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Thursday, August 25, 2016

MOTHERS OF LOST CHILDREN MARCH 2016

HARTFORD COURANT WRITER STATES MILLENNIALS LEAVING THE STATE OF CONNECTICUT IN HIGH NUMBERS!

In an article for The Hartford Courant, Eric Kebschull states as follows:
"Scores of former Connecticut residents have fled the state for greener pastures, hoping to improve their quality of life. The ranks of these former Nutmeggers include baby boomers who are nearing retirement and looking for a place to spend their golden years.
But what about millennials? Why are Connecticut's young adults fleeing the state?
As a millennial who left Connecticut twice, allow me to explain why..."
READ MORE:



Sunday, August 21, 2016

ROSEMARIE GARLAND-THOMSON SPEAKS ABOUT "BECOMING DISABLED" IN THE NEW YORK TIMES!

"Not long ago, a good friend of mine said something revealing to me: “I don’t think of you as disabled,” she confessed.

I knew exactly what she meant; I didn’t think of myself as disabled until a few decades ago, either, even though my two arms have been pretty significantly asymmetrical and different from most everybody else’s my whole life.

My friend’s comment was meant as a compliment, but followed a familiar logic — one that African-Americans have noted when their well-meaning white friends have tried to erase the complications of racial identity by saying, “I don’t think of you as black,” or when a man compliments a woman by saying that he thinks of her as “just one of the guys.”

This impulse to rescue people with disabilities from a discredited identity, while usually well meaning, is decidedly at odds with the various pride movements we’ve come to know in recent decades. Slogans like “Black Is Beautiful” and “We’re Here, We’re Queer, Get Used to It!” became transformative taunts for generations of people schooled in the self-loathing of racism, sexism and heterosexism. Pride movements were the psycho-emotional equivalents of the anti-discrimination and desegregation laws that asserted the rights of full citizenship to women, gay people, racial minorities and other groups. More recently, the Black Lives Matter and the L.G.B.T. rights movement have also taken hold..."

READ MORE:

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/08/21/opinion/sunday/becoming-disabled.html?_r=0

DIVORCE IN CONNECTICUT BOOK AVAILABLE ON AMAZON!

Find out more about this book on Amazon at the link below: 


UPDATE OF "THE HANDBOOK OF APPELLATE PROCEDURE"!

Below is the most recent update of "The Handbook of Appellate Procedure".  See link:

http://jud.ct.gov/Publications/Handbook_Ap_proc.pdf