Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Take a stand now on HR 1913

I thought I would take this opportunity to pass along what opponents of
the */H.R. 1913 - the Local Law Enforcement Hate Crimes Prevention Act
/*are passing along to try and bias the general public. It isn't pretty,
and these groups are influential. If you have never taken a stand on
these issues, now is the time to contact your Congressmen and let them
know how much you need them to vote for this bill. It is important to
note that this legislation pertains to physical violence and has nothing
to do with the "speaking out on Biblical standards of morality" as
stated in the propaganda. These groups are a real threat to us. Here is
what they are trying to protect against:

'(2) OFFENSES INVOLVING ACTUAL OR PERCEIVED RELIGION, NATIONAL ORIGIN,
GENDER, SEXUAL ORIENTATION, GENDER IDENTITY, OR DISABILITY-

'(A) IN GENERAL- Whoever, whether or not acting under color of law, in
any circumstance described in subparagraph (B), willfully causes bodily
injury to any person or, through the use of fire, a firearm, or an
explosive or incendiary device, attempts to cause bodily injury to any
person, because of the actual or perceived religion, national origin,
gender, sexual orientation, gender identity, or disability of any person--


Here is some of the propaganda:

Please help us get this information into the hands of as many people as
possible by forwarding it to your entire e-mail list of family and friends.

*Don't allow President Obama to remove America's most basic freedoms*

*Contact Congress today about proposed "hate crimes" legislation -
before it's too late! *

April 20, 2009

Dear Friend,

America's most basic freedoms of speech, conscience and the free
exercise of religion are under attack and the time to act is now. *If
President Obama succeeds with his priority of passing the Hate Crimes
law, /H.R. 1913 - the Local Law Enforcement Hate Crimes Prevention Act/,
it could lead to the criminalization of the Biblical view of
homosexuality in sermons and elsewhere.* An offended homosexual could
accuse a pastor, Sunday School teacher of broadcaster of causing
emotional injury simply by expressing the Biblical view that
homosexuality is sinful.

H.R. 1913 is one more step in the campaign to legitimize homosexuality
in our culture by treating it as a protected class along with race,
gender, and religion. *The long term goal is to create one more platform
from which to eradicate wrong thinking about homosexuality. *H.R. 1913
will undoubtedly pave the way to legislation that will make thinking
Biblically about homosexuality a "hate crime."

We believe prosecutors and anti-Christian groups will use loop holes in
the proposed legislation to muzzle the church from speaking out on
Biblical standards of morality which are shared by most Americans.
Unnecessary lawsuits will bring a chilling effect to the free speech and
religious liberty of our churches and of our members.

*Laws already exist in all 50 states to punish violent crime, making
this legislation unnecessary, unfair, indefinable, un-American and
constitutionally suspect.
*
Laws in civilized nations have always been designed to punish conduct,
not thought. H.R. 1913 is not designed to aid in crime fighting.
*Punishing wrong beliefs about homosexuality is the sole aim of /H.R.
1913 - the Local Law Enforcement Hate Crimes Prevention Act/.
*

*
* And another piece of propaganda:

A vote is looming this week in Congress on a bill that one conservative
activist warns would not only silence Christian opposition to
homosexuality, but also would legitimize deviant forms of "sexual
orientation."

A markup vote is expected Wednesday in the House Judiciary Committee on
the Local Law Enforcement and Hate Crimes Prevention Act of 2009. House
Democrats only have to give 24 hours' notice before the vote. The
measure (H.R. 1913) sponsored by Representatives John Conyers
(D-Michigan) and Mark Kirk (R-Illinois) would add homosexuals and
transgender people to the list of classes federally protected from
so-called "hate crimes."

Andrea Lafferty, executive director of the Traditional Values Coalition,
says the bill is a serious threat to religious freedom.

"Your pastor could be prosecuted for conspiracy to commit a hate crime
if it passes and become law," she warns. "This so-called 'hate crimes'
bill will be used to lay the legal foundation and framework to
investigate, prosecute, and persecute pastors, business owners, Bible
teachers, Sunday School teachers, youth pastors -- you name it -- or
anyone else whose actions are based upon and reflect the truth found in
the Bible."

Andrea Lafferty TVCTVC says H.R. 1913 broadly defines "intimidation" --
and offers up this example: "A pastor's sermon could be considered 'hate
speech' under this legislation if heard by an individual who then acts
aggressively against persons based on 'sexual orientation.'" Under those
circumstances, says the group, the pastor could be prosecuted for
"conspiracy to commit a hate crime."

The legislation has another "serious problem," the pro-family group
says, because Congress has failed to define the term "sexual
orientation." Consequently, says TVC, 30 sexual orientations (as defined
by the American Psychiatric Association) will "arguably be protected"
under the legislation. "Those 30 sexual orientations include behaviors
that are felonies or misdemeanors in most states or can result in
death," notes the group's website.

In addition, TVC argues the bill is based on a fraudulent premise: that
there is an epidemic of so-called "hate crimes" against "lesbian, gay,
bisexual, and transgender" persons that needs federal involvement for
local law enforcement officials.

Lafferty says unless Christians in America act, the hate crimes bill
could be on President Obama's desk in three to four weeks at the most.

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Corset pics

I posted 2 pics of the new corset. I'll post more when I get some better
ones of it.

Corset making - take 2

Well, as much as I liked my corset it had a flaw in it that led to its
early demise. The outer layer of fabric let loose at the seams due to my
own design error. I should have put it together differently than I did.
But I learned that lesson and took it apart to re-use the hardware and
make a new corset.

I am wearing my new corset right now, in fact. I made the new one out of
denim from 3 pairs of old jeans, so it has a neat look to it. It is
mostly blue denim with a black denim stripe down the side of it. I
finished the top edge with a strip of black denim as well. So far it is
pretty comfortable and I don't have the issue of the front of my thigh
going to sleep while wearing this one. On the last one I tried for a
more pointy front to the corset and had cut the sides too high,
resulting in pressure on the top if the hip bones. This one I cut
straight across on the bottom and it fits much better and lower over the
hips. I actually have to tighten the bottom laces on this one, where the
last one I could not do this. As a result, the pressure is more evenly
distributed.

I also made another design change (which I am still not sure if it was a
good idea or not). I made the front and back pieces where it joins one
piece that was folded over instead of having a seam there. I'll see how
the holes for the busk hooks holds up to wear. I may need to add a strip
of bias tape over the edges in front to help prevent fraying around the
holes, but only time will tell. I can't complain either way since this
is my second corset ever and I designed the pattern for both from hand
with no prior experience to go on.

The other change that I made was to make this one proportioned
differently and a little larger than the last (I had actually made it a
hair too small). I allowed for less compression in the hips since there
is no fat there to compress and a little less in the chest. I also made
the overall corset about 2" larger. I may be able to close this one all
the way if I want to go really tight, but with it laced comfortably
there is about a 2" gap in the back.

I'll post some pics in the gallery shortly.

Saturday, April 11, 2009

Inspection...

This morning I had to take the Jeep through inspection. Since I was
planning on it being a Heather day anyway and had my nails polished, I
certainly wasn't going to let that stop me. I was dressed pretty casual,
jean capris, 2 layer pink T-shirts and ballet flats. When I got to the
inspection station, I had my drivers license, insurance, and
registration all handy and kept my TG ID card at the ready just in case
it was needed. I pulled in and handed my paperwork to the guy. He looks
it over and says to me "I need to see YOUR drivers license." I pulled
out my TG ID card and said "This should explain things a little better."
He looked it over, compared the photos to me and my drivers license and
got this kind of embarrassed smile as his eyes lit up when he made the
connection and said "Oh, ok that does." I said to him "Thanks for the
compliment, though." He have me a sheepish grin and handed me my
paperwork back. The rest of the process went without incident (the Jeep
passed inspection, yay!).