Thread: Queer News 2

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    Default Queer News 2

    Old thread reached 500+ posts so here is the new one.

    Link to the old: http://www.revleft.com/vb/queer-news-t161989/index.html


    (News below)
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    According to what Gallup calls the largest single study of the American LGBT population on record, 3.4% of Americans identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender. Gallup conducted 121,290 phone interviews between June 1 and Sept. 30, 2012, asking the question, “Do you, personally, identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender?”
    3.4% responded yes while 4.4% either refused to respond or “didn’t know.”
    Though consistent with a previous estimate, Gallup concedes that the numbers don’t reflect the actual number of LGBT people in America, simply the number willing to identify as such:
    Measuring sexual orientation and gender identity can be challenging since these concepts involve complex social and cultural patterns. As a group still subject to social stigma, many of those who identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender may not be forthcoming about this identity when asked about it in a survey. Therefore, it’s likely that some Americans in what is commonly referred to as “the closet” would not be included in the estimates derived from the Gallup interviews.
    The poll also found that when it comes to identifying as LGBT, non-white people are more likely than white people and women are more likely than men.; Americans aged 18-29 are three times more likely to identify as LGBT than senior citizens; and contrary to a “more limited” study by the Williams Institute, “identification as LGBT is highest among Americans with the lowest levels of education”:
    Among those with a high school education or less, 3.5% identify as LGBT, compared with 2.8% of those with a college degree and 3.2% of those with postgraduate education. LGBT identification is highest among those with some college education but not a college degree, at 4.0%.
    The same is purportedly true when it comes to economics:
    More than 5% of those with incomes of less than $24,000 a year identify as LGBT, a higher proportion than among those with higher incomes – including 2.8% of those making $60,000 a year or more…about 16% of LGBT-identified individuals have incomes above $90,000 per year, compared with 21% of the overall adult population. Additionally, 35% of those who identify as LGBT report incomes of less than $24,000 a year, significantly higher than the 24% for the population in general.
    Those numbers are consistent with a previous report that LGBT Americans are at a higher risk for poverty. You can read the full Gallup report here.

    The Russians really know how to hold a grudge. Back in August, a group of anti-gay activists tried to slap Madonna with a $10 million lawsuit for violating St. Petersburg’s ban on “homosexual propaganda,” but seeing that their arms were too short to *****slap with Madge, they recently sent a summons to the popstar’s house. According to RT, the nine plaintiffs acquired the address of Madonna’s New York home, summoning her to appear in court to defend her actions at a concert in St. Petersburg, where she told fans to “show your love and appreciation to the gay community,” distributed pink wristbands and scrawled the words “no fear” on her oddly muscular back.
    Madonna is, of course, currently trekking the globe on her MDNA tour, but the activists are nevertheless determined to track her down – they also sent a summons to the Material Matron’s Hard Candy gym in Moscow (like she’s ever set foot in that dump). Staffers, for their part, claim that they’ve received nothing to that effect.
    You gotta hand it to those alleged activists for pursuing a lawsuit that they’ll never win since Madonna openly refuses to acknowledge its existence.

    A court clerk in rural Iowa is facing fraud charges after filing false documents certifying she had married two men—even though she never met the couple.
    Grundy County Deputy Clerk of Court Brigitte Van Nice, 42, was arrested on Wednesday and charged with both forgery and perjury. She had been ordained to preform marriage rites last year via a website, and filed a certificate at the county recorder’s office claiming she had officiated the wedding on Valentine’s Day.
    Van Nice, who was paid $150 for her “efforts,” was found out after one of them contacted a lawyer regarding a divorce. Investigators determined that the ceremony never happened and that Van Nice had faked the signatures of two fictional witnesses.
    The two unnamed groom are not facing charges, as authorities believe they were hapless victims of a scam: “We determined that they basically were the ones that were duped. I don’t think they were trying to fraudulently obtain a marriage license,” said Grunge County prosecutor Jennifer Miller. “They were told it was fine for them to not be in the state when they got married. I don’t think they realized it was not going to be a valid marriage.”

    With the help of the L.A. Gay and Lesbian Center, the L.A. Unified School District is launching SPIN, or Suicide Prevention Intervention Now, to address a culture of bullying that has existed for far too long in one of the nation’s largest school districts. “The school district had a long history of helping these youth, but we knew even more could be done,” said Lorri Jean, chief executive of the L.A. Gay and Lesbian Center.
    A large part of SPIN involves education: just getting faculty used to the word “gay” or “lesbian” can have enormously positive consequences. Teachers and faculty are also trained in how to create a safe classroom environment as well as signs to look for in students who may be withdrawing into themselves for reasons well-known to any of those who have ever been bullied.
    The success or failure of the program will also depend on parents who often times encourage the very behaviors the SPIN program is trying to combat.
    Whether or not SPIN ends up being a model for other school districts throughout the country is yet to be seen. But for the victims of bullying and family and friends of those who have taken their lives it’s a step in the right direction.
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    The Anoka-Hennepin School District just doesn’t get it: It’s so-called “neutrality” policy enabled the fatal bullying of several students, and now it has appointed the head of a anti-gay hate group to a task force aimed at stopping student harassment. The head of Parents Action League (PAL), Bryan Lindquist, has been appointed to the committee. PAL promotes ex-gay therapy and refers to AIDS as “GRID” (Gay-Related Immune Deficiency). In January, Lindquist (near right) presented his list of demands to the district:
    Whereas Anoka Hennepin District 11 has devoted a special section on their website to GLBT issues, training and awareness.
    And whereas the theme of school safety is being used as a pretext to advance a much broader agenda, the legitimization of homosexuality and related conduct to impressionable school children
    And whereas the Anoka Hennepin school board is considering removing the protective sexual orientation curriculum policy, an action that undermines the academic focus of this district and open the door to pro-homosexual and related conduct materials in the school curriculum thereby exposing students to concepts hostile to there [sic] religious faith and/or moral conviction
    And whereas school officials would be liable for violating parental rights by subjecting a child to homosexual and related conduct indoctrination
    And whereas the Supreme Court in Meyer v Nebraska has held that parents’ right to direct the moral upbringing and education of their children is one of the most fundamental of all rights and a failure to abide by parental rights can result in liability for damages both the the school district
    Whereas schools may face liability for intentional and negligent instruction of students who rely upon false and misleading information about sexual conduct and are subsequently harmed.
    Whereas as superintendent Dennis Carlson and prevention coordinator Barry Scanlon went on a listening tour visiting the nine GSA clubs in the district January thru May of 2011 and have not conducted a listening tour with students of faith, moral conviction, ex-homosexuals and ex-transgenders
    And whereas district 11 has ordered copies of pro-homosexual video “It Gets Better: Coming Out, Overcoming Bullying and Living a Life Worth Living,” edited by Dan Savage for secondary media centers
    And whereas legal liability exists for the tort of negligence if it is proved that homosexual activists and organizations were granted access to students under responsibility and that students suffered physical or mental harm.
    Therefore be it resolved the Parents Action League in Anoka Hennepin School District 11 demands the following ten actions be taken by our school board.
    1. A new division within the student support services and a special section on the District 11 website devoted to student of fiath [sic], moral conviction, ex-homosexuals and ex-transgenders.
    2. A listening tour by Superintendent Denny Carlson and district prevention coordinator Barry Scanlon with students of faith, moral conviction, ex-homosexuals, and ex-transgenders.
    3. That District 11 administrators and staff work closely with pro-family and ex-homosexual and ex-transgender organizations to provide ongoing training to school counselors, school nurses, social workers, school psychologists, prevention specialists, student learning advocates and a number of secondary principals and principals.
    4. Provide professional development opportunities in which philosophical, pedogogical, and political assumptions of GLBT advocacy are critically examined.
    5. Provide webinars, seminars for all staff on overcoming sexual disorders
    6. Provide training on bullying and suicide that protects all students.
    7. Provide the history of gay-related immune deficiencies and acquired immune deficiencies and the medical consequences of homosexual acts.
    8. That all health classes that address homosexuality be required to provide up-to-date information from the CDC on sexually transmitted diseases and HIV among the groups the CDC designates as men who have sex with men.
    9. Provide the following pro-family, ex-homosexual, ex-transgender information and websites to all counselors, school psychologists and classroom teachers
    10. Provide pro-family, ex-homosexual and ex-transgender videos to secondary media centers.
    Meanwhile Truth Wins Out reports that Tammy Aaberg, whose son Justin committed suicide, was rejected from the committee—as was anti-bullying trainer Jefferson Fietek, the faculty advisor for the local Gay-Straight Alliance.






    The Wildcat, The University of Arizona student newspaper, committed a bit of a faux pas this week when it printed a cartoon that joked about killing gay kids.
    In it, a father tells a son, “If you ever tell me you’re gay, I will shoot you with my shotgun, roll you up in a carpet and throw you off a bridge.”
    “I guess that’s what you call a ‘Fruit Roll Up!’” the son replies.
    The two chuckle manically, “Bwah-hah-ha-ha-hah!”
    Here’s a tip to budding cartoonists: if you have to dedicate a quarter of your comic strip to clarifying that the preceding panels were a joke, maybe it wasn’t so funny.
    It’s hard to imagine how an editor could see this little opus and think, “Mmm, yes, that’s ready for press.” But somehow the piece made it to print, people got upset, and the newspaper is very sorry about that.
    The following day The Wildcat printed an apology, referring to the cartoon as something that “some readers felt was homophobic and inappropriate.”
    Oh, some readers felt that?


    Full story here: http://www.queerty.com/university-of...#ixzz29m0myXIp

    Ohio Senate hopeful Josh Mandel wants gays in Ohio to know he’ll be looking out for them if he gets sent to Washington. Except the 35-year-old Republican treasurer opposes the repeal of Don’t Ask Don’t Tell and stands against the principle of marriage equality.
    But besides that, y’know, he’s totally there for us.
    In a debate with Democratic opponent Sherrod Brown, Mandel said:
    On the military side, I disagree with [the repeal of DADT]. As far as the decision here in state of Ohio, I’m a supporter of marriage between one man and one woman. I believe in traditional marriage.
    At the same time, I want you to know I will do everything I can to represent every single person in the state of Ohio—all eleven-and-a-half-million people. I don’t care if you are a Democrat, a Republican, a Libertarian or a vegetarian… I will be blind to race, religion or any kind of orientation here in the state of Ohio and when I go to Washington.
    Yes, blind— as in he won’t see us.
    P.S: See source for video


    Buzzfeed has some interesting infographics on the current state of marriage equality in America.
    In the second map, we see that if gay marriage passes at the polls in Maine, Maryland and Washington—and in the courts in California—the percentage of Americans who live in marriage-equality land could shift dynamically by December 1. That should lessen the sting from the last map, which shows that currently, more than 65% percent of Americans live in places with bans on same-sex nuptials

    Full story here: http://www.queerty.com/maps-the-layo...#ixzz29m12sawb
    P.S: See source for graphs
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    Rev. Phil Snider’s surprising speech on LGBT equality became a viral sensation this week, more than two months after he originally delivered it at a council meeting in Springfield, MO.
    On Saturday Snider, pastor of the Brentwood Christian Church, spoke about the feedback he’s received from the clip, which has received nearly two million hits to date.
    I’m really heartened by all of the emails, Facebook messages, and kind words that I’ve received over the last 24 hours. As I read each one, I don’t see them simply as messages that seek to affirm a particular talk I gave on a particular night in Springfield, MO (as grateful as I am for such affirmations), but rather, I view them as a reflection of the thousands — indeed, the millions — of people who, on a daily basis, are journeying together because we believe that our world can be a better place, a fairer place, a more beautiful place — for all people and not just for some — and we won’t stop calling for a more beautiful world to be born.
    I’m also grateful for all of the people who have come before us — many whose names history won’t recall — who have allowed us to be where we are now, on whose shoulders we stand. These folks may not be famous — more times than not they are friends or family members who have bravely told their story, often in the face of major consequences. They are the ones who have brought us to this place, and we carry their stories with us as we try to build a a more just world…
    A lot of people ask, ‘How can a pastor who values the Bible take this kind of stance?’ Truth be told, there are a bunch of pastors and people of faith across the country who are open and affirming — not in spite of their faith, but precisely because of it. And the number of open and affirming people of faith is rapidly increasing…
    Secondly, to the many of you who said, “I wish I lived in Springfield, because yours is a church I could actually attend!” Well, this kind of statement makes my day. … I also want you to know that there are several churches around the US with a similar ethos. We may not be big churches or fancy churches, but we are there.
    Finally, a quick disclaimer related to my speech: I recognize that the discrimination experienced by African-Americans in the history of the United States has its own nuances and characteristics, so it’s important to highlight the different ways that discrimination functions in our society…
    To be sure, all forms of discrimination are obviously problematic, and none are acceptable. But the experience of discrimination in the US is not a one-size-fits-all category, and the more we recognize the differences between various forms of discrimination the more we honor those who’ve experienced discrimination, and the better equipped we are to work toward building a better world that honors the integrity and dignity of all people.
    My gratitude to each of you as we try to build a better world together, as we try to live into what Desmond Tutu once called the dreams of God for this world. Not for some people, but for all people.
    While Snider’s home state is gearing up to vote on a marriage-equality ban in November, he was actually addressing a new ruling in Springfield that adds LGBT people to the list of minorities protected from discrimination.
    You can read his full comments here.
    P.S: See source for video


    On Thursday, federal prosecutors in London, Kentucky opened the first federal trial to invoke the Matthew Shepard-James Byrd Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act, which imposes penalties on violence targeted at individuals because their real or perceived sexual orientation, among other criteria. In April 2011, Kevin Pennington, 29 was approached at his home by Mable and Alexis Jenkins. Under the pretext of soliciting drugs, girls lured Pennington to a truck to join defendants Anthony and David Jason Jenkins. After driving around for a while, the five stopped at a remote spot in rural Kingdom Come State Park in Harlan County, where Pennington told investigators that David, 37, demanded sexual favors and threatened to violently rape Pennington when he refused.
    As the two attackers got out of the truck and came around for Pennington, he “asked me not to let them hurt him,” Ashley Jenkins testified this week. “He begged me.”
    Pennington was then pulled out of the truck and knocked to the ground, where he was brutally beaten as the two men shouted, “How do you like this, faggot?!?”
    “I was screaming at the top of my lungs to stop, please stop,” Pennington testified, wiping tears from his eyes. “I was sorry for anything I had done to make them do this to me.”
    While one of the men searched for a tire iron and one of the girls agreed to help throw the corpse over the mountainside after they killed him, Pennington jumped over a cliff, hid behind a rock and waited 45 minutes for them to leave. Bruised and beaten, he made his way to a local park ranger station and called for help. Pennington was left with a torn ear, a torn shoulder ligament, boot marks on his body and gravel embedded into his face.
    The defense acknowledges Pennington was beaten by the Jenkins men but claims it had nothing to do with his sexuality, but rather a drug deal gone bad. But Alexis, testifying for the prosecution, confessed Pennington’s orientation was the true motivation behind the plan to attack Pennington, after it was learned he had a relationship with Anthony Jenkins’ brother.
    Alexis, 19, who is married to Anthony, 20. also testified that the men bragged about it after the fact: “It was like, you know, ‘We whupped that faggot.’”
    In addition to hate-crime charges, David and Anthony Jenkins face conspiracy and kidnapping charges. The trial is expected to last up to a week and, if found guilty, the men could face life in prison.

    Forget that vow of poverty: The Roman Catholic Church has shelled out more than $1 million to fight various marriage-equality initiatives, according to a new report from the Human Rights Campaign. The study shows that the millennia-old institution has donated more than $1.1 million to anti-equality initiatives, including ones fighting gay-marriage measures in Washington, Maryland and Maine—and one supporting a gay-marriage ban in Minnesota, where it has given more than $608,000 to support a constitutional amendment defining marriage as between a man and a woman. (That’s more than half the campaign’s budget.)
    Today, the Church is now the top religious donor for anti-equality efforts, with more than $640,000 coming from the Catholic fraternal organization the Knights of Columbus.
    Fortunately it looks like gay-rights advocates have been able to raise considerably more funds overall than anti-equality cronies. (HRC has contributed $7.3 million to marriage-equality campaigns in the past 12 months.).
    Given that a majority of everyday Catholics actually support gay marriage, HRC president Chad Griffin says “The Church hierarchy owes the laity an explanation as to why they are spending this much money on discrimination, and at what cost to other crucial Church programs.”
    In a statement, Jason Adkins of the Minnesota Catholic Conference replied, “Our marriage amendment activities, like our other activities, are aimed at fostering the common good.”
    Thanks but no thanks, pal.

    British boxer Tyson Fury admits he sent a homophobic tweet about another boxer but claims a followup one, which said all gay people should be executed, was a prank by his young cousins. Fury confessed he posted a tweet about opponent David Price that read “David Price, I’m going to put you in intensive care, that’s for sure mate. And you know your gay lover Tony Bellew? He’s got to fight me in between the rounds as well. I want the two of you, you pair of tossers”
    But the says the tweet that read “dont like gays shoul all b shot dead,” was written by a mischeivious relative.
    “While I’m abroad on training camp I train three times a day often for two hours a time, and I haven’t got time to respond to all the people that ask questions. So I give my phone to my cousins at the camp,” Fury explained to the Guardian. “They’re only young lads and they give abuse back. Today I’ve come back and they were laughing about calling some people some names and whatever.”
    Discussing recently out boxer Orlando Cruz, Fury wished the featherweight well on his title match on Friday (Cruz won), and said he’d like to take him for a beer. But he reveals he was “furious” about the prank and will make his cousins pay—on the canvas: “[I] am going take these boys three rounds in the ring [and] see if they laugh now,’ he tweeted. ”

    A trans teenager in Maryland was suspended from school for getting into a fight after a fellow student allegedly assaulted her. Dee, a 15-year-old transgender student at Patapsco Senior High School in Dundalk, MD, was reportedly attacked by her classmate on October 11. According to the Washington Blade, the fight stemmed from an earlier drink-throwing incident that Dee claims was done in defense of a gay friend. The Transgender Law Center reports that 78% of transgender and gender non-conforming youth report being harassed in school.
    After the October 11 fight, both students were immediately suspended, as per school-district policy. But even though Dee’s opponent allegedly called her a “tranny faggot” during the altercation, a spokesperson for the school system claimed authorities determined “sexual orientation did not provoke this incident.”
    No? How about gender expression?
    In a bit of ugly irony, the hearing to determine whether Dee’s suspension should be extended or upgraded to expulsion is today—on Spirit Day. Hope you’re rocking a fierce purple outfit, girl!
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    State Rep. Jan Pauls might have sponsored Kansas’ ban on same-sex marriage, but its her own life and liberty she fears for. “I have friends who have told me they worry that I’ll be another Gabby Giffords, literally,” the conservative Democrat told the Kansas City Star.
    A 21-year veteran of the Kansas statehouse, Pauls has been involved in campaigns to block job discrimination based on gender identity and sexual orientation, to ban gay marriage and civil unions, and to keep sodomy laws on the books even after the Supreme Court ruled they were unconstitutional.
    But to hear her tell it, Pauls, 59, is a shrinking violet beset by mean old gay ogres.
    Her opponents, she says, have been calling people up, asking that lawn signs be removed. Fliers sent to voters used a photo-shopped trick that showed her seated and smiling next to Gov. Sam Brownback, as if the two were BFFs.
    “The fliers against me were nasty.” Her supporters feel it, too. “People have been scared to speak out because of what the gay community is doing.”
    Wow, it’s like Jim Crow all over again.
    Perhaps Pauls is feeling anxious because, thanks to recent remapping of district lines, she’s faced a tough election cycle for the first time in her career. Her strategy over the decades has been essentially to be the bluest Democrat in the state.
    But as a new generation with more progressive values emerges, he strategy isn’t working anymore: In the November election, Pauls is up against Dakota Bass, a socially liberal former Democrat who switched parties just to challenge her.
    In the August primary, Paul came within ten votes of losing her seat to Erich Bishop, an openly gay maintenance worker and newcomer to politics. Running against a political dinosaur who’s never had to fight for her seat? That’s practically bullying!
    With queer terrorists putting Pauls in their crosshairs, her husband, Ron, has stepped up as a kind of personal bodyguard. And his distaste for the lavender set is even more profound than hers: “Homosexuals don’t love,” Ron says. “Homosexuals are all about the sex… Not love.”
    As proof of her victimization, Rep. Paul recounts a story from 2006, when she was drafting the state’s constitutional amendment banning gay marriage and civil unions:
    [Rep. Paul] was at a political event called Washington Days, the annual meeting of Democrats at the Topeka Ramada Inn. Standing near a stairwell, Pauls had a view of the atrium — and was next to the meeting room of the party’s gay/lesbian caucus.“A fat guy with a red face,” she recalls, came running out, yelling, fists high in the air. She demonstrates with her own fist in the air.
    “I backed up and yelled: ‘Security! Call security!’ I think he was hoping he could throw me over the stairs.” There were throngs of people in the hallway. But husband, Ron, was not at her elbow. He heard her yell and was pushing to get to her.
    “I yelled at Ron not to touch him because I knew that could lead to trouble. It was scary.”
    She looks at her husband now. Both seem like they’d rather not remember this. No arrests were made, because the man’s friends calmed him down, she says. In her telling of the tale, she thinks she knows who the man was: the same one now orchestrating the campaigns against her, Tom Witt of Wichita, the executive director of the Kansas Equality Commission.
    Witt says Pauls is rewriting history: He was there, he admits, but just to calm the real agitator down.
    “She came and stood right outside the door of the LGBT caucus. A guy named Larry Hurlbert went out into the hallway to confront her about the horrible things she said about gays. I heard him say, ‘I’m gonna give her a piece of my mind!’?”
    Witt said Hurlbert hardly got past the room’s doorway, the yelling lasted maybe 30 seconds. Several caucus members dragged him back in, and no balcony was closer than 10 yards.
    Maybe Pauls is so used to breezing through elections she doesn’t understand how politics works. “They’re trying to intimidate and bully people who don’t agree with them,” she moans. “[It's] ironic, because, you know, they shouldn’t be bullying at all.”
    Right, that’s your provenance.
    “I think most Kansans’ concerns are not that the homosexuals want equal rights but superior rights. That’s what makes this issue so difficult,” she explains. “Homophobia here in Hutchinson? I don’t think so. We would have heard about it by now if we were.”
    Um, you’re hearing about it now, lady.

    Hundreds of parents, students and community members in the Hamptons are expected to attend a meeting tonight regarding the recent suicide of 16-year-old David Hernandez Barros. The East Hampton High School student had reportedly been a victim of anti-gay bullying before his death—and had even attended a Gay Straight Alliance meeting just days before taking his own life on September 29.
    The meeting was organized by Long Island Gay and Lesbian Youth (LIGALY) to give the community a chance to remember David and “chart a course forward to combat the isolation” that LGBT youth face.
    Though David’s sexuality was not known at the time of his death, LIGALY director David Kilmnick told Patch that “it really shouldn’t matter at this point.”
    He’s also careful not to point blame in any one direction: “When issues of bullying arise, people are quick to look for blame. Many times, right or wrong, schools bear the brunt of this blame,” Kilmnick says. “The East Hampton School District is a model for what schools should be doing to address anti-GLBT bullying. However, schools cannot do this alone, and we are bringing the East End community together to make sure that going forward, teens like David Hernandez have a local GLBT Center than can go to as a safe haven.”

    Last week, Alabama State Rep. Daniel Boman (D-Sulligent) used his campaign’s Facebook page to imply that his opponent, Rep. Robert Aderholt (R-Haleyville), is gay. On October 14, Boman posted:
    Who would you vote for on Novemeber [sic] 6, 2012 between the following two candidates:
    1) A republican who is a homosexual who has a voting record of voting AGAINST ALL homosexual legislation. Further, this particular homosexual congressman has ALL homosexuals working on his congressional staff
    OR
    2) A democrat who is a straight male, but has no voting record for or against homosexual legislation.
    Boman, a former Republican who switched parties in 2011 over a GOP-backed bill to streamline the firing of experienced teachers, claimed the post was “hypothetical” and didn’t refer to anyone in particular.
    “The people running my campaign posed a hypothetical question,” he told Alabama.com. “The reason they posed the hypothetical question is we received phone calls about a congressman who may be homosexual.” Boman added that “the only way to remove the hypothetical” of Aderholt’s alleged homosexuality “is to call and ask him.”
    But when it comes to conservative candidates, Boman believes that being gay should “absolutely” disqualify one from running for Congress. “The issue is hypocrisy, living one way and voting another,” he said. “It has nothing to do with homosexuality, if that’s your preference or not.”
    Aderholt, who is married and has two children, has served eight terms in Congress where he’s racked up a record of opposing LGBT rights, including voting against the Employee Non-Discrimination Act and for a Constitutional amendment banning gay marriage. He remains unphased by Boman’s comments.
    “When someone is making a fool of himself,” Aderholt said, “we hate to interrupt.”
    Meanwhile, how’s this for a Facebook poll:
    Who would you vote for on November 6, 2012 between the following two candidates:
    1.) An anti-gay Republican
    OR
    2.) An anti-gay Republican masquerading as a Democrat
    .
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    We’re days away from one of the most important Election Days in recent memory: Not only could we see a rollback on all the advances the Obama Administration has made, but the Democrats could lose the one house of Congress they’ve managed to hold onto.
    To help us see what kind of playing field we’re looking at, HRC has released a Congressional Scorecard for the 112th Congress—and the news ain’t so great.
    Politicians with anti-gay values are making headway in the 112th Congress, as the average score for members of the Senate dipped to 35%, compared to 57.3% tin 2010 In the House of Representatives, that number dropped to 40%, from 50.8% two years ago—thanks to GOP gains in the interim elections. (The number of Representatives that scored a big fat zero rose from 144 to 219 in the same time frame.)
    The scores were tabulated by examining the members voting record on hate-crimes legislation, ENDA, the Respect for Marriage Act and other LGBT-related bills.
    Ironically only 33% of Congresspeople support marriage equality, while a full 54% of the general public believe gay people should have the legal right to wed. What’s worse, 79% of Americans believe LGBT people should have workplace protections, but only 40% of the lawmakers on Capitol Hill do. “While the American people move forward on these issues, the majority of Congress, particularly the House, continues to be out of touch,” said HRC legislative director Allison Herwitt.
    Still, it’s not all bad news: 115 House members scored 100% from HRC, including 33 from marriage-equality states and eight from states facing gay-marriage initiatives in November. Meanwhile, 22 senators scored 100%, including seven from states with marriage equality and five from states that are taking it to a vote.
    Among those who nabbed perfect scores are Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-CA), Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-OR) and Rep. Adam Smith, the top-ranking member of the House Armed Services Committee, who introduced legislation extending benefits to same-sex spouses of servicemembers.
    The politicians who got a goose egg include House Majority Leader Rep. Eric Canter (R-VA), Republican VP nominee Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI) and—shocker—chief DOMA defender Rep. John Boehner (R-OH).

    Full story here: http://www.queerty.com/survey-politi...#ixzz2A3J1Um3r
    P.S: See source for video



    In a situation that has tensions rising on both sides of the marriage equality issue, a lesbian couple in New York State was turned away by a farm owner who refused to book their wedding because of their sexuality.
    Melisa Erwin and Jennie McCarthy inquired about holding their summer 2013 nuptials at Liberty Ridge Farm in Schaghticoke, NY, but say the owners refused to host their ceremony because they’re lesbians, reports WNYT.
    “When we asked why, [the owners told us], ‘That’s what my husband and I decided. We’ve been married a long time and it’s great you’re getting married and all, but you can’t do it here,’” said McCarthy.
    Owner Robert Gifford defended his stance: “I think it’s our right to choose who we market to, like any business. We are a family business, and we just feel we ought to stay down the family path.”
    But New York State’s human-rights laws ban discrimination based on sexual orientation in public accommodations, and Erwin and McCarthy have filed a complaint. (A similar situation in Vermont ended with the Wildflower Inn agreeing to no longer host weddings of any kind.)
    We’ve shouted down the argument that marriage-equality legislation will force people to wed us against their will, but could we be headed that way?
    Take your vows in the comments section.





    Full story here: http://www.queerty.com/will-the-new-...#ixzz2A3J8qUpl
    P.S: See source for video


    Some queer bloggers are steamed over a video game that they claim pushes thinly veiled homophobia on America’s youth.
    Battle Bears, a hit release from SkyVu Entertainment, sees militaristic ursine soldiers blasting warm-and-fuzzy pink bears called Huggables. When the cuddly critters are shot, though, they bleed rainbows instead of blood and guts.
    Blogger Aksarbent writes:
    This contemptible game has blown up since its August release, now closing in on 20 million downloads to mostly preteen boys. Since many of the install*ments in the Battle Bears series are free, in-game advertising accounts for half the revenue. But soon the not-so-subtle anti-gay subtext of the game will be rewiring the brains of young boys on children’s TV too, with action figures and toys not far behind. Hey GLAAD, did you forget to set your alarm clock?
    But is the game targeting the rainbow-loving gays—or the actually-pretty-annoying Care Bears? Or is it just a silly game?
    I think its pushing it just a bit to claim that. In these kind of games I often get the feeling that such developers are only interested in what makes a wacky enough game


    Being a trailblazer is never easy, and for Gene Robinson, becoming the first openly gay bishop in the Episcopal Church brought harsh denunciations, harassment, even death threats.
    But Robinson, looking back as he prepares to retire at the end of the year, says he was never deterred from his groundbreaking path. “There has never been a time when I didn’t feel this was worth it,” he says. “When you are pursuing God’s dream for a just society, that is worth dying for … it’s a noble thing to pursue.” And he takes great satisfaction from the progress his church and society as a whole have made on LGBT issues since he was elected bishop of New Hampshire in 2003.
    Robinson, however, is not just looking back but looking forward. After retiring as bishop, he will be working half-time in Washington, D.C., as a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress, the think tank founded by former White House chief of staff John Podesta, where he’ll be writing and speaking on a variety of social issues. The bishop is also the subject of a documentary, Love Free or Die,which will air on PBS October 29, and he has a new book out, God Believes in Love: Straight Talk About Gay Marriage.
    Love Free or Die, which won the Special Jury Prize in the documentary category at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival, has had about 300 screenings around the nation but will be available to a wider audience with the PBS broadcast and an upcoming DVD release. It details Robinson’s experiences and contributions as bishop and provides a look at how far his church has come — and those who would hold it back. His book focuses on progress that still needs to be made, as will his work for the think tank.
    It’s clear that there has been progress, Robinson says, despite some difficult times. He notes that his appointment as bishop put not only his life but that of the church in jeopardy. “I think it’s not too dramatic to say the Episcopal Church risked its life for its LGBT members, and I’m very proud of that,” he says.
    At some points it appeared the church was in danger of schism, with some congregations leaving the Episcopal denomination to affiliate with Anglican dioceses abroad that held more conservative views on LGBT issues (the Episcopal Church is the U.S. branch of the Anglican Communion, a worldwide church body). This phenomenon appears to be largely played out, though, says Robinson, noting that the breakaway congregations claim about 100,000 members, while the Episcopal Church retains 2 million.
    Meanwhile, in 2009 the Episcopal Church in 2009 lifted a moratorium on further appointments of openly gay bishops, and in 2010 it consecrated its first out lesbian bishop, Mary Glasspool, in Los Angeles. This year it approved an official blessing for same-sex couples and a policy prohibiting discrimination against transgender members and clergy. The church “has just moved extraordinarily” on LGBT issues, says Robinson. So have some other mainline Christian denominations, such as the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America and the Presbyterian Church (USA), which in recent years have approved the ordination of openly gay, partnered clergy.


    The situation overseas is much different, with great hostility to LGBT people from Anglican and other religious leaders in certain countries. “We’re dealing with a much more complex set of issues internationally,” says Robinson, noting that some nations still have laws criminalizing homosexuality. He thinks, however, that acceptance of gay people will increase as they assist these nations in addressing poverty and other problems. “We know that knowing someone gay or lesbian makes all the difference,” he says.
    He hopes the film and the book will empower audiences to speak out for equality. “I think the message of the film is that each one of us can make a difference in the fight around LGBT equality,” he says. The movie features many people who have supported him, including his husband, Mark Andrew, and Robinson’s parents and daughters (he was married to a woman for several years before coming out as gay). It also documents the Episcopal Church’s internal battle over full inclusion of gays, with both advocates and opponents getting time on camera.
    With his book, which counters religious and other arguments against equal marriage rights, Robinson says, “in many ways I’m trying to give a script to those who are supportive of marriage equality — ways to win someone over, especially in an election year.” Not only are there four states voting on marriage-related measures, there are presidential candidates with starkly different views on the issue, and Robinson is outspoken about his preference.
    “I’ve been quite public about my support of Barack Obama,” he says, noting that he gave the invocation that opened the president’s inaugural events in 2009. He supports Obama because of other issues in addition to LGBT rights, he adds. For instance, Congressman Paul Ryan, Mitt Romney’s running mate, has proposed a federal budget that would cut deeply into programs that aid the poor. “There’s not any word to describe it but immoral,” says Robinson.
    What about the arguments made by some conservatives that biblical morality, or morality in general, mandates individual charity, not government spending? “That would be a fine attitude to take if it were true,” Robinson says. The Bible’s call to assist the needy, he says, makes clear that this is a societal responsibility. “I find it hard to believe that one could read Scripture and come away with the idea that it applies only to private charitable giving.”
    His concern about a broad range of social matters will be reflected in his work for the Center for American Progress. Podesta, he says, “wanted to bring a moral voice to the issues of the day.”
    As Robinson looks ahead to this effort, he does look back with a sense of accomplishment on his tenure as New Hampshire’s bishop. “My greatest satisfaction comes from leading a healthy and holy diocese,” he says. “We have been devoting ourselves to preaching the good news and making the church relevant in the 21st century.”

    Love Free or Die, directed by Macky Alston, will be shown at 10 p.m. Eastern/Pacific on PBS stations as part of theIndependent Lens series; check local listings.God Believes in Love (Alfred A. Knopf, $24) is available in bookstores now.
    Source: http://www.advocate.com/politics/rel...would?page=0,1


    Gay mom sues Staver's law school in wake of custody fight


    By Rene Stutzman, Orlando Sentinel

    5:56 p.m. EST, October 20, 2012
    Lisa Ann Miller and Janet Jenkins fell in love, and because they lived in Vermont, where same-sex unions are legal, they had a civil ceremony and were united as partners.
    Two years later, they had a baby girl, but when she was 17 months old, Miller took the toddler and moved to Virginia. Then things turned ugly.



    Miller would become an evangelical Christian, denounce her lesbianism and insist that the child, Isabella, have no contact with her other mother because of her "sinful" lifestyle.
    Five years of legal battles followed in whichJenkins argued that she should be able to visit the child. Miller refused and hired Mathew Staver, an Altamonte Springs lawyer who often jumps to defend conservative and fundamentalist Christian principles. He was one of several lawyers working on her behalf.
    Staver argued that because Miller was the birth mother and had moved Virginia, which does not honor civil unions, she did not have to follow the visitation and custody orders of a Vermont court.
    Miller and Staver lost that battle, and in 2009, after a judge ordered her to surrender custody of the child, she and the little girl disappeared. With the help of Amish-Mennonite pastors, Miller fled with Isabella to Canada, then Nicaragua, and they are still missing, according to federal-court evidence.
    The law school Staver heads, Liberty University School of Law in Lynchburg, Va., is now one of several defendants in a civil-racketeering lawsuit filed by Jenkins in U.S. District Court in Burlington, Vt.
    Staver, who was involved in the case from 2002 to 2009, is dean of the law school affiliated with Thomas Road Baptist Church in Lynchburg, Va., formerly headed by the Rev. Jerry Falwell. The law school and church are defendants in the civil suit, which alleges there was a conspiracy to kidnap the child and sneak her out of the country.
    Staver, 56, is not personally named in the suit, which he has called frivolous and outrageous.
    "I had no involvement in their departure, had no knowledge that they had departed or intended to depart," Staver said. "She just disappeared, and we couldn't reach her anymore."
    Before Staver worked at the law school, he founded Liberty Counsel, a group of lawyers who take on cases involving issues popular with political and religious conservatives. For example, he has fought gay marriage, gay adoption, a ban on religious art on public property and restrictions on anti-abortion protesters.
    Last month, a federal jury in Burlington, Vt., convicted an Amish-Mennonite pastor, Kenneth L. Miller of Stuarts Draft, Va., of helping Lisa Miller kidnap her child and spirit her out of the country. He faces a maximum sentence of three years in prison. He is not related to Lisa Miller.
    Federal authorities were able to tie him to the abduction through cellphone and airline-ticket records, as well as the testimony of a Mennonite pastor in Canada who said Kenneth Miller asked him to pick up Lisa Miller and her daughter once they crossed the U.S.-Canadian border and take them to the Toronto airport, where they then flew to Central America.
    Source: http://articles.orlandosentinel.com/...iberty-counsel
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    Alex Shakiri, a leading LGBT-rights leader in Macedonia, was viciously attacked in the the Southeast European nation’s capital city, Skopje, by a pair of unnamed men. Shakiri, the leader of LGBT United Macedonia, was heading home at around 9pm when he heard people shouting gay slurs and telling him “You are all going to die!”
    He started running but his assailants overtook him and started punching him in the stomach. Gay Star News reports Shakiri is still traumatized, but resting at his home.
    Though Macedonia has been a contender for membership in the EU since 2005, it’s hardly a paradise for gays: Family rejection, job discrimination and police harassment are routine, and the International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association (ILGA–Europe) classifies it as the worst country in the Balkans regarding LGBT rights.
    Given its neighbors, that’s saying something.


    “Hate speech by political leaders and in national media often leads to attacks, as violent individuals feel their actions become legitimate’, members of the European Parliament Intergroup on LGBT Rights said in a statement.

    A pastor in Kansas has kicked out a member of the church band for being an unrepentant homosexual.
    Chad Graber found a spiritual connection at CrossPoint Church in Hutchison, KS, located about forty miles outside of Wichita. He discovered his passion for music there, became active in the church orchestra, and even found help for his substance-abuse problem in the church’s recovery program.
    The Kansas City Star reports:
    “My goal was to put more good things in my life, and church was it,” he remembers.
    Sometime around 2007 he joined the six-piece worship team for Celebrate Recovery, playing keyboards, learning Christian songs and practicing chord changes.
    He belonged.
    His playing caught the ear of other worship leaders at CrossPoint, the largest church in Hutchinson, boasting some 1,400 members.
    It wasn’t long before Graber joined the Saturday worship band. For nearly four years he played in both worship groups.
    But when senior pastor Andy Addis found out Graber was gay—and not exactly grappling with his same-sex attraction—he sent him away like Mary and Joseph at the inn.
    Graber, who was single, hadn’t discussed his sexual orientation with many people, but he had come to realize it was something that “refused to go away,” despite his prayers for healing. He had never talked about it with anyone at church, though. So it was surprise when, last fall, Pastor Addis pulled Graber aside and asked him point blank: Are you gay?
    It turns out a fellow band member had “complained” about Graber, a gay man, having a leadership role in the church. Addis said that was a dealbreaker, and that he was also worried a “troubled Christian” might try to hurt Graber.
    “But he told me he’d love for me to keep going to church services,” says Graber, who passed on the opportunity to sit in the back of the bus, er, chapel.
    The good pastor says he still accepts Graber but that the Bible is the Bible: “I have to stand on Scripture,” he explains. “People on both sides of the aisle need to be willing to forgive, understand and accept their differences. When I say ‘accept,’ I can still believe that I’m 100% right and that you may be wrong, but I still have to accept you as a person.”
    But Graber—who has since found a new welcoming church (and a partner)—doesn’t think you can cast out someone you profess to accept. “That’s like someone saying they love black people but believe in slavery,” he says. “Or they love women, but they fight to their dying breath to deny them the right to vote. Or they’re with the Nazi party and work in the Holocaust, but they say they love Jews… There is no compromising my life.”
    At least Graber can be content knowing Addis is being equitable. He says he’d treat a heterosexual parishioner exactly the same if they were committing adultery. “Everyone sins. But the issue is whether you see it’s a sin and make changes as a response to what you see in Scripture. The difference with Chad is that he switched from struggling with his sin to embracing it.”
    So Christians like Addis accept us, but only if we’re miserable.

    The production of the gay-themed play The River and the Mountain in Uganda this August led to the imprisonment of producer David Cecil for violating the nation’s ban on promoting homosexuality. For actor Okuyo Joel Atiku ‘Prynce’, the overwhelmingly negative backlash has been worth it. Prynce played the lead character, Samson, a gay factory owner who is killed by his workers after they are incited by a conservative pastor. The actor told Radio Netherlands that “literally 100 percent” of the reactions he got after the play were negative. “Even from people from whom I least expected it,” he said, “like fellow artists and guys at UBC [Uganda’s public broadcaster]. ‘Are you not yet killed?’ someone from UBC asked me.”
    Though he had expected the play to create controversy, Prynce insisted that breaking taboos is the very nature of art. “I partook in the play because of the artistic challenge and to drive debate, to make people realize that gay people are part of society too.”
    Rehema Nanfuka was The River and the Mountain‘s conservative pastor and she thinks the play “has only alienated Ugandans further from homosexuals.”
    “In retrospect, I question the effectiveness of discussing homosexuality the way we did,” she said. “I had hoped that the play would influence at least some opinions. Yet, of all the people I know, only my mum now slowly starts understanding homosexuality. I am not sure anymore if the people to whom we are preaching, are interested in change at all.”
    Uganda’s Ethics and Integrity Minister, Simon Lokodo has threatened the actors from The River and the Mountain with possible prosecution, which Prynce is prepared to ignore. “Those prohibitions don’t find a basis in our constitution,” he said. “I don’t need permission to be free. You can’t ‘give’ me freedom.”

    For a single straight man, New York’s Mayor Michael Bloomberg has a lot riding on gay equality: The billionaire businessman-turned-politician, who has already donated $250,000 to a same-sex marriage campaign in Maryland, is now giving another $500,000 for marriage-equality fights in Maine, Minnesota and Washington State. ‘Marriage equality is the next big step in America’s long march of freedom” Bloomberg said in a statement on Monday.
    The mayor will give $125,000 to Mainers United for Marriage, which is backing a ballot initiative to legalize gay marriage, plus $250,000 to efforts in Washington State to uphold marriage-equality legislation passed earlier this year. Another $125,000 is being designated for Minnesotans United for All Families, which is fighting the state’s upcoming referendum banning same-sex nuptials.
    Minnesota for Marriage, the group backing the North Star State’s marriage ban, calls Bloomberg an interloper: “We believe it is the people of Minnesota who should decide the question of marriage, not out-of-state donors like Bloomberg.”
    What about out-of-state donors like the carpetbagging National Organization for Marriage, which almost single-handedly spurs anti-equality initiatives across the country?
    Guess that doesn’t count, huh?

    On Monday, the East Aurora School Board in Illinois passed a policy protecting trans and gender-variant students—and then quickly rescinded it five days later. The measure asked teachers to use appropriate pronouns and names, and to allow trans students to engage in activities like phys ed without disclosing their birth gender.
    By midweek the Illinois Family Institute (IFI) was up in arms: In a blogpost, IFI Cultural Analyst Laurie Higgins called the trans-inclusive measure a “radical policy on gender confusion.”
    The school board is now imposing non-objective, “progressive” moral, philosophical, and political beliefs—not facts—aboutgender confusion on the entire school. This feckless school board has made a decision to accommodate, not the needs of gender-confused teens, but their disordered desires and the desires of gender/sexuality anarchists who exploit public education for their perverse ends.
    I wonder how many of these board members have thought or read deeply on the issue of gender confusion or Gender Identity Disorder. And I wonder how many of them have read deeply the writing of not just “progressive” scholars but conservative scholars as well.
    Gender confusion affects approximately .003 percent of males and .0001 percent of females. Aurora East High School is now accommodating the disordered impulses and unproven beliefs of a statistically miniscule segment of their population and in so doing ignores the beliefs of the majority. Some would argue that this policy also reflects a gross distortion of compassion and profound ignorance about what truly helps the few students who suffer from gender dysphoria or Gender Identity Disorder.
    Do we even need to mention that the Southern Poverty Law Center classifies the IFI as a hate group?
    Bowing to criticism, the school board withdrew the policy at a special meeting on Friday, despite the fact that the policy was drafted by the assistant superintendent and parents and community members spoke in favor of it.
    Board president Annette Johnson tried to make it sound like the district wasn’t caving in, but wasn’t very successful: “It’s not a question of are we backing down or being intimidated–we are not.” she said. “It’s just… we have to try to make everybody happy.”
    Isn’t that essentially caving in?
    Johnson did reveal that, of the more than 1,000 emails she received about the change in policy, a majority of complaints came from non-residents.
    So, the school board is trying to placate people that don’t even have children in its schools? Someone needs to work on her comprehension skills.

    In the latest installment of the “Minnesota Marriage Minute,” an informerical from the reactionaries at Minnesota for Marriage, Kalley Yalta informs us that “the fundamental public purpose of marriage is to provide the ideal environment for children to be raised by the people who brought them into the world.”
    Is that so? We asked our straight friends and they don’t remember swearing to have kids before they could get their marriage license. (Our friends who have adopted children weren’t too thrilled with her statement either.)
    Could Minnesota for Marriage be—gasp!—redefining marriage? If so, it’s a critical threat to our very civilization. Someone needs to get on that.
    Yalta, a former Minneapolis newswoman, also explains that marriage equality “separates the interests of children from the purpose of marriage,” transforming it “from a child-centered institution to one that exists only to satisfy the demands of adults.”
    Yes, because gay people don’t have kids, and when we do they’re just accessories. (Just try telling that to our lesbian friends going through early-morning feedings with their twins.)
    If this clip turns your stomach like it did ours, there’s an easy remedy: Go to Minnesotans United for all Families and make a donation.
    P.S: See source for video

    *gasp* ...the commentator here used the term "reactionaries"...hehe... don't see that often.
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    Despite some ugly tweets from ticked-off Cardinals fans, professional sports has made amazing progress in the last year or so, both in reaching out to the LGBT community and in actually standing up for our rights. As we head into Game One of the World Series tonight (its like the Oscars of baseball but with no red carpet or Billy Crystal), we thought it’d be appropriate to thank all the Major League Baseball players, teams, managers and owners who have helped create a more inclusive and gay-positive wide world of sports.
    Above, check out the San Francisco Giants contribution to the It Gets Better Project: “We speak for the entire Giants organization when we say there is no place in society for hatred and bullying against anyone,” says pitcher Barry Zito. (Detroit hasn’t done one yet but there is a petition out there. Maybe openly gay ex-Tigers outfielder Billy Bean can help.)
    We all have LGBT friends who are sports fanatics, but until recently it hasn’t really felt like there’s been a place for us as a community in the bleachers. That’s rapidly changing—from LGBT nights at various stadiums to pro athletes who are even more outspoken on marriage equality than we are. (That’s Giant’s pitcher Matt Cain and his wife, Chelsea, in a No H8 photo above.)
    It would be unsportsmanlike for us to openly root for the Giants—even though our corporate bosses live in SF—so we’ll just say we hope everyone plays a good game.
    And that maybe next year someone playing in the World Series has come out and said he plays for our team.
    P.S: See source for video



    After a conversation with Log Cabin Republican Executive Director, R. Clarke Cooper, The Nation‘s Ben Adler claimed the LCR had brokered a secret deal with Mitt Romney to gain his support for the Employee Non-Discrimination Act in exchange for their endorsement, which the organization announced yesterday. Cooper denied the allegations to Buzzfeed, noting that he “did not say Romney would sign the current form of ENDA.” Adler later edited his original article to clarify that Cooper had not explicitly said that there was a deal, though he implied as much:
    As I continued to press this point and suggested that LCR may be factually wrong about Romney’s position, Cooper blurted out, rhetorically, “Have you met with Romney’s domestic policy team?” Cooper’s implication was abundantly clear: Romney’s domestic policy team has privately told LCR what they wanted to hear. And therein lies the answer to how Romney secured LCR’s endorsement. But Romney so fears the wrath of the religious right that he will not adopt this position in public, (Although ENDA polls very well, major social conservative groups, such as the American Family Association, continue to oppose it and demand that Romney do the same.)
    Whether a secret deal took place or not, Romney’s word is as good as the lie its printed on.

    A report from the UK’s Royal Bolton Hospital claims sniffing poppers may lead to lasting eye damage. According to the BBC:
    Poppers is the street name for a group of chemicals called alkyl nitrites and are used by thousands of clubbers as a stimulant and legal high.
    It is illegal to sell them for human consumption but they are often sold in sex shops, clubs and gay bars as “air fresheners”.
    Writing in the journal Eye, doctors who carried out the study say some patients have experienced damaged vision after just one dose and are calling for more awareness among users and ophthalmologists.
    A man who goes by “Steve” has been using poppers for decades and took part in the study after his doctor was puzzled by his blurred vision.
    “They’re used by so many people for a quick high, you really don’t think about the health impacts,” he told the BBC. A recent study on drug use among the British LGBT community by the Lesbian and Gay Foundation found that 1 in 5 had used poppers in the last month.
    Royal Bolton Hospital’s report doesn’t suggest that everyone who uses poppers will lose their eyesight but that more needs to be done so potential users can properly weigh the risks. “If there was some sort of warning as with cigarettes and alcohol,” Steve said, “people could make more of an informed choice.”

    After the San Francisco Giants beat the St. Louis Cardinals 9-0 in Game 7 of the National League Champion Series, the crème de la crème of Cardinals fans cried themselves to sleep with a series of homophobic and racist tweets. SFist rounded up a few of the tweets highlighted by @BestFansStLouis, “Baseball’s Best Fans,” who are apparently the world’s worst people.
    What’s most disturbing is the number of AIDS and HIV-related bashing, which proves that homophobia – and ignorance – are still very much present in sports.
    Here’s a sample of the overwhelming hate:













    And this one is just pure poetry:

    Though the Giants recorded an “It Gets Better” video to combat shit like this, it seems that it only gets dumber.

    On Tuesday, the Boston Globe reported it was endorsing openly gay Republican Richard Tisei for Representative in Massachusetts’ 6th Congressional District race against incumbent Democrat John F. Tierney, who has been saddled with controversy and dwindling popularity. “There’s longstanding evidence of Tisei’s willingness to defy his party and even public sentiment at key points,” the papers’ editorial reads. “He voted against rolling back the state income tax from 5.3 percent to 5 percent because he didn’t think the state could afford to do so. He argues that, because he would be the only openly gay Republican to be elected to Congress, he would have a national profile of sorts. He would—and he should use it to press for tolerance and moderation among his fellow Republicans.”
    If he wins, Tisei, 50, will become the first gay Republican to reveal his orientation before taking office.
    Massachusetts generally swings Democrat—as does the Globe—but Tierney has been tarred by an illegal offshore gambling scam involving his wife and brother-in-law.
    Tisei’s moderate—in some cases downright progressive—views don’t fall into typical GOP ideology. He supports marriage equality (thank God), as well as a woman’s right to choose. And the former state senator says electing an out Republican would send a strong message to both his party and the nation: “As gay [people], we will never have true equality until we have people on both sides of the aisle who are willing to stand up for the concept that everybody should be treated fairly under the law.”
    A Globe poll from earlier this month puts Tisei six points ahead of Tierney, who has received endorsements from The Rainbow Times and Rep. Barney Frank.

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    In London, KY, Anthony and David Jason Jenkins were acquitted of hate-crime charges connected to the April 2011 beating of 29-year-old Kevin Pennington. The case was the first federal trial invoking sexual-orientation statutes in the Matthew Shepard-James Byrd Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act.
    The Jenkins, however, were found guilty for kidnapping and conspiracy in connection with the attack on Pennington. Their attorneys successfully argued that it wasn’t homophobia but simply a drug deal gone bad that prompted the attack.
    CBS reports:
    Andrew Stephens, the attorney for David Jason Jenkins, argued that his client had at least 21 beers on the day of the assault and was too drunk to have formulated a plan for such an attack.
    “These people who were stoned and drunk were going to form a plan? When this event took place, they were all about drugs,” Stephens said.
    Attorney Willis Coffey, who represents Anthony Jenkins, argued that his client has an IQ of roughly 75 and was merely a follower who does not hate gay people. He called the allegations “the nearest thing to nothing I have ever seen.”
    Coffey said Pennington pushed the idea that he was attacked for being gay to serve his own political agenda. Coffey invoked the name of the Democratic president who is unpopular in Kentucky and lost badly there four years ago.
    “If the government and President Obama want to bow to the special interest groups, that’s their business, but they picked the wrong case,” Coffey said.
    The men were acquitted despite testimony from relatives Ashley and Alexis Jenkins claiming they had used anti-gay slurs while beating Pennington. Ashley insisted that Anthony and David had intended to kidnap, beat and eventually kill Pennington because he was gay.
    Attorney Hydee Hawkins also played a 911 tape in which Pennington says, “They’re trying to kill me. I didn’t know what they were going to do. I think it’s because I’m gay.”
    Hawkins claimed it was a day for accountability—though it seems the buck stopped a bit short of London, Kentucky.

    Marriage equality opponents in Washington are a reeeeeaaaaal piece of…work. Their latest ad use voiceovers by children (of the corn) as well as terms like “deceptive ads” and “discrimination,” yet surprisingly they’re not talking about themselves.
    Suddenly, they’re the victims, they’re the ones being discriminated against and we’re just a bunch of whiners who “get the same benefits” anyway and are trying our damndest to destroy society.
    Well, guess the jig’s up.
    This election is almost over but before then, putrid crap like this, disguising itself as a public service, will continue to be hammered into our collective minds. Luckily Bill and Melinda Gates threw a cool half million towards shutting them up, but if you want to donate, you can do so here at Washington United for Marriage.
    P.S: See source for video


    What is it with Republican Senate candidates (male, of course) and women’s right to choose? The current pin-up boy for GOP foot-in-mouth disease is Richard Mourdock of Indiana, who took it upon himself to say that if a woman becomes pregnant as a result of rape, she still shouldn’t have access to an abortion because God wants that baby to be born. “I think that even when life begins in that horrible situation of rape, that it is something God intended to happen,” Mourdock said during a debate. Mourdock has unsuccessfully tried to walk back his statement, which is redolent of comments made by another GOP Senate candidate, Todd Akin of Missouri. Akin famously declared that women can’t become pregnant as a result of “legitimate rape” because their body protects them.
    Mourdock is the perfect Tea Party Republican. He defeated incumbent Richard Lugar in the June GOP primary by painting Lugar as insufficiently conservative. Mourdock’s campaign included an ad that showed Lugar giggling and dancing with a cartoon Obama, with pink hearts and rainbows floating around them. (We’re sure any homophobia was purely intentional.) As you might imagine, Mourdock is a mighty opponent of marriage equality, domestic partnerships, workplace protections and anything else remotely lavender.
    Mourdock’s comments are a godsend (if you’ll pardon the expression) to the Obama campaign. It’s another chance to remind women that the GOP leaders might not only oppose the right to choose but possibly are eyeing the repeal of the 19th amendment of the Constitution. Given the existing gender gap in this year’s voting, this is a demographic nightmare for the Republicans. It’s bad enough to have lost the Latino vote for the foreseeable future. If they lose the women’s vote as well, Republicans will only ever see the White House from the outside for a long, long time.
    The immediate impact of Mourdock’s gaffe (defined as the inadvertent expression of a true belief) is that he increased the chance of his losing the Senate race, which would be quite a feat in GOP-friendly Indiana. The bigger impact is that it gives Obama an opening to tie Romney–who just released an ad endorsing Mourdock, the only Senate candidate he has endorsed–to the far-right wing of the GOP. Obama’s lost no time in doing so.
    Republicans are on the defensive, but what should they expect? They keep minting crazies for candidates because that’s what the base wants. How long will it take for them to realize that ultimately it’s a losing strategy?

    During a cozy getaway with the Log Cabin Republicans at a Virginia farmhouse last week, Mitt Romney allegedly came around on some important LGBT issues. Of course, he was riding a carousel at the time, so where he’ll stop nobody knows. Log Cabin Executive Director R. Clarke Cooper told The Nation‘s Ben Adler that the governor not only supports ending workplace discrimination – though not necessarily the “current form“of the Employee Non-Discrimination Act – but also gay adoption, hospital visitation rights for same sex couples and the repeal of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.”
    Adler then points out that “the Romney campaign has undermined Cooper’s claims on two of those”:
    Back in May, Romney told Fox News that “[gay couples] have a right,” to adopt children. But the very next day he told CBS affiliate WBTV in Charlotte, North Carolina, that he was observing a national consensus, not asserting a belief of his own. “That’s a position which has been decided by most of the state legislatures,” said Romney. “So I simply acknowledge the fact that gay adoption is legal in all states but one.”
    Regarding hospital visitation rights, Romney surrogate Bay Buchanan said after Monday’s presidential debate that Romney believes decisions on gay marriage and related issues such as hospital visitation and adoption should be left up to the states. This was off-message to both the right and the left. It blatantly contradicts Romney’s pledge to support a federal ban on gay marriage. But it also implies that Romney would reverse the Obama administration’s 2010 executive order requiring hospitals participating in Medicare and Medicaid to recognize the visitation rights of gay couples.
    Buchanan later clarified her statements, insisting that she had “referred to the Tenth Amendment only when speaking about these kinds of benefits – not marriage.” Romney does support a federal ban on same-sex marriage but believes the issues of hospital visitation rights and gay adoption should be left up to the state.
    This wavering between “ultra-conservative” and “relatively moderate,” however, threatens to alienate the ultra conservatives, like American Family Association nut-job Bryan Fischer. Adler rang up Fischer, who had this to say about a possible deal with LCR:
    “If Governor Romney gives up any ground on ENDA that is a huge problem for social conservatives. ENDA will do to every Christian businessman in America what Obama’s abortion mandate does to hospitals, which is robs them of religious freedom and freedom of conscience and their constitutional right to freedom of association. I think if a President Romney were to give an impetus to an ENDA-like bill that would create a firestorm in his conservative base. It would not be smart politics for him to do that, as well as being wrong.”
    Fischer later tweeted that “we need a clear, unambiguous, no loophole denial from Gov. Romney that he will support ENDA as president.” But, hey, if Bryan Fischer wants a “flat emphatic, unambiguous denial from Romney himself,” Romney should just give it to him, then take it back when R. Clarke Cooper is looking. It’s not cheating if you don’t get caught…or if you’re a Mormon. So if Mitt Romney continues to get in bed with both of them, he should really put a ring on it.

    Hip-hop star Chris Brown is in trouble for throwing F-bombs around in public—again. According to Perez Hilton, a fan spotted Brown at a Hollywood cineplex and asked for an autograph: “The movie let out and I saw Chris come out the front door, sort of semi-running,” says Lucas Peter “I approached Chris and asked him to sign my CD cover.”
    But it wasn’t meant to be.
    “His bodyguard stopped me and said Chris wouldn’t be signing, so I told him Rihanna signs all the time,” says Peter. “That’s when Chris stopped in the garage by the parking pay stand and yelled ‘faggot’ at me.”
    Figuring he’d lost his shot at a signature, Peter decided to stir the pot a little more:
    “I walked over to where Chris was getting in the elevator and called him a wife beater and asked him if he was going to beat Rihanna again. Chris said, ‘I beat pussy’ and then his bodyguard tried to scare me by saying, ‘And I beat men.’”
    Did this go down like Peter says it did? Brown’s spokesperson called the allegations, “a fabricated story that horribly uses the subject of homophobia as a means to garner attention.”
    But it wouldn’t be the first time Brown’s been called out for slighting the LGBT community: Earlier this summer he addressed Frank Ocean’s courageous coming out with a rather lame “Man, no homo!”
    Previously, Star Magazine claimed he lost his cool during a basketball game and starting calling other players faggots. And Brown had to issue an apology to a group of L.A. photographers he assailed with anti-gay comments.
    Aw, Chris—you have such a pretty mouth. Why do such mean things have to come out of it?

    Halloween is a reminder of how much our family has evolved.
    The Halloween before last, our three and a half year old son wanted to dress up as Snow White and we were panic-stricken. What would people say? How would people respond? Though we were tempted to, we would not let our boy dress as a girl for all to see – not even on the one night of the year that is reserved for fantasy, role-play and costumes.
    Oh, no, instead I sat him on my lap, scrolled through BuyCostumes.com’s “Boys Costumes” section and manipulated him into thinking that those were his only options.
    He finally, reluctantly selected a costume. He slid off of my lap and walked solemnly to his room as I ordered it online. I felt bad for not letting him dress as he wanted for Halloween, but I also felt like I didn’t have another choice. What kind of parent let’s their child cross-dress in public?
    Besides, I argued, C.J. was getting what he really wanted out of a costume, which was to wear makeup and fabric that “felt nice.” He trick-or-treated as a silly-faced skeleton, wearing a black satiny polyester blend getup with a face full of black and white make-up that would have impressed the girls and boys working the MAC counter.
    It was fine, but it was not Snow White.
    Halloween was over and I figured that our boy’s “girly phase” would be done by the next October 31, at which time he’d pick a “boy costume” and we would forget about the Snow-White-Skeleton Halloween.
    Twelve months later, C.J. was four and a half and wanted to dress up as Frankie Stein, (the teenaged daughter of Frankenstein and star pupil at Monster High) for Halloween.
    By that time we had realized that our son’s penchant for all things girly was not a phase, it was his way of life. We knew that he was gender-nonconforming. We knew that he was going to want a “girl costume” for Halloween. We weren’t panic-stricken like the year before, but we were scared.
    If he were an only child, he could get all dolled up in full drag and rock the hell out of All Hallows’ Eve. But, he wasn’t an only child. And, while C.J. might not get teased if he wore a “girl’s costume,” his older brother probably would. We were committed to letting C.J. wear the costume of his choice, even as we worried incessantly about the effects it might have on his brother.
    Our one condition was that C.J. had to wear a wig. His dad and I both felt like we could really hide (protect) him and his brother with the use of a wig. A wig felt like a safety net. I took C.J. shopping for his costume early in the morning in the middle of the week so that no one would see his selection.
    C.J.’s Brother was less-than-thrilled about his little brother dressing like a girl and parading himself proudly around our community for Halloween. For all of us but C.J., the holiday’s happiness was damped by worry.
    This year for Halloween, C.J. wanted to dress up as Bloom, a fairy from Winx Club. None of us gave it a second thought; we just bought the costume. No manipulative online browsing. No off-hour trip to the costume store. No panic. No worry. No nothing.
    The costume didn’t come with a wig and I didn’t get one. Bloom has red hair and so does C.J. His isn’t long like hers but I figured that we didn’t need a wig. I didn’t feel like we needed the protection that a wig felt like it provided last year.
    C.J. freaked out.
    “I need a wig! I want a wig! If I don’t have a wig people will know I’m a boy. They’ll know it’s me!” he said mid-meltdown.
    “Okay, okay, we’ll get a wig. I promise,” I said.
    “Today?”
    “No, but before Halloween.”
    His dad, brother and I hadn’t given this year’s costume choice a second thought. And, just as we three got to the point of not caring about what other people might say or think or do, C.J. was just beginning to care, take such things into consideration and modify his behavior accordingly.
    Now it saddens me to think that next year he might want a “boy costume” to avoid negativity, stares and judgment from other people. Now, I don’t want my boy to want a boy costume.
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    You might remember Roseanne Barr from the 90’s comedy Roseanne where she played a single working mother struggling to raise children while fighting against male oppression. Later on in her career and personal life she stated unequivocally that she supported same-sex marriage. She seemed to be heading on the right track. Back in such days it might have been progressive (pending on who you ask) but now her feminism has taken a reactionary turn for the worse: transphobia.


    Recently Roseanne has made headlines again only this time not for comedy. Reacting to a story about a Transgender woman (transitioning from a male identity) entering the woman’s restroom; Roseanne repeatedly called the woman in question, Colleen Francis, a creep as well as various other transphobic slurs. Though she attempted to back pedal later on from denying the existence of transpeople her substitution of “they are not real” with “they are secret rapists” is piss poor.


    In a tweet conversation she declared that only woman who lack penises are “real woman” and that Colleen was “forcing her penis” in the metaphoric faces of the other young girls.


    Obviously such a statement is heinous and belongs nowhere in the vocabulary of a spokesperson for a revolutionary organization. If the Peace and Freedom Party has any self-respect than they will dump this Transmisogynic bigot and replace her with someone worthy, and educated enough, to uphold the basic human rights which everyone, regardless of gender identity, deserve.
    Source: http://thequeerproject.wordpress.com...d-transphobia/
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    On Thursday, President Obama endorsed the marriage equality ballot measures in Maine, Maryland and Washington. ‘‘While the President does not weigh in on every single ballot measure in every state, the President believes in treating everyone fairly and equally, with dignity and respect,’’ said Paul Bell, the Obama campaign’s press secretary in Washington State. “Washington’s same-sex marriage law would treat all Washington couples equally, and that is why the president supports a vote to approve Referendum 74.’’
    In Maine, marriage equality advocates are hoping to reverse a 2009 referendum in which voters rejected a same-sex marriage law passed by the legislature. In Maryland and Washington, gay marriage legislation was passed and signed into law by the governors earlier this year, but opponents collected enough signatures to hold referendums on whether the laws should be upheld or rejected. Minnesota, the fourth state where gay marriage is being put to a popular vote, has an amendment effectively banning gay marriage on the ballot.

    ‘‘When I first began fighting in the legislature for marriage equality,” said Ed Murray, an openly gay in Washington’s state senate, “I would never have dared to dream that a president of the United States would one day step forward at this crucial moment, in the middle of his own close re-election campaign, to offer his support for our efforts. But that is exactly what President Obama has done, and it is an example of his courage and leadership.’’

    A Senegalese journalist was sentenced to four years in prison for homosexuality, arms possession and battery, reports AllAfrica.com. A security guard heard shouting coming from the apartment of Tamsir Jupiter Ndiaye (right), and found the reporter in a heated fight with male companion Matar Diop Diagne, who claimed Ndiaye bribed him into having a gay tryst for $100,000 Francs CFA. During their scuffle, Diagne suffered wounds to his lower abdomen during their scuffle.
    In his deposition, Diagne stated that the situation was spontaneous, but police maintain the presence of lubricant and condoms in Ndiaye’s apartment suggest otherwise. Senegal, a Muslim nation in West Africa, criminalizes sexual behavior between people of the same gender.
    Ndiaye’s lawyer plans to appeal the verdict, claiming no laws were broken.

    The battle over marriage equality has been particularly vicious this election season, particularly in Minnesota where an amendment is on the ballot on November 6 that would ban same-sex marriage in the state. Those against gay marriage have adopted the role of victim, claiming their rights are at risk should everyone be treated equally. The latest flack comes courtesy of Pastor Brad Brandon. Brandon is the pastoral outreach director for Minnesota for Marriage, which is supporting the ban. The pastor recently compared the techniques being used by gay marriage advocates to those of Hitler.
    KMSP-TV reports:
    Brandon seemed to claim that critics of gay marriage would be silenced, saying, “[Hitler] removed their voices in the public square and removed their control of their own businesses. So, he stopped Jewish people from speaking out in public and he silenced them.”
    Minnesota for Marriage is standing by Brandon’s beliefs, though not necessarily his phrasing.
    “He’s apologized and he’s apologized on behalf of the campaign,” said a spokeswoman. “His point was absolutely correct; he was just using a poor analogy and an incorrect choice of words to make his religious liberties point. He’s been instructed to no longer compare the loss of religious freedoms to Hitler and Nazi Germany.”
    Hoping to provide an umbrella in the resulting shitstorm, MM’s deputy campaign manager Andy Parrish claimed he had an “explosive” video – a “BOMBSHELL,” even – of staff from pro-gay marriage group, Minnesotans United for All Families “gone wild.”
    Turns out that bombshell was a sassy drag queen doing what sassy drag queens do best – be sassy. The video wasn’t even taken at a Minnesotans United for All Families event, as Good As You points out.
    The sheer amount of vitriol being spewed by the ultra-conservative right undermines not only the severity of a potential ban on gay marriage in Minnesota, but also undermines the intelligence of voters. As Rabbi Marci Zimmermann told KSMP-TV, “Once you use something such as Hitler and the Holocaust, you end any kind of civil discourse.”
    The latest polls show Minnesotans pretty evenly divided over the amendment with 46% in favor of banning gay marriage and 49% opposed. November 6 is quickly appraching but there’s till time to sway opinion in either direction. You can contribute to the effort to stop a ban on gay marriage in Minnesota by donating to Minnesotans United for All Families here.
    P.S: See source for video


    A Brooklyn man has been charged with second-degree assault as a hate crime in connection to a September incident in which he allegedly shouted anti-gay slurs at another man and attacked him with a taser, CBS News reports that Joseph Desmond, 23, was arraigned on Tuesday, and saddled with additional second-degree aggravated harassment and second-degree harassment charges stemming from the attack on an unnamed 23-year-old victim in Ridgewood, Queens.
    Desmond’s victim was able to call police despite suffering chest pains from the assault and Desmond was quickly arrested nearby. New York’s Hate Crimes Act of 2000 includes attacks based on a victims actual or perceived sexual orientation.
    “Crimes of hate such as this random and senseless attack will never be tolerated here in Queens County,” says Queens District Attorney Richard A. Brown. “When they do regrettably occur, they will be condemned in the strongest possible terms. Every person has the right to feel safe to walk the streets without being harassed or assaulted based on race, religion, gender or sexual orientation.”

    Kyle Wood, an openly gay full-time volunteer for Republican House candidate Chad Lee from Wisconsin, claimed he was attacked in his home on the basis of his sexuality and political beliefs. According to The Daily Caller, Wood’s car was graffitied last week with “house trained republican faggot,” “traitor” and “ur like a jew 4 hitler,” in reference to his support for Lee, as opposed to gay Democratic candidate, Mark Pocan. Lee and Pocan are competing for (also openly gay Democrat) Tammy Baldwin’s recently vacated seat in the House as she pursues her run for Senate.
    Wood addressed the vandalism on his Facebook account in an open letter:
    “If you understand either freedom or me at all, you would [know] that this will only make me work harder … You can think whatever you like about me, but I will not be bullied into voting for a gay man simply because I am gay.”
    Then, on Wednesday morning, Wood was physically assaulted.
    “I was getting ready for work and there was a knock at the door,” Wood told The DC. “I opened it, and a guy wrapped a ligature around my neck, slammed my head into the doorway, and smashed my face into a mirror, telling me ‘You should have kept your [f*******] mouth shut.’”
    Jimmy LaSalvia, co-founder of gay conservative group GOProud, called the attack “hate and vitriol directed towards a gay conservative from gay liberals.”
    After the beating, Wood reiterated his prior sentiments, telling The DC, “I will not be bullied, intimidated or threatened into abandoning my moral values.”
    All right, ignoring LaSalvia’s comments (as everyone should do to avoid completely going insane) do you think this was an instance of gay-on-gay bashing brought on by the increasingly bitter divide among “liberals” and “conservatives”? And if so, is Harvey Milk turning over in his grave right now?

    In the Middle East, AIDS education and treatment are often hampered by ignorance and prejudice: A recent survey, for example, suggests 57% of Egyptian doctors believe HIV/AIDS could be contracted through a mosquito bite. There are approximately 570,000 cases of HIV in the Middle East, 40% of them women. Of the men infected with HIV, it’s believed up to 70% are gay, but in heterosexual unions to hide their sexuality.
    Because AIDS is seen as a Western disease, medical professionals receive little training in how to combat or treat it. Sometimes, though, the ignorance is willful:
    Most Egyptian doctors refuse to treat HIV patients or to deliver their children. Egyptian officials continue to insist that there’s no AIDS problem there. To take action, they reason, would force the government to confront such taboo subjects as homosexuality, safe sex and what Muslim ethics say about how to treat the ill—however the disease is contracted.
    “When the government becomes more religious, they believe AIDS is a punishment from God. But being religious starts with respecting human rights,” an Egyptian man who contracted AIDS from a blood transfusion when he was a child says. “We are not a part of the revolution. They isolated us. We did not isolate them.”
    It’s no surprise, then, that the Middle East is one of the few regions of the world where infection rates are on the rise. “The world is talking about the beginning of the end of AIDS. We are not,” says Wessam not el Beih, the U.N.’s AIDS country director for Egypt.
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    We’ve got a little more than a week until marriage equality comes to a public referendum in Maine, Maryland, Minnesota and Washington. As we near the big day, Queerty is zooming in on the fights in these battleground states.
    In Maryland, voters will be deciding on Question 6, which would affirm the Civil Marriage Protection Act, which legalizes same-sex marriage. The act was already passed by the State Legislature and signed by Governor O’Malley.
    Marylanders for Marriage Equality, the group campaigning to get Question 6 passed, produced a radio ad that uses President Obama’s view on gay marriage to drive the point home with everyday voters. (Check out the spot above.)
    We’re cautiously optimistic about the fight in the Old Line State: A Washington Post poll from October 18 indicates support for marriage equality in Maryland is at 52%, compared to 43% who oppose it. But as the Post reminds us, “historically, opposition to gay nuptials at the ballot box has been stronger than polls suggested.”
    Our opponents have whipped up an ad campaign of their own, but one relying on fear and misinformation (no shock there). A recent ad, called “Parents Have No Rights,” warns Maryland families that if Question 6 passes, their kids will be indoctrinated by bleeding-heart gay radicals looking to turn them into fairies.
    To find out how to get involved, visit the Marylanders for Marriage Equality website.
    P.S: See source for video


    It sounds surprising, but Weimar Germany was actually a somewhat progressive place for gays and lesbians. But when the Nazis came to power, they went about destroying any evidence of an emerging queer culture.
    Now, a rare fragment of the 1919 film Anders als die Andern (Different from the Others) has been discovered in the Ukraine. It’s in pretty poor shape but Outfest has just launched a Kickstarter campaign to help pay for its restoration.
    Perhaps the first sympathetic portrayal of homosexuality in cinema, Different was directed by Richard Oswald and more notably, co-written by psychologist Magnus Hirschfeld, one of the forefathers of modern LGBT movement.
    In the film, violinist, Paul Körner (Conrad Veidt) falls in love with one of his male students. As a blackmailer tries to expose his secret, Körner flashes back on early inklings of his orientation, and subsequent attempts to change it. (Hirschfeld has a small role as a doctor who dissuades Körner’s parents from trying to “cure” him.) The musician and his extortionist wind up in court, and though the judge is sympathetic, Körner career is ruined by the scandal. Tragically he commits suicide.
    A polemic against Germany’s Paragraph 175, which outlawed same-sex relations, Different from the Others is believed to be the only remaining film from a series of queer-friendly flicks produced before WWII.
    “Our work on this film will ensure that the message of tolerance and acceptance that was made so courageously in 1919 in Germany will continue to inspire generations to come,” explains Christopher Racster of the Outfest Legacy Project. (A preview of the work-in-progress was held on October 13.)
    The Kickstarter campaign’s goal is a modest $5,000 but its less than half the way there. If we all ponied up $20, (you can skip Alex Cross, trust us) this vital piece of our cultural heritage can be revived.
    P.S: See source for video



    "If you are married or dating, in most cases, your wife or girlfriend has not struggled with SSA and will not understand your recovery process. It is up to you to help educate her about your needs…Tell her, also, ‘I need to be the man of the house. Let me be the man of the house.’ Dominant women only demasculinize men. A man has got to be the lion of the den. Not in an abusive manner though.”


    National Association for Research and Therapy of Homosexuality (NARTH) Scientific Advisory Board member and now noted misogynist, James Phelan, discusses the importance of sexual dynamics in his book, Practical Exercises For Men In Recovery Of Same-Sex Attraction, via Truth Wins Out.
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    AMARILLO, Texas -- A Texas gay couple say that the national media attention they received after finding “leave or die fags,” painted on their Clarendon, Texas home only made matters worse, until readers of an LGBTQ blog pitched in to give the couple a new start.
    Jeremy Jeffers and Joshua Harrison chose to contact the media early this month when they felt that the death threat and vandalism they’d suffered were being ignored by local police.
    “They walked around and took our statement,” Jeremy recalls, “but they didn’t offer to set up a patrol or bother to ask any questions around the neighborhood. We went to the media because we knew that if our story got out, then people might be aware of what happened, so would be hesitant to physically attack us.”
    The media attention did bring heightened scrutiny to the incident, Harrison notes, but further alienated the couple from the small, close-knit town.
    Since word of the media’s involvement spread, the local cleaning service where Harrison worked began losing clients, resulting in loss of employment for Harrison. Additionally, the couple says they’d been refused service at some local establishments and verbally assaulted at others.
    The Owldolatrous Press, religious-oriented LGBTQ blog, stepped in with a "Donations" button at the end of the follow-up story, prompting donors from across the country to contribute to help the couple leave Clarendon. LGBT Advocacy Group Equality Texas also stepped in to assist the couple in their search for jobs and housing in nearby Amarillo, Texas where there exists a small but thriving gay community.
    This week, Jeffers and Harrison will receive $2690 in donations and the keys to their new apartment in Amarillo, where they are grateful to be out of harm’s way, yet still close to family and friends.
    The couple says that their recent trials have only brought them closer together as a pair.
    “Sometimes the stress gets to us, but we’ve bonded together in so many ways because of this.”
    The couple expressed gratitude for the many statements of support and encouragement they’ve received. “The support of the gay community has been amazing. For a while I was wondering if we were really a community or a family anymore. And the gay community reaching out. We were so scared. It’s nice to know that we’re not alone.”
    To read the original story or to visit LGBTQ Nation, a content partner with SDGLN, click HERE.
    Source: http://sdgln.com/news/2012/10/27/van...lgbt-community


    In an MTV interview on Friday, President Obama discussed how the struggle for marriage equality would play out in his second term (God willing). The President kept to his states-rights argument but predicted the Supreme Court would soon rule the Defense of Marriage Act, which bans legally married gay couples from receiving federal recognition, was unconstitutional.
    Historically, marriages have been defined at the state level. And there’s a conversation going on… there’s some states that are still having the debate. And I think for us to try to legislate federally into this is probably the wrong way to go,
    The courts are going to be examining these issues. I’ve stood up and said I’m opposed to the so-called Defense of Marriage Act… I’ve said that’s wrong. There are a couple of cases that are working their way through the courts, and my expectation is that Defense of Marriage Act will be overturned. But, ultimately, I believe that if we have that conversation at the state level, the evolution that’s taking place in this country will get us to a place where we are going to be recognizing everybody fairly.
    I’m very proud of that fact that as president I’ve got a track record of not just talking the talk on this, but walking the walk: ending Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell, making sure that federal employees are treated equally when it comes to their partners and I’m going to keep pushing as hard as I can.
    Is there really a cogent argument here? Imagine if Loving v. Virginia meant interracial couples could receive federal benefits but could still be discriminated against on the state level.
    At least one member of the audience at the “Ask Obama” event at Georgetown University didn’t see the President’s logic. Tucker, a student in Washington State, said:
    “I love having a president in the White House who can go on MTV and say that he thinks gay and lesbian people should get married… But the fact is, it’s been four years and the Defense of Marriage Act is still on the books, and I don’t think the conversation should be left to the states. I believe in evolution too, but I believe there’s a right answer to that question, and we need to take it farther.”
    P.S: See source for video


    If you were to put money on which Republican politician in Texas would publicly express support for gay rights, John Carona, the state senator from Dallas, would be a good bet. He's always been about as pragmatic as Texas Republican come. But it was still a surprise when, earlier this week, he told the Dallas Voice he supports several pro-LGBT initiatives. He stopped short of endorsing gay marriage, but he told the paper that he would support bills to ban employment discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity, offer domestic partner benefits to state university employees, and allow same-sex adoptive parents to have both names on birth certificates.
    "I think anything that advances, encourages monogamy is a good thing," he said. "And frankly how could you be against people who want to get their affairs in order and have a loving household"
    Seems reasonable enough, but not in Texas' many circles of conservatism. The Texas Freedom Network has a roundup of some of the reaction. Yesterday the Liberty Institute-founded group Texas Values lambasted Carona for his support for the "top legislative agenda of the homosexual lobby."
    "We also remain very concerned that such statements regarding marriage and the LGBT agenda would ever be uttered by Senator Carona or any other member of the Texas Legislature who is believed to support family values," the group said in a statement, adding that it's "very clear, these so-called "gay rights" measures are nothing more than a direct attack on marriage."
    Dave Welch, head of the Texas Pastors Council, and Houston pastor Steve Riggle separately accused Carona of throwing support behing measure that amount to a violation of God's law. A San Antonio pastor Charles Flowers, said Carona would be faced with an "unpleasant reality."
    "We will no longer be silent, intimidated or ignored when traditional marriage, the nuclear family and our moral standards are threatened," he wrote. "We love God and love His people too much to allow those threats to remain unchallenged."
    None of that's a surprise. It's telling, though, that Republicans not so closely affiliated with the religious right have been quiet on Carona's remarks. Maybe they and Carona sense that the tide is shifting, that support for LGBT rights is slowly but surely reaching critical mass. Or maybe Carona just decided it was the right thing to do. Either way, it was a pretty ballsy move for a Texas Republican.
    Source: http://blogs.dallasobserver.com/unfa...na_declare.php


    MANASSAS, Va.—A local church on Friday denied a Washington Blade staff writer access to an anti-gay marriage gathering at which Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli spoke.
    A woman who was standing near the entrance of Reconciliation Community Church in Manassas in front of two men wearing dark suits who appeared to be security personnel asked this reporter for identification and proof of media affiliation after he identified himself as a Blade staff writer. He proceeded to show her his drivers’ license and business card.
    The women concluded this reporter was a member of Cooch Watch, a group named for the nickname Cuccinelli received while he was an undergrad at the University of Virginia that had planned to protest. She then pointedly told him to turn his car around in an adjacent driveway and leave the church’s property.
    Cuccinelli’s spokesperson, Brian Gottstein, told the Blade the attorney general “fully expected the media as well as the protesters to be” at the church.
    “We had not heard otherwise,” he said.
    Gottstein apologized to the Blade over the incident.
    “However, it is the host of the event who decides who can enter their event, not us,” he said. “As I said, the attorney general was expecting an open event.”
    Pastor John Peyton of the Reconciliation Community Church acknowledged he was asked to host the gathering at which Cuccinelli spoke — the attorney general said on his Twitter account earlier on Friday he was “looking forward to speaking at the Virginia Defense of Marriage Summit tonight!” Peyton told the Blade in an e-mail he “did not bargain for any protesters to come.”
    “We have members who have been delivered from many sins by having a personal relationship with Jesus Christ,” he said. “We also wanted respect for the guest[s] on our ground[s.] Sorry you weren’t allow[ed] in this meeting, but you may come back any Sunday and visit our church.”
    The Manassas gathering was the last in a series of rallies and other events that took place across the commonwealth during the day-long Marriage Protection Virginia Bus Tour that began earlier on Friday at Liberty University in Lynchburg. It was part of the Traditional Marriage Tour the High Impact Leadership Coalition, a group founded by Bishop Harry Jackson, Jr., of Hope Christian Church in Beltsville, Md., organized.
    Virginia was the seventh and final state that tour participants visited.
    “Recent events including the president of the United States commenting that he supports gay marriage, instructing the Department of Justice not to enforce violations of the Defense of Marriage Act and a Ninth Circuit Court’s decision to strike down Proposition 8 in California, makes it necessary for us to act now,” said the High Impact Leadership Coalition in an Aug. 1 press release that announced the Traditional Marriage Tour.
    In addition to Cuccinelli; Jackson, Bishop Eugene Reeves of New Life Ministries in Woodbridge, Va., and Phillip Goudeaux of the Calvary Christian Center in Sacramento, Calif., were among those scheduled to speak at Reconciliation Community Church. The Manassas event took place less than a week after Goudeaux described gay men as “predators” who seek to indoctrinate children during an anti-gay marriage gathering at a Baltimore church that Family Research Council President Tony Perkins, Maryland Marriage Alliance Chair Derek McCoy, Jackson, Reeves and roughly 100 others attended.
    Shelley Abrams, co-founder of Cooch Watch, told the Blade roughly a dozen members of her group who traveled to Manassas to protest Cuccinelli were also denied access to the church. One Cooch Watch member who arrived at Reconciliation Community Church around 4:45 p.m. told Abrams a woman said “there’s no rally here.”
    Abrams said the protester looked at the church and told the same woman she recognized its name. The woman reportedly said only congregation members were allowed to attend the gathering.
    “She said, ‘We’re not allowing protesters in and we’re doing God’s work,’” said the woman, according to Abrams.
    Abrams further stressed churches typically allow Cooch Watch members to attend forums, meetings and other events they host.
    “To be denied entry into what’s considered God’s house is appalling,” she said. “Not only that, this is a public official. We are Virginians and we want to hear what he has to say about same-sex marriage. And we were not given that opportunity. There is fear among the ultra-right wing of being exposed and they know that Cooch Watch is here to expose them.”
    Equality Virginia spokesperson Kevin Clay also criticized the church’s decision to deny access to the gathering.
    “It’s a shame that the press has been denied access to the attorney general’s speaking engagement,” he told the Blade. “At Friday’s event Cuccinelli spoke on the marriage amendment to a small group that most likely did not represent fair-minded Virginians. Behind closed doors, we suspect he rehashed the same overreaching rhetoric. At Equality Virginia, we expect our elected officials to represent all of the commonwealth’s citizens.”
    Source: http://www.washingtonblade.com/2012/...arriage-rally/
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    TAIPEI — Tens of thousands of people marched through Taipei on Saturday to push for the legalisation of same-sex marriage in Taiwan as the island marked its 10th annual Gay Pride event in colourful fashion.
    "The theme this year is to fight for equal rights on marriage. Gay people are also tax-paying citizens and we demand the same basic right as any heterosexual couples," said Mu Chuan, one of the organisers of the rally.
    The parade saw revellers in flamboyant costumes, big feathered hats and swimming trunks waving placards reading "marriage" and "equal rights".
    "Even though marriage is a very personal choice, I think gay people should not be stripped of the right to choose to get married," said Mi Feng, a software programmer from Taipei dressed in white and holding a bridal bouquet.
    "I just want to tell the world we have the right to love equally like others," said Kongpaphop Panya, a 30-year-old doctor who came from Thailand with three friends.
    Organisers expected a turnout of 50,000 people from as far afield as Europe for capital's 10th annual gay parade.
    Encouraged by US President Barack Obama's support for gay marriage, Taiwanese rights group have launched a campaign to collect one million signatures for a bill they drafted on the issue that they aim to submit to parliament next year.
    Taiwan is one of the most culturally liberal societies in East Asia, and gay and lesbian groups have been urging the government for years to make same-sex unions legal.
    Aiming to raise awareness about the issue, some 80 lesbian couples last year took part in Taiwan's biggest same-sex "wedding party", attracting about 1,000 friends, relatives and curious onlookers.
    In August, two women tied the knot in the island's first same-sex Buddhist "wedding" in a much-publicised event with the blessings of a well-known Buddhist master and 300 Buddhist guests.
    Source: http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp...e861396ba9.1c1


    Gay-marriage mailer misleads on senior domestic partnerships

    A mailer sent to senior citizens states that by voting for the state's same-sex marriage measure they also will be voting to preserve domestic partnerships for seniors. In reality, domestic partnerships for seniors will remain in place whether Referendum 74 passes or fails.
    By Lornet Turnbull
    Seattle Times staff reporter


    Claim: A campaign mailer sent to senior citizens in Washington said that approving Referendum 74 will allow any seniors age 62 or older to have a domestic partnership if marrying would cause them to lose their retirement or other benefits.
    The mailer also said that by voting to approve Ref. 74, "you will vote to preserve domestic partnerships for seniors" and ensure that all loving and committed couples have the freedom to marry.
    What we found: Half true. Whether it's approved or rejected by voters, the same-sex-marriage bill passed by the Legislature, signed by the governor in February and now before voters as Ref. 74, will have no bearing on domestic partnerships for senior couples.
    Campaign officials with Washington United for Marriage, which supports same-sex marriage and sent the mailer, said it was intended to clear up confusion about how the new law would affect seniors who are eligible for state domestic-partnerships benefits.
    They point out that phrasing in their mailer is consistent with ballot language for Ref. 74. In fact, the ballot title, written by a Thurston County Superior Court judge, is printed on the mailer and reads in part: "This bill would allow same-sex couples to marry, preserve domestic partnerships only for seniors. ... "
    That was likely done to convey that domestic partnerships would continue to exist only for seniors — but not for younger gay couples.
    But the mailer is misleading in posing the question: "Why vote approve," and then answering it by saying "you'll be voting to preserve domestic partnerships." It suggests that the flip side is also true, that voting to reject Ref. 74 would end such partnerships for seniors — which is not true.
    Campaign officials stand by the wording: "The law takes it away for some and allows it for others," said David Ward, an attorney for Legal Voice who works with Washington United for Marriage.
    Senior couples, where at least one person is 62, were included in the state's domestic-partnership law from its inception five years ago because for some seniors, remarrying would result in the loss of certain kinds of benefits, such as pension and military.
    Under Ref. 74, same-sex couples under 62 who haven't dissolved their partnerships would be required to convert to marriage by June 30, 2014, or the state would do it for them.
    But whether the same-sex-marriage law passes or not, senior couples — both straight and gay — would continue to be eligible for domestic partnerships.
    Zach Silk, campaign manager, said in a statement: "It is not intuitive or self-evident why we need to 'preserve domestic partnerships only for seniors' — and so we put together this very straightforward, fact-based mailer."
    In a statement, Preserve Marriage Washington, the campaign against gay marriage, said the mailer was meant to mislead seniors.
    Source: http://seattletimes.com/html/localne...etruth27m.html


    A transgender woman in Brazil has died after being stoned by a group of attackers last week, reports Gay Star News.
    The woman, who was born Amos Chagas Lima and went by the name of Madona, was pelted with cobblestones by her assailants October 19 in Aracaju, the capital of the state of the Brazilian state of Sergipe. She was admitted to a hospital and died four days later of severe head injuries. No suspects have been arrested.
    Madona, who was a well-known and well-liked figure in Aracaju nightlife, is among many transgender people who have been targets of violence in Brazil, activists say.
    “Trans people are the smallest and most vulnerable part of the LGBT Brazilian communities, making up a mere 10th, yet we suffer from the highest incidence of violence and murder,” Keila Simpson, president of the National Council to Combat Discrimination, told Gay Star News. “Since January we have had over 100 transgender people murdered here — that means over 10 people murdered every month. … People here in Brazil think that if they don’t like someone, like a trans person, they have a right to murder. Murders occur because they go often unpunished — simply put: Homophobic and transphobic hate is not a criminal offence.”
    Source: http://www.advocate.com/politics/tra...d-death-brazil


    Cape Town - Six young lesbians from Gugulethu fear for their lives after they were attacked and beaten. None of the women wanted to be identified for fear of further victimisation.
    One of the women, 22, told the Cape Argus that the friends made their usual “snack” stop at a petrol station in Gugulethu in the early hours of Sunday after leaving what she described as a gay-friendly club.
    Without provocation, a man charged towards the group and started punching one of her friends, the woman said.
    “He punched her until she was down on the ground. He kicked her in the face until blood trickled down her forehead. He slapped, shoved and punched anyone who tried to intervene… he was so strong; we felt powerless.”
    She said the guy looked “angry and energetic, as if he was on drugs”. He then turned on some of the other women in the group. While he was beating the women, he allegedly shouted: “These f***ing lesbians, we must beat them up until they stop.”
    The 22-year-old said that after what seemed like hours, he got into his car and drove off.
    “We just stood there helplessly. The sad part is a group of guys watched and didn’t do anything to help.
    “I don’t know where all that hate was coming from. I am scared to go out now. As a lesbian I feel like a walking target.”
    The six friends have opened a case of assault at the Gugulethu police station.
    Two of the injured women ended up at the Gugulethu Day Hospital.
    One of them is a 19-year-old matric pupil. She told the Cape Argus that when she saw her friend not moving on the ground, she tried to intervene.
    “She was just lying there not moving. I bent down to check on her… When I saw blood… I knew we were in serious trouble,” she said.
    Despite a swollen face and a fresh scar above her eye, the matric pupil wrote her English exam on Monday.
    “I am still shaken. I never thought something like this would happen to me… we didn’t do anything to provoke him. We hope justice is done so that this guy can’t hurt anyone else,” she said.
    Pumeza Runeyi, a witness and member of Free Gender, a black lesbian organisation based in Makhaza, Khayelitsha, said she felt helpless watching the attack.
    “No one could stop him. If that guy had a gun he would have killed someone that night.
    “It was if he held a grudge against them. I am angry and want to see justice done,” said Runeyi.
    Of the club, she said: “It’s the only gay-friendly club we can go to in the township. It’s obvious we are not safe anywhere,” she said.
    Police spokesman Lieutenant-Colonel André Traut was not in a position to comment on the case on Thursday afternoon
    Source: http://www.iol.co.za/news/crime-cour...5#.UI2BPYaE7B-
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    This week, the Virginia man arrested for shooting a security guard inside the Washington, DC, headquarters of the Family Research Council has been indicted by a grand jury on terrorism charges that are being utilized for the first time. Floyd Lee Corkins was arrested in August after opening fire on the anti-gay lobbying group’s ground floor and hitting guard Leonardo Johnson in the arm. Corkins’ sexuality hasn’t been reported on, but he was volunteering at a local LGBT center at the time of the attack and carried Chick-fil-A sandwiches in his backpack when he entered the building. During the assault, he told Johnson,”don’t shoot me—it was not about you, it was what this place stands for.”
    On Wednesday Corkins, who earned a Masters in education from George Mason, became the first person to be indicted under the the District’s Anti-Terrorism Act of 2002, which criminalizes “acting with the intent to intimidate and coerce a significant portion of the civilian population of the District of Columbia and the United States.”
    That indictment alone carries a possible 30-year sentence, but Corkins was also charged with attempted murder, second-degree burglary and carrying a firearm across state lines.
    So far, he is pleading not guilty to all.
    “The terrorism indictment announced today makes clear that acts of violence designed to intimidate and silence those who support natural marriage and traditional morality violate the law and undermine the security and stability of our form of government,” said FRC president Tony Perkins. “We again call on organizations like the Southern Poverty Law Center to stop its reckless practice of labeling organizations that oppose their promotion of homosexuality. The SPLC’s `hate’ labeling of Christian organizations is fostering a dangerous and deadly environment of hostility and it needs to stop.”
    Using pretzel logic to politicize a heinous act by a disturbed individual—there’s some great family values right there.

    "Like Sonmi, there are people who will spit on me, want to lynch me, want to crucify me…I am interested in engaging with the world, hopefully in a way that makes some people not as afraid of people like me or view people like me as these others who aren’t as human as them or different than them…People are freaked out by GLBT people. They’re angry about my gender or my life or the way I inhabit the world the same way that Hugo [Weaving] as Mephi feels that Sonmi is a threat to his natural order in the world. So it’s a weighty choice to do this, but I think… I hope it’s worth it.”
    Transgendered filmmaker Lana Wachowski talking to The Wrap about her motivation behind her latest film with brother, Andy, Cloud Atlas.

    A recent poll in Indonesia shows a marked increase in homophobia. The Indonesian Survey Circle (LSI) reported that almost 81% of those surveyed would object to having a gay or lesbian neighbor, about double the number who would object to someone of a different religion. The study also indicated a sharp uptick in anti-gay sentiment since 2005, when 64.7% of respondents said they would object to having a neighbor. Homophobia was most pronounced in men (60%) , Indonesians who’d only obtained a high-school education (67%) and those who earned 2 million rupiahs (about $210) or less per month.
    Hartoyo, founder of the LGBT empowerment group One Voice, cited radical Islamist groups and the media as the main culprits: “Some media outlets, mainly online news portals and TV channels that are easily accessible, tend to give imbalanced reports about us or portray us only as clowns.”

    Last week, we reported how in 2005 Mitt Romney revealed to an audience at the Spartanburg County Republican Party in South Carolina that—gasp!—gay couples were marrying and having kids.
    “Some gays are actually having children born to them. It’s not right on paper. It’s not right in fact. Every child has a right to a mother and father.’’
    It was nauseating enough to read his comments, but now a video of his address has gone viral. Hope you have a strong constitution.
    P.S: See source for video


    The Supreme Court will meet to discuss whether it will review American Foundation for Equal Rights (AFER)’s federal challenge to Proposition 8, along with several challenges to the Defense of Marriage Act, at a private conference on Tuesday, November 20. According to the AFER, the Court will either:

    • Grant review of our Prop. 8 challenge, at which point AFER’s legal team, led by distinguished attorneys Ted Olson and David Boies, will submit written briefs and present oral arguments by April 2013. A final decision on Prop. 8 and marriage equality is expected by June 2013.
    • Deny review, making permanent the landmark federal appeals court ruling that found Prop. 8 UNCONSTITUTIONAL. Marriage equality will be restored in California.

    The Court is expected to release an Order List detailing its decisions on cases it has granted or denied review by Monday, November 26.
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    The Family Research Council rode its spiritual high horse around to churches in Minnesota distributing hate in the guise of informational pamphlets that decried same-sex marriage as the end of society. So basically, business as usual in Minnesota where an amendment is on the ballot that would ban gay marriage.

    Good As You acquired the bulletin inserts, in which the FRC urges good, God-fearing Christians to “graciously proclaim” how the gays are going straight to hell, along with the drunks, the thieves and the “male prostitutes” (females get a free pass, we guess) and how redefining marriage will destroy culture all together.
    Well, as long as their gracious about it. But if culture can survive six seasons of the Jersey Shore, we’ll be fine.

    Anyone who picks up the pamphlet should stop reading after the first sentence, though, which completely devalues it as anything of note: “God has ordained three basic institutions: the church, the government and the family. ”
    This is America, trash. Church and state are separated for a reason. And that reason is called the Family Research Council. Click here to donate to pro-marriage equality group, Minnesotans for All Families.

    It wasn’t a case of if but when: A fundamentalist minister has gone on the record blaming Hurricane Sandy on President Obama and the LGBT community.
    On his blog, pastor John McTernan described Sandy, currently bearing down on the East Coast, as “the most powerful hurricane on record.” But instead of explaining recent weather patterns, he points a finger at Obama for being pro-gay and “100 percent behind the Muslim Brotherhood, which has vowed to destroy Israel and take Jerusalem.”
    By promoting homosexuality, America has become like the ancient pagan Amorites and has now come under the judgment of God.
    America promotes homosexuality by custom with events such as Gay Pride Day, Gay Awareness Month (June), Gay day at Disney land, Gay Day at sporting events and events like Southern Decadence in New Orleans . There are gay clubs in high school and colleges. The political parties are pandering to the homosexuals for their votes. By custom, homosexuality has woven into the fabric of America…
    The Bible warns of God judging a nation that walks in these ordinances. When the corporate attitude of a nation is friendly toward homosexuality then at this point the iniquity is full.
    In a follow-up post, McTernan tars Mitt Romney, who he claims is “pro-homosexual” (Now that’s news to us!):
    [Mitt Romney] is a big time pro-homosexual supporter to the point he will keep open homosexuality in the military; he wants homosexuals in the Boy Scouts; and he wants more open homosexuals in the Republican Party.”
    McTernan previously blamed the gays for Hurricane Isaac, linking its arrival to the annual Southern Decadence celebration in New Orleans.

    Remember Leon Purvis, the 16-year-old New Jersey student who asked Justin Bieber to his junior prom? Well, J-Bieb didn’t go, but his manager, Scooter Braun, has extended a special VIP invitation to Purvis (now 17), including two meet-and-greet passes and free tickets to Bieber’s November 4 show in Philadelphia.
    Dreams really do come true—eventually.
    Last year, when Purvis sent out the call, he asked “Justin Bieber, would you like to come to my prom with me? Not as a date—just as a friend, as a brother.”

    Lou Rispoli, a respected and beloved gay rights advocate in the Sunnyside neighborhood of Queens, was attacked by two men in the early morning of October 20. Openly gay City Councilman Jimmy Van Bramer announced that Rispoli was taken off of life support on October 26. He was 62. The victim was struck in the head with a blunt object, the sound of which neighbors mistook for a gunshot. The two assailants are described as being in their 20s and may have emerged from a car with Rispoli, according to an eyewitness. It is not yet known whether Rispoli knew the men or if the attack was a hate crime based on his homosexuality.
    Rispoli married his partner of 31 years in 2011. The two met on the subway in 1980 and raised two daughters. Mark Horn, a longtime friend of Rispoli, told Gay City News:
    [T]hat even before there was God’s Love We Deliver, Rispoli was cooking meals and delivering them to people with AIDS in the neighborhood. Rispoli’s involvement in LGBT rights went back to the Gay Academic Union in the 1970s. He was also secretary to the legendary out gay composer Virgil Thomson for many years.
    “Lou was a proud gay man,” Van Bramer said. “He fought for full equality for our community. But I don’t know if he was attacked because he was a gay man. This is a good and safe neighborhood where gay men and lesbians can walk the streets and be who they are.”
    The mayor’s office and the NYPD is offering a $22,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the person or persons responsible for Rispoli’s death. Anyone with information about the attack is urged to call the NYPD’s Crime Stoppers Hotline at 800-577-TIPS, submit tips at nypdcrimestoppers.com, or text those tips to 274637 (CRIMES), then enter TIP577.

    A Jamaican gay rights advocacy group is challenging the nation’s colonial-era “buggery” laws as being unconstitutional and promoting homophobic violence. The Offences Against Persons Act of 1864 – commonly known as the “buggery laws” – does not formally ban homosexuality but does stipulate up to 10 years in prison, with or without hard labor, for anyone convicted of the “abominable crime of buggery committed either with mankind or any animal.” The law also outlaws attempted buggery and gross indecency between two men.
    Jamaica has one of the highest murder rates in the world and according to Dane Lewis, Executive Director of the Jamaica Forum of Lesbians, All-Sexuals and Gays (J-FLAG), murders of gay men are increasing.
    “This year alone there have been nine [murders],” he told The Guardian. “The violence in Jamaica is having a spillover effect on other parts of the Caribbean: St Lucia now has a murder or so every year.”
    In 2009, John Terry, the British honorary consul in Montego Bay, was found beaten and strangled to death with a note attached to his body: “This is what will happen to all gays.”
    While it was uniting its kingdom, the British entrenched “buggery laws” into its colonies, many of which remain in some form. “Today, 42 of the 54 nations of the Commonwealth criminalize same-sex relations,” said the Conservative Lord Lexden at a House of Lords debate last week, noting homophobia as a legacy of the British empire.
    JFLAG is trying to rectify that legacy in Jamaica with the help of the UK’s Human Dignity Trust. Together, they will challenge the Offenses Against Persons Act in the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights. Jamaica is not a full member of the commission therefore any ruling would only be advisory and not binding, but would send out a strong signal of international disapproval.
    .
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    A gay couple in Texas who found anti-gay grafitti on their house say that things only got worse after the local media picked up their story. After finding “leave fags or die” scrawled on the wall of their Clarendon, TX, home, Jeremy Jeffers and Joshua Harrison initially went to the police—but soon felt ignored: “[The officers] walked around and took our statement,” Jeffers says. “But they didn’t offer to set up a patrol or bother to ask any questions around the neighborhood.
    The men said they went to the media because “people might be aware of what happened, [and] would be hesitant to physically attack us.” The glare of the camera did raise awareness about their plight, but not in a good way.
    LGBTQ Nation reports:
    Since word of the media’s involvement spread, the local cleaning service where Harrison worked began losing clients, resulting in loss of employment for Harrison. Additionally, the couple says they’d been refused service at some local establishments and verbally assaulted at others.
    Fortunately, the LGBT blog Owldolatrous Press, stepped in with more than $2,600 in donations from across the nation, and Equality Texas is pitching him to help Jeffers and Harrison find work and a new home in gay-friendlier Amarillo. “For a while I was wondering if we were really a community or a family anymore,” says Jeffers. “It’s nice to know that we’re not alone.”
    It’s nice to hear an ugly story with a happy ending.






    This election cycle is so nasty, even members of the same party are at each others’ throats. In a mailer that went out to voters in Los Angeles’ 27th District, supporters of Rep. Brad Sherman bash opponent Howard Berman for being too lefty. He tried to convey this by including ominous shots of Sen. Barbara Boxer and Representatives Maxine Waters and Barney Frank.
    As Buzzfeed reports, some feel the inclusion was fear-mongering, using Waters and Frank to stir up racist and homophobic sentiment. (Boxer is also known as a staunch supporter of the environment and women’s rights.)
    For years, Republicans have used all three politicians as bogeymen of the left in advertisements and speeches to motivate conservative voters.
    But their inclusion in a mailer backing Democratic candidate has raised eyebrows in Democratic circles, and drew a sharp rebuke from Berman’s camp.
    “We were shocked to see a mailer like this. We find it offensive,” said Brandon Hall, a senior Berman advisor.
    Beneath this “hit list,” Sherman rattles off the local Republican politicos who have endorsed him, including State Assemblyman Cameron Smyth and L.A. City Council members Mitch Englander and Dennis Zine.
    Um, is that supposed to win you votes? We get that you’re trying to show that you can reach across the aisle, but you’re a Democrat and your voter base is Democratic. Showing how the GOP just loooves you—and giving the finger to your party leaders—might not be the way to go.
    Ironically, the ad was paid for by a group calling itself Californians for Integrity in Government.


    Full story here: http://www.queerty.com/ca-democrat-u...#ixzz2AoIvdXCw

    On Halloween night, Reverend Bob Larson will be the star of his own Lifetime Television reality show, The Real Exorcist, which follows Larson as he rids hapless souls of evil demons. Larson has already shilled his spiritual snake oil everywhere from Oprah and Anderson Cooper to SyFy Channel.
    Normally we’d rank this with paranormal-investigation shows and forget about it—but a rather chilling clip has surfaced of Larson performing an exorcism on man beset by a “gay” demon.
    After getting his subject to “admit” he committed homosexual acts, Larson repels the incubus, who sounds suspiciously like a *****y drag queen we once knew in Baltimore. In honesty, though, we can’t really laugh at this ridiculous charade, knowing there are thousands of gays and lesbians subject to similar experiences against their will.
    Once the exorcism is over, Larson addresses his audience: “I pray in the name of Jesus for those who may be battling sexual feelings of lust and pornography and lesbianism and homosexuality.”
    Isn’t Lifetime the network for women and gay men? Don’t they air Project Runway, Dance Moms and Drop Dead Diva? Who do they think is watching this stuff—not Pentecostal Christians who think Heidi Klum is the Whore of Babylon.
    Maybe Lifetime is just keeping Larson on retainer to exorcise the demons from Liz & Dick star Lindsay Lohan?
    P.S: See source for video


    "Of the five legs shown thus far, four have been in Muslim countries and homosexuality is illegal in every country we’d visited or passed through. Since we are guests in these countries, we chose to not embrace or kiss for practical and respectful reasons.”
    “We were literally relying on the kindness of strangers and cab drivers and challenging their beliefs would not have been strategically smart nor neighborly. To be completely fair, perhaps many of the great people we met along the way wouldn’t have had any issues with our relationship. But unfortunately, we didn’t have the time to get to know them better personally.”



    Josh Kilmer-Purcell and Brent Ridge, aka The Fabulous Beekman Boys, took to their Facebook to explain why they’re not as affectionate as other couples on The Amazing Race, via Gay Star News.
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    Openly gay Republican Carl DeMaio has gotten little love from the San Diego LGBT community in his mayoral race with openly straight Democrat Bob Filner. DeMaio has been notoriously quiet on LGBT issues and has accepted campaign donations from supporters of Proposition 8, which banned same-sex marriage in California. While former Mayor Jerry Sanders campaigned aggressively against Prop 8 four years ago, DeMaio reained silent on the issue as he ran for City Council in a conservative district. Though DeMaio has since stated his support for gay marriage, he has insisted that gay rights would not be a priority as mayor.
    “I’m proud of San Diego that sexual orientation has not played an issue in this race,” DeMaio told The New York Times. “I’ve been running on fiscal reforms and prosperity to create jobs. That’s the agenda that I think has brought so many diverse groups together.”
    But for the queer community in San Diego, it is an issue. DeMaio was booed at a debate at the city’s LGBT center and he and his partner were booed as they walked hand-in-hand at this year’s pride parade. While DeMaio claims that only a small minority of gay voters are so vocally opposed to him, the nonpartisan Gay & Lesbian Victory Fund has not endorsed him and even the Romney-loving Log Cabin Republicans initially endorsed another candidate.
    Among conservatives, however, DeMaio is making major headway. “Carl’s been embraced by just about everyone,” said Tony Krvaric, chairman of San Diego’s Republican Party, which endorsed DeMaio over two other GOP candidates. “He has a lot in common with a lot of people on the fiscally conservative side.”
    Filner, an outspoken gay rights advocate, has been pressing the gay issue in what has become an unsurprisingly bitter campaign. After criticizing DeMaio’s partner, the publisher of San Diego Gay & Lesbian News, Filner was accused of trying to draw attention to his opponent’s homosexuality in order to dissuade the socially conservative from voting for him.
    Nevertheless, many LGBT leaders have thrown their support behind Filner. “For Carl DeMaio to be elected mayor would not be a victory for gay and lesbian people,” said lesbian activist and organizer Linda Perine. “It would be a defeat.”





    After the Supreme Court announced that it would consider whether to grant review in Hollingsworth v. Perry (formerly Perry v. Brown), the federal constitutional challenge to California’s Proposition 8, the American Foundationn for Equal Rights created a helpful and informative infographic explaining the journey of the Prop 8 case to date, as well as potential outcomes of the Supreme Court’s review of Perry. You can view the full infographic here.


    Full story here: http://www.queerty.com/photo-america...#ixzz2AoJlvs71

    Season 3 of The Walking Dead has taken off like a shot, but the queer blog Back2Stonewall is ticked that the series has yet to incorporate any gay characters, even though some appear in the comic book it’s based on.
    Considering the veritable United Nations of characters that have been seen on The Walking Dead over the past three seasons it’s becoming a glaring omission and sad fact there has not been one LGBT character on this show up till now.
    Invisibility on television is a major problem for the LGBT Community and both TV and movies need to learn that a characters sexuality is an aside, a trait like being left-handed or having blue eyes and should be presented and treated as such and not som ething to fear presenting.
    LGBT viewers of The Walking Dead and television in general deserve much better. Better characters, better representation, and better advocating for such by concerned individuals and organizations.”
    While the character of Andrew, a prison inmate, has appeared in the first two episodes of Season Three, his lover Dexter is nowhere to be seen.
    Pop-culture blogger NerdReactor, says that it’s not homophobia at work, just time constraints:
    “The show literally blows right pass 95 pages in the comic in one episode, nixing many other storylines… As owner of a few Walking Dead hardbacks, I know the prison story starts in Book 2 and ends after Book 4. The entire first two seasons take place in Book 1 alone. That’s a lot of story.”
    What do you think? And don’t say “Braaaaains!”

    Kyle Wood, the openly gay campaign worker for Republican Congressional nominee Chad Lee, has denied being attacked in his home on October 24 as a result of his sexuality and political views. Captain Joe Balles confirmed to The Isthmus Daily Page that Wood had indeed recanted his story, but would not go into greater detail about the case. Balles updated the incident report late Monday afternoon, noting it was “imperative” to “get something out there because of the politically charged background this was happening in.”
    Jimmy LaSalvia, co-founder of gay Republican group, GOProud, had previously condemned the attack on Kyle Wood as “hate and vitriol directed towards a gay conservative from gay liberals.” Wood claimed he was victimized for opposing openly gay Democratic candidate, Mark Pocan, further alleging that Pocan’s husband, Philip Frank, had sent a series of threatening and “sexually-charged” text messages to Wood prior to his attack.
    Conservative website Media Trackers had originally reported on these texts in a story titled, “Mark Pocan’s Husband Told Beaten GOP Operative ‘You’re A Marked Man,’ Threatened and Harassed Via Text Message,” though the headline now reads, “Allegations Fly in Beating of Gay GOP Volunteer,” with the majority of the story, including the texts, removed. However, Red Alert Politics reports:
    After mocking Wood for supporting the Republican candidate, Frank wrote, “Remember your station in life and remember not to cross the husband of a powerful man. You are on shaky footing as it is, push much farther and you won’t have a future in this town, or any other.”
    But according to Capt. Balles, those text messages “did not occur,” though he refused to elaborate further. Pocan and Frank are now considering legal action against Wood. Pocan’s campaign manager, Dan McNally, said in a statement: “These allegations are completely false. These text messages are fabricated and we’ve referred this matter to Madison police. We are currently in discussions with an attorney and intend to sue for libel or defamation.”
    Balles and the Madison police, after doing their due diligence, will discuss whether any charges will be filed against Wood with the district attorney office.
    Since this couldn’t come at a worse time for Chad Lee, what with the Election just days away and Pocan already heavily favored to win, who’s willing to wage that LaSalvia and GOProud will make a statement denouncing Kyle Wood as a liberal spy in the house of Lee who had planned to bring down that political machine from day one. Ten bucks, who’s taking it?
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    In July Mark Regnerus, a sociology professor at the University of Texas-Austin released a study that claimed the adult children of gays and lesbians were more likely to get involved with drugs, get divorced and be depressed than grown kids raised in heterosexual families. In “The New Family Structure Study,” Regnerus asked 3,000 adults ages 18-39 (including 248 with parents in a gay relationship) questions about their income levels, mental and physical health, romantic relationships and other markers.
    Social scientists and LGBT activists raised red flags from the get-go: Regnerus, whose work was published in the journal Social Science Research, only examined people who had a parent in a gay relationship at some point—not necessarily while they were children. And he didn’t ask subjects to specify if the gay parent was in a stable relationship through their childhood.
    “The two million kids being raised by one million gay parents in this country are doing great,” said Freedom to Marry President Evan Wolfson. “And [they] would do even better if their parents didn’t have to deal with legal discrimination, such as the denial of the freedom to marry, and ongoing attacks such as this kind of pseudo-scientific misinformation and the disinformation agenda that’s funding it.”
    Regnerus is known for spouting ultra-conservative ideology and his study was funded by the Witherspoon Institute, a conservative think tank with ties to the Family Research Council and the National Organization for Marriage.
    But now even he admits there are flaws in his research. ThinkProgress pulled up an interview Regnerus did with anti-gay group Focus on the Family, where he explained:
    I’d be more careful about the language I used to describe people whose parents had same-sex relationships. I said ‘lesbian mothers’ and ‘gay fathers,’ when in fact, I don’t know about their sexual orientation—I do know about their same-sex relationship behavior. But as far as the findings themselves, I stand behind them.
    Regnerus also confesses he didn’t try to dissect the children’s concept of their parent’s sexuality because, “self-identity is a different kind of thing than behavior, and lot of people weren’t out in that era.
    Despite these faults, Regnerus’ study has been used repeatedly by anti-equality hate groups like Focus on the Family and NOM. It was even used as evidence in a federal marriage-equality case.
    The University of Texas started an investigation on Regnerus for scientific misconduct but ultimately exonerated him, claiming it considered the matter closed.
    Blogger Scott Rose, whose reporting prompted the investigation, hinted in a comment on the Advocate that he felt the school was covering its ass.
    [The University of Texas-Austin] is in on this research hoax, along with Regnerus and his funders.
    I made a Public Information Act request for Regnerus’ study-related communications between David Ochsner—a UT Director of Public Affairs—and any person, about the Regnerus study. UT then sent a letter to the Texas Attorney General, asking for exceptions to my document requests. In that letter, UT describes itself as being a co-investor in the study. And UT tells the Attorney General that Regnerus and UT administration strategized on spin about the study, before it was released. The school anticipated negative reactions and was afraid for UT’s “branding.”
    UT officials were not just prepared to answer questions about the research. They knew that the project had been funded by vile bigots with a history of distorting the scientific record for use as a weapon against gays.
    What do you think? Should the school start another investigation? Pull his tenure? Demand a retraction? Sound off in the comments section below.
    Failed presidential candidate Mike Huckabee is using some pretty thinly veiled language to scare voters into making the “right” (in both sense of the words) choice next week.
    Above, Huckabee babbles about eternal judgment and values that “stand the test of fire.” This guy was actually a mainstream contender for the highest office in the land, people!
    Many issues are at stake, but some issues are not negotiable: The right to life from conception to natural death. Marriage should be reinforced, not redefined. It is an egregious violation of our cherished principle of religious liberty for the government to force the Church to buy the kind of insurance that leads to the taking of innocent human life.
    Your vote will affect the future and be recorded in eternity. Will you vote the values that will stand the test of fire? This is Mike Huckabee asking you to join me November 6th and vote based on values that will stand the test of fire.
    However, Huckabee didn’t suggest women should not be allowed to vote—that’s one of those inconvenient biblical values reactionaries don’t like to bring up.
    Representative Judy Biggert (R-IL) thought she’d borrow a page from President Obama and explain she “grapples” with same-sex marriage. The problem is, the President moved beyond that point—coming out in favor of marriage equality—and Biggert, a Republican, hasn’t.
    And Chicago’s LGBT community is upset Biggert, 75, accepted a $500,000 donation from American Unity PAC, founded by hedge-fund billionaire Paul Singer to push for marriage equality, but is still skittish.
    In a press conference after a debate with Democratic opponent Bill Foster, Biggert said she was still on the fence about gay marriage—then compared it to bigamy and polygamy.
    “Let’s wait and see what the courts have to say. It is a state issue—we don’t have polygamy and bigamy and all of these things in the federal government. It’s the states that take care of that, and I’ve worked in this realm with the estate planning.”
    But Biggert said she understood the sting of discrimination:
    “I was discriminated against when I went to law school. I was told I was taking the place of someone who belonged there—a man. From that point, I don’t want to see discrimination against anyone.”
    After initially opposing same-sex marriage, Foster has come around to our side. About Biggert, he told the Tribune:
    “She has not yet evolved. So, she’s crawling out of the swamp or something… I’m all dry, fluffed off and happy to be a hominid.”
    On Friday, Biggert’s campaign issued a statement:
    “Like many Americans, the Congresswoman grapples with the idea of marriage for same-sex couples. The point she was making in the debate is that states – not the federal government – give out marriage licenses and make the determination about parameters for marriage, like they do for example in terms of age.
    The reference to polygamy and bigamy were in that context and she certainly did not mean to make a comparison between that and loving same-sex couples. She remains committed to the LGBT community and opposes efforts to write discrimination into the Constitution to take rights away from people.”
    Oh well that makes it so much better!
    Biggert’s not an archenemy—she received a 70 on HRC’s Congressional Score Card, supports ENDA and voted to give benefits to partners of LGBT federal employees.
    But the reality is, once upon a time even well-meaning people could dodge supporting full marriage equality for gays and lesbians. No major one was really endorsing it, and it wasn’t a litmus test. You could just announce you’re “grappling” or “evolving”—when what you really meants was, “Ask me again when the zeitgest has shifted.”
    Well it’s happened—it is happening—and now sitting on the fence can feel like worse than standing against us.
    Natural disasters are like meth for religious fanatics. As soon as lives are ruined, property destroyed, people killed they spark up and start spouting that meth-addled rigmarole. And the Westboro Baptist Church is getting crazy high on Hurricane Sandy. The Huffington Post reports:
    Shirley Phelps-Roper, daughter of Westboro pastor Fred Phelps, has spewed a series of tweets about Hurricane Sandy since the storm first brewed in the Caribbean last week. “God sent the whirlwind. #ThankGodForRighteousJudgment,” Phelps-Roper tweeted after deaths were announced in Cuba.
    She went on to target specific states in Sandy’s path, including Connecticut and Delaware, both of which have legalized same-sex marriage. The Westboro Baptist Church, an independent Baptist church based in Topeka, Kan., is infamous for protesting funerals of members of the armed forces because gays are allowed to serve.
    The Westboro heir described Hurricane Sandy as the “wrath from God hangs over NY and Doomed USA like a Sword or Damocles.” She also mentioned the Hawaii tsunami and a Nebraska wildfire as signs from God.
    So far, Sandy has left at least 69 people dead in the Caribbean and 33 dead in the U.S. with an expected $35 to $55 billion in damages to the economy. What better time, then, for Phelps-Roper to hop on the batshit bandwagon with fellow loving Christian John McTernan in rejoicing over the gays finally – FINALLY - feeling God’s righteous vengeance yadda yadda see you in hell.
    "It’s unbelievable to me that people’s lives and relationships are literally being voted on in a matter of days. In Maine, Maryland, Minnesota and Washington, voters will go to the polls to decide if gay and lesbian couples – our friends and neighbors – are worthy of the same protections as everyone else. But that’s the system we have and I’m not going to back down from the fight for loving and committed couples to have the ability to marry. Especially when groups like the Human Rights Campaign are fighting these battles day-in and day-out. So, here’s what I’m going to do. If you make a contribution to these ballot measure campaigns in the next 24 hours, I’ll double it – every dollar of the way, up to $100,000.”
    Noted perfume pusher Brad Pitt lends a helping hand to the Human Rights Campaign.
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    In Minnesota, the battle over a proposed amendment that would ban same-sex marriage has become the most expensive constitutional amendment campaign in the state’s history, with both sides raising a combined $16 million. According to the San Francisco Chronicle:
    Minnesotans United for All Families raised about $3 million from Sept. 19 to Oct. 22, and has received about $536,000 in contributions since. That brings the total haul for the opponents of the marriage ban to more than $11 million since forming in 2011.
    Minnesota for Marriage raised about $2.4 million from Sept. 19 to Oct. 22, and took in another $692,000 since. In all, Minnesota for Marriage has collected about $5.1 million.
    The majority of Minnesotans United’s largess comes from over 62,000 individual, mostly in-state, donations, though New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg recently donated $125,000 to the effort. The pro-equality group reported about $309,000 left of their funds, with donations still flowing in.
    Minnesota for Marriage received over $1 million from Minnesota’s six Catholic dioceses, $100,000 of which was received this week. Conservative group, the Minnesota Family Council donated $500,000 last week, on top of $476,000 in previous donations. Minnesota for Marriage did not report what money they still had on-hand.
    Both organizations have used the bulk of their cash cache to pollute the airwaves with ads for the amendment and subsequently wash the lies away with ads against it. Though gay marriage won’t be legalized whether the amendment gets passed or not, Minnesotans United maintained that “the constitution shouldn’t be used to deny rights to loving couples who want to get married, regardless of gender.”
    If you’d like to give Minnesotans United for All Families an extra push in this, the final week before Election Day, click here to donate.

    Since the 2008 election, self-described gay geek Nate Silver has emerged as the go-to guy for spot-on poll analysis and election predictions. But, apparently, he’s so prescient he ticked off a right-wing blogger, who attacked him for being too “effeminate” and “soft-sounding” after Silver predicted a likely Obama win next week.
    On October 25 Dean Chambers of Unskewed Polls wrote “The Far Left Turns to Nate Silver for Wisdom on the Polls” for Examiner.com, in which he lambasted our number-crunching dreamboat as “a thin and effeminate man with a soft-sounding voice.” He also suggested Silver could be a eunuch.
    Nate Silver is a man of very small stature, a thin and effeminate man with a soft-sounding voice that sounds almost exactly like the “Mr. New Castrati” voice used by Rush Limbaugh on his program.
    In fact, Silver could easily be the poster child for the New Castrati in both image and sound. Nate Silver, like most liberal and leftist celebrities and favorites, might be of average intelligence but is surely not the genius he’s made out to be. His political analyses are average at best and his projections, at least this year, are extremely biased in favor of the Democrats.
    In another post, Chambers made his own prediction that Romney would win the White House by 54% of the popular vote and as many as 359 electoral votes.
    He also took another opportunity to piss on Silver’s boots:
    Before this year I had never heard of Nate Silver, but I don’t read the New York Times (it’s useless) and I don’t have a bird or need to line a cage with the paper. Nor do I waste my time reading the rantings of insane moonbats and other assorted America-hating leftists at sites like Democrat Underground or The Daily Kos.
    Silver started his political analysis at Daily Kos.
    Chambers’s site, part of a larger network of reactionary blogs, “interprets” poll data that’s been skew by the media or lefty pollsters and makes it more palatable to gun nuts, homophobes and various mouthbreathers.
    This is what his site looks like:

    Silver invented a wildly successful baseball-stats system at age 23. He then founded the blog FiveThirtyEight, now owned by the New York Times, where he correctly predicted the popular vote in the 2008 presidential election within one percent, predicted the outcome in 49 out of 50 states, and accurately predicted all of the Senate races that cycle. He was named one of Time’s 100 Most Influential People in the World in 2009.
    In other words, he’s not sweating Chambers’ dis.
    On Twitter, Silver recently posted about the description, writing, “Per http://unskwedpolls.com, I am ‘a thin and effeminate man’ & therefore not to be trusted. Unskewedpolls argument: Nate Silver seems kinda gay + ??? = Romney landslide!”
    We’ll stick with our guy.

    Rosario Crocetta, of the left-leaning Italian Partito Democratico, became the first openly gay governor of Sicily following his election last Sunday. Crocetta was the first openly gay mayor in Italy after he was outed during his run for office in Gela by his right-wing opponent in 2003. Crocetta, however, is Italy’s second openly gay governor, after Nichi Vendola, who was elected governor of Apulia in 2005 and is positioned to become the next leader of Italy as head of the Left Ecology Party.
    Despite being openly gay, according to Gay Star News, LGBT rights won’t be a focus for Crocetta, who says “chastity is the best way of life for a politician”:
    He won the election leading a coalition with the Union of Christian Democrats, a centrist party very close to the Catholic Church. And during the electoral campaign, Crocetta reassured his allies, saying: ‘In case of victory, I will say goodbye to sex and sexuality, I’ll be married only to Sicily and to Sicilians’.
    The new governor won Sicily’s election with more than 30% of the votes, defeating the right-wing Popolo delle Libertà, which has governed the Italian island for the last decade. Funny enough, Crocetta’s own party, Partito Democratico, didn’t want him representing them in his 2003 mayoral run because he was gay.
    But since he was “chaste,” at the time, we guess they got over it.

    Anderson Cooper made international headlines when he came out this summer, but we’ll soon be seeing less of him: His struggling talk show, Anderson Live, is being canceled after the end of its second and current season. The New York Times reports low ratings are to blame, despite a major retooling over the summer. “I am very proud of the work that our terrific staff has put into launching and sustaining our show for two seasons,” said Cooper, who will still be seen on CNN’s Anderson Cooper 360. “I look forward to doing more great shows this season, and though I’m sorry we won’t be continuing, I have truly enjoyed it.”
    In a statement Warner Bros said it was “extremely proud of Anderson and the show that he and the entire production team have produced,” but that the syndicated show was the victim of “a marketplace that has become increasingly difficult to break through.”
    Earlier this fall, the Silver Fox lashed out at former talk-show host Star Jones, who quipped his coming out was a ratings ploy. ““If I was wanting to boost ratings, I would have waited to announce it on ‘A Very Special Episode’ that would have been promo’d for weeks and weeks,” Cooper groused. “And there would have been commercials [for] ‘Anderson’s Huge Announcement!”
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