SGN December 10, 2021

Page 1

ISSUE 50

C E L E B R AT I N G

VOLUME 49

47 YEARS

F R I D AY

IN

DECEMBER 10, 2 0 21

PRINT S E AT T L E ’ S L G B T Q I A + N E W S & E N T E R TA I N M E N T W E E K LY S I N C E 19 74

SAWANT SEEKS TO HOLD ONTO DISTRICT 3 COUNCIL SEAT IN DIVIDED RECALL ELECTION

by Renee Raketty SGN Contributing Writer Seattle City Councilmember Kshama Sawant gave a rousing speech to her supporters on December 7, after the voting in the recall election in Seattle’s District 3 had come to an end. The crowd gathered at Chop Suey, a music venue in Seattle’s Capitol Hill neighborhood, to hold what they had hoped would be a victory party, but the Recall Sawant campaign was in the lead. Sawant left nothing unsaid, giving a fiery oratory about the recall campaign and Seattle’s political establishment, while also giving one last full-throated defense of herself against the charges that had led to the recall effort.

see SAWANT page 5

Photo by Renee Raketty

Queerness at the con: ECCC in-person after two years

Supreme Court hears case to repeal abortion rights

Photo courtesy of ECCC

by Daniel Lindsley SGN Contributing Writer Stepping out of Westlake Station, I traveled back in time. Jedi walked beside stormtroopers. Bane, one of Batman’s nemeses, waited at a crosswalk with an emerald-green tote bag. Two Princesses Peach ordered hot dogs from a roadside stand. From Thursday, December 2, through Sunday, December 5, fans and artists of all kinds were gathering for the first in-person Emerald City Comic Con in two years.

Photo by Andrew Harnik / AP

The familiar tension of the pandemic was present, even with masks and proof of vaccination. People gave each other a wide berth, space allowing, and I heard (and used) the same beat in many conversations: everyone there was readjusting, after being shut inside for months on end. In light of the pandemic, I was impressed by the turnout. The crowding wasn’t as bad as at conventions I’d attended before—like Fanime in San Jose, or Wondercon in Ana-

see ECCC page 9

by Lindsey Anderson SGN Contributing Writer On Wednesday, December 1, the United States Supreme Court heard oral arguments in Dobbs v. Jackson, the newest case challenging the fifty-year precedent set by Roe v. Wade in 1973 and reaffirmed in Planned Parenthood v. Casey in 1993. The case regards the “Gestational Age Act.” Enacted in 2018, this Mississippi law would ban all abortions after fifteen weeks, including those caused by rape or incest.

However, the law has never gone into effect. It was first blocked by the Federal District Court for contravening a key component of both Roe and Casey, namely, that states are not allowed to ban abortions before the age of fetal viability. It was then taken to the court of appeals, which upheld the previous ruling. After the death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg and the hasty confirmation of Trump appointee Amy Coney Barrett, Mississippi pushed to have the case heard once

see ROE page 19


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