The Pastry Chef, Chaim Soutine
https://www.wikiart.org/en/chaim-soutine/paulette-jourdain-1928-0
Natasha Lyonne photographed by Annabel Mehran for Tablet Magazine.
Hayv Kahraman, Iraq
Idyll, 1927, Francis Picabia
Medium: gouache,cardboard
Pokhara, Nepal
In 1972, early in his career, Green wrote an article in The International Journal of Psychiatry taking issue with “the premise that homosexuality is a disease or a homosexual is inferior.” The following year, the American Psychiatric Association dropped homosexuality from its list of mental disorders.
“Those were times when, if you spoke up in support of homosexuals, people immediately thought that you were secretly homosexual yourself, or had unresolved sexual issues,” Jack Drescher, a clinical professor of psychiatry at Columbia University, told the Times. “Richard was very much heterosexual, and it took a lot of courage to argue for gay people.”
Even earlier, in 1962, Green testified on behalf of a Nicaraguan man who was facing deportation from the U.S. for being gay. The man won the right to remain in the U.S. Later, Green “testified on behalf of a transgender woman who was suing to keep her job as a pilot, and a transgender parent who was suing for child visitation,” the Times reports.
Green eventually completed a law degree, and he put that to use in support of LGBTQ rights as well. In 1990 he volunteered his legal services in a case brought by the American Civil Liberties Union against the Boy Scouts of America’s ban on gay scoutmasters. Although the BSA won the suit, it finally dropped the prohibition in 2015.
May his memory be a blessing.
Stefan Karl Steffanson is Iceland’s man of the year.
Well deserved
moominvalley is good
Tzipora Tzabari, winner of Israel’s Queen Esther beauty pageant
via reddit
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Jewish • I like psychiatry and anthropology and linguistics
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