Singer
Bryan Adams cancels Mississippi show to protest same-sex
law
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[April 12, 2016]
By Suzannah Gonzales and Colleen Jenkins
(Reuters) - Canadian singer
Bryan Adams has canceled a show in Mississippi to
protest a new state law that will let people with
religious objections deny services to same-sex couples,
the second major concert scrapped in the U.S. South over
discrimination concerns.
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On Friday, rock star Bruce Springsteen called off a weekend
concert in North Carolina to show his opposition to a new law
there barring transgender people from choosing bathrooms
consistent with their gender identity.
The cancellations come as U.S. states consider legislation seen
as restricting lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender rights.
Supporters of the measures say they are needed to keep women and
children safe in restrooms and to protect religious freedom
after a U.S. Supreme Court ruling last year legalized same-sex
marriage.
Adams, who was set to perform on Thursday at the Mississippi
Coast Coliseum in Biloxi, called the state's measure "extremely
discriminatory."
"I cannot in good conscience perform in a state where certain
people are being denied their civil rights due to their sexual
orientation," Adams wrote on his website.
The law signed in Mississippi last week allows people with
religious objections to deny wedding services to same-sex
couples and permits employers to cite religion in determining
workplace policies on dress code, grooming and bathroom and
locker access.
Ninety-five Mississippi writers, including best-selling author
John Grisham, signed a letter released on Monday calling for a
repeal of the law before it takes effect in July.
"There have always been people here battling injustice," the
letter said. "That’s the version of Mississippi we believe in,
and that’s the Mississippi we won’t stop fighting for."
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In North Carolina, several hundred people rallied in Raleigh on
Monday in support of that state's law, the first in the nation to
require transgender people to choose bathrooms and locker rooms that
match the gender on their birth certificate.
The law also bars local governments from enacting
anti-discrimination protections based on sexual orientation and
gender identity.
The supporters wore pins that read "No men in women’s bathrooms" and
thanked Republican Governor Pat McCrory for standing firm against
attacks on the measure, WTVD-TV reported.
Executives from dozens of U.S. corporations have urged both North
Carolina and Mississippi officials to repeal their laws.
A state legislator who was one of 11 Democrats to vote for North
Carolina's measure called for its repeal on Monday.
"I made the wrong vote, and we must now make it right,"
Representative Billy Richardson said in an opinion article for the
Fayetteville Observer.
(Reporting by Suzannah Gonzales in Chicago and Colleen Jenkins in
Winston-Salem, N.C.; Editing by Daniel Wallis, Jeffrey Benkoe,
Leslie Adler and Jonathan Oatis)
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