How to turn your Neighborhood into a Village

Permaculture instructor Andrew Millison journeys to Portland, Oregon to talk with architect Mark Lakeman, founder of Communitecture Architecture and the City Repair Project. Mark initiated a movement in Portland to transform the homogenous neighborhoods of the city into places that have many of the qualities and characteristics that are found in some of the most treasured villages on Earth. Mark reveals the things you need to know to transform your own neighborhood into a village.

Mark Lakeman’s architecture firm:
https://ift.tt/6pFjfRM

The City Repair Project:
https://cityrepair.org/

Special thanks to Maitreya Ecovillage in Eugene, Oregon for letting us film their sweet spot:
https://ift.tt/7BKWdTo

Andrew Millison’s links:
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https://ift.tt/mbtYQkU

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Why Los Angeles Has More Potential Than Any Other American City

Los Angeles is a city with a tremendous amount of potential-with its fantastic weather, considerable population density, and massive wealth, it could, in theory, fundamentally change its urban planning to become a walkable, bike able, transit oriented city, where owning a car is merely an option for its residents. It could become the Amsterdam of America. It could become the greatest city in the world.

If you want more urbanism content, subscribe to my channel. If you really, really, really liked the video, then I would encourage you to click on my channel and watch my other long form stuff-it would would be great for the algorithm and would help my channel grow.

IG: @Real_Thomas_Y
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-Thomas Y

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Good/interesting things I noticed recently

  • Pennsylvania Dems held their one-seat lower-house majority in a special election, and Joanna McClinton remains Speaker.
  • Nevada Dems advanced their NPVIC amendment to the next legislative session. Needs another majority vote in both houses in 2025 before it goes to the ballot in 2026.
  • Lots of good new laws passed in Minnesota.
  • Washington State legalized building more apartments. Still some more work to do, and it may take some time before homelessness is less rampant in the Seattle area.
  • Rose v Raffensperger: while the Grimberg ruling is being appealed by the state to the 11th Circuit, the plaintiffs are asking for Grimberg to redraw the GAPSC map.
  • Texas Dems led the passage of the CROWN Act, sending it to Abbott’s desk. Literally their only legislative victory this year.
  • Dems flipped the Jacksonville mayor seat. Small victories down there.
  • Alaska Supreme Court rules against partisan gerrymandering.
  • Connecticut and Delaware are half the way from sending amendments to legalize no-excuse mail voting to the voters.
  • Michigan passed adding abortion to their nondiscrimination law
  • An LLM has been used in a BCI to interpret brain signals into words
  • San Francisco appointed D’Arcy Dollinger as their first drag laureate.
  • Montana Dems led the passage of a ban on prison gerrymandering.

Minnesota Dems Crushed It This Year

Proud of what Minnesota Dems have been able to get passed into law this year:

  • HF2890/SF2909:
    • universal background checks for handgun sales
    • red flag’ law allowing family and others to petition a court to have guns removed from a person’s possession if they’re found to be a significant danger to themselves or others
    • helping offenders re-integrate into society and increasing crime prevention efforts
    • repealing defunct bans on adultery, fornication and consensual non-vaginal sex
    • expanding the right for a free public defender to cases where a person appeals a district court’s decision on a child protection case;
    • simplifying how victims of identity theft or mistaken identity can expunge court records to clear their names;
    • prohibiting peace officers from joining or supporting hate or extremist groups;
    • requiring places of public accommodation to provide closed-captioned television when a television is available;
    • allowing lawsuits seeking damages to continue after the person suing has died;
    • creating a carjacking crime and establishing penalties;
    • prohibiting law enforcement agencies from retaliating against, or penalizing a peace officer who intercedes against or reports another officer or employee use of excessive force;
    • creating a crime of organized retail theft;
    • prohibiting the state and counties from using private prisons;
    • restricting strip searches of detained juveniles;
    • establishing a supervised release board to review the cases of minors sentenced to mandatory life in prison;
    • establishing the Office of Missing and Murdered Black Women and Girls;
    • expanding the crime of an assault motivated by bias to include bias against a person due to the person’s gender, gender identity, or gender expression;
    • changing the first-degree possession offense to equate the possession of fentanyl with the possession of heroin;
    • requiring the state, instead of counties, to pay for medical examination costs for criminal sexual conduct victims;
    • requiring carbon monoxide alarms in hotel rooms;
    • granting early conditional release to inmates who make sufficient progress toward rehabilitation; and
    • establishing a Clemency Review Commission and modifying Board of Pardons’ operations.
  • HF37: CROWN Act, prohibiting discrimination on hair style and texture
  • SF13: Establishing Juneteenth as a paid state holiday
  • HF146/SF63: deeming Minnesota a refuge state for transgender people and protecting them from legal repercussions for traveling to Minnesota for gender-affirming health care
  • HF16/SF23: banning “conversion therapy” for minors and vulnerable adults
  • HF1/SF1: codifying abortion rights and reproductive health care for all
  • HF7/SF4: mandating Minnesota utilities transition to carbon-free energy by 2040
  • HF28/SF28: A bill restoring voting rights to people still on parole or probation
  • HF4/SF27: A bill allowing undocumented residents to obtain driver’s licenses
  • HF1071/SF667: A bill codifying federal Indian Child Welfare Act language into Minnesota law
  • HF5/SF123: A bill providing free breakfast and lunch for all Minnesota students in the majority of schools
  • HF3:
    • automatic voter registration,
    • allows 16- and 17-year-olds to pre-register to vote
    • allows voters to choose to vote by mail permanently by getting on a permanent absentee ballot list.
    • requires more reporting of who’s behind political ads.
  • To be signed:
    • HF100: legalizes recreational cannabis
    • SF1362: Joins Minnesota to the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact
    • HF91: Would decriminalize abortion and miscarriages

But there’s more that they should do in their next session to get up to the same level as their contemporaries, or even exceed them:

  • Ban prison gerrymandering
  • Zoning and housing reform
  • Abolish the penal exception for slavery in the state constitution
  • right to a clean environment and climate
  • A right to free and fair elections
  • A right to health
  • Equal rights amendment
  • More support for ranked choice voting
  • abolish the state senate

(Sources: KVLY, Minnesota Reformer)

The Lumity Kiss, One Year Later

Saw a few posts marking the one-year anniversary of the kiss between Luz Noceda and Amity Blight (aka “Lumity”) in The Owl House season 2 episode “Clouds on the Horizon”. Quite a cultural moment for animation and LGBT representation in mass media, particularly for the Disney behemoth. They fed the fandom with this one.

This moment, among others, netted The Owl House a 2023 nomination for a GLAAD Media Award for Outstanding Kids and Family Programming (Animated), even though it went to Netflix’s Dead End: Paranormal Park. I honestly wish that GLAAD Media Awards would allow for a first, second and third place winner for each category, now that they’ve expanded the nominee list for many categories to ten entries.

But still, Dana Terrace can say that she expanded Disney’s boundaries.

Tamberlane | Short Animation

Been working for the last year Directing/Producing a short animation for the webcomic Tamberlane! Their kickstarter is now live so please go check it out and give some support to this adorable webcomic!
https://ift.tt/xl6PsmA

CREDITS

DIRECTORS/PRODUCERS
Ashley Nichols
Caytlin Vilbrandt

STORYBOARDS
Caytlin Vilbrandt
Ari “Metajoker” Noble
Hunter Braly

ANIMATION
Rainsyru
Star Ren
Marji Bordner
Isabel Pereira
Sam Staehler
Sara Cardona

BACKGROUNDS
“Frog” Chu

CLEANUP
Ashley Nichols
Jacob McCaw
BMBrice
Ana Guerrero

COMPOSITING
Ashley Nichols

MUSIC
Ari “Metajoker” Noble

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Sodomy law repeal update (19 May 2023)

As of 19 May 2023:

  • MarylandHB0131, decriminalizing oral sex, will become law without signature on Oct 1 2023.
  • MassachusettsH1640/S913 no closer to passage for the last five months. They have until November 15.
  • Michigan: two three House bills (HB4431, HB4432, HB4433), all introduced 4/19/23. Twitter user @LGBTmarriage notes that neither bill repeals “the ‘gross indecency’ laws that also ban consensual private gay and straight sex (750.338, 338a and 338b).” Hope to see this fixed. Unlike the other three legislatures, Michigan has all year to get this done.
  • Minnesota: Some of the text of HF91/SF70 folded into HF2890/SF2909, passed and signed into law. Gay sex is now statute-legal in Minnesota, as well as “adultery” and “fornication”; abortion-related language in HF91 still being worked out before the session ends on Monday (May 22). Thanks to Rob Salerno @LGBTMarriage for the news.

ONCE AGAIN, it really shouldn’t be taking this long to remove some archaic swords of Damocles from over the heads of LGBT people in blue trifecta states.

Also, the Texas bill died before getting a vote in the House. Of course.

But anyway, two down, two blue trifectas with anti-gay-sex laws to go. Progress.