Thread: Queer News 2

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  1. #121
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    In a comment piece for PinkNews, Zoe Stavri argues that Guardian columnist Suzanne Moore should apologise for her recent transphobic outburst.
    On Tuesday columnist Suzanne Moore wrote a reasonably decent article about anger. I say “reasonably decent”, because it contained a rather problematic line: We are angry with ourselves for not being happier, not being loved properly and not having the ideal body shape – that of a Brazilian transsexual.
    This line, when viewed in the context of the sheer number of trans Brazilian women who are murdered, is not a good thing to write, as
    this blog explains really well. At that point, when this was drawn to Moore’s attention, she could have apologised for a thoughtless,
    flippant line, and we could all go on to appreciating her reasonably decent article about anger. This wasn’t the case. Instead, she responded with open, vitriolic transphobia about “cutting dicks off”, and complaints that we were not focusing on the “real issues”. It was almost a textbook example of columnist-rage, moving into complaints about intersectionality swiftly. I storifyed the first 24 hours of it. You don’t have to take my word for it and can view the whole thing in context.
    I’d hoped that was the end of that, and we could all go back to our lives, but apparently I was wrong, and Moore’s still digging, deeper
    and deeper.
    She wrote an article in the Guardian, complaining. She starts off with the “some of my best friends are trans” argument in record time,
    moving swiftly into listing some books she’s read that (possibly) show she’s right. Then she dips her toes into how the big mean intersectionals are shutting down discussion, claiming she’s read bell hooks. Then comes Suzanne Moore’s point: that we shouldn’t care about tiny little things like the oppression of trans people and her contribution to it, but we should instead focus on the cuts, literally saying this:
    “So to be told that I hate transgender people feels a little…irrelevant. Other people’s genital arrangements are less interesting
    to me than the breakdown of the social contract. I am asking for anger and for alliances. Less divide and rule. So call me a freak.” For all her having read bell hooks, it looks like Suzanne Moore missed a vital bit: bell hooks often talks about how privileged women contribute to the oppression of other women. In her call to unite around the thing she wants us to unite around while sweeping her own contribution to the oppression of other women under the carpet, Moore has been part of the problem hooks highlighted.
    Ultimately, Moore does apologise. She flat-out tweeted “I’m not going to apologise. Get it?”
    This sort of reaction is horribly unhelpful and stands in the way of ever being able to unite against other forms of oppression, such as
    the brutal government attacks on anyone vulnerable. Moore messed. It was minor at first, but with her reaction, it escalated into something far uglier and far harder to heal. Moore feels like we can never move ahead if we worry about such trivialities as the oppression of trans people, but the reality is that this oppression is far from trivial.
    It might seem tiny to Suzanne Moore, but that’s only because it’s something that she doesn’t have to worry about herself. In order to
    build a movement that can actually unify, though, she should care about it, and should monitor her own contribution to oppression of
    other people–a lot of whom are women. An apology would be a nice place to start. It’s quite sad, really, because Moore’s article on anger was reasonably decent, and did make some points about gigantic problems in society. It’s a shame, then, that as well as addressing some, she also contributes to others herself. No one oppression is so important that all other oppressions must be neglected and ignored. There is no “let’s do this tomorrow, after we’ve fixed the real stuff.”
    This is all real. It’s all important. You can be good on one thing and absolutely terrible on another. And isn’t it better to try not to be
    terrible on anything?
    Zoe Stavri runs the blog Another Angry Woman - she describes herself as “Part anarchist. Part feminist. All angry” and blogs about ”a mishmash of feminism, psychology, politics and navel-gazing.”
    Source: http://www.pinknews.co.uk/2013/01/11...-stop-digging/


    While everyone is debating the merits of Jodie Foster’s Golden Globes speech, another distinguished performer, albeit one with a lower profile, has quietly confirmed that he’s gay: character actor Victor Garber.
    Garber, perhaps best known for Titanic and the TV series Alias, and currently on-screen in Argo, confirmed the information to Greg in Hollywood blogger Greg Hernandez in a recent interview.
    In a post published today, Hernandez writes that he met Garber last week at the TV Critics Association Press Tour in Pasadena, Calif. He asked Garber about a Wikipedia entry that said he is partnered with a man, Rainer Andreesen, with whom he lives in New York. “I wondered if that’s something public, that you’ve confirmed,” Hernandez said to Garber.
    “He seemed surprised by the question but said: ‘I don’t really talk about it but everybody knows,’” Hernandez writes. “Garber then added: ‘He’s going to be out here with me for the SAG Awards.’”
    The Argo ensemble, which includes Garber as Canadian ambassador Ken Taylor, is nominated for a Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture.
    Garber also noted to Hernandez that he’s friendly with Argo star and director Ben Affleck and Affleck’s wife, actress Jennifer Garner; he played her father in the espionage drama Alias. He also appeared, uncredited, in Affleck’s film The Town. Of Argo, he told Hernandez, “It’s such a gratification because of my relationship with Ben and Jennifer to see him emerge now as one of the great directors which I’ve always felt since Gone Baby Gone. To be a part of it is like the icing on the cake. It’s incredibly thrilling for me. And the fact that people love the movie so much means the world.”
    Garber also currently appears in the TV series Deception, playing corporate executive and family patriarch Robert Bowers. His notable film roles include shipbuilder Thomas Andrews in Titanic and San Francisco mayor George Moscone in Milk. He has appeared frequently on Broadway and has four Tony Award nominations, along with six Emmy nominations for his TV work — including one for a 2004 guest shot on Will & Grace.
    Source: http://www.advocate.com/arts-enterta...ms-yep-hes-gay


    A group of business leaders signed an open letter to Illinois's general assembly urging the passage of marriage equality legislation.
    Fred Eychaner, chairman of the Newsweb Corp., and Laura Ricketts, the out co-owner of the Chicago Cubs, signed the letter. Google, Orbitz Worldwide, and Groupon also urged action, ThinkProgress reports.
    "Marrige equality would strengthen the workforces of Illinois employers, who know there is no substitute for employees with diverse backgrounds and experiences," read part of that letter. "Companies must understand a changing marketplace and be able to connect with their customers; having a diverse workforce is part of that. That's one reason many employers have adopted nondiscrimination policies and offer domestic partner benefits."
    The letter also said marriage legislation would bring a financial windfall to the state. Read more here.
    Source: http://www.advocate.com/politics/mar...riage-equality
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  2. #122
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    An effort to repeal Virginia's marriage equality ban in the state's House of Delegates failed after Republicans quashed it.
    Democrat Scott Surovell, who introduced the repeal legislation, said times have changed since Virginia voters passed a referendum against same-sex marriage in 2006. He also warned that the ban was making the state less desirable for businesses who value equality.
    Surovell's measure was defeated in a voice vote in a Republican-controlled subcommittee. Read more here.
    Source: http://www.advocate.com/politics/mar...es-down-flames


    San Francisco Supervisor David Campos is working to ensure visitors to his city will land in Harvey Milk International Airport.
    The openly gay supervisor will introduce legislation Tuesday to change the name of San Francisco International Airport to honor the late city supervisor and LGBT rights icon Harvey Milk. Campos will need the support of five other supervisors to get the proposition on the city's ballot in November. According to the San Francisco Chronicle, there were already four other co-sponsors, including out supervisor Scott Wiener, who represents the same area that Milk did in the 1970s.
    SFO would become the first airport named after an openly gay person. Currently, about 80 of America's airports are named after famous people.
    While it will cost an estimated $50,000-$250,000 to make the change official, Campos said there may be enough private donations to help float the cost. 

    Stuart Milk, the nephew of the late supervisor, said this change will have "huge implications" for the 9 million international visitors coming from countries around the world -- specifically countries where attitudes toward LGBT citizens are harsh or worse.
    "To be in Dubai, and see on the board a flight that ends at Harvey Milk San Francisco International Airport, or to be a young Pakistani, in a country where it is illegal to be gay, look up and see the name of a gay icon and feel, 'I am not alone.'"
    Source: http://www.advocate.com/politics/pol...tional-airport


    Lee Thompson, known as Honey Boo Boo's Uncle Poodle revealed that the results of a recent HIV test have returned with a positive diagnosis.

    Thompson, who is openly gay, told Fenuxe.com that a test in May showed that he was HIV-positive.

    "I knew it had been my boyfriend who infected me," Thompson said. "I later learned he had been HIV positive and was not taking medication and had not bothered to tell me about it."

    Thompson said he then reluctantly press charges against his ex, who is now serving a five-year sentence in prison for not disclosing his HIV status.

    "I would have been cool with his status if he had been honest," he said. "I don't have an issue with the disease. I would have known how to protect myself."

    Thompson said his nickname "Uncle Poodle" stems from his niece, Alana Thompson, otherwise known as Honey Boo Boo. He said she calls all gay men "my poodles." He said he would like to have his own reality show, possibly a spinoff of Here Comes Honey Boo Boo on TLC, highlighting what it's like to be gay in the South.
    Source: http://www.hivplusmag.com/people/201...e-hiv-positive


    Longtime LGBT activist Whoopi Goldberg will receive the Human Rights Campaign's Ally for Equality Award on February 2 in New York City.
    Goldberg, current co-host of The View and former Oscar-winner for Ghost, has put her neck out for LGBT people for years. She spoke at 1987's March on Washington for gay rights.
    "Mr. Reagan, did you explain…that sometimes ignorant people act in such a way [toward people with AIDS] that it is frightening," she said at the event. "How long is it going to take before people get smart…educated people? We’re not talking about illiterate people. We’re talking about senators and congressmen and the fucking president."
    Goldberg frequently defends LGBT rights on The View, noted HRC president Chad Griffin.
    "We are proud to honor Whoopi Goldberg with the Ally for Equality Award for her commitment to the LGBT community through her public support of marriage equality, including taking part in our successful New Yorkers for Marriage Equality video campaign in 2011," Griffin said in a statement. "Whoopi is always willing to stand up for our community and is a longtime friend of HRC."
    Source: http://www.advocate.com/arts-enterta...-lgbt-activism
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  3. #123
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    Lena Dunham, who won two Golden Globes on Sunday for her HBO comedy Girls, caught up with fawning members of the press after her victory… and probably after taking off those ridiculous high heels that made her wobble like a toddler.
    During her acceptance speech, Dunham referred to her boyfriend, fun. guitarist Jack Antonoff, as "family." That prompted USA Today to question the actress about possible impending nuptials.
    But Dunham shut down that speculation, and gave a damn fine reason for doing so.
    "I'm not engaged," said Dunham. "I don't want to get married until all gay people can get married."
    Rock on, Lena.
    Dunham's boyfriend, Antonoff, is also on record as an ally, recording a video last year for the Human Rights Campaign's "Americans for Marriage Equality," and writing a heartfelt op-ed for Huffington Post about the importance of straight voices in the fight for LGBT equality.
    fun., comprised of Antonoff and fellow straight bandmates Nate Reuss and Andrew Dost, have made it clear that they're allies for equality, too, launching The Ally Coalition and donating their time and talent to LGBT equality organizations.
    Source: http://www.shewired.com/box-office/2...l-everyone-can


    The Presidential Inaugural Committee has asked Luis León, an LGBT-friendly Episcopal priest based in Washington, D.C., to issue the benediction at President Obama's Inauguration on January 21, reports The Huffington Post.
    León, a Reverend at St. John's Church in D.C. where the President and his family frequently attend services, confirmed to Huffington Post that he would, indeed, deliver the benediction. León gave the invocation at President George W. Bush's 2005 Inauguration, and his church has seen every sitting president since James Madison attend services, according to Huffington Post.
    León's parish reportedly welcomes gay members, and the Episcopal Church he works within ordains openly gay, non-celibate priests, has had a gay bishop, and recently announced that it would bless same-sex unions and ordain transgender priests.
    CNN first announced León's selection Tuesday, less than a week after the Committee's prior selection, Louis Giglio, declined an invitation to issue the benediction after an antigay sermon the pastor gave in the 1990s surfaced. In rejecting the invitation, Giglio cited "those seeking to make their agenda the focal point of the inauguration."
    Source: http://www.advocate.com/politics/rel...al-benediction


    A proposal to create a domestic registry in Pinellas County passed on Tuesday, giving unmarried couples — gay or straight — legal recognition of their relationships.
    The law will allow couples to register as domestic partners, granting them the right to visit each other in hospitals, make medical decisions for each other in a crisis and, depending on their employers, share health insurance coverage. The Pinellas County Commission passed it by a 6-1 vote, with Commissioner Norm Roche dissenting.
    County officials estimate they will need about 90 days to build the public database and create the required forms. There will be a $50 fee to register.
    Ian Taylor, 62, and his longtime partner, George Olds, 61, attended Tuesday's meeting to show their support.
    They married in Canada, where they live most of the year.
    "I commend you," Taylor told commissioners after the vote.
    Each year, when Taylor and Olds fly to Clearwater for the winter, they lose their status as a married couple as the state's Constitution bans gay marriage. So far, they have encountered few problems. When Taylor had to be hospitalized in St. Petersburg, Olds waved his Toronto marriage license and was ushered in. And like many gay couples, they have power of attorney.
    Still, Taylor said, "It is not enough."
    "We find it rather weird that people have to pay a fee to be treated equally, or treated as human beings," Olds said. "Be prepared for legally married couples to want to be protected equally when they come down to Florida to winter."
    Critics of the law called it unnecessary, saying it confers many of the same rights that can be obtained by giving someone power of attorney.
    "This has no legal merit," Roche said, adding that if a couple has a medical emergency in a county that does not recognize partnerships, they're out of luck.
    "I don't believe we should be using our authority to make political statements," he said. "The real tool in this situation is a power of attorney."
    But getting that tool can be costly. Myra Hickman and her partner Ann Nagelschmidt, who live in Clearwater, said they spent $1,600 on the document, which authorizes them to make decisions on each other's behalf.
    "We have legal provisions in place, but not everyone does," Hickman, 60, said.
    Several commissioners said that though the ordinance was a small step, and will only protect couples in parts of Florida that recognize domestic partnerships, it would build on the registries' surge in popularity. Currently, Broward, Miami-Dade, Orange, Palm Beach and Volusia counties offer domestic registries.
    "Would I prefer that the Florida Legislature take the lead and do this? Yeah," said Commissioner Charlie Justice.
    But the commission's vote "will build a certain amount of momentum to where the Legislature will say, 'You know what, maybe it is time.' "
    The commission's decision to take up the issue came after three Pinellas cities passed domestic registry laws. Gulfport, which has a large gay and lesbian population, was first last May. St. Petersburg and Clearwater followed.
    Elected officials in Dunedin and Largo have debated whether to create registries, but ultimately decided to wait and support a countywide law. Treasure Island officials took an unusual step in August, approving a policy that allows domestic partners to register but does not give them any additional rights.
    For residents of Gulfport, St. Petersburg and Clearwater who have registered as domestic partners in their cities, the fee will be reduced so they pay only the difference between their city's fee and the county's fee.
    Anna M. Phillips can be reached at [email protected] or (727) 893-8779.


    [Last modified: Jan 16, 2013 12:11 AM]
    Source: http://www.tampabay.com/news/localgo...gistry/1270582
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    The European Court of Human Rights has ruled against two British Christians who claimed their religious beliefs entitled them to discriminate against gays and lesbians. In one case, Lilian Ladele was a city registrar who refused to officiate civil partnership ceremonies between same-sex couples as part of her duties. In another, Gary McFarlane was a counselor for a confidential sex therapy and relationship counseling organization who refused to provide support for same-sex couples. In both cases they were removed from their positions, so both brought complaints that their religious beliefs had been violated.
    In its ruling against them, the Court argued that their beliefs did not justify the discrimination against same-sex couples:
    The Court considered that the most important factor to be taken into account was that the policies of the applicants’ employers – to promote equal opportunities and to require employees to act in a way which did not discriminate against others – had the legitimate aim of securing the rights of others, such as same-sex couples, which were also protected under the [European Convention on Human Rights]. In particular, in previous cases the Court had held that differences in treatment based on sexual orientation required particularly serious justification and that same-sex couples were in a relevantly similar situation to different-sex couples as regards their need for legal recognition and protection of their relationship.
    The authorities therefore had wide discretion when it came to striking a balance between the employer’s right to secure the rights of others and the applicants’ right to manifest their religion. The Court decided that the right balance had been struck.
    This judgment represents a significant blow to conservatives’ argument that their religious beliefs entitle them to discriminate against the LGBT community. Indeed, they are entitled to hold their anti-LGBT beliefs, but not to infringe on others’ rights.
    Source: http://thinkprogress.org/lgbt/2013/0...ion/?mobile=nc


    Though the world knows Gary Dell’Abate as Howard Stern's famous prankster producer Baba Booey, many don't realize that he's a longtime HIV/AIDS activist whose became involved with Lifebeat decades ago, after his brother died of AIDS. This week Dell'Abate is thrilled to announce Lifebeat's latest endeavor. Lifebeat: Music Fights HIV/AIDS and the MTV Staying Alive Foundation are hosting a celebration Thursday to celebrate the launch of The Arches of Hope. A stunning and inspiring interactive art installation, The Arches of Hope will be unveiled on the eve of President Obama’s second inauguration as part of a multifaceted campaign aimed at raising awareness of the rise of HIV and AIDS in young people and "calling on our national leaders on the eve of President Obama’s inauguration to help create an HIV-free generation." The installation was created and conceived by Patrick Duffy, the creative director of gay-oriented hotel The Out NYC, and designed by award-winning Italian designer and architect Antonio Pio Saracino.
    The reception, to be held from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. at The Out NYC in New York, is the kickoff to a week of celebration. From this Thursday through January 24, Lifebeat is asking people from around the country to participate in the campaign by tweeting messages that recognize the installation's message of hope for an HIV-free generation with the hashtag #ArchesofHope. Messages will then be beamed to jumbo screens in Times Square and displayed via digital ticker tape embedded in the installation, and then shared across 12 major social media sites. “We are also encouraging the public to sign a petition calling on President Obama and Congress to designate April 10 as National Youth HIV and AIDS Awareness Day,” says Dell'Abate, who is “thrilled” that Sandra “Pepa” Denton of Salt-N-Pepa, a longtime advocate for safe sex, will be joining the reception to kickoff the campaign.
    We caught up with Dell'Abate, now president of Lifebeat, to talk about his brother's legacy, getting kids to listen, and whether we'll ever have an HIV-free generation.
    The Advocate: You got involved with Lifebeat after your brother died of AIDS. Were you actively searching for something to do?
    Gary Dell’Abate: I was actively searching for an organization about a year after my brother died. I saw the movie Philadelphia with a friend, and after we went for a cup of coffee. We were sort of shell-shocked. It was so moving and powerful. She looked at me and said, “We have to do something.” So we actively sought an organization. There were many big ones out there that I didn't think needed my help. Lifebeat was small and I thought I could really make a difference with them.
    Tell me about your brother. What was he like?
    Lots of people say that someone was a great guy after they die, but my brother really was. People liked him. He was funny and could crack the right joke at the right time. He loved sports — the Knicks — and he loved the movies. Just a good guy.
    Does working with Lifebeat keep you close to him?
    Every time I do something with Lifebeat, it makes me think of my brother. There is no doubt that's why I got involved. It helps me remember him in a positive way as opposed to the frail guy in the hospital bed. I spoke at my son's high school on World AIDS Day and I just told his story. That makes me feel good. My son's never met my brother, so that's how I keep his memory alive.
    Lifebeat is about raising awareness around prevention. Why do you think young people aren’t getting that message?
    I feel so old saying this, but they didn't see what I saw. I read this amazing piece in Newsweek last week by David Ansen recounting a cover story he wrote in 1993 on AIDS and the generation of artists lost to the epidemic. He wrote, “That was almost exactly 20 years ago. A lot of deaths followed, and then, at least in the First World, there was an easing, though not an end. AIDS ceased to be an automatic death sentence, though only the foolish called it cured. A whole new generation has come of age since then, some of these kids shockingly cavalier about the dangers of unprotected sex. That era, when funerals were more common than birthdays on one’s social calendar, has, mercifully, become history.”
    I saw more people die in five years than I've seen in the rest of my life. They think because people don't die that they can be cured. It's a foolish idea.
    When do you think we’ll have an HIV-free generation?
    I don't know that we'll ever see that, but I hope we can live in a world where, through medicine and education, the numbers become minuscule. I have my fingers crossed. That and some hard work might do it.
    A lot of people know you as Baba Booey, the brash, ribald, shenanigan-prone producer of The Howard Stern Show. How much does your public image match who you really are? For some people it’s hard to think of that guy as the president of an organization that’s trying to raise awareness about a social cause.
    I'm like anyone else. I do a show, but I've also experienced tragedy in my life. If my brother hadn't died, I wouldn't be here doing this and talking to you. And maybe that's why I am here. I think everyone has a cause, no matter who they are or what they do. This is mine.
    Have you roped Howard Stern into helping with Lifebeat in any way?
    Howard has been supportive since the day I joined. He's helped promote events on the air, and he always lets me talk about the cause. Howard was an early supporter of helping the cause. He's been great.
    Source: http://www.advocate.com/arts-enterta...ng-arches-hope


    The small Appalachian town of Vicco, Ky., has become the smallest municipality in the U.S. to approve an LGBT nondiscrimination law.
    "Vicco is a community that believes all folks should be treated fairly," said Vicco city attorney Eric Ashley. "We believe everyone deserves the opportunity for life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. Fairness is a Kentucky value, a Vicco value, and one of our most American values."
    Vicco's 334 residents will be protected under the fairness ordinance, which prohibits discrimination in employment, housing, and public accommodations on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity, according to the American Civil Liberties Union of Kentucky. The ordinance passed 3-1, with the support of Mayor Johnny Cummings.
    Vicco becomes Kentucky's fourth municipality to pass such an ordinance, following Lexington, Louisville, and Covington.
    Source: http://www.advocate.com/society/law/...gbt-rights-law


    A transgender woman who went AWOL from the Marines 31 years ago will be issued a discharge with honorable conditions from the military.
    Elizabeth Tremblay entered the Marines in 1980 after learning she would be be trained in teletype communications, according to Maine's Lewiston-Auburn Sun Journal. A year later, after her duties changed to driving Jeeps and trucks, she decided to leave without being properly discharged or granted leave.
    Tremblay returned to her home in Maine to work at L.L. Bean and Bates of Maine. In the 1990s she began taking hormones, changed her name to Elizabeth from Donald, and underwent partial gender transition surgery. In 2001, Tremblay suffered a back injury in a car crash, and she has collected disability insurance ever since.
    A warrant for Tremblay, charging desertion, was discovered by the Androscoggin County Sheriff's Office last September. She was arrested and held in a jail for two and a half days. She has since awaited further punishment from the military, only to find she will just be discharged.
    And though Tremblay enlisted in 1980 as Donald, her new discharge papers use her name Elizabeth Marie Tremblay.
    Source: http://www.advocate.com/politics/mil...after-31-years
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    An 11-year-old fifth-grader in Winter Haven, Fla., brought an eight-inch butcher knife to school after being subjected to antigay bullying, according to Gawker.
    Other students in the boy's class at Inwood Elementary School noticed the knife sticking out from the boy's Scooby-Doo book binder and reported the weapon to teachers. Police are investigating the situation, but there were no injuries, and the school contends that no student was ever in danger.
    The boy's father said his son was being bullied at school, for what his grandmother said might be perceived as "gay tendencies." The boy's family say they informed school officials about the bullying, but saw no action taken. They contend the boy brought the knife to school to defend himself.
    School and police officials challenge the family's allegation that the student was bullied and administrators did nothing to intervene.
    "Right now there is nothing on file with the school that she has been told of any bullying," police captain David Brannan told a local ABC affiliate. "But there will be more interviews done to find out."
    The child is currently in custody at a juvenile assessment center in Polk County, reports the station.
    Source: http://www.advocate.com/crime/2013/0...tigay-bullying


    Four gay men were allegedly subjected to antigay slurs and a physical assault at a screening of the new Barbra Streisand movie, Guilt Trip, in Lafayette, La. on Sunday. The alleged assailant, 37-year-old Joseph Menard Jr., has been arrested and charged with two counts of simple battery, according to The Advertiser.
    Walt Jamison, 23, told The Advertiser that he and his partner and two gay friends met at a local theater Sunday to see the new Streisand movie costarring Seth Rogen, but were almost immediately assaulted by a man sitting behind them, who began by loudly referring to the group of men by a gay slur.
    When Jamison's partner responded with an inquisitive "Excuse me?" Menard "stood up and leaned over us and started screaming hate slurs peppered with profanities," Jamison told The Advertiser.
    Another woman in the theater reportedly asked Menard to stop yelling, since her young children were in the audience, but Menard insulted that woman and told her to sit down.
    That's when Menard allegedly punched Jamison's partner in the back of the head, hard enough that "he did rock forward," said Jamison. Once his partner exited the theater in search of management, Jamison says Menard took a swing at him, grazing his cheek and knocking his glasses to the floor.
    Police were called to the scene, and later arrested Menard and his wife — who fled the theater after the altercation — for simple battery and resisting arrest. Jamison said that police and theater staff were considerate and respectful, and noted Menard's antigay comments in the police report. Even so, Menard has not been charged with a hate crime.
    A police spokesman told The Advertiser he was unsure why officers did not charge Menard with a hate crime, but noted that because the homophobic comments are in the police report, the prosecutor and judge may consider adding such charges when Menard appears in court.
    "I want people to know that not only is his behavior obviously unacceptable, and he has suffered consequences and hopefully will continue to suffer consequences as a result," Jamison told The Advertiser. "But just because you're different does not mean that you have to take this lying down."
    Source: http://www.advocate.com/crime/2013/0...ovie-louisiana


    Tracy Thorne-Begland was first nominated to the state judiciary in Virginia last year, but the out gay father and former fighter pilot's judicial appointment wasn't confirmed until yesterday, according to MaddowBlog. Thorne-Begland was ultimately elected to the Richmond Manchester District Court by a vote of 66-28 in the Republican-controlled House, and a Senate vote of 28-0, confirming Thorne-Begland's legacy as the state's first openly gay judge.
    But 12 out of 20 GOP senators abstained from the election, essentially casting "no" votes without actually voting on the decorated Navy veteran's nomination, reports Ben Tribbet.
    Last year, when Thorne-Begland's name arose as a candidate for a full-time seat on the bench, several state Republicans said the interim judge's sexual orientation "made him biased and unqualified for the state bench," according to MaddowBlog.
    Source: http://www.advocate.com/society/law/...vote-gay-judge
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    For the first time, a majority of MPs have committed to vote for a change in the law to lift the ban on same-sex marriage in England and Wales.
    According to the Coalition for Equal Marriage, a grass-roots organisation campaigning for the introduction of same-sex marriage, 330 MPs have confirmed they will vote in favour of same-sex marriage legislation when it is introduced at Westminster in the next few months.
    In contrast, just 126 MPs have publicly stated that they remain opposed to a change in the law, meaning there is now a clear parliamentary majority for equal marriage.
    The survey, conducted by the Coalition for Equal Marriage, is based on public declarations of support or opposition from MPs, including letters to constituents.
    James Lattimore and Conor Marron, co-founders of the Coalition for Equal Marriage, said; “We welcome the news that MPs favour the introduction of same-sex marriage by a margin of 3-1 and hope that even more will announce support in time. Lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people are entitled to full equality, including equal marriage rights for same-sex couples. The UK Government has the green light to push ahead with this fair and progressive change which has the support of an overwhelming majority of the public and now Parliament too.”
    Key figures from across the political spectrum have said they will personally be voting for the proposals, including the leaders of the three main parties.
    The news comes as polling shows increasing support for same-sex marriage amongst the public. A recent poll carried out by ICM for the Guardian in December showed 62% of people in favour, with just 31% opposed. Similar polls for YouGov, Populus, ComRes, and Ipsos MORI have shown consistent public support for a change in the law to allow same-sex marriage.
    In December, the Government released its response to the public consultation on same-sex marriage in England and Wales. With over 228,000 responses, it represented the largest consultation ever carried out by the UK Government. Despite a well-funded campaign by opponents of LGBT equality to encourage negative responses to the consultation 53% of respondents voiced support for same-sex marriage while 46% opposed. 72% of respondents who stated they were Christian supported the proposals, alongside 99% of those who identified as lesbian or gay.
    The news that a majority of MPs support same-sex marriage was welcomed by politicians, secular groups and religious representatives.
    Nick Herbert MP, Founder of the “Freedom To Marry” campaign, said; With the polls showing that a clear majority of the public support equal marriage and now evidence that a majority of MPs will back it, too, this is a reform whose time has come. Its opponents should recognise the democratic will and focus on ensuring legitimate protections for religious freedom rather than trying to frustrate a change that is so widely supported.”
    Yvette Cooper MP, Labour’s Shadow Minister for Women and Equalities, said; “The Labour Party strongly supports same sex marriage. When couples love each other and want to make a commitment, it should be a cause for celebration, not discrimination. Those couples should be able to marry, regardless of their gender or sexuality. My Shadow Cabinet colleagues and I will continue to be loud and proud supporters of same sex marriage, and I’m pleased there is a clear parliamentary majority in support of the forthcoming legislation. Labour votes will ensure that this measure is passed in the House of Commons and we hope the Government brings forward legislation as soon as possible.”
    Stephen Gilbert MP, Liberal Democrat MP for St Austell & Newquay who proposed the party’s policy to support marriage equality said; Liberal Democrats have long fought for equal marriage and now we’re in government we’re committed to making it happen. That a majority of MPs have come out in favour of is a very significant step forward. The right to love and commit to who you chose is a fundamental one and whether you’re straight or gay, the civil institution recognising that love and commitment should be the same.”
    The British Humanist Association (BHA) said; “Equality before the law is a vital civil right and the rights of one class of person to equal treatment should never be compromised because of the unshared religious beliefs of anyone. There is no suggestion that religious organisations should perform marriage against their will; all that is asked is that we all demonstrate some basic humanity and toleration, and do not obstruct same sex couples who wish to have legal equality for their relationship. We hope that the majority of parliamentarians will think the same and vote accordingly.”
    Rabbi Anna Gerrard, Outreach Director of Liberal Judaism, said; “Liberal Judaism supports and promotes full equality in UK marriage law for same sex couples, including the use of the word ‘marriage’ and the option of sanctifying their relationship with a religious marriage ceremony. Liberal Jewish Rabbis already officiate at religious ceremonies for same sex couples, currently alongside a civil partnership, and hope that these may soon be enshrined in UK law.”
    The UK Government is expected to launch same-sex marriage legislation for England and Wales by summer 2013. Separate legislation for Scotland has already been launched in December 2012 by the Scottish Government, and already has the support of over two-thirds of MSPs.
    Source: http://www.c4em.org.uk/latest-news/majority-support/


    WASHINGTON - A top adviser in Michele Bachmann's 2012 White House bid has filed a complaint with federal election officials alleging campaign finance violations involving her presidential campaign and the independent political action committee she leads.
    The Federal Election Commission (FEC) complaint was filed Tuesday by Peter Waldron, a widely known evangelist enlisted by the Bachmann campaign for outreach to Christian conservatives. The filing follows his allegations last week that the Bachmann campaign has withheld payments to staffers who refused to sign confidentiality agreements.
    Waldron, formerly Bachmann's national field coordinator, is accusing the campaign of improperly dipping into money from MichelePAC to pay longtime fundraising consultant Guy Short for presidential campaign work he performed in the critical final weeks ahead of Iowa's caucuses last year.
    Waldron also alleges that the campaign concealed payments to Iowa state campaign chairman Kent Sorenson, a state senator who abruptly left the Bachmann camp to join then-U.S. Rep. Ron Paul's insurgent campaign. Under Iowa Senate rules, Waldron maintains, Sorenson could not perform paid work for a presidential campaign.
    Source: http://www.startribune.com/politics/...1.html?refer=y


    A man is suing his former school and employer, alleging that positive reviews and recommendations all turned sour and that his supervisors took retaliatory actions after he disclosed his transgender status.
    Everything was going fine for Kellen Bennett as the Oakland-based licensed marriage counselor pursued a Ph.D. in clinical psychology at Alliant International University in San Francisco from August 2006 to October 2011. His grades were good and his recommendations solid. But then one day in October 2011, he told a faculty member and several classmates in a group session that he is transgender.
    All of a sudden, positive reviews turned to bad ones, and a promised postdoctoral internship evaporated. One of his supervisors began repeatedly using the word “tranny” in his presence and school records were altered in an attempt to deny him a job, Bennett alleges in a lawsuit filed late last year against the university’s California School of Professional Psychology.
    Bennett, who has lived as a man for 13 years after undergoing sexual-reassignment surgery, sued Alliant and faculty members Dr. Elizabeth Milnes and Dr. Gregory Wells, according to documents on file at San Francisco Superior Court.
    The revelation came to light in one of Milnes’ classes, the lawsuit states. At the time, Bennett was employed via Alliant’s in-house psychiatric services provider at two Bay Area high schools as a counselor.
    Milnes allegedly repeatedly used the word “tranny” in front of Bennett in class, and Wells allegedly told peers and supervisors to “watch Bennett” and “make sure he doesn’t do anything inappropriate,” according to the lawsuit, which alleges workplace discrimination and harassment and failure to promote.
    Through attorney Roberto Ripamonti, Bennett declined to comment.
    Citing ongoing litigation, Alliant Vice President Jennifer Wilson declined to comment on the specifics of the lawsuit, but said the school “vigorously disputes” Bennett’s allegations.
    “We pride ourselves on our diversity,” she said. “We would never condone transgender discrimination.”
    While Bennett did not receive a postdoctoral internship through Alliant, he did receive his degree, Wilson said.
    Using the word “tranny” in front of a transgender person is akin to using the n-word in front of black people, according to Theresa Sparks, a transgender woman who chairs The City’s Human Rights Commission.
    “That’s always been a negative term, and it’s usually harassment or bullying,” she said. “This does happen here [in San Francisco], and this is not an isolated case.”
    Transgender people suffer from much higher unemployment rates and face significant barriers to health care and housing, Sparks said.
    Seventy percent of transgender people reported workplace discrimination or harassment, according to a report from the San Francisco-based Transgender Law Center.
    Between 0.2 percent and 2 percent of Americans identify as transgender, a number that “varies wildly” because the U.S. Census Bureau makes no accommodation for such people, who often do not self-identify because of
    discrimination issues, Sparks said.

    Read more at the San Francisco Examiner: http://www.sfexaminer.com/local/2013...#ixzz2IFqac7Gv
    Source: http://www.sfexaminer.com/local/2013...d-mistreatment
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    Michael Triplett, president of the National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association, died today at age 48 after a battle with cancer.
    “While Michael only served as president for a few short months, he has been a member of our leadership team for several years, first as a Washington, D.C., chapter board member and president and then as a national board member and vice president for print,” NLGJA officials said in a press release posted on the group’s website.
    Triplett was assistant managing editor at Bloomberg-BNA, where he helped guide coverage of tax and labor issues, drawing on his background in law. He frequently served on NLGJA panels dealing with legal matters.
    When NLGJA joined UNITY: Journalists for Diversity, he played a key role in the move, and he was one of NLGJA’s first representatives to the UNITY board. He also was a principal contributor to NLGJA’s RE:ACT blog.
    “Michael was truly a joy for all of us to work with, and his loss will be felt among our organization for years to come,” NLGJA officials said. The board plans to elect an interim president soon and also determine the best way to memorialize Triplett. Survivors include his partner, Jack.
    Source: http://www.advocate.com/society/obit...iplett-dead-48


    Pressure continues to mount on the Pentagon to take the lead in revising military regulations so that same-sex spouses of service members can be issued military IDs and be included in spousal clubs and other on-base events, organizations, and benefits.
    Several LGBT organizations called on the Pentagon to revise military policies drafted before the repeal of "don't ask, don't tell," that, as-written, permit discrimination based on sexual orientation, since homosexuality was a military offense punishable by discharge until 2011, when Congress repealed DADT.
    Late Tuesday night, Buzzfeed reported that the Pentagon announced that it would not intervene in the Army's decision to continue to deny membership to Ashley Broadway, who is married to a female lieutenant colonel stationed at the Ft. Bragg Army base in North Carolina.
    By contrast, the U.S. Marine Corps issued guidance last week mandating inclusion for same-sex spouses, in an effort to avoid the type of controversy currently boiling over Ft. Bragg.
    "It makes no sense that the spouse of a service member can face discrimination in one branch of the Armed Services yet be protected from discrimination in another," said Human Rights Campaign President Chad Griffin in a statement released Wednesday. "This situation would not have occurred if the Pentagon was not dragging its heels on updating military regulations to include the families of gay service members.”
    OutServe-Servicemembers Legal Defense Network today filed a Freedom of Information Act request for documents and correspondence pertaining to Ft. Bragg's decision to deny Broadway membership in the spouses' club.
    "Gay and lesbian military families at Fort Bragg and throughout the armed services deserve to know if their chain of command is working for them or against them," said Army Veteran and OutServe-SLDN Executive Director Allyson Robinson in a statement. "If there is a coordinated effort that would undermine the principle that every service member and his or her family should be treated impartially, our nation's leaders at the Pentagon need to know as well."
    A Ft. Bragg spokesperson told Buzzfeed that The Association of Bragg Officers' Spouses has no intention to admit Broadway, and fell back on existing antidiscrimination law to support that decision.
    "The Association of Bragg Officers' Spouses, to the judgment that we have here at Fort Bragg, are not in violation of federal discrimination laws because federal discrimination laws don't extend to sexual orientation," said the spokesperson.
    Source: http://www.advocate.com/politics/mil...litary-spouses


    One of the more pressing and emotional topics in the fight for LGBT equality is health care and how the community’s rights are violated due to this inequality. Hospital visitation rights, joint insurance capabilities and medical discriminatory policies affect LGBT people and their families at the most difficult and upsetting times of their lives.
    In the transgender community, such inequities permeate every level of physical and mental health care. For a group of people who rely so heavily on the health care system to assist them in reaching the identity they feel is correct, transgender people rarely receive the treatment they need and, even more rarely, the respect and care they deserve.
    Dr. Sherman Leis, a world-renowned surgeon specializing in transgender surgery and the founder of The Philadelphia Center for Transgender Surgery, has recently spoken out on this matter. Dr. Leis described how despite instating anti-discrimination policies, he has encountered many local hospitals not allowing their physicians to operate on transgender patients due to a lack of training and education in treating them.
    "Most hospitals in the Delaware Valley do not give privileges to surgeons to perform transgender surgery," Leis told EDGE. "There is no clear reason why they do this and my thoughts are that they remain uneducated about transgender issues and, in fact, many are outright discriminatory in their practices even though their by-laws state they do not discriminate on the basis of race, religion, sexual orientation, or gender."
    Leis also made a point of noting that certain health care environments are more prone to these discriminatory practices, saying that the Catholic hospital systems are least likely to provide the resources that transgender patients require. This is, of course, problematic in that health care levels should not change based on the hospital’s affiliations.
    Making matters worse is that even the hospitals with more inclusive policies are often little comfort for the community. Few insurance policies include coverage for transgender health care, and those are mostly in larger Fortune 500 companies, where employment levels of transgender staff are notoriously low. Despite the inclusion of transgender health care being a relatively inexpensive and significantly effective change in insurance plans to promote inclusion and equality, it is still an unheard of benefit.
    "It is the most important and simple fix," Dr. Leis reiterated. "This change would include the medical and surgical care of the transgender patient. Currently, it is the responsibility of the individual or company purchasing health insurance to include transgender health services as part of their insurance package."
    Equal to the risks of not having access to proper health care are the resulting mental health side effects, and self-administered medical work. Without supportive medical care, high rates of depression and suicide are common in the transgender community. With medical access and procedures being so closely associated with the mental health and well-being of this community, these high rates are logical and significantly dangerous.
    "Although our focus is on transgender surgery and health, we also make available a wealth of experience and information for transmen and transwomen, as well as for the medical community in general."



    Equally as significant are the astronomical costs that traveling internationally for transition surgery require, due to domestic health centers being unable to provide for the transgender community.
    This comes, of course, at great personal cost and inconvenience for the transgender community, and is often performed by unqualified and badly trained surgeons and can result in complications and medical risk. With a high price tag on operations associated with transitioning, it is not uncommon for those without the means to seek out non-medically trained surgeons and other high-risk alternatives.
    It is this grocery list of hurdles that the transgender community faces to get through essential surgery that has led Dr. Leis to create The Philadelphia Center for Transgender Surgery. He believes that simple fixes such as insurance inclusion, education and training within the medical field, as well as awareness campaigns to the general public are necessary to properly care for the transgender in our nation.
    "One of the reasons I founded The Philadelphia Center For Transgender Surgery was to provide a complete resource for the transgender community, through the use of the Internet," Dr. Leis said in a recent press release for the Center. "This resource is accessible worldwide. Although our focus is on transgender surgery and health, we also make available a wealth of experience and information for transmen and transwomen, as well as for the medical community in general."
    Along with his focus as providing this worldwide resource, the Center’s staff is an exceptional mix of experienced physicians and experts in fields that benefit their patients. This includes surgeons, physicians, and make-up/styling artists that are made available to teach patients how best to tastefully and convincingly apply cosmetics during the transition period. With this mixture of services, the Center is well positioned to be an all-encompassing approach for transgender people to best address their unique medical needs.
    "The chief goal of The Philadelphia Center for Transgender Surgery is to make available comprehensive medical and surgical care for transgender people," Dr. Leis explained. "Hopefully, the impact I believe we are having on the medical field is to not only make the care for transgender patients available at our own Center, but also to train other establishments’ young surgeons to perform high quality transgender surgery, and to make available resources in multiple specialties for a more holistic level of care for transgender patients."
    For more information on The Philadelphia Center for Transgender Surgery and the resources it provides, please visit http://www.thetransgendercenter.com/.
    Source: http://www.edgeonthenet.com/news/loc...%80%99_surgery
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    India, which has been a popular destination for gay would-be parents seeking surrogacy services, will be so no more, with new regulations barring foreign same-sex couples and single people from entering into surrogacy arrangements there.
    The new rules, posted on the Indian Home Ministry’s website, “say foreign couples seeking to enter into a surrogacy arrangement in India must be a ‘man and woman [who] are duly married and the marriage should be sustained at least two years,’” Agence France-Presse reports. Some proponents of the move said they were concerned about exploitation of impoverished young Indian women by affluent foreigners. India legalized commercial surrogacy in 2002.
    Several fertility specialists and activists, meanwhile, decried the new regulations. “This is a huge heartbreak for homosexual couples and singles,” fertility doctor Anoop Gupta told AFP. Gay rights advocate Nitin Karani added, “It’s totally unfair — not only for gay people but for people who are not married who may have been living together for years, and for singles.”
    Hari Ramasubramanian, a lawyer who deals with surrogacy, said the rules should be challenged in court. “A lot of people who will be affected had seen India as a wonderful option for getting into parenthood and now this option is closed,” he said. It’s quite sad.”
    Source: http://www.advocate.com/health/healt...ogacy-services


    Former senator and Republican presidential contender Rick Santorum blamed the decline of America on indoctrinating the gay agenda in colleges across the country and the media.

    "If you look at popular culture and what comes out of Hollywood, if you go to our schools and particularly our colleges and universities, they are indoctrinating in a sea of relativism and a sea of antagonism toward Christianity -- religion in general, but Christianity in particular," Santorum said, according to Right Wing Watch. He was a guest on "Washington Watch," a radio show hosted by Tony Perkins of the Family Research Council.

    Perkins did, however, chime in to add that his Bible-owning third grade teacher regularly punished her students with a yardstick.

    "But that was…Before Repressive Government, back when God was still welcome in our schools," Perkins said.
    Source: http://www.advocate.com/politics/rel...genda-colleges


    The SyFy series Lost Girl has received some criticism for apparent antitransgender bias in its third-season premiere, and now its producers have released a statement saying no such bias was intended.
    In the episode, heroine Bo, who investigates crimes among supernatural beings, is in a prison run by Amazons, the mythical tribe of women warriors, GLAAD reports on its blog. The villainous warden appears to be a woman and claims to be an Amazon but turns out to be biologically male, and the revelation leads the prison guards to attack the warden.
    “Whether or not you consider the prison warden to be a transgender character is open to interpretation given that the character is a mythological shapeshifter, but there’s no mistaking the scene that takes place out at the end of the episode,” GLAAD’s blog notes. “The warden being ‘discovered’ and then viciously attacked is a scenario tragically based in reality, but here is played out for the enjoyment of the audience. It’s also evocative of the offensive claim that transgender women are ‘tricking’ their way into female-only spaces for perverted or criminal purposes.”
    After GLAAD raised the issue, Prodigy Pictures, which produces the series, released a statement saying the warden was intended solely to represent a “mythological shapeshifter known as the Liderc,” as all the show’s episodic characters are based on established mythology. “We did not intend this character to be seen as a transgender person, we apologize if the character was seen as such,” the statement continues. “We do hope that you accept that no comparison or discrimination toward the transgender community was intended by the depiction of this mythological character. Lost Girl prides itself on being open and accepting to everyone, and are enthusiastic supporters of the GLBT community.”
    GLAAD notes that Lost Girl is a very inclusive show, with strong lesbian and bisexual characters, including Bo, who started a relationship with a woman in the same episode. It also has a large lesbian and bisexual fan base. GLAAD’s post closes by expressing hope that the series “will continue to set a good example in future episodes.”
    Source: http://www.advocate.com/arts-enterta...-say-producers
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    Today marks the first anniversary of Mayors for the Freedom to Marry, whose membership has increased more than threefold since the group’s launch.
    The group, a project of Freedom to Marry, started with 80 mayors last year, and the number has now reached 291, with mayors from 32 states, notes The Huffington Post. The mayors sign a pledge in support of equal marriage rights for same-sex couples. Its leaders are mayors Michael Bloomberg of New York City, Thomas M. Menino of Boston, Annise Parker of Houston, and Antonio Villaraigosa of Los Angeles,
    A recent addition to the group is Atlanta mayor Kasim Reed, who told HuffPo his views on marriage equality had evolved. “There’s a difference between civil unions and the rights that come with marriage,” he said. “For many years I didn’t believe that there was a difference.”
    The mayors’ effort is an important aspect of the fight for marriage equality, he added, because it “helps to create a space in time and an environment where more and more people in the more conservative parts of the United States can come, over time, to the conclusion that I did.” Read more here.
    Source: http://www.advocate.com/politics/mar...old-first-year


    The North American Old Catholic Church, an LGBT-friendly denomination not affiliated with the Vatican, will ordain a transgender man as a priest Saturday.
    Shannon T.L. Kearns will be ordained to the priesthood in Minneapolis, according to a press release. He will be serving a new Minneapolis parish, House of the Transfiguration, after his ordination.
    “I am honored and humbled to have my calling to ministry affirmed by the North American Old Catholic Church,” said Kearns, who transitioned while attending Union Theological Seminary, where he received a master of divinity degree. “I look forward to many years serving as a priest.”
    Bishop Benjamin Evans of the diocese of New Jersey, who will preside over the ordination, added, “The North American Old Catholic Church looks forward to establishing a presence in Minneapolis with the ordination of Father Kearns. God’s Holy Spirit continues to bless us with growth!”
    The denomination combines Catholic traditions and rituals with progressive values and welcomes all people, the press release notes.
    Source: http://www.advocate.com/politics/rel...sgender-priest


    Christianity Columnist Steve Chalke calls for a new Christian understanding of homosexual relationships
    The government has announced that extending marriage to same-sex couples will ensure the ancient institution ‘is relevant for our century.’ Marriage, however, predates both state and Church – it belongs to neither of them. All of which means there are some extremely complex and controversial discussions to be had about same-sex marriage – which our society will do well to reflect on before rushing to premature decisions.
    This article is not about those issues. I’m worried that the noise of the arguments around gay marriage will cloud and confuse the real question for the Church, which is about the nature of inclusion. I am convinced that it is only as the Christian community grapples with this issue that we will find wise answers, not only regarding gay marriage, but also to related questions around the Church’s wider attitude to gay people.
    I feel both compelled and afraid to write this article. Compelled because, in my understanding, the principles of justice, reconciliation and inclusion sit at the very heart of Jesus’ message. Afraid because I recognise the Bible is understood by many to teach that the practice of homosexuality, in any circumstance, is a sin or ‘less than God’s best’.
    Some will think that I have strayed from scripture – that I am no longer an evangelical. I have formed my view, however, not out of any disregard for the Bible’s authority, but by way of grappling with it and, through prayerful reflection, seeking to take it seriously.
    Promiscuity is always damaging and dehumanising. Casual and self-centred expressions of sexuality – homosexual or heterosexual – never reflect God’s faithfulness, grace and self-giving love. Only a permanent and stable relationship, in which respect and faithfulness are given and received, can offer the security in which well-being and love can thrive.


    Vulnerable and Isolated
    One tragic outworking of the Church’s historical rejection of faithful gay relationships is our failure to provide homosexual people with any model of how to cope with their sexuality, except for those who have the gift of, or capacity for, celibacy. In this way we have left people vulnerable and isolated. When we refuse to make room for gay people to live in loving, stable relationships, we consign them to lives of loneliness, secrecy and fear. It’s one thing to be critical of a promiscuous lifestyle – but shouldn’t the Church consider nurturing positive models for permanent and monogamous homosexual relationships?
    In autumn 2012 I conducted a dedication and blessing service following the Civil Partnership of two wonderful gay Christians. Why? Not to challenge the traditional understanding of marriage – far from it – but to extend to these people what I would do to others: the love and support of our local church. Too often, those who seek to enter an exclusive, same-sex relationship have found themselves stigmatised and excluded by the Church. I have come to believe this is an injustice and out of step with God’s character as seen through Christ. I leave it to others to debate whether a Civil Partnership plus a dedication and blessing should equal a marriage or not. But I do believe that the Church has a God-given responsibility to include those who have for so long found themselves excluded.
    Traditional Argument
    Traditionally, it is argued that the injunctions of both the Old and New Testaments against homosexual activity are irrefutable, and therefore any attempt to interpret them in new ways betrays the Bible. Things, however, may not be as we thought.
    For many, a central issue is the exegesis of the second Genesis Creation Story (Genesis 2:4-3:24), which is the one that Jesus later refers to, as recorded in Matthew 19:5: ‘For this reason a man will leave his father and mother and be united to his wife, and the two will become one flesh’ (Genesis 2:24).
    Was the author intending to enshrine the view that all lifelong sexual unions should be exclusively heterosexual because this is a ‘creation ordinance’? Or, is this simply the normative illustration, whereas the critical truths of the story lie elsewhere? If it is the former, then it is perhaps legitimate to refer to practising homosexual sex, even within a lifelong relationship, as having ‘fallen short of God’s ideal’ and to state that those who are not heterosexually orientated are ‘in need of restoration’. But if it’s the latter, then does the ‘norm’ necessarily infer the ‘ideal’? Or is it like the ‘norm’ of being right-handed, which never implies any failing of those who are born left-handed? If so, then neither of the earlier negative definitions is appropriate, but instead cause a great deal of unnecessary pain and, sometimes, terrible tragedy.
    Biblical Interpretation
    Most Christians are properly wary of using the story of God’s judgement on the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah (Genesis 19) which is now widely understood to be about the indulgence, indifference to others and social injustice of their inhabitants, rather than a proof text against homosexuality.
    Equally, the difficult cultural issues and ambiguities involved in the interpretation of the clauses of Levitical law are widely understood. The old approach of dividing the laws into three watertight categories – ceremonial, civil and moral – with no contemporary obligation to keep the first two, has been shown to be simplistic. Leviticus 20:13 might tell us that ‘If a man has sexual relations with a man as one does with a woman, both of them have done what is detestable. They are to be put to death’. However, the next chapter, Leviticus 21:16-23, is decidedly bad news for the inclusion of any physically disabled people: ‘…none of your descendants who has a defect may come near to offer the food of his God.’
    Then there are the New Testament injunctions (Romans 1:26-27; 1 Corinthians 6:9-11 and 1 Timothy 1:9-11) which, depending on the commentaries you choose, are read negatively or more positively in relation to faithful (as opposed to casual), same-sex relationships. In fact, a growing number of evangelical scholars argue that what the New Testament writers refer to as homosexual practice could not have been the stable same-sex unions of the sort that exist today, of which they knew nothing, but promiscuity associated with wild occultic orgies.
    However we interpret these passages, nowhere does the Bible actually affirm same-sex relationships. So, can loving, committed, same-sex unions ever be regarded as biblically faithful? The whole Bible matters. We disregard it to our great cost. But the vital question is about how to interpret it properly.
    A Key Challenge
    Sometimes minority interpretations of scripture struggle for decades before eventually becoming accepted by the majority. When Copernicus discovered that the sun, not the earth, was the centre of our solar system, scripture was used by Luther, Calvin, the Catholic Church and many others to condemn him. Why? Because, while Copernicus’ critics couldn’t see beyond the exegesis of the biblical text, the real issue was to do with hermeneutics.
    Exegesis and hermeneutics are two essential tools for understanding the Bible. But while exegesis analyses the actual structure and meaning of the text itself and looks at the nuances of the linguistics, hermeneutics digs deeper to unearth what’s behind it, as it explores the cultural and social perceptions of the writer and their hearers.
    A key challenge the Church faces – which often goes unrecognised – is that the Bible does not provide the final answer to a whole number of issues to do with inclusion with which Christians have subsequently wrestled. Take just two examples:
    There are several New Testament texts that are very clear about the role of women in Christian communities. 1 Timothy 2:11-14 says: ‘I do not permit a woman to teach or to assume authority over a man; she must be quiet. For Adam was formed first, then Eve. And Adam was not the one deceived; it was the woman who was deceived and became a sinner.’ The text appeals to Genesis 2 and the very nature of creation as its source of authority for the silence and submission of women.
    In 1 Corinthians 14:34-35, Paul writes: ‘Women should remain silent in the churches. They are not allowed to speak, but must be in submission, as the law says. If they want to inquire about something, they should ask their own husbands at home; for it is disgraceful for a woman to speak in the church.’
    Uncompromising Statements
    There have been numerous popular and theological attempts to soften these injunctions. Some suggest these verses were added by later editors, or that they address specific communities and refer to particular women. Others say they are offset by Romans 16 where Paul commends ‘our sister Phoebe, a deacon of the church in Cenchreae’ and later greets Junia, commenting that she is ‘outstanding among the apostles’.
    Regarding Phoebe, however, the New Testament uses the word deacon (servant) to refer to those who serve alongside the overseers/elders of a local church (see Philippians 1:1). But in 1 Timothy 3, where it is noted that women can fulfil this ‘secondary’ role (v11), the qualifications for the post of overseer/elder (vs1-7) are very male indeed!
    Regarding Junia, although some suggest that Paul’s greeting names her as an apostle, the overwhelming evidence is that the phrase simply means Junia was ‘esteemed by’ or ‘greatly respected’ among the apostles.
    The absolute and universal character of the Epistles’ instructions about women is not easy to escape.
    Although motivated by a laudable concern for inclusion, many of the arguments used in an attempt to soften these uncompromising statements unintentionally end up clouding the real issue – one of wider hermeneutics rather than simple exegesis.
    The vast majority of Christians now recognise that women can, and should, teach and lead. So, how have we got there when, on the face of it, the New Testament prohibits it?
    It's Cultural
    ‘It’s cultural,’ we say. But if that’s the case, why is the issue of the role of women regarded as ‘cultural’ by so many while homosexuality isn’t?
    Which culture does our phrase ‘it’s cultural’ refer to? By whose authority do we decide to reinterpret any Bible passage? If ‘it’s cultural’ amounts to saying that ‘Because the way we think about the role of women in this day and age is different to that of the New Testament writers, it’s ok for us to ignore those passages’, we are on very shaky ground.
    To make ‘this day and age’ our spiritual norm is to place us all on the slippery slope of relativism. It is thoughtful conformity to Christ – not unthinking conformity to either culture or textual prohibitions – that should be our unchanging reference point.
    Take another example. How has the whole Church found itself believing something about slavery which is so at odds with the Bible?
    William Wilberforce and friends were condemned by huge swathes of the Church as they fought for abolition. They were dismissed as liberal and unbiblical for their ‘deliberate abandonment of the authority of scripture’. But, on the basis of a straightforward biblical exegesis of the Bible’s text, their critics were right.
    The Old Testament not only endorses slave-keeping and trading, it sets out terms and conditions for its practice (eg Leviticus 25:44-46). Although the New Testament proposes a more humane form of slave-keeping, it fails to deliver a clear-cut protest against it. Of course, Galatians 3:28 explains ‘There is neither Jew nor Gentile, neither slave nor free, nor is there male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus.’ However, this passage is no more a call for the abolition of slavery than it is of the sexes or of national identities and cultures.
    How then did Wilberforce and friends reach their conclusions? It was their view of the proper interpretation of scripture. They saw that the biblical writers did not take blind dictation from God; instead, their personalities, cultural and social understandings all played a part in the formation of their writing. So, rather than basing their approach on isolated proof texts, the abolitionists built their stance around the deeper resonance of the trajectory of scripture – the compass for which is Jesus, who was radically inclusive of women and other social outcasts of his day, challenging social norms and perceived orthodoxy.
    Same Principle?
    The Bible does not always speak with one voice. For instance, the New Testament moves the issues of the treatment of slaves, women and homosexual people on from the Hebrew scriptures: though slave-keeping is still endorsed in the New Testament, slave trading is condemned. Though women are still subordinate to men, they benefit from greater freedom. Though permanent same-sex relationships are still not supported, there is no longer talk of capital punishment.
    Using my hermeneutical lens – the Bible is the account of an ancient and ongoing conversation where various, sometimes harmonious and sometimes discordant, voices contribute to the gradually growing picture of the character of Yahweh; fully revealed only in Jesus. For more insight on this, read Having Words with God: The Bible as Conversation by Karl Allan Kuhn, endorsed by Walter Brueggemann.
    Christianity is not about a book, but about a person who is the word of God made flesh. On the issue of women or slavery, as just two examples, the New Testament closes some distance from where even the most conservative Christian now is in their understanding. The process of understanding the character and will of Yahweh as revealed through Jesus is an ongoing task for every generation.
    Here is my question: shouldn’t we take the same principle that we readily apply to the role of women, slavery, and numerous other issues, and apply it to our understanding of permanent, faithful, homosexual relationships? Wouldn’t it be inconsistent not to?
    What are we to make of the kind of fancy exegetical footwork which can allow (in spite of the 1 Timothy 2 argument from the order of creation) one approach to the role of women in church leadership, while rejecting the acceptance of faithful same-sex relationships because it would overturn a ‘creation ordinance’? Is this ‘pick and choose’ approach to the New Testament more to do with an outworking of social conditioning and cultural prejudices than a genuine grappling with its text?
    A Pastoral Plea
    Why am I so passionate about this issue? Because people’s lives are at stake. Numerous studies show that suicide rates among gay people, especially the young, are comparatively high. Church leaders sometimes use this data to argue that homosexuality is unhealthy when tragically it’s anti-gay stigma, propped up by Church attitudes, which all too often drives these statistics.
    I believe that when we treat homosexual people as pariahs and push them outside our communities and churches, when we blame them for what they are, when we deny them our blessing on their commitment to lifelong, faithful relationships, we make them doubt whether they are children of God, made in his image.
    So, I face a hard choice; a choice between the current dominant view of what scripture tells us about this issue, and the one I honestly think it points us to. This is why I seek to speak and write openly and, I hope, graciously, to encourage a compassionate, respectful and honest conversation that might lead to our churches becoming beacons of inclusion.
    None of this is to point the finger at others. I have remained silent for fear of damaging important relationships. Even in this I realise my self-centredness, for no rejection I might suffer is anything compared to what so many homosexual people endure all their lives.


    I understand that there are those who will take other views. I respect their right to differ graciously with me just as I try to do the same with them. However, I believe that as the leader of a local church, a charity and many thousands of young people in schools and staff around the country and the world, I am called to offer support, protection and blessing in the name of Christ, the king of justice, reconciliation and inclusion, who beckons each one of us out of isolation into the joy of faithful relationship.
    Christ-like Love
    Rather than condemn and exclude, can we dare to create an environment for homosexual people where issues of self-esteem and well-being can be talked about, where the virtues of loyalty, respect, interdependence and faithfulness can be nurtured, and where exclusive and permanent same-sex relationships can be supported?
    Tolerance is not the same as Christ-like love. Christ-like love calls us to go beyond tolerance to want for the other the same respect, freedom and equality one wants for oneself. We should find ways to formally support and encourage those who are in, or wish to enter into, faithful same-sex partnerships, as well as in their wider role as members of Christ’s body.
    In the coming months, there will be huge and often heated debate around gay marriage. I am committed to listening and trying to understand the intricacies of the arguments on both sides. But whatever the outcome, and whichever side of the debate we find ourselves on, my hope is that as Christians we face what I think is the central issue – what does real, Christlike inclusion look like?
    For the extended version of this article click here.
    Source: http://www.christianitymagazine.co.u...evechalke.aspx
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    An anonymous group going by the name Use Your Mandate is urging Senators to reject former Sen. Chuck Hagel's nomination for Secretary of Defense because he is "antiwoman, antichoice, anti-Israel, antigay, and pro-assault weapon."
    The group is choosing to remain anonymous because many of those involved are allies of the Obama administration, according to the Huffington Post. The group is running television and web ads to disseminate their message, and has sent a mailer to 350,000 people illustrating Hagel's views.

    Hagel's nomination has been met by mixed reactions from LGBT organizations. Hagel has been conducting damage control after comments resurfaced that he made regarding the 1998 confirmation of openly gay ambassador James Hormel. The Nebraska senator told his hometown newspaper that Hormel may be too "aggressively gay" to become an ambassador but has since apologized.

    He also said he supported the repeal of "don't ask, don't tell," and that he would ensure that all service members could access equal benefits "under current law." However, as reported earlier this week, same-sex partners and families of service members currently have very limited rights because of the federal Defense of Marriage Act.

    "Never in his life, in any public capacity, has he done anything in the positive department for gay rights," a source told the Huffington Post. "Everything that the group is doing is aimed at starting this discussion, and if he doesn't meet the criteria and can't answer some very basic questions with some familiarity and make some commitments that are really no different than the president's really, then what's the point? ... What did we fight this election for? Is this the best that we can do?"

    Watch the television ad below:
    Source: http://www.advocate.com/politics/mil...y-defense-post

    P.S: See source for video



    WASHINGTON — After declining to take a position on the issue for years, GOProud, the group for gay conservatives, told BuzzFeed Friday it is coming out in support of same-sex marriage equality.
    "We support same-sex marriage, civil marriage," GOProud executive director Jimmy LaSalvia said.
    The move follows a decision by the GOProud board earlier this month to expand the group's mission to include state-level work. It also comes after, LaSalvia noted, the reelection of a president who supports same-sex couples' marriage rights, while some in the Republican Party are urging their party to reassess their position on the issue.
    Since its founding in 2009, GOProud has always opposed the federal Defense of Marriage Act, calling the law a "federal power grab," but it avoided the underlying issue of marriage rights. In the course of a 285-word statement provided to BuzzFeed on "marriage and relationship recognition" being released publicly Friday, though, the group declares, "Where civil marriage is possible, we support civil marriage."
    At the same time, the group is pushing strongly for a state-level, political efforts — not judicial decisions — and LaSalvia warned that "a sweeping decision" in the Supreme Court case challenging California's Proposition 8 ban on same-sex couples' marriages "will create a backlash" — including the proposed Federal Marriage Amendment being "brought to the forefront again."
    LaSalvia explained why the group was weighing in now.
    "Since we'll be forming groups in the states, that makes necessary that we take positions on state issues. And so, for the first time, we felt it necessary to articulate our position on marriage and relationship recognition for gay people. We hadn't had to do that before because we only worked on federal issues, and marriage has always been an issue dealt with with the states," LaSalvia said.
    The group, which he said had nearly a $350,000 budget in 2012 that came from about 500 donors, is starting off by supporting the marriage equality bills in Illinois, Minnesota, and Rhode Island. Asked about the bills, LaSalvia said the group supports them, noting, "Where it is being considered and where it is possible, we support it and we're going to be there." He later added in a follow-up email, "[W]e haven't formed local affiliates there yet, so our level of engagement will be limited."
    In announcing its position, the group's statement declares, "GOProud believes that stable, loving, committed relationships are the cornerstone of our society and should be protected and encouraged for all couples — including gay and lesbian couples. We believe that the decision about how to best do this is one that should be made at the state level and that these decisions are best made by the people directly or through their elected representatives — not by unelected judges."
    The statement goes on to say, "Where civil marriage is possible, we support civil marriage. Where civil unions are possible, we support civil unions. Where domestic partner benefits are possible, we support domestic partner benefits. As federalists, we do not believe in a one-size-fits-all approach on almost any issue and that includes relationship recognition for gay couples."
    Log Cabin Republicans, the older and generally more moderate of the groups for gay Republicans, has been in support of same-sex couples' marriage rights. Its statement of support also is more direct: "Gay or straight, Republicans are united in the belief that strong families are critical to a free society. Log Cabin Republicans are committed to advocating for the freedom to marry."
    LaSalvia said that while GOProud supports civil marriage for gay couples, his group's new statement simply reflects the "political reality" that same-sex couples — absent Supreme Court intervention — aren't going to be marrying in Alabama anytime soon.
    "The country's having a long discussion about marriage. I think many states, in the short term, will be considering civil marriage. Many states will not be. When a state considers civil marriage, we'll support that," LaSalvia said. "I think, ultimately — I happen to believe that some day, there will be civil marriage in every state for gay couples. Will that look the same in every state? I don't know, but that's up for the people of the states to decide."
    In terms of those who would question the group's stated support now for civil unions or domestic partnerships in certain circumstances, he said GOProud sees those options as a path toward civil marriage, saying of civil marriage, "In Alabama, that's not a reality as a political possibility, and so, in Alabama, we would support whatever is realistic to help [same-sex couples] … with the ultimate goal, I think ideally, civil marriage is the ideal situation for all couples, including gay couples. Every state is not going to come to that solution at the same time."
    The bottom line, he said, is that GOProud "support[s] civil marriage for gay couples. How you get there and how it looks in the end is up to the states to decide."
    Asked if the "unelected judges" line represented an opposition to either of the two Supreme Court cases pending by legal organizations — one challenging DOMA and one challenging California's Proposition 8 marriage amendment — LaSalvia said no.
    The group agrees with the case brought by the American Civil Liberties Union that DOMA is unconstitutional, but on different grounds. The ACLU and Roberta Kaplan from Paul Weiss argue that the law, which bans the federal government from recognizing same-sex couples' state-granted marriages, violates the guarantee of equal protection found in the Constitution. LaSalvia, though, said, "DOMA is unconstitutional because the Tenth Amendment doesn't give the federal government that power. DOMA was a federal power grab of an unprecedented nature. We believe that violates the 10th Amendment," an argument that has been advanced by Massachusetts in its challenge to DOMA and has figured into, though not been the sole basis for, the appeals court decisions striking down DOMA.
    As for the challenge to Proposition 8, LaSalvia said, "There are specific issues with Prop 8, regarding a state — the people — rolling back a court decision, and that's something the judges will address." Because of that "specific question," LaSalvia acknowledged that the court would have to decide the issue but maintained that GOProud would "prefer that states' elected officials and the people directly should make these decisions." But the lead lawyers for the case brought by the American Foundation for Equal Rights, Ted Olson and David Boies, had previously argued a much more broad case — one based on the constitutional equal protection guarantees that could potentially apply to states other than California — and are likely to raise that possibility at the Supreme Court.
    LaSalvia said "that's not the preferred path," adding, "We think the best way to solve all these problems is to do it through the political process. Now, that's not saying," he said of a more broad decision, "that it's not going to happen. It very well could." If it does, though, he warned of potential backlash. "I certainly think a sweeping decision will create a backlash, and I think that is something that a lot of people recognize. So, there would certainly be political backlash. And we've long been opposed to a Federal Marriage Amendment, but I think that would be brought to the forefront again should that happen."
    In the meantime, he said there is "a need for a truly conservative voice in the states on the issue of marriage" — a statement with which Log Cabin leaders would take issue. Adopting language far more often used by more moderate groups, LaSalvia said of GOProud, "We are in the business of changing hearts and minds about how people feel about issues that affect gay people, and I think that we're in a unique position to be able to do that."
    "I think that, so many times, the establishment gay organizations do gay outreach, and it's ineffective," he went on. "They say, 'Conservatives support gay marriage,' and then they shove Meghan McCain in their face. Conservatives hate Meghan McCain."

    GOProud's Full Marriage Statement



    Source: http://www.buzzfeed.com/chrisgeidner...or-gay-couples
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    Daniel Radcliffe on Sex in 'Kill Your Darlings'

    1.22.2013

    By Out.com Editors

    The actor explains why all English men aren't gay


    The reviews for first-time director John Krokidas's film, Kill Your Darlings—which stars Daniel Radcliffe as a young Allen Ginsberg—are coming in after its Sundance premiere. And so far it seems critics are loving it. As the UK's The Independent stated, Radcliffe "provides a defining performance as Beat poet Allen Ginsberg." Since so much is being made of the gay sex in the film, we asked Radcliffe his thoughts.
    Daniel Radcliffe: "For me, Kill Your Darlings is a film about young love in whatever form it takes. It wasn’t any more challenging than if you’re doing a [sexual] awakening scene with a girl. At no point did any of us want to do anything that would distinguish it from how we would fall in love with somebody—to my knowledge, there is no difference in how heterosexual and homosexual people fall in love. A lot of people are quick to ask if it’s a gay love story—well, yes, they are gay characters, but it’s just a love story.
    The relationship between Allen [Ginsberg] and Lucien [Carr], I think is incredibly universal—you meet somebody who is far more confident, far more charismatic, and seemingly more intelligent than you, and you completely fall in love with them, and then you actually outgrow them, and they come to resent you for it. I think that’s the whole point of relationships is that they do absolutely move you on as a person, and you learn things about yourself as a person, things you like and don’t like, and things you can do better next time you are with somebody.
    There were certainly relationships that I could draw on when thinking about my relationship with Lucien, and not all of them romantic relationships, some of them just relationships of professional mentorship, the couple of really great teachers I’d had—elements of all those relationships factored into Allen’s and my experience of Lucien.
    Out: One of the things that our readers, certainly, find compelling about you is this sense of your instinctive comfort around people of different sexualities. For a lot of gay men that seems quite empowering.
    I had an interesting conversation with someone recently, because there was a wonderful moment on the opening night of How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying when one of the male chorus of the show tried to set up my bisexual dresser, who’s a woman—and who had been with a woman for a long time at that point—with my gay English singing teacher, which was never going to work.
    I said, "Did you not know Mark was gay?" And he said, “To be honest, all English people I meet seem gay, so I just assume none of you are.”
    I was talking to someone about this and I said, "Why is it that when people meet English men in America they automatically think they’re gay?" and one of the girls explained to me it was because American men feel the need to in some way assert a sense of masculinity in everything they do, and British men don’t feel the same compulsion to do that all the time.
    I think my attitude towards homosexuality is actually the prevalent one in my generation—it’s just unfortunate that in the world of the Internet sometimes the angriest voices are the ones we hear the loudest. But I can’t remember the last time I met somebody of my age who was bigoted. Obviously it exists, but I do think attitudes are changing.
    Source: http://www.out.com/entertainment/mov...-your-darlings
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    CAIRO, Egypt -- Maha remembers going to Tahrir Square on Jan. 25, 2011. The 27-year-old office worker only wanted to look around the Cairo intersection filled with thousands of protesters. But seeing Egypt's revolution unfold before her, she left to get friends and quickly returned. Without planning to, Maha became one of the highly visible gay men and women who took to the streets shouting for change.
    "We don't get freedom anywhere. No voice, nothing," said Maha, who declined to give her surname "So, the first chance at revolution, we fought."
    Nearly two years after the ouster of former leader Hosni Mubarak, Maha sits smoking a shisha with her friend Noor at a back-street cafe in downtown Cairo. Together, the women have made this location a "safe place" for gays, somewhere they can come and be themselves.
    Unlike in other major cities around the world, there is no flag or signage to indicate this is a "gay" cafe. People know about it through word-of-mouth and the online forum, "Bedayaa." They talk about the time since the revolution with a weariness that contrasts with the excitement they initially felt.
    Many of Egypt's gays and lesbians thought sexual freedom was on the horizon. "There was a moment of hope but the last few years has killed it," Maha says, adding: "Nothing much has changed, it is very hard." She is interrupted by Noor: "I think it is getting worse," she says.
    The women remember sitting with gay male friends at another cafe three months after the revolution, when locals complained about it and called nearby military police, who then found make-up in the bag of one of the boys. They were all taken away for questioning for "making a mess" in the area.
    Egypt has no specific laws banning homosexuality although there are plenty of ways to charge someone suspected of engaging in homosexual acts. Police will often charge gay people with "debauchery" or breaking the country's law of public morals. The election of an Islamist president in Egypt, and the passing last month of a new constitution, has also increased fears among the country's gay men and women that anti-gay legislation could soon be introduced. "We think in two or three months they will put a law to discriminate," Maha says.
    Many others fear a government crackdown is only a matter of time. The most notorious pre-revolution attack on gay men took place in 2001, when Cairo police raided a Nile boat, arresting dozens of gay men. Along with others taken from the streets, they became known as the "Cairo 52." But now, the Muslim Brotherhood is not just a power to be appeased - it is the dominant power in Egypt's new government.
    The natural instinct for most gay Egyptians is to try not to draw attention to themselves but taking part in the revolution has brought greater visibility -- at a cost. Alongside other minorities the gay community has been criticized for its role in the uprising.
    Adel Ramadan, a legal officer at the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights, describes the derogatory language used to attack the groups that took to the streets. "After the fall of Mubarak, the criticism of those groups has always contained a sexual element. Whether it's the women who are participating are called prostitutes or 'loose' women, or men are called homosexuals."




    Maha believes this kind of rhetoric has led to an increase in verbal abuse. She thinks some people feel emboldened to shout and call names, knowing the authorities will be on their side. A popular term with some members of the Muslim Brotherhood is "shewaz," a derogatory term for homosexuals that loosely translates as "perverts."
    While gay advocacy organizations are active in other predominantly Muslim countries such as Lebanon, Egypt's support groups are not well organized and struggle to be heard. The Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights is a human rights group that will talk about gays but this cause is not a priority for them. Another group that works with them asked that it not be named for fear of reprisals.
    Despite their fears, gay life continues in Cairo. Men still meet on one of the city's bridges, and the Internet and social media help bring people together. Kholoud Bidak is an activist who is thinking of setting up an online forum. She was also in Tahrir Square in January 2011 and was stunned at the number of gay men and women at the heart of the protests. She has been disappointed in the two years that followed, but believes the gay community has at least gained recognition from human rights groups, which were previously uninterested. "They are finally starting to acknowledge LGBTs, 'oh, they were in the revolution since day one very, very effectively.' I thought that is very positive. She remains scared by the anti-gay rhetoric from some politicians and clerics but tries to stay upbeat. "There is some hope," she says. "How? I don't know."
    Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2...crackdown?lite


    At least one half of the Harbowl would welcome a gay player on his team — the San Francisco half.

    "Personally, there’s no discrimination in my heart,” said 49ers Coach Jim Harbaugh, according to OutSports.

    The San Francisco Harbaugh (who faces off against his brother John as coach of the Baltimore Ravens in the Super Bowl) is a former player himself as an ex-quarterback for the Chicago Bears. OutSports reports that he told the San Francisco Chronicle's subscription iPad magazine his expectations wouldn't change if a player of his were gay.

    "I ask all players to play through their own personality and be who they are," he said. "What you ask of a player is to be a great teammate and be a good player. My expectations would be the same."

    So far no NFL player has dared to come out while still in the league. Neither has any player on any major sports. A campaign called "The Last Closet" has called on team owners, who have been accused of helping keep players closeted, to express their support for coming out.
    Source: http://www.advocate.com/sports/2013/...ome-gay-player


    An LGBT student group at Boston College Law School got a hateful message on this Martin Luther King Jr. Day, even as President Obama was delivering the most inclusive inauguration speech in history.

    Above The Law posted a photo of the vandalism left behind after someone scrawled a series of vile words across the walls of the Lambda Law Students Association. The school's dean quickly condemned the graffiti as "cowardly," with Dean Vincent Rougeau telling Above The Law that it "runs counter to everything we stand for as a law school."

    One of the targeted group's leaders told Above The Law that it is looking for ways to counteract the hate, perhaps by using the words as a backdrop for posting articles, pictures and quotes from the the LGBT rights movement as a statement "to show where we have come from and yet how far we still have to go."

    See the photo below, and get updates at Above The Law.
    Source: http://www.advocate.com/crime/2013/0...alized-mlk-day
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    A Seattle man accused of berating a child he believed to be gay is facing a hate crime charge.
    King County prosecutors contend Steven W. Ramirez shoved and threatened a 13-year-old boy during a 30-minute-long argument at a North Beacon Hill home.
    Ramirez, 44, is alleged to have approached the boy inside the shared building and tried to strike up a conversation.
    When the boy declined to speak with him, Ramirez launched into an angry, homophobic tirade, a Seattle police detective said in court documents. Ramirez, the detective continued, called the boy names, including an anti-gay slur, and mocked him for wearing dresses.



    “At one point (the boy) said Steven was so close to him he could feel his beard and spit,” the detective told the court.
    The boy attempted to call 911 but was stopped by Ramirez, the detective continued. At one point, Ramirez is alleged to have shoved the boy. Concerned Ramirez would punch him, the boy armed himself with a knife.
    The boy’s mother ultimately discovered the argument and called 911. Detectives arrested Ramirez after interviewing the boy.
    Ramirez has been charged with malicious harassment under Washington’s hate crime statute. He remains jailed on $25,000 bail.

    The American Civil Liberties Union is demanding the Lake County School Board allow a gay-student support group to form at a Leesburg middle school after the group was denied by campus administration.
    In a letter sent Wednesday, the ACLU contends that the school district has a legal obligation to allow students at Carver Middle School to form a local chapter of the Gay Straight Alliance student group.
    In October, several students petitioned Principal Mollie Cunningham for permission to start the group, saying it would help combat bullying and give students a safe, supportive place to be themselves. The students cited several examples of gay Carver Middle School students being taunted or pushed while on campus.




    "It was hurtful and no one really wanted that to continue," said Bayli Silberstein, 14, an eighth-grader who applied to start the group.
    Students also had applied to start the club last school year, but were denied by the former principal, according to the ACLU letter. This year, Bayli asked for reasons in writing why the club would be denied, but school officials have yet to provide answers, according to the letter.


    School district spokesman Chris Patton said the the Gay Straight Alliance group application was "under review," but non-academic clubs are not allowed on campus. Principals have discretion as to how clubs get started, he said. Other Lake County middle schools allow clubs such as the Fellowship of Christian Atheletes and Multi-Cultural club to meet and have space on school Web sites.
    The ACLU contends that under the Equal Access Act, schools cannot pick and choose among clubs based on what they think students should or should not discuss. If a school allows any student group that's not directly related to school curriculum to meet, then it cannot deny other student groups the same access.
    Federal courts in Florida and across the country have repeatedly held that it is unconstitutional for schools to deny the formation of local Gay Straight Alliance clubs. Last August, a federal judge ordered the Marion County school district to allow the group to form a club at a high school after it was rejected.
    The ACLU wants the Lake school district to allow the Gay Straight Alliance to begin meetings by next Tuesday.
    Source: http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/...,1804041.story


    When Cloud Atlas had its big premiere party in China, The Wrap reports that producers in the audience were shocked by what was missing — a full 30 minutes had been censored.

    That 30 minutes perhaps not surprisingly included gay sex, but also reportedly included scenes between straight characters, plus violence. China often trims movies from overseas.

    Lana Wachowski, the trans woman who co-wrote and co-directed the movie, was among those at the premiere and told reporters, "It sucks really. But I believe you can watch the full version online."

    The Wrap points out that might have been a jab at the country's piracy problem.
    Source: http://www.advocate.com/arts-enterta...ed-version-her
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    St Margaret's Children and Family Care Society in Glasgow was found to discriminate against homosexuals by giving higher priority to couples who have been married for at least two years.

    The Office of the Scottish Charity Regulator (OSCR) reviewed the practices of the adoption agency following a complaint from the National Secular Society.

    Despite concluding the charity provides a valuable service to the public, its investigation found St Margaret’s was operating in breach of the Equality Act 2010.

    It has until April 22 to comply with the legislation or will lose its charitable status, which means it does not pay corporation tax and receives a substantial discount on its rates.

    The ruling came after the SNP administration decided to press ahead with the introduction of gay marriage despite two-thirds of respondents to an official consultation being opposed.

    John Deighan, the Scottish Catholic Church’s parliamentary officer, said the decision was an example of the “equality extremism” that will become more evidence when same-sex marriage is introduced.
    “This proves the concerns have been valid. The adoption society has done an outstanding job throughout the years,” he said.
    “It seems quite absurd that can be written off and the charity regulator can say it doesn’t provide a public benefit. That’s not the reality for all the children and families it has helped over the years.”
    The OSCR report found the agency gives greater priority to prospective adoptive parents who are a couple, Catholic, married for at least two years and wish to adopt within the framework of the Catholic faith.
    Because marriage is not yet available to gay couples, the regulator ruled this “constitutes direct discrimination” and breached equality laws because access to the benefit the charity is providing is “unduly restricted”.
    “OSCR also finds that this discrimination causes disbenefit to same-sex couples. For these reasons OSCR finds that the charity does not provide public benefit and it therefore fails the charity test,” the report concluded.
    Martin Tyson, the regulator’s head of registration, said: "We acknowledge the valuable service provided by this charity, but the fact is that all charities must comply with the law, including the Equality Act 2010. Where we find this is not the case, we have a duty to act.”
    Alistair McBay, Scottish spokesman for the National Secular Society, welcomed the decision and suggested the agency sever its connections with the Catholic Church to retain its charitable status.
    “This kind of crude discrimination is no longer acceptable in our society – and that goes double where the discrimination is, in effect, being largely financed by the public purse,” he said.
    The adoption agency was unavailable for comment last night but Mike Russell, the SNP Education Minister, said he was “disappointed” by the decision.
    "We do not believe that this outcome is in the best interests of the children St Margaret's helps, who are in need of a safe and loving family home," he said.
    Source: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/ukne...imination.html


    Facebook has apologised after it blocked the operator of one of America's leading same-sex marriage campaigns from accessing the service when he posted a photograph of a mixed-race gay couple online.
    Murray Lipp, the founder of the Gay Marriage USA Facebook page, which has 300,000 fans, received a notification that the photograph of a gay couple was "offensive". The photograph of the marriage of a bishop at a relatively small Pentecostal church movement with his husband resulted in a number of complaints.
    In a message sent to Lipp by the Facebook administrators, he was told that he would be prohibited from posting content on to the Gay Marriage USA Facebook page for a week for breaking Facebook's "policies and community standards".
    Prior to the image being removed by Facebook, it had garnered a significant number of homophobic comments including: "I am just in disgust with their lifestyle. It's disgusting and completely vile."
    Another said: "Someone please explain to me how it is acceptable when man and man/woman or woman cannot conceive children? It is our purpose in life to conceive children."
    Others quoted passages from the bible that prohibit gay sex and threatened to get the Gay Marriage USA Facebook page shut down.
    Lipp claimed that he has been reprimanded by Facebook numerous times over the past year following complaints that he perceived to have originated from homophobic subscribers to his page. He told the Guardian: "Not once has Facebook ever contacted me to give me an opportunity to respond – it simply blocks me each time and each time the block is for a longer period of time. It's totally unjust that I should be punished for someone else's homophobia."
    After being notified of the situation by the Guardian, Facebook relented and reinstated the Gay Marriage USA page.
    A spokesman for Facebook said: "The content of the photograph in question did not violate our terms, however it was removed in error."
    He explained that the correct action would have been to remove the homophobic comments, adding: "Normally these comments are reviewed separately and removed where appropriate. In this instance the photograph itself was mistakenly taken down, despite there being nothing in the picture that breaks our rules. We apologise for the error."
    A source at Facebook explained that the company receives thousands of complaints about content every day and that occasionally mistakes are made but that a longer term review is underway of the way that the social network deals with accusations of offence.
    Earlier this month, Facebook apologised for the deletion of content posted by PinkNews that used the word "faggot" while reporting on a homophobic outburst made by the singer Azealia Banks. Following the post, several PinkNews staff found themselves temporarily blocked from the social network.
    Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology...k-gay-marriage


    The General Assembly on Wednesday confirmed Andrew J. McDonald, a former Democratic state senator and longtime confidant of Gov. Dannel P. Malloy, as the first openly gay justice of the Connecticut Supreme Court.
    McDonald, 46, of Stamford was confirmed on votes of 30-3 in the Senate and 125-20 in the House, clearing the way for him to resign as Malloy's general counsel and join the state's highest court Thursday.
    Andrew J. McDonald

    As the long-time co-chairman of the legislature's Judiciary Committee, McDonald was an influential legal voice in Connecticut. He resigned from the Senate two years ago to join the Malloy administration as legal adviser, a role he played in Stamford when Malloy was mayor.
    His sexual orientation was not addressed during a debate in which opponents focused on his lack of previous judicial experience and his sponsorship of a bill in 2009 that Catholics deemed an intrusion into church affairs.
    All 23 legislators opposing his nomination were Republicans, though the ranking GOP House and Senate members of the legislature's Judiciary Committee, which screens nominees, pronounced him qualified, as did the leaders of the Republican minorities in the House and Senate.
    "Is he the kind of person that can take the partisan part of his experience in life and set it aside in this new role? Now I don't think this going to be easy for Andrew McDonald to do that," said House Minority Leader Lawrence F. Cafero Jr., R-Norwalk. "But I believe he can do that."
    McDonald is one of at three justices appointed to the Supreme Court since the 1970s without prior service on a lower court. The others were Ellen Ash Peters, a Yale professor chosen by Gov. Ella T. Grasso in 1978 as the first woman to serve on the court, and Richard N. Palmer, who was chief state's attorney when named to the court by Gov. Lowell P. Weicker Jr. in 1993.
    Two opponents, Reps. Dan Carter of Bethel and Al Adinolfi of Cheshire, said they would have voted to confirm McDonald as lower court judge. "I think he is a great jurist, potentially," Carter said.
    Rep. Livvy Floren, R-Greenwich, whose House district overlapped with McDonald's Senate district, said she had no hesitation to support him.
    "His respect for the rule of law of law and his respect for the opinions of others is part of his DNA," she said.
    In the Senate, three of the 14 Republicans were opposed: Michael McLachlan of Danbury, Joseph Markley of Southington and Tony Guglielmo of Stafford.
    Guglielmo did not speak during the debate, but McLachlan and Markley said their opposition to McDonald's confirmation stemmed from a bill he proposed in 2009 that could have forcibly reorganized the finances of Catholic parishes, mandating a stronger role for parishoners.
    Both called it an infringement of religious freedom that made them question McDonald's fitness for the bench.
    "It was a failed bill that attacked the First Amendment of the Constitution of the United States of America and was a direct attack on the Catholic Church of the state of Connecticut," McLachlan said. "I believe that someone who was willing to take that kind of action in the state legislature is not an appropriate candidate for a Supreme Court justice."
    McLachlan also complained that McDonald failed to respond to a letter he wrote clarifying the nominee's testimony about the bill during his confirmation hearing. McLachlan had challenged the McDonald's account that the legislation was offered at the behest of a constituent.
    Other Republicans rose to defend McDonald, praising his intelligence and temperament.
    Sen. Kevin Witkos, R-Canton, said he received emails objecting to McDonald's advocacy as a legislator.
    "That's our role as legislators, to fight for things we believe in. That's not the role of a judge," said Witkos, who was confident that McDonald would be a fair arbiter of the law.
    He is the first lawyer nominated to the seven-member high court without serving as a lower court judge since Gov. Lowell P. Weicker Jr. nominated Richard Palmer.
    As a justice, McDonald would bring to the state's highest court the perspective of a politician who struggled to draft and pass legislation on the death penalty, gay marriage, transgender rights, gun control and drug penalties.
    "The Judiciary Committee is the legislative cauldron for all of that," McDonald said in 2009.
    McDonald, who first ran for the state Senate in 2002 as an openly gay politician, was co-chairman of the Judiciary Committee in 2005, when the legislature passed a civil unions law that gave many of the same rights as marriage to same-sex couples.
    The law was seen as a stepping stone to marriage, a right the state Supreme Court gave gay couples in 2008.
    Like the governor, McDonald was a supporter in the legislature of gay marriage, transgender rights and the abolition of the death penalty.
    McDonald is a graduate of Cornell University and the University of Connecticut School of Law. He was a litigation partner at Pullman & Comley, overseeing its appellate practice.
    Within minutes of the House vote, McDonald was packing boxes in his second-floor office at the Capitol, stopping only to accept the congratulations of visitors, including Lt. Gov. Nancy Wyman and Mark Ojakian, the governor's chief of staff.
    Once he was confirmed, McDonald no longer could practice law in Connecticut. He will take the oath of office privately Thursday, with a public ceremony expected next week.
    Source: http://www.ctmirror.org/story/18858/...-supreme-court
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    Lesbian feminist writer, philosopher, linguist, and political activist Julia Penelope has died at age 71.
    Penelope, a Florida native, died Saturday in Texas, Windy City Times reports. She produced numerous books as either author or editor, including Lesbians Only: A Separatist Anthology; The Original Coming Out Stories; Finding the Lesbians; International Feminist Fiction; Sexual Practice/Textual Theory: Lesbian Cultural Criticism; Lesbian Culture: An Anthology; Out of the Class Closet: Lesbian Speak; Call Me Lesbian: Lesbian Lives, Lesbian Theory; and Crossword Puzzles for Women.
    She taught at several universities, including the University of Nebraska–Lincoln, but she “was reportedly passed over for promotions because of her focus on lesbian issues,” Windy City Times notes. She was one of the first professors to teach courses in women’s studies. She also encountered difficulties with academic authorities in her student years, having been asked to leave Florida State University in 1959 because she was a lesbian. She went on to receive degrees from the City University of New York and University of Texas at Austin.
    Penelope was a controversial writer and scholar, according to a biographical entry in the Encyclopedia of Lesbian and Gay Histories and Cultures, in part because she was a separatist and because she criticized some sexual practices, such as sadomasochism, among lesbians. “Disheartened by lesbian infighting, she eventually withdrew from lesbian writing, devoting her energies instead to editing copy for major commercial presses,” the book relates.
    She eventually settled in Lubbock, Texas, where she pursued her freelance editing career and helped found the Lubbock County Green Party, according to the website OurCampaigns.com. She ran for Congress as a Green candidate in a 2003 special election; her platform emphasized environmental protection and opposition to war with Iraq as well as support for human rights.
    Source: http://www.advocate.com/society/obit...nelope-dead-71


    In Wyoming, one of the more conservative states in the nation, legislators are scheduled to hear testimony next week on three LGBT rights bills, including one for marriage equality.
    Bills for marriage equality, domestic partnerships, and nondiscrimination have just been introduced, according to the National Center for Lesbian Rights. The House Corporations Committee will hear testimony on the first two Monday, and if the committee approves one or both, they will move to a vote by the full House in a few days. The Senate Judiciary Committee will hear testimony on the nondiscrimination bill Wednesday.
    NCLR, the Human Rights Campaign, and Wyoming Equality are working together in the effort to get the legislation passed, and votes are expected to be very close. NCLR has information on how to contact Wyoming lawmakers here.
    Source: http://www.advocate.com/politics/mar...mination-bills


    Poland’s legislators rejected three pieces of draft legislation that would have recognized same-sex civil unions, a defeat for the country’s prime minister who had thrown his weight behind the proposed laws but was outvoted by those citing Catholic teaching.
    The debate in Parliament over the bills was a sign of the tug-of-war between more liberal-minded and secular politicians and conservatives who support traditional religious values that has characterized Poland’s approach to a range of social issues as it reintegrates with Western Europe.
    Poland’s first openly gay lawmaker, Robert Biedron of the Palikot Movement party, presented two of the bills in the lower house, known as Sejm. A third bill was introduced by the ruling Civic Platform party of Prime Minister Donald Tusk. It was the first time the Polish Parliament has considered granting some rights that married people enjoy to homosexual couples.
    The two civil-unions bills presented by Mr. Biedron were defeated by firm majorities. But the Civic Platform legislation was defeated narrowly, with 211 MPs in the 460-seat lower house voting to allow the bill to move forward. About a fifth of the ruling party’s house members refused to back it and teamed up with opposition conservatives to produce 228 votes against it.
    All of the legislation would have allowed couples to register partnerships and gain the right to inherit property tax-free and to make life decisions in the other partner’s name, among other privileges. Even though the legislation was expected to be mostly used by opposite-sex couples, the change would have been profound for gay relationships that currently enjoy no explicit recognition in Polish law.
    Shortly before the final vote, a quarrel erupted between Mr. Tusk and his justice minister, Jaroslaw Gowin, who argued that the legislation was incompatible with Poland’s constitution, which calls for the protection of marriage as a union of man and woman.
    Mr. Gowin is seen as an informal leader of a conservative group within the ruling party and has previously spoken against public funding of artificial insemination and a Council of Europe convention on preventing domestic violence, which the government eventually signed.
    Mr. Tusk urged the house to ignore Mr. Gowin’s objections and allow the legislation to proceed.
    “It’s not the government’s position that the bills violate the constitution,” he said. “One can’t close one’s eyes to social facts. We have marriages described by the law and guaranteed by the constitution, we have informal couples, and we have homosexual relationships, as well as singles. It seems obvious that the current legal setup doesn’t reflect that those social facts exist.”
    In the 2011 parliamentary campaign, Mr. Tusk sought to lure more liberal voters by promising to put the legislation before Parliament if he won. The ruling Civic Platform party won the most votes, but has to rely on a partner, the Peasants Party, for a majority in the lower house. On civil unions, its coalition partner Friday sided with the conservatives.
    Opponents said the primary goal of couples is to procreate, which is why same-sex unions can’t be recognized. “Society can’t fund a sweet existence to unstable, barren unions of people from whom it doesn’t benefit only because of the sexual attachment that binds them,” said Krystyna Pawlowicz of the opposition Law and Justice party.
    To back up their viewpoint, some of the opponents pointed to the concept of natural law, which isn’t, however, among the sources of law enumerated in the Polish constitution. Ms. Pawlowicz also said the bills sought to “exhibitionistically allow for displays, in the public sphere, of sexual inclinations that violate the sense of aesthetics and morality.”
    Source: http://blogs.wsj.com/emergingeurope/...-civil-unions/
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    The bill that would establish marriage equality in the U.K. was introduced in Parliament today, with a vote expected early in February.
    Debate on the bill and a vote are scheduled for February 5, the Associated Press reports. Although some religious conservatives oppose the measure, it is likely to pass, as it has the backing of Prime Minister David Cameron and other national leaders.
    “We feel that marriage is a good thing and we should be supporting more couples to marry, and that is exactly what the proposals being brought forward today do,” Equalities Minister Maria Miller told BBC radio.
    Gay couples in the U.K. have had access to civil partnerships since 2005. Those confer similar rights but not the designation of marriage.
    Source: http://www.advocate.com/politics/mar...ill-introduced


    ATLANTA — Coming off a string of successes, LGBT activists were warned today against complacency.
    During her annual State of the Movement Address to the 3,000 attendees of the 25th National Conference on LGBT Equality in Atlanta, Georgia, National Gay and Lesbian Task Force executive director Rea Carey said the 2012 election yielded "a record number seven out members of Congress," "beat back marriage opponents in Minnesota," and "won marriage equality in Maine, Maryland and Washington State," but added that LGBT Americans must "resist the pressure to become smaller, to narrow our sights, to be lulled into thinking we are near the end of our work."
    Carey declared, "We are family, and we will not leave any of you behind!" By "family," Carey meant the countless activists who have fought for LGBT rights over the Task Force's 40-year history as well as the many LGBT citizens who need legal protection beyond that offered by legal marriage equality.

    "If there is one message we can take away from Election Night 2012," Carey said, "it is that we are not alone. We are not alone as a movement, as a people, and we need to make sure no one else is alone either. ... We must choose as a basic moral value, never to leave any of our movement’s family behind."

    Among those still needing legal protection in the nation, Carey included those who choose not to get married, schoolchildren in need of comprehensive antibullying policies, transgender immigrant detainees who face sexual and physical abuse in federal detention facilities, trans people who can still be refused a hotel room or hospital care without public accommodations laws, any LGBT person living in a state without marriage equality or employment protections, and those suffering due to skyrocketing HIV rates.
    (RELATED: President Obama Thanks LGBT Activists at Creating Change)

    Carey also highlighted the need to support those fighting for immigration, reproductive, labor, and economic rights. and reiterated, as she has in past years, that "we are not a one-issue movement."

    "We will never be whole, we will never be free, until every single one of us feels safe to express ourselves sexually, intellectually, and spiritually and finds support in our homes, places of worship, and workplaces."

    She then unveiled the steps the NGLTF will take in the coming year to help fight inequality:

    - As of today, the NGLTF has opened the Organizing Academy, a new, free online grassroots training program that pledges to train and support more than 1,000 grassroots activists annually.

    - Carey promised to "push the president to issue an executive order to protect LGBT people working for federal contractors ... until Congress gets their act together and passes the Employment Non-Discrimination Act."

    - She pledged "to finish the work of burying 'don’t ask, don’t tell' by allowing transgender people to serve openly and same-sex married service members to get the same benefits as their straight peers."

    - Carey said the NGLTF "will continue to play a leadership role in partnering with immigration rights organizations in advocating for the many areas of comprehensive immigration reform that affect our community, including security for binational same-sex couples, respectful and appropriate treatment of transgender and HIV-positive immigrants, and ensuring that families are not separated for years on end as a result of our immigration laws," adding that "creating a path to citizenship is an LGBT issue."

    - Lastly, Carey said, "In the coming months the Task Force and our colleagues at the Ballot Initiative Strategy Center will be sharing with the movement post-election research we conducted that takes a hard look at how voters actually behave across ballot measure issues like marriage, immigration, taxes, and education. Our analysis will not only help us as a movement to be smart about when we put forth ballot measures but on exactly which voters will vote for and against them based on how they vote on other issues."

    "I challenge us to take to heart the words family, love, and commitment," Carey said. "Let’s not restrict or limit them to one view of what our families are supposed to look like. Let family and love and commitment expand our lives, not restrain them."

    "We want a family that understands, that has our back, that picks us up when we need it, that pushes us further when we tire, a family that walks in the door when everyone else has walked out," Carey said.

    "And those who seek to divide us, need to take a look at this room. More than 3,000, out, proud, determined, not intimidated and not going anywhere, here in Atlanta, reaffirming our chosen family — our bonds of love together. Nothing can divide us."
    Source: http://www.advocate.com/politics/201...wn-complacency

    P.S: See source for video



    PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) — The fate of gay marriage legislation in Rhode Island could hinge on the exemptions it affords religious groups that oppose it, the state Senate president said Friday, a day after the House overwhelmingly passed the bill.
    Teresa Paiva Weed said she remains opposed to the bill and has heard that the sticking point for many senators is on how broad of a religious exemption is included in the only New England state that doesn't allow same-sex marriage.
    The Newport Democrat said she doesn't want to fast-track the legislation and promised a "full and fair debate" on what she said is a personal and emotional issue for many lawmakers. She made the comments during a taping of WJAR-TV's "10 News Conference."
    She said she doesn't know whether there's enough support in the Senate to pass the legislation, which would make Rhode Island the 10th state to allow gay marriage.
    "There's a whole group of people who are genuinely struggling with this issue," she said. "The debate and the discussion in the Senate will be very real, and neither I nor anybody else ... really knows what the final outcome of that will be."
    She would not detail her own objections to the bill or say what it would take to get her to support a bill legalizing same-sex marriage, saying it would be inappropriate for her to comment because of her leadership position.
    Paiva Weed said several senators have told her they want a more expansive religious exemption to protect religious leaders, churches, religious charities and organizations that do not support same-sex marriage.
    In legislative testimony, a lobbyist for the Roman Catholic Church raised concerns that Catholic schools and charitable organizations could be forced to change employee benefit policies if compelled to recognize the same-sex spouses of employees.
    The bill passed by the House states that religious institutions may set their own rules for who is eligible to marry within their faith and specifies that no religious leader can be forced to officiate at any marriage ceremony.
    Paiva Weed said she has instructed her legal advisers to compare Rhode Island legislation's religious exemption to those written into gay marriage laws in Maine, Washington state, New York and Maryland.
    She said some in the Senate might be willing to put the question of gay marriage to the voters as a referendum. But that idea would run into difficulties in the House. Fox and Gov. Lincoln Chafee remain opposed to subjecting what they say is a civil rights issue to a popular vote.
    "This is one of those issues you don't punt," Fox said.
    It's likely to be weeks or even months before the Senate Judiciary Committee holds hearings and a vote on the legislation. That's in stark contrast to the House, where House Speaker Gordon Fox followed through on his promise to hold a vote on gay marriage before the end of January.
    Fox, a Providence Democrat, is gay. He dropped gay marriage legislation two years ago when he concluded it would not pass the Senate. Following Thursday night's 51-19 vote in favor of the legislation, Fox said he trusts the Senate to weigh the merits of the bill and dismissed concerns from some gay marriage supporters that Paiva Weed would use the issue in political horse-trading that often occurs at the end of the legislative session.
    "I'm used to that kind of stuff," he said.
    Chafee urged the Senate to act on the legislation. The governor, an independent, argues that Rhode Island is at a competitive disadvantage to other New England states that allow it.
    "Now that the House has swiftly acted, I urge Senate leadership to 'call the roll' — for our economy, for our gay and lesbian friends and neighbors, and for history," he said in a statement.
    Wendy Becker said she's optimistic the Senate will pass the bill. The Providence woman married her partner in Massachusetts, and they have two children. Becker has come to the Statehouse many times to testify in favor of gay marriage.
    "I think we've reached the tipping point," she said. "Frankly, I don't want to have to come back here next year."
    Source: http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/n...riage/1865161/
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    MILWAUKEE - Five suspect now face murder charges in the disappearance case of Ebony (Evon) Young.
    Billy Griffin, 28, Ashanti Mcalister, 18, and Victor Stewart, 27, each now face murder charges. They previously had been charged with substantial battery.
    Ron Allen, 37 of Milwaukee, and Devin Seaberry, 23 of Milwaukee, were charged Wednesday after an investigation into the disappearance of Young.
    Young has been missing since Jan. 2, 2013.
    In the criminal complaint, Griffin told police that he and Young were roommates.
    Young came home after leaving work on the evening of New Years' Day.
    A bit later, Mccalister, Stewart, Allen and Seaberry, all allegedly with the Black P-Stones gang, came over to that home on the 5300 block of North 52nd Street.
    According to the complaint, Stewart pointed a gun at both Young and Griffin, then told Griffin that he could return to the gang if he killed Young.
    Stewart told police that McAlister also put a gun to Young's head, but Griffin said not to shoot Young in the kitchen.
    Griffin said in the complaint that while in the home's basement, some of the others put a bag over Young's head, and Young tried to fight back.
    Two of them allegedly strangled Young with a chain, then struck and kicked Young.
    Griffin further said in the complaint that after he went upstairs, he heard three gunshots.
    Hours later, Griffin said Stewart called him and said "the deed is done."
    According to the complaint, Stewart said they then put Young's body in the dumpster. An investigation showed a fire happened in that dumpster.
    Young's body has not been found.
    Source: http://www.todaystmj4.com/news/local/188333061.html


    Four Republicans joined all of Virginia's Democratic state senators to pass an employment non-discrimination guarantee for LGBT people on Friday, but the idea could stop there.

    The Human Rights Campaign praised the Senate's vote but noted the difficulty presented by the House of Delegates, "where it faces a steep uphill climb in the more conservative chamber."

    The Virginian Pilot editorial board called on state lawmakers to pass the bill, warning that with right-wing Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli planning a run for governor, it's possible discrimination against LGBT state employees could be ignored.

    Cuccinelli raised the profile of the issue when in 2010 he undid inclusive anti-discrimination policies by state universities, saying they were illegal unless the legislature acted.

    The state's governors had a recent history of working around the legislature by issuing executive orders barring antigay discrimination by state employees. Democratic governor Mark Warner was the first to issue an inclusive executive order, with former governor Tim Kaine following suit. But when Republican Governor Bob McDonnell issued an executive order on workplace discrimination it did not include sexual orientation as a protected class, which would have made the state liable in lawsuits.

    Instead, McDonnell later warned state employees they could be reprimanded or fired for discriminating against gays and lesbians.

    The state's first openly gay senator, Adam Ebbin, led the effort to pass the anti-discrimation bill, which succeeded on a 24-16 vote. "We're going to press forward with this momentum," he said. "No state employee should ever doubt Virginia's commitment to equal opportunity for all. This assures state employees that they will be judged solely on their merits and that discrimination has no place in Virginia."
    Source: http://www.advocate.com/politics/201...lgbt-employees


    Lesbian, gay. bisexual and transgender folks who live, work and play in the south-central Idaho town of Ketchum will soon be included in a citywide non-discrimination policy.
    The Ketchum city council passed the ordinance, which prohibits discrimination based on a person’s sexual orientation or gender identity in cases of housing, employment and public accommodation, unanimously, after a third reading of the measure on Tuesday night.
    Mayor Randy Hall told the Idaho Mountain Express in December that for him the issue was “simple”
    “The city has zero tolerance when it comes to discrimination based on somebody’s sexual orientation,” he said. “We wanted to make sure we lead by example and make sure everybody understands that there will be no discrimination in Ketchum..”
    The next step will be to create a “Human Relations Review Board” which “would be formed to investigate complaints of violations of the ordinance. The emphasis of the ordinance will be on “mediation and education.” However, violators could be charged by the Blaine County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office with a misdemeanor,” the newspaper reports.
    Ketchum is the third city in Idaho to enact such an ordinance. Sandpoint passed its anti-discrimination ordinance in 2011 and Boise passed a similar measure in December. Leaders in Pocatello, and Moscow are also considering adding their own anti-discrimination bans. Driggs considered its own proposal in November but council members voted not to move the measure forward.
    According to reports, Idaho Falls was scheduled to have the first reading of its anti-discrimination ordinance tomorrow night. However, the City Clerk’s office says it isn’t on the council’s agenda. There are also reports that the measure maybe changed to a simple resolution, which, while still encouraging, wouldn’t carry as much weight as a full ordinance.
    Source: http://idahoagenda.net/2013/01/23/un...ion-ordinance/


    If Colorado passes a civil unions law, Catholic Charities is already vowing to stop its adoption services in the state.

    As it has in other states, the agency said it would abandon Colorado if it doesn't get a conscious exemption in the civil unions law being considered by the legislature.

    "The Catholic church understands the best foundation for a child's life is to be in the home of a father and a mother that is going to raise them in a family environment that is a strong, healthy marriage," said Monsignor Tom Fryar in a report by 9News.

    After Illinois passed its civil unions law, the state ended its contract with Catholic Charities over their open discrimination against same-sex couples. The Catholic Church had also sought an exemption from the law in that state and failed.

    Watch the Colorado church's case in the video from 9News below.
    Source: http://www.advocate.com/politics/rel...f-civil-unions

    P.S: See source for video
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    A Boy Scouts troop in Maryland that operated with a nondiscrimination policy will return to "don't ask, don't tell" after the antigay national organization threatened to yank their charter.
    Pack 442 of Cloverly, Md. recently adopted an nondiscrimination policy allowing openly gay scouts and leaders, but according to Pack 442's website, the national organization "contacted us a few weeks ago pressuring us to remove our statement, we attempted to negotiate a rewording of the statement that would represent a compromise on the matter, but ultimately [National Capital Area Council] leadership felt only removal of the statement would be acceptable."
    The equality-minded pack acquiesced to pressure from the parent organization, releasing the following statement on their website this weekend:
    "Due to pressure from the National Capital Area Council of BSA, Pack 442 was forced to remove its Non-Discrimination statement in order to keep our Charter (set to expire Jan. 31st).This Non-Discrimination statement, previously posted here, welcomed ALL families. Please feel free to send feeback to NCAC at 301-530-9360."
    Source: http://www.advocate.com/society/yout...ks-antigay-org


    The COO of Square, Keith Rabois, has resigned after a being accused of sexual harassment by a male employee and threatened with a multi-million dollar lawsuit.
    The drama caused Rabois to release a statement announcing his resignation from Square, a massively popular mobile payment company. He said he began a relationship with the man several years ago after being introduced through mutual friends and encouraged him to apply to the company, where he was eventually hired.
    “I had no impact on his potential success at the company,” Rabois wrote. “At no point did he ever report directly to me, and I have seen his work product less than a handful of times.”
    The man has said the relationships wasn’t consensual and is now threatening legal action.
    Rabois, 43, has denied the claims and plans to defend himself, calling the action a “shakedown.”
    “”I was told that only a payment of millions of dollars will make this go away, and that my career, my reputation, and my livelihood will be threatened if Square and I don’t pay up,” he wrote.

    Fox News struggled to consistently cover President Obama's endorsement of marriage equality during his second inaugural address, at times agreeing with his position while still looking for ways to criticize his comments.
    On January 21, President Obama became the first president in U.S. history to mention gay rights during an inaugural address, stating:
    We, the people, declare today that the most evident of truths - that all of us are created equal - is the star that guides us still; just as it guided our forebears through Seneca Falls, and Selma, and Stonewall...
    It is now our generation's task to carry on what those pioneers began. For our journey is not complete until our wives, our mothers, and daughters can earn a living equal to their efforts. Our journey is not complete until our gay brothers and sisters are treated like anyone else under the law - for if we are truly created equal, then surely the love we commit to one another must be equal as well. [emphasis added]
    Fox wasted no time in criticizing Obama's speech, railing against the president's "liberal agenda" and falsely accusing him of ignoring economic issues.
    Yet, when it came to Obama's support for marriage equality, the network shied away from the anti-gay talking points one might expect to hear on Fox.
    During the January 21 edition of Fox's The Five, for example, co-hosts Dana Perino and Eric Bolling admitted that they agreed with the president on same-sex marriage, opting instead to half-heartedly criticize Obama for changing his position on the issue:
    PERINO: I like that. I agree with it. What I think is strange is that he didn't talk about that in 2008. Now maybe because he had the evolution of his thinking and he had the announcement in June and now he's able to say it - I mean I think that's good and fine. That's why I keep going back to the 2008 speech versus this 2012 speech is just so different.
    BOLLING: Yeah. You're 100 percent right, Dana. Remember, about a year ago he evolved to seeing things this way on gay rights. Look, we're all in agreement. We agree. I don't think there's anyone here that disagrees with anything President Obama said on that issue. However, does it really need to be in the inaugural address? [emphasis added]
    The Five returned to the topic of marriage equality the next night when Bob Beckel accused his co-hosts of being "out of the mainstream" on the issue of same-sex marriage. Greg Gutfeld corrected him, saying, "I was for gay marriage before Obama!" and Perino denied that the Republican party was opposed to marriage equality, asking "who talks about gay marriage anymore?":
    Even Fox & Friends co-anchor Brian Kilmeade shied away from anti-gay talking points when discussing the president's position on gay marriage, instead arguing that Obama wouldn't have made his comments had Vice President Joe Biden not "ram rod[ed] him into it on a Sunday comment that popped up."
    Fox's muted criticism of Obama's support for marriage equality is a far cry from how the network has typically dealt with the issue of same-sex marriage. Less than a year ago, Fox Nation described Obama's support for marriage equality as a declaration of "WAR ON MARRIAGE." And Fox's Bill O'Reilly has a long history of warning that same-sex marriage would lead to marriage with ducks, turtles, and dolphins.
    The network's garbled response to Obama's second inaugural address seems to be more evidence of Fox's uncomfortable balancing act in covering LGBT issues.
    The network has largely moved past its days of attacking same-sex marriage, preferring instead to sweep major LGBT victories under the journalistic rug. At the same time, the network continues to appease its anti-gay viewers by offering contrived criticisms of Obama's stance on gay rights and fear mongering about homosexual indoctrination in schools.
    Source: http://mediamatters.org/blog/2013/01...ity-too/192398

    P.S: See source for videos
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    A committee of the Wyoming House narrowly killed proposed marriage equality legislation, but its members later advanced a bill to grant domestic partnerships to same-sex couples.
    The Wyoming House Corporations Committee rejected HB 169, which would have legalized same-sex marriage, by a 5-4 vote. Malicious testimony including graphic gay sex depictions and comparisons to pedophilia were included in the debate.
    A partner bill that would create a domestic partner registry did pass the committee with a 7-2 vote. Read more here.
    Source: http://www.advocate.com/politics/mar...ic-partnership


    Reports are spreading that Chick-fil-A has ended its donations to antigay groups. But that's not the whole story.

    Shane Windmeyer, executive director for Campus Pride, wrote a column for the Huffington Post today that appeared to some to indicate Chick-fil-A had ended the entirety of its charitable donations to the groups flagged by Equality Matters in its reports on antigay giving. Equality Matters included a list of groups it considered antigay when tallying $2 million in 2010 alone by Chick-fil-A's Winshape Foundation.

    But Windmeyer clarified in an interview with The Advocate that when he saw IRS tax forms last week, provided to him by Chick-fil-A officials, that several of the groups identified by Equality Matters are still indeed receiving donations.

    Those groups include the Marriage and Family Foundation, National Christian Foundation and the Fellowship of Christian Athletes.

    What Chick-fil-A was attempting to highlight by showing Windmeyer the tax documents from 2011 is that it had stopped giving to what it considers more activist groups such as Exodus International, which had practiced so-called "conversion therapy," and the Family Research Council, which is labeled by the Southern Poverty Law Center as a "hate group."

    All Chick-fil-A has promised is that it doesn't contribute to the likes of Phyllis Schlafly's Eagle Forum or James Dobson's Focus on the Family. Windmeyer describes these as "the more divisive groups that have a political or social agenda."

    But what remains are donations to groups Windmeyer says he and others consider "anti-LGBT" but that perhaps don't rise to the same levels.

    For its part, Chick-fil-A issued a statement today once again trying to clarify whether it is giving money to antigay causes.

    "Our intent is to not support political or social agendas," the company said in a statement. "This has been the case for more than 60 years. The Chick-fil-A culture and service tradition in our restaurants is to treat every person with honor, dignity and respect and to serve great food with genuine hospitality."

    This is the kind of statement that has made Chick-fil-A's giving policy a little murky in the past. When a Chicago alderman named Proco "Joe" Moreno bragged in 2012 that the fast-food chain had told him it ended antigay giving as part of a deal that would let it expand to his neighborhood, Chick-fil-A President Dan Cathy himself had a conversation with Mike Huckabee — the inventor of "Chick-fil-A Appreciation Day" — and appeared to deny it.

    Cathy said then: "There continues to be erroneous implications in the media that Chick-fil-A changed our practices and priorities in order to obtain permission for a new restaurant in Chicago. That is incorrect. Chick-fil-A made no such concessions, and we remain true to who we are and who we have been."

    But Cathy may have been making a careful distinction with that statement. It may have been true that Chick-fil-A made no change in its giving policy in response to the alderman's demands, only because the company had already stopped giving to the groups the local lawmaker saw as most offensive. At least, that's what the tax records shown to Windmeyer indicate.

    The only real outstanding question is just how antigay are the groups that Chick-fil-A continues to give to?

    Equality Matters included the Fellowship of Christian Athletes on its list because the group had once bragged it could "free" people from homosexuality, even featuring on its website in 2011 the story of a coach who was "delivered from homosexuality."

    The National Christian Foundation regularly offers grants to groups that might very well continue to include the likes of Focus on the Family.

    Equality Matters points out that the Marriage and Family Foundation, for example, hosts a regular conference on marriage that has in the past prevented same-sex couples from attending. And even stranger, that foundation is run from the same address as Chick-fil-A's headquarters in Atlanta. It was founded in 2007 by a member of the Cathy family.

    "I have not told anyone to go buy a Chick-fil-A sandwich," said Windmeyer, whose organization faces regular questions from university student organizations trying to decide whether to allow the fast-food chain on campus. "I'm telling students, make your own decisions."

    Windmeyer said his organization, CampusPride, has not received any money from Chick-fil-A or its charitable giving arms. And it does not expect to. He said the point of his Huffington Post column, headlined "Dan and Me: My Coming Out as a Friend of Dan Cathy and Chick-fil-A," was to role model for the movement that boycotts can be effective in getting two opposing sides to sit down and have constructive conversation.
    Source: http://www.advocate.com/business/201...ionable-giving
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    Two-spirit organizers of the Idle No More movement say they’re looking for more allies from the queer community in order to maintain momentum.

    Indigenous peoples who oppose parts of the federal government’s omnibus Bill C-45, which they say ignores existing treaties and will negatively affect First Nations, Métis and Inuit communities, as well as the environment, lead the grassroots movement. Idle No More protesters gathered in Ottawa Jan 28 as MPs returned to the House of Commons.

    “We’re talking about human rights and sovereignty,” says Alex Wilson, an organizer and professor of social justice and indigenous education at the University of Saskatchewan. “I think that’s a place where the LGBTQ community can connect. This is a global issue that affects all of us.”

    Queer people have histories of mobilization for social justice similar to Idle No More, says Melody McKiver, an administrator and videographer working with the movement in Ottawa. Wilson says she is frustrated that many people who are normally involved in politics have not asked about Idle No More.

    “I wonder if they feel excluded, or if they just don’t know enough so they don’t feel comfortable asking,” she says.

    Artist Thomas Bruyere created a graphic logo to includes queer people in the movement.
    (Thomas Bruyere)



    Idle No More is not limited to indigenous peoples, says McKiver.

    To welcome LGBTQ people as allies, artist Thomas Bruyere has created a graphic logo that includes them in the movement. “The graphic uses the Lambda symbol that has been used in the past as a gay pride symbol. I thought it looked like a teepee,” he says.

    The four teepees in the image symbolize the four founders of the Idle No More movement. At the bottom is a rainbow pride flag.

    “What is also important is that it says ally. This is so anyone can use this symbol and feel included,” says Bruyere.

    In Ottawa, queer-friendly sex shop Venus Envy spent four days collecting clothes, food, canned goods, blankets, letters of support, wood and some money donations for Idle No More, says Lara Purvis, the shop’s education coordinator. This was done in response to a call for supplies to help support participants, she says.

    Most of the supplies were brought to hunger-striking Attawapiskat First Nation chief Theresa Spence’s camp on Victoria Island, says Purvis. But some of the extra clothes were taken to blockades outside of the city, she adds.

    The response to the shop’s collection has been positive, says Purvis.

    “People seemed happy to have a way to contribute to a cause that many might support, but aren't and weren't sure what they could actually do,” she says.

    One thing people can do is go to a rally or flash mob round dance, says McKiver. “Putting your body on the line with others is a really powerful message, just going and offering your presence,” she says.

    Alex Wilson is a professor of social justice and indigenous education at the University of Saskatchewan.



    In fact, it’s crucial to have people who hold different points of view participating, says Wilson.

    The founders of Idle No More are committed to a range of social justice principles because sovereignty is impossible without the undoing of systemic forms of oppression like sexism, racism and homophobia, says Wilson.

    Although two-spirit people have different roles depending on the particular indigenous community they belong to, a general understanding is that they encourage open-mindedness, agree Wilson and McKiver. They are necessary for a community to be balanced, adds Wilson.

    McKiver, who is Anishinaabe with roots in the Lac Seul First Nation of northwestern Ontario, says for her being two-spirit is as much about gender roles as sexual orientation.

    “If you look back to living on a trap-line, you wouldn’t have had the moment to think of whether a woman were to go out and hunt or tend to a fire or if a man were to – you do what you need to do to survive and there shouldn’t be such rigidity in different gender roles.”

    Anishinaabe cultural teachings emphasize a profound ethic of non-interference, says McKiver. In this climate, two-spirit people find ways to serve their communities that make best use of their talents and interests, regardless of existing gender roles, she says.

    “It’s an issue of personal sovereignty and presenting yourself in the way that you feel comfortable. It can be a way of shaping dialogue and bringing other viewpoints to discussions,” says McKiver.

    Two-spirit people can help encourage political and personal transformation, says Wilson.

    “There needs to be people that can kind of have that vantage point of standing in a doorway and you can kind of see the two sides. By two sides I don’t mean male-female, I mean the two sides of any kind of discussion that were having,” says Wilson.

    Ultimately, Wilson and McKiver agree that Idle No More is about education. Before growing to include flash mobs and protests, it started with teach-ins providing information about Bill C-45, says Wilson.

    “For me, what’s been really energizing about Idle No More is creating dialogue in places where there hasn’t been a lot of dialogue,” says McKiver. “There’s so much ignorance about indigenous issues within Canada and I think Idle No More is working to bring that to light.”
    Source: http://www.xtra.ca/public/Ottawa/Idl...ity-13083.aspx
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