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Valve Steam Deck OLED Review
Valve Steam Deck OLED Review
It’s been almost two years since the Valve Steam Deck hit the market, a release
2023-11-21 03:49
BMW Raises Outlook for Vehicle Deliveries on Strong EV Demand
BMW Raises Outlook for Vehicle Deliveries on Strong EV Demand
BMW AG increased its forecast for vehicle deliveries for the year on the back of a deep order
2023-08-03 13:30
U.S. senators announce subpoenas to Discord, Snap, X CEOs on child sexual exploitation
U.S. senators announce subpoenas to Discord, Snap, X CEOs on child sexual exploitation
WASHINGTON U.S. Senators Dick Durbin and Lindsey Graham said on Monday that subpoenas have been issued to the
2023-11-21 00:22
Who owns Tottenham Hotspur FC? Jay-Z will 'move quickly' to takeover soccer club if current owner Joe Lewis is convicted
Who owns Tottenham Hotspur FC? Jay-Z will 'move quickly' to takeover soccer club if current owner Joe Lewis is convicted
Joe Lewis is facing charges of insider trading and conspiracy, leaving the fate of the elite soccer club hanging in the balance
2023-07-30 15:25
The ‘fake’ gay marriage case in the middle of the Supreme Court’s latest threat to LGBT+ rights
The ‘fake’ gay marriage case in the middle of the Supreme Court’s latest threat to LGBT+ rights
A Christian website designer in Colorado did not want to provide her services to same-sex couples, potentially running afoul of state law that prohibits public-facing businesses from discriminating against LGBT+ people. The designer didn’t have any same-sex clients. She didn’t receive any requests from gay couples to work on their wedding websites. But in her legal challenge, supported by an influential right-wing legal group that backed a lawsuit ending Roe v Wade, she argued that Colorado’s law infringed on her First Amendment rights. In its final day of its current term, the US Supreme Court’s conservative supermajority agreed, potentially endangering already vulnerable rights of LGBT+ Americans and state governments’ abilities to protect them. But a crucial piece of evidence in the case appears to have been fabricated. A man who is named throughout the case, and whose phone number and email address were attached in court filings, claims he has nothing to do with it. In 2016, Lorie Smith claimed in filings that a man named “Stewart” contacted her website to help with his upcoming wedding to a person named “Mike”: “We are getting married early next year and would love some design work done for our invites, placenames etc. We might also stretch to a website.” The New Republic found “Stewart”. He said he is straight, married to a woman, and never contacted Ms Smith. His alleged request for services came within 24 hours after Ms Smith first filed her lawsuit in state court. “If somebody’s pulled my information, as some kind of supporting information or documentation, somebody’s falsified that,” he explained to The New Republic. “I’m married, I have a child – I’m not really sure where that came from? But somebody’s using false information in a Supreme Court filing document.” It remains unclear, even after the Supreme Court’s decision, how and why he is involved. In a statement to The Independent, attorneys for Ms Smith dismissed his reaction and claimed that the service request was genuine. A spokesperson for Colorado’s attorney general pointed to earlier claims that there was no proof that it was. Meanwhile, the statements “Stewart” claims to never have made, and arguments from attorneys who use his name and alleged statements, remain printed across several court documents. In a motion filed by attorneys for Colorado in 2016 to dismiss the case, they pointed out that Ms Smith had never received any request for services and had no standing to sue. A response from the Alliance Defending Freedom, the conservative Christian group representing Ms Smith, asserted that it was not necessary to have received any such inquiry before challenging state law. Months later, in February 2017, in an effort to bolster their challenge to state law, attorneys for the group said that Ms Smith received an inquiry, weeks before Colorado attorneys asked to dismiss the case. “Notably, any claim that Lorie will never receive a request to create a custom website celebrating a same-sex ceremony is no longer legitimate because Lorie has received such a request,” according to the filing. Later that year, following a court ruling in Colorado’s favour, the group mentioned “Stewart” and “Mike” in a press release. In a December 2021 filing with the Supreme Court, attorneys for Colorado responded to the alleged request again, noting that the inquiry “was not a request for a website at all, but just a response to an online form asking about ‘invites’ and ‘place-names,’ with a statement that the person ‘might also stretch to a website.’” The Alliance Defending Freedom fired back in a reply brief, once again mentioning a request that may not even exist: “Colorado’s claim – that a request from ‘Mike’ and ‘Stewart’ for a wedding website does not reflect a same-sex wedding request – blinks reality.” The Independent asked representatives for the Alliance Defending Freedom how “Stewart” became involved with the case. Senior counsel Kellie Fiedorek said The New Republic’s findings are a “last-minute attempt to malign Lorie [that] smacks of desperation to delegitimize her civil rights case and our judicial system.” “It’s undisputed that Lorie received this request through her website. She doesn’t do background checks on incoming requests to determine if the person submitting it is genuine,” she added. “Whether Lorie received a legitimate request or whether someone lied to her is irrelevant. No one should have to wait to be punished by the government to challenge an unjust law.” A spokesperson for the office of Colorado’s attorney general did not have a comment prior to the ruling but pointed The Independent to its brief with the Supreme Court noting that Ms Smith did not take “any steps to verify that a genuine prospective customer submitted the form.” The Supreme Court’s decision is a blow to LGBT+ advocates who fear the case could open the door for rollbacks to discrimination protections, with Justice Sonia Sotomayor noting that the ruling comes in the middle of a wave of state laws targeting LGBT+ people. “This case cannot be understood outside of the context in which it arises,” she wrote in her dissent. “In that context, the outcome is even more distressing. … In this pivotal moment, the Court had an opportunity to reaffirm its commitment to equality on behalf of all members of society, including LGBT people. It does not do so.” A statement from Kelley Robinson, president of the Human Rights Campaign, the nation’s largest LGBT+ civil rights organization, said the court’s decision “is a dangerous step backward, giving some businesses the power to discriminate against people simply because of who we are.” President Joe Biden, noting the decision’s arrival on the final day of Pride Month, said he is “deeply concerned that the decision could invite more discrimination” against LGBT+ Americans. “More broadly, today’s decision weakens long-standing laws that protect all Americans against discrimination in public accommodations – including people of color, people with disabilities, people of faith, and women,” he added. Read More Supreme Court allows Colorado designer to deny LGBT+ customers in ruling on last day of Pride Month The Supreme Court just made me a second-class citizen ‘It’s hard on our family’: For these lawmakers with trans children, Republican attacks are personal
2023-07-01 02:01
Fortnite x Dead Space Strange Transmissions Quest Pack: All Items, Cost, How to Get
Fortnite x Dead Space Strange Transmissions Quest Pack: All Items, Cost, How to Get
Epic Games has revealed a new Fortnite collaboration with iconic survival horror franchise, Dead Space.
1970-01-01 08:00
'Ashamed' influencer pays £130k to have legs extended and now regrets it
'Ashamed' influencer pays £130k to have legs extended and now regrets it
An influencer who splurged £130,000 on leg extension surgery now has regrets. Theresia Fischer, 31, added 5.5 inches to her height after claiming her husband encouraged her to do so. Fischer, who appeared on Germany's Celebrity Big Brother, spoke on the radio station MDR, where she claimed her partner said: "Theresia, you know I like big ladies. So I would really like this. You could get up to 14cm more." She continued: "[He would say] 'You can’t do anything without me. You need me'. And if you are told that 20, 30, 60, 70 times – then you believe that you are nothing without him." Fischer said she didn't even know such surgery existed until her husband brought it to her attention. The influencer, who was 5 foot 6 inches and is now 6 feet after the surgery, had adjustable telescopic rods inserted into her shins at the age of 24. "I am ashamed because I consented to an operation that I shouldn’t have had," she said. Around the time of the procedure, Fischer reportedly claimed the operation had improved her sex life and that she followed through with it after years of bullying as a teenager. She also previously described the grueling procedure to Bild, candidly sharing how the shin bone was broken and the calf muscles were split. "You stretch your lower legs independently by holding your knee with one hand and screwing your foot inward with the other hand until it clicks," she said. "Ten clicks a day on each side bring an additional 0.5 millimetres ." Sign up for our free Indy100 weekly newsletter Have your say in our news democracy. Click the upvote icon at the top of the page to help raise this article through the indy100 rankings.
2023-08-31 20:37
Analysis: Debt deal could boost unloved corners of U.S. stock market, though risks loom
Analysis: Debt deal could boost unloved corners of U.S. stock market, though risks loom
By Laura Matthews and Chibuike Oguh Global investors are gaming out how a tentative deal to raise the
2023-05-29 05:27
Coach Prime's matchup with Nebraska's Matt Rhule will be a contrast in program building methods
Coach Prime's matchup with Nebraska's Matt Rhule will be a contrast in program building methods
Nebraska's Matt Rhule says it's not for him to say how other coaches should go about building their football programs
2023-09-05 02:42
Charting the Global Economy: US Inflation Cools; BOE Hikes Rates
Charting the Global Economy: US Inflation Cools; BOE Hikes Rates
US inflation showed more signs of moderating in April, giving the Federal Reserve room to pause interest-rate increases
1970-01-01 08:00
Shah Rukh Khan: How Bollywood's romance king became a fighting machine
Shah Rukh Khan: How Bollywood's romance king became a fighting machine
Shah Rukh Khan has reinvented himself as a rugged action star - and the audiences are loving him.
2023-10-12 08:10
'Cancel the show': Fans furious as HBO pushes 'Euphoria' Season 3 to 2025 after WGA strike
'Cancel the show': Fans furious as HBO pushes 'Euphoria' Season 3 to 2025 after WGA strike
A user wrote, 'I don't understand it's not even like that hard of a show to make so like why does every season take like 3 years'
2023-05-27 10:37