WHO: Jeff Parker
WHAT: ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN #1 release party, benefit for All Out
WHEN: Wednesday May 29, 5-7pm
WHERE: Floating World Comics, 400 NW Couch St.
WHAT: ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN #1 release party, benefit for All Out
WHEN: Wednesday May 29, 5-7pm
WHERE: Floating World Comics, 400 NW Couch St.
Join writer Jeff Parker on Wednesday May 29 to celebrate the release of
ADVENTURES OF SUPERMAN #1, featuring work by Jeff Parker and Chris
Samnee, plus stories by Jeff Lemire and the team of Justin Jordan and
Riley Rossmo. 100% of the proceeds from this issue will be donated to Allout.org to support their fight for LGBT equality.
From Portland Mercury, 2/21/13:
DC Comics recently hired Orson Scott Card to write a story in the first issue of their new Superman comic, Adventures of Superman. Card’s a hell of a writer—he wrote Ender’s Game, one of my favorite novels, the long-awaited film adaptation of which will come out this fall. He’s also a relentless, shameless bigot.
For at least 20 years, the Mormon author has been doing his
sanctimonious best to deny respect and basic civil rights to everyone
who isn’t heterosexual. There’s a huge chasm between the person who I
imagine wrote Ender’s Game—a fantastic, nuanced story about the
brutal lies of war, the strength and frailty of human beings, and neat
rooms where kids can float around because there isn’t any gravity—and
the person Card’s revealed himself to be through actions like serving on
the board of the National Organization for Marriage. When he isn’t saying that gays and lesbians should be arrested—
What we do with small children is to establish clear boundaries and offer swift but mild punishment for crossing them. As their capacity to understand and obey increases, the boundaries broaden but the consequences of crossing them become more severe…
Laws against homosexual behavior should remain on the books, not to be indiscriminately enforced against anyone who happens to be caught violating them, but to be used when necessary to send a clear message that those who flagrantly violate society’s regulation of sexual behavior cannot be permitted to remain as acceptable, equal citizens within that society. (Via.)
—he’s (apparently seriously) vowing to overthrow any government that lets gays and lesbians get married.
Marriage has only one definition, and any government that attempts to change it is my mortal enemy. I will act to destroy that government and bring it down. (Via.)
I also spoke with Floating World Comics’ Jason Leivian, who—like Chicago’s Challengers Comics—has
found a pretty fantastic solution: Yes, he’ll be selling the issue, but
100 percent of Floating World’s proceeds from the book will be going to
“All Out or another LGBT charity organization.”
“While I feel that a financial boycott may hit DC’s bottom line a
little harder,” Leivian says, “I like that there has been a large public
response to this story and I’d like to spin it in the opposite
direction by using this controversy to directly support organizations
Orson Scott Card would be opposed to.”
A couple weeks later artist Chris Sprouse announced that he would not
illustrate the story written by Card, citing the media attention
surrounding the controversial author. As a result DC has cancelled the
Orson Scott Card story, possibly to be published later with a different
artist.
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