Nachher zum "Wintermärchen" in die Bremer Shakespeare Company.
Die erste Inszenierung davon habe ich wohl 89 / 90 oder so gesehen. Peter Kaempfe, Gabriele Blum, Rainer Iversen in 30 Rollen, teilweise "mehrfach" gleichzeitig auf der Bühne. Toll übersetzt und getextet von Chris Alexander. Ernst und heiter, mit einem wunderbaren Schafschurfest 😊
Irgendwo gibt es sogar eine Aufzeichnung, WDR glaube ich, wo ich auch im Publikum sitze und Wolle werfe.
Ich bin gespannt, wie es jetzt ist, mit ganz anderen Leuten, 30 Jahre später.
Trailer bei Youtube.
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Nenon
Als Antwort auf Jaddy • • •@transworld
Okay.... Before this discourse goes into that direction id like to ask a critical question:
if transitioning is not there to treat a medical condition called dysphoria anymore, but instead is a life choice you can freely make.... Then why should a third party (goverent, NHS) pay for it at all anymore?
Jaddy
Als Antwort auf Nenon • •@Nenon @Transgender World Firstly, this is not a choice anyone makes lightly. Everyone of the 200+ people I know who transitioned have thought intensely about the consequences. Long before any surgeries were on their list or any mandatory session about risks with doctors. Their concerns were about how they would be treated by their families, loved ones, kids, colleagues, jobs, sports clubs, church communities. That is social transition. New name, new pronouns, different presentation.
Secondly, third parties like NHS, insurances, etc are required to pay for a lot of life choices. Even life style choices, like the consequences and diseases of smoking, alcohol, bad diets, risky sports, dangerous driving, etc. These things cost literally billions per year in every european country. Transitions are, in comparison, some minor numbers behind the decimal point. (HRT i
... mehr anzeigen@Nenon @Transgender World Firstly, this is not a choice anyone makes lightly. Everyone of the 200+ people I know who transitioned have thought intensely about the consequences. Long before any surgeries were on their list or any mandatory session about risks with doctors. Their concerns were about how they would be treated by their families, loved ones, kids, colleagues, jobs, sports clubs, church communities. That is social transition. New name, new pronouns, different presentation.
Secondly, third parties like NHS, insurances, etc are required to pay for a lot of life choices. Even life style choices, like the consequences and diseases of smoking, alcohol, bad diets, risky sports, dangerous driving, etc. These things cost literally billions per year in every european country. Transitions are, in comparison, some minor numbers behind the decimal point. (HRT is especially cheap. Hundreds of millions of women get the same hormones, millions of men get their testosterone at older age).
So, the first topic makes it clear, that "choice" doesn't mean "out of thin air" or “because I was in the mood" or whatever. There's something more substantial behind it. Abigails argument is, that people are competent enough to decide for themselves, and if they decide so, all the "specialists" have to do is to help them achieving their goals. With information and good medication.
The second topic is a question of equal treatment. If a public health care system has to pay for someone who made the choice to ruin their health by smoking or excessive fast food, then it should also have to pay for a treatment that (as studies show) greatly improves the wellbeing of those who want it.