Jennifer On Twitter: Having A Vigil For Mac

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Liam Gallagher paid tribute to Mac Miller on stage in Berlin (Picture: Rex) Liam Gallagher shared a touching tribute to Mac Miller on stage at his Lollapalooza performance, in Berlin. A petition launched this week aims to have the park—which is part of the larger Frick Park—renamed in Mac Miller’s honor. Since his death Friday, tributes have poured in from Childish.

Watch Chance The Rapper and Justin Bieber take the stage together at Coachella 2014. We've already seen plenty of footage from the three-day festival that went down in Indio, California this weekend, aka Coachella.

There have been live streams available for each night of this festival (check out Day 3's stream which is going down right now ), however not all artists/rappers made the festival stream. Took the stage during the day today, and although he isn't a part of the stream, fans have been available to catch video Instagrams from the Chicago rapper's set, which includes a surprise performance from. We'll have to wait on high quality footage, though. You'll recall the two collaborated during Justin Bieber's 'Journals' series, for the track Watch a fan's Instagram footage from the Coachella performance above.

Cause of death Suicide by vehicular impact Nationality American Leelah Alcorn (November 15, 1997 – December 28, 2014) was an American girl whose attracted international attention. Alcorn had posted a to her blog, writing about societal standards affecting transgender people and expressing the hope that her death would create a dialogue about discrimination, abuse and lack of support for transgender people. Male at birth, she was given the name Joshua Alcorn and raised in by a family affiliated with the movement. At age 14, she as transgender to her parents, Carla and Doug Alcorn, who refused to accept her female gender identity. When she was 16, they denied her request to undergo, instead sending her to Christian-based with the intention of convincing her to reject her gender identity and accept her gender as assigned at birth. After she revealed her attraction toward males to her classmates, her parents removed her from school and revoked her access to.

In her suicide note, Alcorn cited loneliness and alienation as key reasons for her decision to end her life and blamed her parents for causing these feelings. She killed herself by walking out in front of oncoming traffic on the highway.

Alcorn arranged for her suicide note to be posted online several hours after her death, and it soon attracted international attention across mainstream and social media. Activists called attention to the incident as evidence of the problems faced by transgender youth, while vigils were held in her memory in the United States and United Kingdom. Petitions were formed calling for the establishment of 'Leelah's Law', a ban on conversion therapy in the U.S., which received a supportive response from U.S. Within a year, the city of criminalised conversion therapy. Alcorn's parents were criticized for Leelah in comments that they made to the media, while LGBT rights activist blamed them for their child's death, and social media users subjected them to. They defended their refusal to accept their child's identity and their use of conversion therapy by reference to their Christian values. 'When I was 14, I learned what transgender meant and cried of happiness.

After 10 years of confusion I finally understood who I was. I immediately told my mom, and she reacted extremely negatively, telling me that it was a phase, that I would never truly be a girl, that God doesn't make mistakes, that I am wrong. If you are reading this, parents, please don't tell this to your kids. Even if you are Christian or are against transgender people don't ever say that to someone, especially your kid. That won't do anything but make them hate them self.

That's exactly what it did to me.' — Leelah Alcorn's suicide note, 2014 According to her suicide note, Alcorn had felt 'like a girl trapped in a boy's body' since she was four, and came to identify as a transgender girl from the age of fourteen, when she became aware of the term.

According to her note, she immediately informed her mother, who reacted 'extremely negatively' by claiming that it was only a phase and that God had made her a male, so she could never be a woman. She stated that this made her hate herself, and that she developed a form of depression. Her mother sent her to Christian conversion therapists, but Alcorn later related that here she only encountered 'more Christians' telling her that she was 'selfish and wrong' and 'should look to God for help'. Aged sixteen, she requested that she be allowed to undergo transition treatment, but was denied permission: in her words, 'I felt hopeless, that I was just going to look like a man in drag for the rest of my life. On my 16th birthday, when I didn't receive consent from my parents to start transitioning, I cried myself to sleep.' Alcorn publicly revealed her attraction to males when she was sixteen, as she believed that identifying as a gay male at that point would be a stepping stone to coming out as transgender at a later date. According to a childhood friend, Alcorn received a positive reception from many at Kings High School, although her parents were appalled.

In Alcorn's words, 'They felt like I was attacking their image, and that I was an embarrassment to them. They wanted me to be their perfect little Christian boy, and that's obviously not what I wanted.'

They removed her from the school, and enrolled her as an eleventh grader at an online school,. According to Alcorn, her parents cut her off from the outside world for five months as they denied her access to social media and many forms of communication.

She described this as a significant contributing factor towards her suicide. At the end of the school year, they returned her phone to her and allowed her to regain contact with her friends, although by this time, according to Alcorn, her relationship with many of them had become strained, and she continued to feel isolated. Two months before her death, Alcorn sought out help on the social media website, asking users whether the treatment perpetrated by her parents constituted. There, she revealed that while her parents had never physically assaulted her, 'they always talked to me in a very derogatory tone' and 'would say things like 'You'll never be a real girl' or 'What're you going to do, fuck boys?' Or 'God's going to send you straight to hell'. These all made me feel awful about myself, I was Christian at the time so I thought that God hated me and that I didn't deserve to be alive.' Further, she explained, 'I tried my absolute hardest to live up to their standards and be a straight male, but eventually I realized that I hated religion and my parents.'

On Reddit, Alcorn also disclosed that she was prescribed increasing dosages of the anti-depressant. In concluding her post, she wrote, 'Please help me, I don't know what I should do and I can't take much more of this.' Alcorn's computer was recovered near the site of her suicide. It contained conversations showing that she had planned to jump off the bridge that crosses days before the incident, but then contacted a and, as told to a friend, 'basically cried my eyes out for a couple of hours talking to a lady there'. Death Prior to her death on December 28, 2014, Alcorn scheduled for her suicide note to be automatically posted on her Tumblr account at 5:30 pm. In the note, she stated her intention to end her life, commenting: I have decided I've had enough.

I'm never going to transition successfully, even when I move out. I'm never going to be happy with the way I look or sound. I'm never going to have enough friends to satisfy me. I'm never going to have enough love to satisfy me.

I'm never going to find a man who loves me. I'm never going to be happy. Either I live the rest of my life as a lonely man who wishes he were a woman or I live my life as a lonelier woman who hates herself. There's no winning.

There's no way out. I'm sad enough already, I don't need my life to get any worse. People say 'it gets better' but that isn't true in my case. It gets worse. Each day I get worse.

That's the gist of it, that's why I feel like killing myself. Sorry if that's not a good enough reason for you, it's good enough for me. She expressed her wish that all of her possessions and money be donated to a transgender advocacy charity, and called for issues surrounding gender identity to be taught in schools. The note ended with the statement: 'My death needs to mean something. My death needs to be counted in the number of transgender people who commit suicide this year.

I want someone to look at that number and say 'that's fucked up' and fix it. A second post appeared shortly after; titled 'Sorry', it featured an apology to her close friends and siblings for the trauma that her suicide would put them through, but also contained a message to her parents: 'Fuck you. You can't just control other people like that. That's messed up.' An additional, handwritten suicide note reading 'I've had enough' was found on her bed, but then thrown away by Alcorn's mother after police made a copy.

In the early morning of December 28, police informed news sources that she had been walking southbound on Interstate 71 near when she was struck by a semi-trailer just before 2:30 am near the South Lebanon exit. She died at the scene. It is believed that Alcorn walked three to four miles from her parents' Kings Mill house, before being struck.

The highway was closed for more than an hour after the incident. An investigation was launched by the, while Alcorn's body was transported to the coroner, where an was scheduled. The truck driver was uninjured in the incident. Within 48 hours of the posting of her suicide note, it had attracted 82,272 views, and by the morning of December 31, it had been reposted on Tumblr 200,000 times. Writing for the, the reporter Maura Johnston described it as a 'passionate post'.

The suicide note was later deleted after Alcorn's parents asked for it to be removed, and the blog was made inaccessible to the public. According to the family minister, the Alcorn family decided to hold the funeral privately after receiving threats. Alcorn's body was reportedly.

The Ohio State Patrol completed their investigation into Alcorn's death on April 30, 2015, officially ruling it a suicide. Reaction Alcorn's parents On December 28 at 2:56 p.m., Alcorn's mother, Carla Wood Alcorn, posted a public message on the social media website, stating: 'My sweet 16-year-old son, Joshua Ryan Alcorn, went home to Heaven this morning. He was out for an early morning walk and was hit by a truck.

Thank you for the messages and kindness and concern you have sent our way. Please continue to keep us in your prayers.' Carla Alcorn's post was subsequently deleted, and her Facebook account was made private. The Alcorn family publicly requested that they be given privacy to grieve in a statement issued by the.

In that statement, staff from Alcorn's former school, Kings High School, declared that 'Joshua Alcorn was a sweet, talented, tender-hearted 17-year-old', adding that counselors would be made available to students affected by the incident. A moment of silence was held in Alcorn's memory before a Kings High basketball game on December 30. LGBT rights advocate Dan Savage called for Leelah's parents to face legal prosecution in the wake of their daughter's death. Some of Alcorn's sympathizers publicly criticized the teen's mother, Carla Alcorn, for her daughter in the Facebook post announcing the teenager's death. Some individuals—termed 'the Internet's self-appointed vigilantes' in —subsequently and harassed Carla via her Facebook account 'in revenge' for Leelah's death. Writing for the United Kingdom-based website, the columnist stated that those harassing Alcorn's parents represented 'a new breed of illiberal liberal' who were intolerant of anyone holding conservative views on social issues. He compared their tactics with those of the, for both 'view harassment of the bereaved as a legitimate form of politics'.

On Twitter, American gay rights activist argued that Alcorn's parents should be prosecuted for their role in bringing about their daughter's death, commenting that through their actions they 'threw her in front of that truck'. He cited the successful prosecution of following the as a legal precedent for such an action. He added that legal action should also be brought against the conversion therapists who had counselled Leelah, and suggested that the Alcorns should lose custody of their other children. Carla Alcorn responded to such criticism in an interview with, stating 'we loved him unconditionally.

We loved him no matter what. I loved my son. People need to know that I loved him. He was a good kid, a good boy.'

Although acknowledging that Leelah had requested transition surgery, Carla stated that she had never heard her child use the name 'Leelah', before reiterating her refusal to accept her child's transgender status, adding 'We don't support that, religiously.' She expressed concern that users of social media thought her to be a 'horrible person', but defended her actions in dealing with her child, stating for example that she had banned internet access to prevent access to 'inappropriate' things. In an email to Cincinnati-based channel, Leelah's father Doug Alcorn wrote, 'We love our son, Joshua, very much and are devastated by his death. We have no desire to enter into a political storm or debate with people who did not know him. We wish to grieve in private. We harbor no ill will towards anyone. I simply do not wish our words to be used against us.'

Writing for, commented that 'it would be cruel and inaccurate to suggest that Carla Alcorn did not love her child', but added that Carla's statement that she 'loved him unconditionally' revealed 'a tragic lack of understanding of the word 'unconditionally', even in death'. Magazine quoted Johanna Olson, Medical Director for the Center of Trans Youth Health and Development at, as stating that 'Did Leelah's parents love her?

Yes, I'm sure they did. Did they support her? No, they didn't. And that's a tragedy.'

Mara Keisling, the Executive Director of the, was quoted as stating that the blaming of Alcorn's parents was unhelpful, adding, 'Despite the great cultural and policy advances transgender people have made, there is still a lot of disrespect, discrimination and violence aimed at us. And being a child or a teenager of any kind today is very difficult.' Tributes, vigils, and activism. A memorial placed against a wall following the London vigil, January 2015 The day after Alcorn's suicide note was published online, the first openly gay councilman on, shared it as part of a Facebook message in which he stated that her death showed how hard it was to be transgender in the U.S. His post was shared over 4,700 times and increased public awareness of the incident. By December 30, Alcorn's death had attracted worldwide attention.

News outlets across the world had picked up the story, and the #LeelahAlcorn had topped. According to British newspaper, the incident 'triggered widespread anguish and raised a debate about the rights of transgender people'. The U.S.-based stated that it 'served as a flashpoint for transgender progress in 2014', while referred to it as having 'sparked a national conversation about the plight of transgender kids and the scanty rights and respect our society affords them.' On January 1, 2015, the Cincinnati-based LGBT rights group Support Marriage Equality Ohio hosted a vigil for Alcorn outside Kings High School. A candlelight vigil in, Columbus, was held on January 2 by a group called Stand Up 4 Leelah.

A further vigil was organized by both The Diverse City Youth Chorus in partnership with the Cincinnati chapter of the at the Clifton Cultural Arts Center for January 10. The vigil location at the Clifton Cultural Arts Center was moved to the Woodward Theater, to make way for a larger setting. The event was attended by over 500 people. A January 3 vigil was scheduled for in; an organizer was quoted as saying that 'Alcorn's death was a political death. When a member of our community is brutalised at the hands of oppression we must all fight back'. Those who spoke at the event included politician and novelist and poet.

Mac

Marches were carried out in honor of Alcorn in both, and, on January 10. The same day, a candlelight vigil was held in 's. A memorial protest against conversion therapy and in memory of Alcorn took place in, on January 24, 2015. Among the transgender celebrities who publicly responded to the incident were, and, while the musician released a song, 'For the Lost and Brave', in dedication to Alcorn., the writer of the television show, dedicated her for Best Television Series to Alcorn. During 's interview with (then Bruce), which confirmed Jenner's transgender identity, Alcorn was mentioned by name and the message 'Fix society.

Please' was broadcast. In June 2015, the singer founded the, an organisation to raise awareness of homelessness and LGBT issues among young people, partly in response to Alcorn's death. To promote the organisation, she released a new series of videos, the second of which, 's ' was dedicated to Alcorn. Celebrities such as (left) and (right) publicly responded to Alcorn's death. Carolyn Washburn, editor of the Ohio newspaper, stated that the incident 'raises important issues we hope will prompt conversations in families throughout our region'. Washburn had also received letters that derided the newspaper's use of Alcorn's chosen name in covering her death.

When contacted by The Cincinnati Enquirer, Shane Morgan, the founder and chair of transgender advocate group TransOhio, stated that while 2014 witnessed gains for the trans rights movement, Alcorn's death illustrated how 'trans people are still being victimized and still being disrespected', highlighting the high rate of transgender people who had been murdered that year. Since the incident, TransOhio received letters from parents of transgender children describing how Alcorn's death had affected them. Morgan stated that while he understood the anger directed toward Alcorn's parents, 'there's no excuse for threats to the family.' Allison Woolbert, executive director of the Transgender Human Rights Institute, informed The Independent that Alcorn's case was 'not unique'; the newspaper highlighted research from the indicating that LGBT youth are about twice as likely to attempt suicide than heterosexual, teenagers.

Similarly placed Alcorn's suicide within its wider context of discrimination, highlighting that the reports that over 50 percent of transgender youths attempt suicide before the age of 20, and that the recently published a report indicating that 72 percent of LGBT homicide victims in 2013 were transgender women. Of the also situated Alcorn's death within wider problems facing young LGBT people.

In his view, she became 'an international symbol of the ongoing challenges faced by LGBT youth', adding that her death 'reminds us of a basic lesson still being taught to young people across America: When it comes to gender identity, it's best to be cisgender; and when it comes to sexual orientation, it's best to be straight.' Under the Twitter hashtag #RealLiveTransAdult, many transgender people posted encouraging tweets for their younger counterparts, while other hashtags, such as #ProtectTransKids, and the term 'Rest in Power', also circulated on Twitter.

A petition was set up calling for Leelah's chosen name to be included on her, which gained over 80,000 signatures. On January 6, Adam Hoover of Marriage Equality Ohio remarked that, since the request of having Alcorn's chosen name on her gravestone seemed 'like a slim possibility', they would be raising money for a permanent memorial arranged as a bench, tree.

The put up signs on the interchange of Interstate 71 South and in Warren County, where Alcorn died, to show that a group adopted that part of the road in memory of Alcorn. Leelah's Law. In the wake of Alcorn's death, President Obama pledged to support a ban on conversion therapy. A Facebook group called 'Justice for Leelah Alcorn' was established, while a petition calling for 'Leelah's Law', a ban on conversion therapy in the United States, was created by the Transgender Human Rights Institute to raise awareness of the psychologically harmful effects of such practices; by January 24 it had 330,009 signatures, and was named the fastest growing change.org petition of 2014. A second appeal demanding the enactment of 'Leelah's Law' was posted to the section of on January 3, 2015, which garnered more than 100,000 signatures as of January 30.

In response to the petition, in April 2015 President called for the banning of conversion therapy for minors. In December 2015, Cincinnati became the second U.S. City after, to ban the practice of conversion therapy outright; council member Chris Seelbach cited Alcorn's suicide as an influence in the decision and stated that 'she challenged us to make her death matter, and we're doing just that'. See also.

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Jennifer On Twitter: Having A Vigil For Machines

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External links., poet reading the poem he wrote in memory of Leelah Alcorn.