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losing my shit at tachyon jim as max steel the character design makes me yearn for a 2d max steel 2013 prequel...
AIDS Activists Storm Stock Exchange, Halting Trading High Price of Burroughs' AZT Under Fire
NEW YORK [September 24, 1989] — For the first time in history, trading at the New York Stock Exchange was interrupted by protesters last Thursday, when seven AIDS activists slipped past security guards and delayed the start of trading by five minutes with a loud and vibrant demonstration.
Shortly after the seven were arrested and taken into custody, at approximately 11:10 am, a crowd — at one point swelling to over 1500 people — began arriving for a raucous, ear-splitting demonstration in front of the Exchange at 30 Broad Street in Manhattan's Financial District.
The protest, organized by ACT UP, targeted the drug company Burroughs Wellcome, maker of Actified, Sudafed, Neosporin and a host of other over-the-counter drugs. Burroughs holds an exclusive patent on the anti-viral drug AZT, which costs individuals an average of $8000 per year, making it the most expensive drug in history. It remains the only federally-approved AIDS treatment proven significantly effective in slowing the progression of AIDS.
Activists demanded the drug be made available free to the millions of people in the U.S. who are now infected with HIV, the virus associated with AIDS.
"There is a myth out there that we're robber barons, ripping people off," David Barry, vice president, research development and medical affairs for Burroughs Wellcome told the Wall Street Journal. "It would be theoretically possible for us to give away all our drug," he continued. "Everyone would get it for a while, and then we'd go bankrupt."
Fake Name Tags
At approximately 9:25 a.m. seven men, all dressed in suits, entered the Stock Exchange using fake Bears Stearns name tags. According to former bond trader Peter Staley, who is the chair of ACT UP's fundraising committee, he and four others then quickly went up to the VIP balcony which overlooks the trading floor, immediately chaining themselves to a bannister and handcuffing themselves to each other. Staley says he looked at the clock at that moment and noticed that it was 9:29:45.
The Exchange opens precisely at 9:30 am, when there is usually a surge of trading. Staley said the five unfurled a banner which read "Sell Wellcome" and hung it from the balcony. They then used loud emergency marine fog horns, attempting to make hearing anything else impossible. Although the trading boards and ticker machines did not stop, it was impossible to verbally communicate and, therefore, most transactions were halted, according to several traders who were on the floor. The Stock Exchange, however, reported that trading was not interrupted.
Times: No Story
Two of the seven protestors had positioned themselves below the balcony and immediately began taking photographs (using cameras which they had smuggled in) when the banner was unfurled. They then quickly walked outside and gave the film to other activists who brought it to the Associated Press, which sent the photo and the story across the country. Reports of the demonstration appeared in all of New York's dailies, except The New York Times, which has come under attack recently for what activists have called its spotty, inaccurate AIDS coverage. The story ran on the front page of the Wall Street Journal; it was also covered by national television networks and most local network affiliates.
Staley said that the chained, hand-cuffed group on the balcony began throwing fake dollar bills out onto the floor, imitating a demonstration by Abbie Hoffman nearly 20 years ago (Hoffman had used real money). The bills were reportedly printed with the slogan, "Fuck your profiteering, we're dying while you play business."
While security guards tried to remove the protestors, traders and brokers surged toward the balcony in large numbers, booing and jeering, according to Staley. "They were angry. They were screaming things like 'Mace the faggots!' and they were throwing wads of paper at us," he told OutWeek.
"You've Seen Faggots Before"
Eva Andersen, a Swedish tourist who was on a tour of the Exchange, said there was a panic on the trading floor at that moment. "It was a bit frightening," she said. "They [the traders] were rushing at them [the protestors]." There was lots of anger and booing." Andersen said the visitors were immediately hurried out by guards. Robert Hilferty, one of the activists who had taken photographs and then walked back into the Exchange, described the traders as “an angry, mobilized mob."
"They were waving their fists, while one trader was yelling to the others: ‘you've seen faggots before, get back to trading!'"
The guards eventually removed the protesters from the Exchange. But at that point, a "witch hunt" ensued, according to Hilferty. "Some traders were looking on the floor for outsiders." Hilferty said a trader looked at him and yelled, "Who the fuck are you!" and ran for him. Within seconds, Hilferty claims, he was being chased by dozens of "blood-thirsty and violent" traders.
Hilferty, a filmmaker, and performance artist Richard Elovich, the other demonstrator who had remained on the Stock Exchange floor, were eventually arrested.
Ear Plugs and Cotton
The other five arrested were: Lee Arsenault, a clothing importer and a self-identified person with AIDS; Gregg Bordowitz, a video producer with the Gay Men's Health Crisis, who has AIDS Related Complex; Scott Robbe, a film producer; James McGrath, a bar owner; and Staley. They were each charged with a Class B misdemeanor for criminal trespass, a Class A misdemeanor for criminal possession of a forged instrument and Class A misdemeanor for criminal impersonation. The seven were held by police for several hours before being released.
About an hour after the men were taken away, a planned demonstration organized by ACT UP took place outside the Stock Exchange. The group, which grew from several hundred to over 1500, set off hundreds of fog horns which echoed through the narrow streets of lower Manhattan, drawing people as high up as the 30th floors of buildings to their windows. Protestors came prepared with ear plugs and cotton, which they also provided to members of the press.
Inside the Exchange, dozens of workers were pressed against the glass doors watching the activities. Some workers later said they didn't leave for lunch for fear that the crowd, which had taken up the entire street, might attack them.
The demonstration was planned to coincide with similar demonstrations in London, where Burroughs' parent company is based, and where the company's stock is traded, and in San Francisco, where the company's major U.S. warehouse is located.
— Michelangelo Signorile, OutWeek Magazine No. 14, September 24, 1989, p. 10.
“... [To] treat theology and science fiction as having nothing to say to one another is to suggest that either science or religion has nothing useful to contribute to humanity’s future. If one regards religion and science as non-overlapping magisteria (to use Stephen Jay Gould’s phrase)—as completely distinct spheres of human life each with its own separate validity—it nonetheless remains the case that fiction which finds one or the other utterly superfluous to its story is suggesting that a major aspect of historic human expression has no place in the future being imagined.
[...]
“[The] case can be made that, in fact, the best scenario is one of integration, one in which we find ourselves able to incorporate insights from both science fiction and religion in our theological reflection, and to incorporate science and theology in our storytelling and our thinking about the future and about humanity’s role in the cosmos. For evidence that this is the best scenario, one needs to do little more than look at some of the most engaging science fiction, from the very beginnings to the present day, and one will find that theological themes are woven into their very core—provided one understands theology not as a narrow sectarian enterprise, but as asking questions and exploring mysteries related to the nature of existence, of transcendence, and of meaning.”
—James F. McGrath, Theology and Science Fiction (Oregon: Cascade Books, 2016), 8-9
Study for Night Lucana - James McGrath, 2013.
Australian,b.1969-
Oil on panel, 80 x 60 cm.
Film Review | The Boss Baby
I’ll admit, I came in pretty cool on this film. I thought the trailer made it look like it was chock full of horribly dumbed-down humor; a clear cash grab for cheap and dumb kid laughs.
After seeing it though, I was humbly and VERY surprised at the amount of laughter in the theater. There were more jokes for adults than kids in the film, I felt. And not only that, but the visual design of the film was really firmly grounded in this late 1950′s aesthetic that was really colorful and beautiful - that’s the BEST part of the film, the production design. The plot is quick-moving, pretty original, and much funnier than I was expecting.
The voice cast doesn’t necessarily bring much too interesting to the table - in fact, the best performances are from Steve Buscemi and James McGrath as Wizzie, the alarm clock wizard. Everyone else is extremely standard fare, even Alec Baldwin, who is essentially retreading Jack Donaghy. There are also many many many HUGE opportunities for Donald Trump jokes, and not a single one is taken - giant point against.
It’s pretty funny and there’s some great visual storytelling, but that’s about it. Definitely one you should be able to wait for VOD.
3 out of 5.
series where the drama peaked in the past and in the present it is a mystery to be unraveled fucking SLAP dude. (spoilers ahead for Max Steel 2013) yes Forge, James, and Miles all made N Tek together, Miles betrayed them for Makino, then Forge, Kat, Jefferson, and Molly all saw Jim die in the final battle, but nevermind that because this teenager has to pass his Driving Test