2013)

I hadn't read both articles in many years and so I was pleased to be emailed a scanned PDF copy of the original articles, but I was quickly disappointed when I realized the PDF copies did not have the OCR text included that I require for reading with my low vision blindness. So it took me awhile to find a friendly grad student to read me the text. Included below are some of the thoughts that occurred to me upon reading both the 1953 and 1963 articles:

First, I think it is too simple to ask, "Who Owns the bragging rights?" to being the first to inspire gay marriage as we know it today. In fact, in W. Dorr Legg's 1963 article, on p. 6, he takes a long view of history and credits the "modern concept" of "homophile marriage" as "a product of our current homophile movement that commenced in Germany in the 1800's." Gay marriage was discussed in the German books of Dr. Magnus Hirschfeld, until he died in the 1930's after the Nazis burned much of his work. Also, Legg's magazine cites the possible example of the "homosexually married" Englishman Edward Carpenter. (Note: between 1953 and 1963, Legg had adopted the editorial convention of using the term "homophile" instead of "homosexual" for two reasons. First was for the legal and political reason of trying to separate the discussion of being "gay" (a slang term he uses in the Jun. 1963 article on p. 8 while referring to a "gay park" used for those seeking illegal "promiscuous" gay sex) from the person's sexual orientation. Second, Legg was an intellectual purist and hated the etymological mash-up of Greek and Latin in the word "homosexual."

The 1953 article made the assumption that for homosexuals to gain acceptance by society that they would have to follow the same restrictive sex laws and gender roles of men being the dominant bread-winners and women being the submissive stay at home mother concerned only with procreation, reproduction and raising a family. The article did not anticipate the sexual revolution of the 1960's and the contemporaneous women's liberation movement that helped the gay liberation movement. When I talk to college-aged students today, I can tell it seems like a fantasy tale to them that at one time in America a male college student could be put in jail for shacking up with his girlfriend, and that laws on adultery, sodomy and monogamy were strictly enforced by society, even if only rarely did anybody end up in jail or other legal trouble. (See ONE, Aug. 1953, p. 10)

Of course, unknown to the gay liberationists of the 1960's and 1970's was that the 1960's "free love" freedom to have sex with a large number of partners would cause the AIDS virus to surface, which led to the discovery of the HIV and the politics of AIDS. The politics of AIDS is sometimes credited with causing a shift toward gay marriage rights instead of the agenda of some gay activists for sexual freedom. However, be warned that the politics of this subject are still too heated for many, today, and I can only briefly mention them in this post.

On page 11 of the Aug. 1953 article, Legg uses the idea of "special rights" that later became popular for Republican groups in America to use when arguing against homosexual marriage. He says the tension between promiscuity and marriage is an old one and explains how societal pressures against the sexual promiscuity of homosexuals works against homosexual marriages being publically visible and known. He also raises the idea that "heterosexual marriage must be protected" and could be threatened by the "acceptance of homosexuality without homosexual marriage ties . . ."

On page 12 of the Aug. 1953 article is an interesting legal declaimer at the end of the article, clearly it was written by an attorney, asserting that nothing in ONE should be construed as encouraging anybody to do criminal sex acts -- clearly this was probably part of their legal fight for their First Amendment freedom of speech rights, which was at the center of attempts by society to censor any discussion of even changing the laws against homosexual acts. This is why I started the timeline for my history of OSU gay groups with the 1964 free speech movement of the University of Berkeley students, which a Corvallis resident participated in before he became an early leader of gay rights activity in Corvallis, Oregon. He was arrested for just showing a public display of affection for another man, something heterosexuals were doing with impunity. (See "Featured links sidebar to my blog and Thomas Kraemer, "Corvallis, Oregon State University gay activism 1964-2002," printed to PDF from OutHistory.org in 2010 is permanently stored by the OSU Scholars Archives@OSU.)

In the June 1963 article on p. 6, Legg talks about why there is a "lack of history regarding homophile marriage through history." He asserts there are no references to gay marriage in ancient literature, but much of it might have been intentionally censored or destroyed. The only thing surviving he says is the notion of the homosexual love between adolescent Greek Warriors that is only transient, and the Greek concept of ephebophiles (older man loving the post-puberty adolescent boy, not pedophiles as often mistakenly claimed) instead of two adult men who are married.

Also on page 7 he discusses the problems of gay men meeting somebody for marriage that he says is proven by the popularity of the "Pen Pal" section of ONE where gay men seek somebody to write to and meet in their area of interest. I note that the need to meet another gay person also helped to pay the bills in the 1970's for "The Advocate" magazine with the paid classified advertisements from men seeking men and this same need similarly helped to start up emerging internet technologies, including the dial-up modem precursors to the internet, such as AOL (America Online) chat rooms and bulletin boards that were often used by gay men to meet each other a few decades ago.

On p. 8, in the list of the author's advice for how to meet other gay men for marriage, the article mentions the now archaic "Wassermann" test for "VD" (venereal disease) and how to get one from a private doctor by telling him you want one because you met a woman and had too much to drink. Tragically, he could not have foreseen how then common sexually transmitted diseases would later morph into AIDS in the future. However, the author's advice to "keep clean" remains good today.

The writing in these two articles provides a glimpse into how things were for gay people over a half-century ago, but it may be hard for younger people who were not alive then to understand the social meaning of the laws and restrictions on sexual behavior, even though few people were arrested or put in jail. These laws were used as an excuse to deny gay people all of the normal rights in society, such as to be employed, much less married.

I am too blind and too weak to write anymore, but I hope to say more on this subject in the future.

See my previous posts

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Year 2013 in review - 8 years of blogging

PHOTO: perhaps only as a parody, Thomas Kraemer takes a fuzzy selfie at the end of 2013 in order to keep up with the latest internet fad. Now if only the focus and lighting were better -- but hey, it simulates my current legally blind vision condition, which I forgive you, if you don't understand, because I couldn't understand it either just from just hearing other peoples' descriptions until after I had suffered from it myself. I may be blinder and weaker than last year, but I am still grateful to still be alive! Merry Christmas and Hallelujah to all! (See my previous post My low vision blindness is like seeing a captcha all the time (1/1/12))

After writing this blog for 8 years, I hope to be able to keep blogging through at least next year, even though my ability to post has declined from posting an average of once a day to only a few times per month during this last year. The reason I have continued to blog is it works very good as a Google searchable memory aid to help me form new memories, which has become harder for me to do with the type of stroke I had (Fortunately, I haven't lost any memories). I am also writing this blog as a gift to the few friends and family members who might read my blog in the future and enjoy our shared memories. I am clearly not blogging for any money or ego satisfaction, which I suspect is what drives many people to blog and to participate in online forum boards or other social networking sites, such as Facebook. (See previous posts Year 2012 in review - 7 years of blogging (12/23/12), Oregon POLST for Thomas Kraemer (12/4/13) for my physician's orders for life sustaining treatment (I hope to die naturally with minimum drama) and for my friends and family I wrote my previous post Obituary for Thomas Kraemer (1/4/12) for them on the event of my death.)

For my previous year in reviews and lists of favorite posts, see previous posts Year 2012 in review - 7 years of blogging (12/23/12) along with the 1,554 blog posts I wrote for my former blog: Year 2006-2011 in review - 6 years of blogging (12/1/11). The reason I moved to a new blog address is described in my previous post This may be my last post - customer feedback to Google (12/1/11)

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Here are some key posts I wrote during the last year:

Here is a list of my selected previous blog posts and year end summaries:

In my previous post Year 2006-2011 in review - 6 years of blogging (12/1/11) I listed the following favorite links to posts and other things that I had written: