WELCOME
to the house of Harry Plopper
And now it's time to check out the GTX Titan
And now it's time to check out the GTX Titan X in action, courtesy of Nvidia's VP of Marketing and Marketing Andrew Witherington.
Update: An official announcement was made with the words "Exclusive and limited release" and a "new release" added to the title.The U.S. Supreme Court is not considering whether the U.S. Constitution allows transgender people to use the bathroom they wish at home or at work, according to a ruling that could pave the way for many transgender people to use the bathroom in their home.
The Supreme Court, which last week granted a temporary stay on a transgender bathroom law in Oklahoma, ruled a year ago that states can impose their own legal protections on private businesses that discriminate against transgender people. The Texas-based state appeals court had decided before June that transgender people could use the bathroom of the gender they wish to use at home and, if their bathrooms are "insignificant," that they could use the bathroom of another person.
The court's decision came at a time when the Supreme Court has been weighing in on whether states have the authority to impose their own policies on private businesses. The Texas case, which has been referred to the high court, is one of the first such rulings of its kind in the U.S.
This ruling is likely to have many more legal consequences for transgender people who choose to use the bathroom they desire. Many transgender people in the U.S. have been forced to use public bathrooms that correspond to their gender identity. Texas was the first to ban transgender bathrooms in 2010.
"The Supreme Court's ruling in Oklahoma is a victory for individuals and groups who have fought for civil rights by refusing to allow public bathrooms that match their gender identity," said Stephanie Smith, the director of the Transgender Law Center (TPLC) at the Center for Constitutional Rights at the University of Texas-Dallas.
The decision will likely not get more attention than the ruling in Missouri, which had not enacted a law in over a decade. In 2013, Missouri's constitutional amendment did not pass, and Missouri's new governor, Jay Nixon, also opposed it.
Although Nixon's veto of a constitutional amendment to allow gay and lesbian-rights groups to organize on the state's behalf may have been a setback for the right to use public accommodation, many transgender people have maintained they could use the bathroom they want in their homes or workplaces.
However, the Kansas Supreme Court ruled on Monday that it could not strike down a Missouri
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