Halsey took a stand against the recent decision to overturn Roe v. Wade during their concert on Saturday, but some fans were pissed that things got political!
30.06.2022 - 17:57 / glamour.com
do change it is because they have established an empathic bond with someone else, meaning that they have started to see that other person as a human being with their own experiences and their own perspectives rather than someone that they can argue with or who doesn’t understand,” she says.Offer background on why you believe the way you do. Share personal experiences that can help contextualize why it matters to you.
Ask the same of them.Whether written in a text, email, or on social media, tone is easily lost — and also swiftly escalates. “Studies show that if you read an opinion that you don’t agree with in any form, you’re more likely to believe that that person disagrees with you because they are stupid and they don’t understand the core concepts,” Headlee explains.
“But if they hear you explain your opinion in your own voice, they’re more likely to believe that you disagree because you have a different perspective and experience.”For that reason, try to avoid the heavily drafted, impassioned, and often performative digital back-and-forths. “Make sure that you are speaking with them in a way that is authentic,” Headlee says, “meaning you’re doing it in person or on the phone if that’s possible.”Building some trust before you take up a dissenting opinion makes all the difference in being heard.
“Generally, people like to hear about what they already think,” explains Dr. Gail Saltz, associate professor of psychiatry at the New York Presbyterian Hospital Weill-Cornell School of medicine and host of the podcast from iHeartRadio.
Halsey took a stand against the recent decision to overturn Roe v. Wade during their concert on Saturday, but some fans were pissed that things got political!
Joe Biden said that he would support altering the rules of the filibuster as a way to codify abortion and privacy rights into law.
Halsey has responded to reports that some fans walked out of their recent concert in Phoenix during a speech about abortion rights.At Sunday’s (June 26) show, Halsey encouraged fans to take a stance on reproductive rights, delivering a powerful speech about the need to be active following the US Supreme Court’s decision to overturn the landmark Roe v. Wade abortion ruling.“This has been happening for a very long fucking time,” Halsey said to approximately 20,000 concert-goers at the Ak-Chin Pavilion.
Halsey isn’t letting anyone silence her political views.
Maya Hawke stated her message to the Supreme Court loud and clear.
The Duchess of Sussex is sitting down with Vogue for an important conversation about abortion rights.
"Full House" star Jodie Sweetin was seen in Los Angeles just days after she was pushed to the ground by an officer with the Los Angeles Police Department while she was protesting the Supreme Court Roe v. Wade ruling with a group in the downtown area of the city on Saturday afternoon. Sweetin, 40, showed signs of bruising on her arms as she walked to her vehicle, but appeared otherwise unharmed following the incident with law enforcement officials over the weekend, which was captured on video by local photographer Michael Ade.
Todd Spangler NY Digital EditorRadio host and entrepreneur Charlamagne Tha God is producing the first Black Effect Podcast Festival in partnership with iHeartMedia, aimed at celebrating and amplifying Black voices in the podcast industry.The event will take place Sunday, Aug. 28, at the Brooklyn Mirage’s Avant Gardner venue in East Williamsburg, Brooklyn.
Jodie Sweetin wants to shift the focus off of herself following Saturday's abortion rights protest in Los Angeles, which saw the actress captured on video being pushed to the ground by police. ET's Nischelle Turner spoke with the longtime activist about why it was so important for her to hit the streets following Friday's Supreme Court decision on Roe v.
Jodie Sweetin is speaking out after she was knocked down to the ground by officers over the weekend at an abortion rights protest.
Cyndi Lauper has shared a rerecorded version of her 1993 abortion rights anthem ‘Sally’s Pigeons’ in the wake of the US Supreme Court’s reversal of Roe v. Wade.In a series of tweets that accompanied the new, more stripped-back and plaintive version of ‘Sally’s Pigeons’ on June 25, Lauper wrote, “In my childhood, women didn’t have reproductive freedom and 50 years later we find ourselves in a time warp where one’s freedom to control their own body has been stripped away.”She continued, “When I wrote this song with Mary Chapin Carpenter in 1991, we wrote about two little girls who dreamt of stretching their wings like the pigeons they watched that flew above them.“They dreamt of being free.
Halsey encouraged fans to take a stance on reproductive rights, delivering a powerful speech about the need to be active during political turmoil.In early May, leaked documents showed that the US Supreme Court voted privately to overturn Roe v. Wade, a 1973 case that made abortion legal on a federal level.
Fighting for her rights. Full House alum Jodie Sweetin was shoved by police officers during an abortion rights protest in Los Angeles over the weekend.
Across the country, people have taken to the streets this weekend to protest the horrific decision from the Supreme Court to overturn Roe v. Wade, putting an end to the 1973 landmark ruling that protected someone’s right to an abortion. Several celebrities have joined the masses in marching and speaking out against the reversal, including Jodie Sweetin.
Jodie Sweetin is speaking out after a video of her being thrown to the ground by LAPD officers Saturday during an abortion rights protest began circulating on social media.In the video, captured by photographer Michael Ade, Ade explained that Sweetin was trying to lead a group of peaceful protestors away from the freeway when she was shoved by police, who were dressed in riot gear. While she was thrown several feet, the actress managed to stand up just seconds later and continue to protest for a person's right to a safe abortion — something that was made illegal in several states across the nation with the Supreme Court's reversal of Roe V.
Jodie Sweetin was knocked down during a protest.
Jodie Sweetin was involved in a confrontation with police during an abortion rights protest in L.A.