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Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Second-Degree Murder Conviction for John Katehis

John Katehis, seen in a posting to his MySpace page, was convicted of second-degree murder. (MYSPACE.COM)

Second-Degree Murder Conviction for John Katehis

Jury finds defendant guilty of top charge in 2009 Brooklyn killing of George Weber

Published: Tuesday, November 15, 2011 7:00 PM CST
BY DUNCAN OSBORNE 
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A Brooklyn jury quickly found John Katehis guilty of second-degree murder in the 2009 killing of George Weber, a journalist and gay man.

“The way Nicolazzi was putting it, she was making it like he was a murderer,” said Spiro Katehis, John’s father, outside of Brooklyn Supreme Court following the November 15 verdict.

Anna-Sigga Nicolazzi, the assistant district attorney who prosecuted the case, delivered an effective closing argument on November 14, telling jurors that Katehis, now 19, may have planned Weber’s murder and perhaps even tortured the 47-year-old victim before killing him.

Nicolazzi declined to comment in the wake of the verdict’s announcement.

Jurors began deliberating around noon on the 14th and announced they had a verdict by 3 p.m. on November 15. During their deliberations, they reviewed parts of the judge’s instructions to them and a few pieces of evidence. The speed of their verdict suggests they easily adopted the prosecution’s theory.

Katehis, who was 16 when he stabbed Weber 50 times, placed an ad on Craigslist in March of 2009 offering oral sex for money. The two men corresponded via email over several days, with Weber seeking to be tied up and smothered, an act that Katehis agreed to. The two met in Weber’s Carroll Gardens apartment after Katehis traveled there from his parents’ home in Queens.


Nicolazzi had a great deal of physical evidence and Katehis’ statements to police to use. Both the defense and the prosecution told jurors that those statements were a mix of truth and lies. The two sides could only make inferences as to much of what actually transpired in Weber’s apartment.

Nicolazzi told jurors that the evidence suggested that Weber’s hands were bound when Katehis began his attack. She noted that Weber had knife wounds on both hands, which suggested he was defending himself, while Katehis had wounds only on his right hand, indicating he was injured when the knife slipped as he was stabbing Weber.

In his defense, Katehis argued that Weber gave him cocaine and alcohol. The drugs made him feel “jumpy,” he said in statements to police. Tests on blood drawn from Katehis within hours of the attack found no controlled substances or measurable amounts of alcohol, nor was any cocaine found in Weber’s apartment.

After he bound Weber’s feet with duct tape, Katehis said, Weber displayed a knife and he panicked. The two struggled over the knife, and Katehis said he accidentally stabbed Weber once in the throat. Katehis had a knife collection and was known to regularly carry knives.

Katehis’ attorney, Jay Cohen, called Weber a “pedophile” repeatedly during the trial. New York’s age of consent is 17. Cohen argued that his client may have been defending himself from Weber or that he acted in a panic after Weber asked him to do something that made him “uncomfortable.”


Katehis’ first trial ended in a hung jury, with 11 jurors voting to convict him and one holding out for acquittal. Jurors in the first trial had a single second-degree murder count to weigh. In the second trial, jurors considered murder and first-degree manslaughter.

“I really made a pitch for them to convict him of manslaughter,” Cohen said.

Second-degree murder carries a maximum sentence of 25-years-to-life. Katehis will be sentenced on December 7.

Same sex relations in th early indian diaspora

Its often been noted that homosexuality wasn't seen as a heinious crime in India until the British came along and made it so.

I'm not sure its quite right to extrapolate from that that ancient India was a gay paradise. There are certainly references in the laws of Manu which disapprove of non-reproductive sex of any kind - a position that can be understood in tribal societies where building up your numbers was a matter of survival.

But it does seem like same sex relations weren't seen as such a terrible thing and some historical corroboration of this has been emerging. For example there's the work of Nayan Shah, a historian based in California who has found fascinating cases of prosecutions for homosexuality involving early migrants from the subcontinent to the West Coast of the USA.

These migrants were usually Punjabi farmers who went to work in the fertile fields of California. Only the men went, with wives being brought over only much later, until that was stopped by racist laws that wanted to restrict non-white immigration into the US. (The Punjabi men who were already there ended up marrying Mexican women, leading to a fascinating Punjabi-Mexican community).

Its not surprising though that some of these men ended up having sex with other men, presumably with each other, but also with white men which is proven by the cases that were discovered and prosecuted (all involving white men). What is particularly interesting, given how the Baba Ramdevs and others go on about how this is a Western vice coming into India, is how the papers at that time reported this as examples of "Oriental depravity" that was tainting American values!

What's also interesting though is some of the statements that Shah uncovered in the transcripts of the trial. Some of the Punjabi men couldn't believe they were being prosecuted in this way for something they clearly saw as so harmless. Again, one should be cautious in taking this as a gay pride statement, but it does show that the shame and horror attached to homosexuality in the West wasn't there in India at that time.

I can't find a full copy of Shah's paper online, but here's a link to a summary:
http://muse.jhu.edu/login?uri=/journals/american_quarterly/v057/57.3shah.html

And here's some more material from a different, rather sadder part of the diaspora story - from the indentured workers who went from places like Bihar and Bengal to the Caribbean (for those who are following Amitav Ghsh's Ibis trilogy this general story will be familiar).

Gaiutra Bahadur, a Guyanese scholar who is the descendent of such indentured workers, has been trying to find out more about their story. In particular she is interested in the stories of the women who went as indentued workers and part of what she has written was recently published in The Caravan. Here's a link - its not of specific queer interest, but well worth reading:
http://www.caravanmagazine.in/Story/1058/Her-Middle-Passage.html

In the course of her research though, Bahadur has also uncovered accounts of labourers who were found to be having same sex relations with each other. Again, its not clear if these came from deeper feelings, or were just situational sex, but the salient point is how harshly they were treated by the authorities. The story of the punishments they were given make for disturbing reading, so be warned.

(Tip of the hat to Siddharth Narrain for sending the material to me):

[Dear colleagues
The Caribbean IRN has received this report. It records the brutality meted out as punishment to 'maintain discipline'
Yours
Vidya

Between 1838 and 1917, the British embarked on bringing indentured labour from India to the then British Guiana.
This 1898 report from the Governor of British Guiana to the Colonial Office in England reports on the punishment meted out by the Surgeon Superintendent of the Mersey against two men Nabi Baksh and Mohangoo for committing sodomy.
"Nobibux was put in irons and Mohangu, after blistering his penis, was made to holystone from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily." The surgeon superintendent said that he had "known of cases where the penis had been blistered, as a prevention treatment, in cases of Masturbation with boys"
When the ship docked in British Guiana, there was an investigation which included testimony from others on the ship.
This report was donated by Gaiutra Bahadur. Ms Bahadur got the report from the Colonial Office Correspondence books at the UK National Archives at Kew, United Kingdom while doingresearch for her soon to be published book "Coolie Woman" "Coolie Woman" is scheduled to be published in 2012 by The University of Chicago Press in the US and Hurst & Co. in the UK. An excerpt from the book first appeared in the Spring 2011 issue of the U.S. literary magazine The Virginia Quarterly Review (http://www.vqronline.org/articles/2011/spring/bahadur-coolie/) and was then reprinted in India in the Sept. 2011 issue of The Caravan magazine. The whole excerpt is up at the Caravan's Web site: http://www.caravanmagazine.in/Story/1058/Her-Middle-Passage.html
Gaiutra Bahadur shared her notes from the report which consisted of a mix of handwritten and typescript pages].

Notes from the Report
Mersey arrived October 31, 1898
Dr. Arthur Harrison, Surgeon Superintendent (SS)
G.H. Rock, Captain
September 25: "No 696, Nobibux, m., 20 years, and No 351 Mohangu, m, 22 years, were caught about midnight by a sirdar named Rambocus committing sodomy. When brought up before the Captain and myself they both confessed their guilt. Nobibux stated that for the last ten years he had allowed men to commit acts of beastliness: he had no doubt induced Mohangu to do this criminal act. Nobibux was put in irons and Mohangu, after blistering his penis, was made to holystone [scrub the decks] from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily." [latitude 35.17 s. and longitude 22.10 e.]

[nobibux handcuffed every night from sept 25 to landing on oct 31, as was a man who had jumped overboard and was rescued]

criminal charges brought against two immigrants; in CO marginalia, discussion over the legality of the punishment and doubt expressed over whether there was any sodomy committed at all; indication there wasn't enough proof to prosecute: "the men should have been put in confinement and tried in British Guiana for an offense committed on the high seas on board a British vessel..."; fine the surgeon but should he be barred from re-employment?

inspector general of police investigated; attorney general decided not to prosecute; IAG criticizes SS for punishing the two without fully and carefully enquiring into the case. violated Rule 165 relating to colonial emigration, which strictly prohibits harsh treatment of the people

Arthur Harrison, SS, states on November 4, 1898:

[on 25th Sept, when near the Cape of Good Hope, his compounder Abdul Wahed reported to him at 8 a.m. that he heard two men had committed sodomy during the night. he told the compounder to take the men to the hospital, where he would question them.]

[witness, the sirdar Rambuccus, brought in with the two men. questioned in front of them, he said that he was on watch in between decks at midnight and "saw something unusual between these two men, they being under one blanket; he pulled off the blanket and saw them
committing sodomy." he called the head sirdar at once. the prisoners denied it to the head sirdar but then later confessed. they were left in the charge of the hear sirdar for the rest of the night. captain also present at inquiry. while Rambuccus was giving this testimony,
neither prisoner said anything.]

[the head sirdar Salikram is then questioned. confirms being called as above. says he separated the men and "asked them why they were doing this wrong thing, that they at first denied it and afterwards they confessed they did it for pleasure."]

[when questioned by SS, men at once confessed. Nabibux: "I have done it." Mohungu said same, "as far as I can remember. I cannot remember the words they used in confessing." Nabibux placed in irons fastened to a stanchion in the hospital. Mohangu placed in hospital and ordered to holystone from 6 a.m to 6 p.m. "I blistered the penis of Mohungu. I
did so as a punishment as I thought he deserved it." did this right after enquiry concluded. the captain knew Harrison did this. "Mohungu was the man who committed the act on Nabibuccus. I blistered him as a preventitive, as he might have attempted the act again. I have known
cases where the penis has been blistered as a preventitive treatment, in case of masturbation with boys."]

[says he didn't see it as a crime committed against the laws of England, but "as a matter of discipline on board ship"; didn't examine their private parts for evidence]

"Since this all occurred, it has come to my knowlegde that the head sirdar had threatend the two men to make them confess. Since I heard this, I have questioned them. Both denied the act and said Salikram had threatened to make them confess.

My compounder's name is Abdul Wahed. I have heard from him since that the man Rambuccus who caught them had a spite against one of the men, owing to something that had occurred in the country Depot in India."

ABDUL WAHED, THE CHIEF COMPOUNDER, STATES:

[the inquiry occurred at about 8:30 p.m. on the 25th Sept.]
"I heard Mohungu say he had put his penis in Nabibux' anus, and some days afterwards both men said to me that Rambux and Salikram had threatened to beat them throughout the voyage if they did not confess to having committed the sodomy."
"Nabibux told me that he and Rambux had had a row in the Fizabad depot and he told me that Rambux had a spite against him." [the prisoners were under his charge in the hospital]
[doesn't know what the depot quarrel was about. didn't ask. never noticed any ill feeling between Rambux and any of the men before this happened. never noticed Mohangu and Nabibux to be much in each other's company]

RAMBUCCUS

[an Ahir. says he knew Nabibuccus for a month in the Fyzabad depot,
where he was a sirdar]

"The men were under a platform sleeping. There were other coolies sleeping there too. The men were sleeping in their usual place... I noticed two men under one blanket. I have orders not to allow this, so I hauled the blanket off. Mohangu was on top of Nabibux who was lying
on his back. Mahangu was lying on his stomach. I asked them what they were doing. They gave no reply. Mahangu came off. I did not see his private parts. His baba was loose. I did not notice the state of Nabibux' baba. He had it on, but I don't know whether the crupper of
the baba was undone or not. I did not see his private parts. I did not see his anus. I did not see Mahungu's penis in Nabibux' anus, but from their position I suspected that they were committing sodomy... These two men always slept together during the voyage."

SALIKRAM

"They said Rambux hauled the blanket and shook them up while they were asleep. Rambuccus said they were committing sodomy but I don't think they were. They appeared to me just as if they had just been awakened. Their eyes seemed heavy with sleep."

"I never knew either of these men before I met them onboard. Myself and Rambuccus do not agree. I never noticed Rambuccus and either of the two men have any quarrel. I never noticed Nabibux and Monungu keeping much company. I don't know whether these men were in the habit of sleeping alongside of one another. I never threatened these men to make them confess. I never heard the men confess they had done it. They did not confess before me."

IN THE END: 50 pounds deducted from Harrison's gratuity for inflicting corporal punishment


[Other reports of gay sex
Ms Bahadur also shared that she found one other reference to gay sex in the 63 ship reports she examined. On the ship The Brenda in 1892, one of the immigrants Mathura was accused by another man, Nanku, "of having attempted on 14th October an unnatural offence," in the words of the Immigration Agent General, who reported this case to the police. Mathura was charged before the police magistrate and referred to Supreme Court for trial

[The scanned images of the diary with the full text of the letters and statements can be viewed on the Caribbean IRN Collection of the Digital Library of the Caribbean].

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Out magazine releases "Out 100" for 2011

Out magazine releases "Out 100" for 2011
Openly gay New York Assembly member Daniel O’Donnell and New York state Sen. Tom Duane are among Out magazine’s "Out 100" this year. Others on the list include former Republican National Committee Chairman Ken Mehlman, writer and activist David Mixner and openly transgender college basketball player Kye Allums. Out (11/3)

Transgender rights bill headed for a vote in Mass.

Transgender rights bill headed for a vote in Mass.
Lobbyists for the Massachusetts Transgender Political Coalition are mustering support from state lawmakers ahead of an expected vote this week to add gender identity to the state's non-discrimination laws. "The bill is not perfect, but this is a critical step," said State Rep. Carl M. Sciortino Jr., a Democrat who co-sponsored the measure. The Boston Globe/Political Intelligence (tiered subscription model) (11/14)

Lobbyist hid anti-gay motives in fight against Nashville ordinance

Lobbyist hid anti-gay motives in fight against Nashville ordinance
The chief lobbyist in the fight to overturn a Nashville, Tenn., ordinance requiring contractors not to discriminate against LGBT employees advised allies not to speak about the legislation in terms of morality or opposition to homosexuality, lest they lose the support of businesses, documents show. In an email obtained by The Tennessean, David Fowler, head of the Family Action Council of Tennessee, warned, "We sure don’t need any loose lips getting word to the Chamber about what I think and for sure not (the Tennessee Equality Project)!" The Tennessean (Nashville) (11/15)

Out officials gain acceptance in Colorado

Out officials gain acceptance in Colorado
Openly gay and lesbian elected officials in Colorado say changing attitudes about sexual orientation have allowed more out candidates to run for local offices. This year Robin Kniech, an out lesbian, won a seat on the Denver City Council. The Denver Post (11/15)

Cincinnati celebrates first out City Council member

Cincinnati celebrates first out City Council member
Chris Seelbach, who last week became the first openly gay candidate elected to the Cincinnati City Council, says he will work during his first 100 days in office to extend health benefits to the partners of the city’s gay and lesbian employees. Advocates say he also has the potential to become a role model for area LGBT youth. Cincinnati.com (11/14)

Washington state lawmakers prepare for marriage equality push

Washington state lawmakers prepare for marriage equality push
Openly gay state lawmakers are set to introduce a bill that would legalize marriage for same-sex couples in Washington state next year. "I believe 2012 is the best chance we've ever had to make marriage equality a reality," said Democratic state Sen. Ed Murray. Recent polling indicated that 55% of Washingtonians would vote to uphold a marriage equality law passed by the Legislature. The Seattle Times (11/12), The Columbian (Vancouver, Wash.) (11/11), Advocate.com (11/14)

Former Penn State Coach Jerry Sandusky Tells Bob Costas He's Innocent

Bob Costas grilled former Penn State Assistant Coach Jerry Sandusky about the sexual abuse charges against him in Sandusky's first interview since the scandal broke. Sandusky denies all of them, insists he was innocent and was just "horsing around". "I

Gay Teen Targeted in Ohio School Beating Caught on Camera Speaks Out for the First Time

Most of you will recall the horrific beating of a gay student at Unioto-Scioto High School in Chillicothe, Ohio which made headlines not only because of its brutality, but because it was filmed by the aggressor's cousin and posted to... read more |

Washington State Launches Effort to Achieve Marriage Equality

Here's Washington United for Marriage's Official Site. The group kicked off efforts yesterday to achieve marriage equality in the state by next year: Washington United for Marriage marks the ultimate step toward achieving the freedom to marry for lesbian and... read more |

Oklahoma City Council Votes 7-2 to Add Sexual Orientation to Anti-Discrimination Statutes

Oklahoma City's City Council has voted 7-2 in favor of extending employment discrimination protections in city offices to gay and lesbian employees. The measure was introduced by Councilman Ed Shadid, The Oklahoman reports: The measure adds “sexual orientation” to the... read more |

Marcus Bachmann Calls Undercover Gay Activist, Demands Money for Unused 'Ex-Gay' Therapy Sessions

You may recall that back in July, John Becker, from Truth Wins Out, a group that works to expose the "ex-gay" movement, paid an undercover visit to Marcus Bachmann for a set of "pray away the gay" therapy sessions which... read more |

Petition urges closure of Ecuadorian ex-gay “torture clinics”

Petition urges closure of Ecuadorian ex-gay “torture clinics”

by
9 November 2011, 5:03pm
 
A petition has been launched, demanding an end to Ecuadorian “torture clinics” allegedly designed to turn lesbians straight.
The petition, addressed to Ecuadorian Health Minister David Chiriboga, welcomes moves by the Ecuadorian government to close some 27 such clinics – but points out that over 200 are still open.
According to the petition letter, escaping patients have reported cases of physical and psychological abuse including verbal threats, shackling, days without food, sexual abuse, and physical torture – inflicted in an attempt to “cure” their sexuality.
Paula Ziritti, 24, who escaped after two years in one such facility, told of three months when she was shackled in handcuffs while guards threw water and urine on her. She also described numerous accounts of physical and sexual abuse.
She says: “The closure of the first clinics by the government is good, but not good enough. Why is the clinic where I suffered still open?”
Writer and sexual rights campaigner Jane Fae warned of the dangers of “medicalising and pathologising human sexuality”.
She said: “We’ve seen it in the US, and occasionally in the UK too, with ‘reparative therapy’, as well as surgical interventions designed to ‘normalise’ the bodies of intersex children.”
Homosexuality has been legal in Ecuador since 1997, with state recognition of same-sex relationships being introduced in 2009.
The petition, which is supported by Fundacion Causana, an LGBT human-rights organization, and a coalition of other Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender groups has so far attracted almost 80,000 signatures.
The petition can be found on the website change.org, here.

French mayor performs “militant gay marriage ceremony”

French mayor performs “militant gay marriage ceremony”

by
14 November 2011, 9:45am
 
A legally void wedding between two men has been held in a small town in the Pyrénées-Orientales, in south-western France.
The mayor of Cabestany, Jean Vila, presided over the symbolic union of Patrick, 48, and Guillaume, 37, whose surnames were withheld.
The two men exchanged rings, but their wedding will not be valid under French law, which prohibits gay marriages.
The mayor described the ceremony as a “militant act”.
He said: “There are times when it is necessary to act outside the law. Refusing homosexual marriage is to deny the reality of thousands of couples.”
Vila added: “They say France is a modern, avant garde country, but at this rate we are going to be last in Europe to legalise it.”
To avoid the marriage being subsequently anulled, the mayor decided not to record it officially.
Claude Greff, a junior minister for the family, called the ceremony a “provocation on the eve of the presidential election”.
Solidarity Minister Roselyne Bachelot said she supported the idea of gay marriages, but called the mayor’s action “not the best way to advance the cause”.
Vila is not the first mayor to officiate at an illegal gay wedding.
In 2004, the Mayor of the Bordeaux suburb of Bègles, conducted a same-sex marriage ceremony for two men, Bertrand Charpentier and Stéphane Chapin.
Noël Mamère, a former politician, was suspended from his post for a month.
In January of this year, the Constitutional Court of France decided that a same-sex marriage ban was not contrary to the Constitution, referring the question of gay marriage to Parliament.
In June, The National Assembly of France voted 293-222 against legalising same-sex marriage.
The same month, a poll by Ifop found 63% of French respondents were in favour of allowing gay marriages.

St Petersburg lawmakers consider fines for “gay propaganda”

St Petersburg lawmakers consider fines for “gay propaganda”

by
14 November 2011, 11:40am
 
Legislators for the Russian city of St Petersburg are considering new laws designed to prohibit gay “propaganda”.
The draft law introduces fines for what it terms the “propaganda of sodomy, lesbianism, bisexualism and transgenderism, to minors” and “propaganda of paedophilia”.
Fines range from a minimum of 1,000 roubles (£20) for an individual to 50,000 (£1,000) for a business.
Polina Savchenko, General manager of LGBT organization Coming Out, Russia told LGBT Asylum News: “By combining homosexuality, bisexuality, and transsexuality into one law with sexual crimes against minors, members of the Legislative Assembly indulge in gross manipulations of public opinion. Their goal – to pass an anti-democratic law, directed at severely limiting human rights in St. Petersburg.
“In the name of ‘public interest’, members of the Legislative Assembly decided to ignore the Federal law, the UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the European Convention for Human Rights, Council of Europe Recommendations and other decrees by international organizations, of which Russia is a member. However, no public discussions were held.
“It is also obvious that adoption of this law violates interests and rights of minors. Russia leads the world in the number of teenage suicides, and ignoring the issues of sexual orientation and gender identity can lead to tragic consequences.”
“This bill is absurd, both in terms of legal logic, and in terms of plain common sense. So what is the real goal? It is clear that adoption of this law would impose significant limitations on the activities of LGBT organizations.
“Organizers of public events cannot restrict access of minors to any open area; people under 18 can be there just by chance. Consequently, it makes any public campaigns aimed at reducing xenophobia and hate crime prevention impossible.”
Two other local legislatures introduced similar laws this year.
According to a 2005 poll, 43.5% of Russians supported the re-criminalisation of homosexual acts between consenting adults.
In June of this year, Russian police arrested 14 gay rights campaigners in St Petersburg. The city is Russia’s second largest, and its former capital.

Gay MP tells Parliament of homophobic attack

Gay MP tells Parliament of homophobic attack

by
10 November 2011, 3:37pm
 
Stuart Andrew MP has spoken about being the victim of a homophobic attack.
The MP for Pudsey made the revelation during a call for a crackdown on anti-gay incidents in a discussion at Westminster.
He told the Commons: “One in five gay and lesbian people has experienced a homophobic attack in the last three years.
“As someone who experienced such an attack in the 1990s, I am aware of the fear that goes on after such an attack.”
Equalities Minister Lynne Featherstone told him: “I’m extremely sorry to learn you had such an experience.
“The actual statistics are quite frightening in terms of hate crime: in 2010, over 48,000.”
She also added that homophobic bullying was “appalling” and the the government has issued new guidelines to tackle bullying which were “much more condensed and to the point”.
Ms Featherstone attended the launch of a new charity this week designed to help prevent homophobic bullying among students.
Mr Andrew was elected as the region’s MP last year. He praised West Yorkshire Police’s efforts to tackle hate crime, and the force’s work with the gay community to report homophobic assaults. Mr Andrew has backed a campaign for an official gay quarter in Leeds.

US Christian university forces staff to declare heterosexuality

US Christian university forces staff to declare heterosexuality

by
31 October 2011, 4:49pm
 
Shorter University, Georgia, is set to ask its 200 staff to sign statements assuring their employer they are not gay.
The move, which is legal as the university is privately funded, will see anyone who does not adhere to the Personal Lifestyle Statement risking immediate dismissal.
The statement also requires staffers to reject premarital sex and adultery.
It is mandatory for new employees and current employees whose contracts are due to be renewed.
Don Dowless, president of the university, said: “I think that anybody who adheres to a lifestyle that is outside of what the biblical mandate is and of what the board has passed, including the president, would not be allowed to continue here.
“Anything outside that is not biblical, we do not accept. We have a right to hire only Christians.’
By signing the document, employees agree to reject “all sexual activity not in agreement with the Bible, including, but not limited to premarital sex, adultery and homosexuality.”

BBC’s Business Editor Robert Peston defended for use of “Queer Street” term

BBC’s Business Editor Robert Peston defended for use of “Queer Street” term

by
15 November 2011, 10:02am
 
Robert Peston, the BBC’s business editor, has been defended for using the established term “Queer Street” to describe financial dire straits.
Peston posted a link to his BBC blog on Twitter, saying: “Why investors love lending to UK government – & how Debt Management Office kept us out of Queer Street.”
As some Twitter users responded with criticism, Peston responded with a link to the term’s Wikipedia page, which explains its many possible etymological origins.
He describing the accusation of homophobia as “bonkers”.
In his blog, Preston praised the UK Debt Management Office, suggesting: “Without its prudence, we might all be in Queer Street or Skid Row by now.”
Peter Tatchell pointed out that Mr Peston had not intended the word as a slur.
He said: “People are being over-sensitive, I appreciate their good intentions but he wasn’t using it in a gay put-down sense.
“The etymology of the word ‘queer’ as Robert Peston used it has nothing to do with homosexuality.”
Peston’s use of the centuries-old term on his BBC blog was not linked to any views opposing gay rights, however the unexpected reaction comes during national Anti-Bullying Week, in which many charities are focusing on pejorative use of gay-related words.

Catholic Charities Groups End Ill. Suit

Catholic Charities Groups End Ill. Suit

By Trudy Ring
Catholic Charities x390 | Advocate.com
Three Catholic Charities groups in Illinois are dropping the lawsuit they filed against the state over the end of their contracts to provide adoption and foster care services.

The state had declined to renew the contracts this year because the Catholic agencies refused to place children with gay or straight couples who are in civil unions, but wanted to refer them to other agencies. The state’s civil unions law went into effect in June.

Officials with the dioceses of Joliet, Springfield, and Belleville issued a statement Monday saying they are dropping the suit “with great reluctance,” the Associated Press reports. The diocese of Peoria had withdrawn from the suit last month.

In August a circuit court judge ruled that the state was within its rights to end the contracts, but the dioceses appealed.

“I am encouraged to hear that Catholic Charities has realized they cannot win this lawsuit,” said Anthony Martinez, executive director of the Civil Rights Agenda, an Illinois LGBT group. He said the case was “all about prioritizing religion over what is best for the children in their care,” adding, “Dropping this suit is a step in the right direction for what is best for all the citizens of this great state.”

GOP Strategy Could Haunt Them

GOP Strategy Could Haunt Them

A divisive and antigay political strategy may ultimately haunt the GOP.
By Michelangelo Signorile
THEY'VE COME UNDONE X390 (MCPHERSON) | ADVOCATE.COM
Is it possible that a sinister strategy that worked so well for Republicans in election cycle after election cycle — throwing out antigay red meat to its ravenous, energetic, evangelical base — could actually, finally be the party’s undoing? Pointing to the GOP’s nasty, homophobic actions could actually work in the Democrats’ favor.

Let’s take a case in point: the 15th annual Human Rights Campaign dinner, held in October. There’s no question we were all stoked when President Obama, speaking to the group for the second time in his first term, came out swinging against Republicans by standing up for a gay soldier who was booed by audience members at a GOP presidential debate.

Stephen Hill, who is serving in Iraq, was among those asked to present questions to the candidates during the Fox News–Google debate in Orlando, Fla., in September. He identified himself as gay and asked former U.S. Senator Rick Santorum if he would bring back “don’t ask, don’t tell.” Before Santorum could give his answer (which was a resounding, ugly “yes!”) audience members booed at Hill’s mere mention of the fact that he is gay. Neither Santorum nor any of the other candidates stood up to the bigotry at the event.

“We don’t believe in the kind of smallness that says it’s OK for a stage full of political leaders — one of whom could end up being the president of the United States — being silent when an American soldier is booed,” Obama stated passionately, as the crowd at the Washington Convention Center in D.C. Roared and leapt to its feet. “We don’t believe in standing silent when that happens. We don’t believe in them being silent since. You want to be commander in chief? You can start by standing up for the men and women who wear the uniform of the United States, even when it’s not politically convenient. We don’t believe in a small America. We believe in a big America — a tolerant America, a just America, an equal America — that values the service of every patriot.”

The comments were noteworthy not just because Obama forcefully blasted the GOP after almost three years of “reaching out” but also because the rest of the president’s speech was cautious and lackluster. He touted his achievements for LGBT Americans — many of which came only after hard pushing by activists — and laid out no concrete plans for equality in the future. Nor did Barack Obama “evolve” (his word) on marriage equality, as some had hoped he would.

The fact that a president who is timid about both taking on the GOP and loudly advocating for LGBT rights hit so hard against the Republicans over their hostility toward a gay soldier was quite telling: Even Obama’s cautious campaign handlers saw it as an easy win.
It’s yet another indication of how vulnerable Republicans are on the gay issue, captive to their increasingly extreme base while the American mainstream is moving forward rapidly. And it’s something Democrats and the media should pick up on, point out forcefully, and run with. The president and his advisers might have thought this was a safe bone to pick because it involved chastising the Republicans on the issue of patriotism and attacking our troops serving overseas. But the booing would not have taken off as a controversy and outraged so many Americans if a majority had not also come to believe — as the polls have shown us — that gay and lesbian Americans should have full civil rights.

Indeed, all of a sudden Republicans would rather not talk about gay rights, after years of using it as an issue to fire up their base. Look at the GOP debates for evidence. Not until the Fox News–Google debate, the seventh one, which solicited questions from Americans online, did we see LGBT issues raised much at all, including the issue of marriage, during a time when New York became the sixth and most significant state to allow gays and lesbians to marry. At both the MSNBC–Politico debate at the Reagan Library in California and the CNN–Tea Party Express debate in Tampa, Fla., both of which took place in September, there was no discussion of any kind about gay issues.
It’s true that it’s up to the moderators to ask, but the campaigns offer up question topics, and during the debate candidates can shift discussion to focus like a laser beam on an issue a candidate prefers — like the HPV vaccine, health care, taxes, or immigration.

MSNBC’s Chris Matthews called out the former Pennsylvania senator and moral crusader Rick Santorum on his not bringing up gay issues during the debate at the Reagan Library: “You know, senator, candidates know how to take a question and give the answer they want. The smart politician gives a quick answer to the question, then says what they want to say. Nobody used that technique tonight to bring up ‘don’t ask, don’t tell’ and to support it, nobody came out against same-sex marriage tonight…. It seems like your party believes that you can’t win this general election if you talk about same-sex marriage.”

Born-again Michele Bachmann, a darling of the Christian right when she was a Minnesota state legislator who tried to get a marriage amendment passed, didn’t want to discuss her antigay positions with reporters throughout the early part of the campaign, when she was surging in the polls and trying to appeal to the mainstream. She wanted to discuss her husband Marcus’s “pray away the gay” program at his Christian counseling centers even less. Only when her candidacy plummeted did she begin publicly addressing gay issues, desperately turning to the religious right to jump-start her dead campaign. Republicans seem to now see the gay issue as one with niche appeal in their party and as a loser in the mainstream.
For most Democrats, who’ve always been uncomfortable discussing LGBT rights, fearful of its use as a wedge issue by the GOP, that might seem like a godsend — a “truce,” finally, on this culture war issue, time to just stop talking about it. But, in fact, that would be stupid. The LGBT cause is now something for the Democrats to use to their advantage and indeed as a wedge against the GOP.

The history of the Defense of Marriage Act is yet another example. Ever since the Department of Justice decided not to defend DOMA, leaving it to Republicans in Congress to hire a lawyer to do so, House speaker John Boehner, in statement after statement, has treated defending DOMA more like a chore than something he’s passionate about. It took almost two weeks after the DOJ announced in February that it would not defend DOMA for Boehner to affirm that the House would do so. He made the announcement on a Friday, certain the news would be lost in the media coverage over the weekend.

Even then, Boehner didn’t state his rationale by railing that traditional marriage needed to be “defended” against gays. Instead he couched the action as a duty to defend a law and charged that the president “has opened this divisive issue.” Boehner had the House Bipartisan Legal Advisory Group — which has a Republican majority — vote (3-2) to defend DOMA rather than taking it to a vote of the full House, knowing that many of his members would not want to be on the record supporting it.

Boehner has been on the defensive ever since. Six House Democrats spearheading the DOMA repeal have demanded a briefing from the outside counsel the House hired, former Bush solicitor general Paul Clement, pointing to his use of arguments that are based on antigay junk science and opinion. “It’s incumbent upon all lawyers…to undertake representation in an objective manner that is factual and legally supportable,” their letter notes. “Unfortunately, the outside counsel that you have retained filed pleadings containing arguments and assertions that are troubling and appear to fall short of this standard.”

When the House in September tripled the cap for Clement’s fee — to $1.5 million, in a time of economic hardship — Democrats pounced again. Boehner ducked and ran for cover, and he had his spokesman put out weak statements about how the DOJ should be covering the cost. But he clearly knew he’s got to feed the extremist beast.

The defensiveness is all the more reason why President Obama, if he wants to capitalize on the issue, needs to evolve on marriage now. He has nothing to lose (most of those opposed to marriage equality are already opposed to him) and everything to gain, as the Democratic Party base and the LGBT community would be enthusiastic, working in full force to get him reelected at a time when polls show Democratic voters to be disillusioned. More so, the president should be speaking out on anti–gay marriage amendments in Minnesota and North Carolina, and pointing to the GOP’s recklessness, intolerance, and waste of taxpayer dollars at this time.

With the GOP on the ropes over gay issues, it’s time for Democrats to deliver a knockout punch and end its political gay-bashing once and for all.

21 Notable Comings Out

21 Notable Comings Out

Thousands of LGBT people no doubt came out in 2011, but the media had their eyes on a handful of folks who helped push visibility in their worlds by coming out as lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender.
 
Akil Patterson
Gay former Division 1 football player

Amber Heard

Bisexual actress and star of canceled series The Playboy Club

Anton Hysen
Gay Swedish professional soccer player

Don Lemon
Gay CNN anchor

Evan Rachel Wood
Bisexual actress and star of True Blood and The Ides of March

GERI JEWELL X390 | ADVOCATE.COM
Geri Jewell
MO ROCCA X390 (GETTY) | ADVOCATE.COM
Mo Rocca
 Mo Rocca
Gay journalist and staple of VH1's I Love the'80s

Peter Murphy
Gay member of Maryland's House of Delegates

Randy Phillips
Gay airman and YouTube sensation

Rick Welts
Gay NBA executive

Scott Norton
Gay professional bowler

Sean Maher
Gay actor and star of canceled series The Playboy Club
  Steven Davies
Gay English cricket player

Teddy Montgomery
Fictional gay student on the television series 90210

Vaughn Walker

Former U.S. District Court judge for the Northern District of California

Will Sheridan
Gay former college basketball player

Zachary Quinto
Gay actor and star of 2009's Star Trek and Broadway's Angels in America 

Church of Scotland May See Mass Resignations Over Gay Clergy

Church of Scotland May See Mass Resignations Over Gay Clergy

As many as 150 ministers in the Church of Scotland are threatening to resign over the church’s decision to allow openly gay clergy.
By Trudy Ring
CHURCH OF SCOTLAND PROTEST X390 (GRAB) | ADVOCATE.COM
As many as 150 ministers in the Church of Scotland are threatening to resign over the church’s decision to allow openly gay clergy, London’s Guardian reports.

The church’s general assembly, its governing body, opened the way to ordination of gay clergy in May, lifting a moratorium on appointment of gay and lesbian clergy that had been imposed after a gay man, Scott Rennie, became a minister in 2009. There will not be full inclusion of gay clergy until at least 2013, following completion of a study by church leaders.

Still, the Guardian reports, “senior sources estimate as many as 150 serving ministers are considering resignation, in the largest schism in the church since 474 ministers quit in 1843 to form the Free Church of Scotland.” The dissatisfied clergy may form another breakaway denomination, some observers said, but a spokesman for the church contended the objections to gay clergy are not so widespread.

The church is Scotland’s largest Protestant denomination. Read more about the controversy here.

Study: Ohio Schools Have Major Gay Bias

Boehnhead territory...

Study: Ohio Schools Have Major Gay Bias

By Neal Broverman
Study Says Ohio Schools Have AntiGay Bias X390 (GRAB) | ADVOCATE.COM
Dwayne Steward (pictured) says being a
Gay teen in Ohio's schools has not been easy.
A new study from the Gay, Lesbian, and Straight Education Network reports that one in four Ohio LGBT students have been physically assaulted because of their minority status — higher than the national average of 18.8%.
GLSEN's results come from a 2009 study, which found a quarter of LGBT Ohio students report being punched, kicked, or hit with a weapon. The study "also found 61% said they were 'cyber-bullied,' while 57% had property taken, stolen, or damaged because of sexual or gender orientation," according to an Ohio television news report. There were two recent high-profile attacks on Ohio students; one a 15-year-old gay male, the second a high school freshman who suffered a concussion after being attacked because he has a lesbian sister. 

Great courage

Great courage

You have great courage. Use it.

Whenever you feel fear, you are also feeling your potential for courage. Go
ahead, feel the fear, and then let that courage of yours spring to life.

The fact that you can feel the fear means you also have the courage to get
beyond it. Otherwise, the fear would serve no useful purpose.

Put that fear to good use by allowing it to ignite your courage. Put that
courage to good use by utilizing it to move toward positive, meaningful
objectives.

Feel the fear and know it means you have the courage. Learn from that fear
and then step forward with all that courage.

The beginning of courage feels like fear. Follow through on that feeling,
let the courage come, and with it you will achieve great things.


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Cathedral City Police Raid Barracks Bar on Closing Night of Leather Pride Weekend

Barracks Bar in Palm Springs was raided by police last night during a beer bust for Palm Springs Leather Pride, which was happening this weekend. Leatherati writes: Breaking news...we just received a text indicating the Barracks Bar in Cathedral City,... read more |

Iowa Baker Refuses to Create Wedding Cake for Lesbian Couple, Cites Her Christian Beliefs

Lesbian couple Trina Vodraska and Janelle Sievers went to Victoria Childress for their wedding cake. At a taste-testing appointment they were told that she wouldn't do it for them because it conflicts with ther Christian beliefs. Said Childress: "I didn't... read more |

Monday, November 14, 2011

Parents of webcam victim return to Rutgers

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/n/a/2011/11/14/national/a070445S29.DTL

The Associated Press
Monday, November 14, 2011

Parents of webcam victim return to Rutgers

(11-14) 07:47 PST Piscataway, N.J. (AP) -- The parents of a Rutgers University student who committed suicide last year returned to Rutgers University on Monday with a message: "The change that you want to see in the world and in your school begins with you."

Joseph and Jane Clementi attended an academic symposium on the benefits and perils of social media for teens and young adults. It was their first time on Rutgers' main campus since last year when their son, 18-year-old freshman Tyler Clementi, killed himself days after his roommate allegedly used a webcam to spy on his intimate encounter with another man. The tragedy touched off a national conversation on the bullying often faced by young gays and lesbians.

Joseph Clementi, with his wife standing by his side, opened the conference with a two-minute statement.

"The nationwide outpouring of compassion from a wide range of people and organizations has been truly humbling and comforting," he said.

He said The Tyler Clementi Foundation, a co-sponsor of the symposium along with Rutgers, would do more work to research and try to prevent cyberbullying and victimization based on sexual orientation, looks or other characteristics.

He also applauded the university for developing the symposium.

The family has filed legal papers to preserve their right to sue the school, but has not yet sued and it's not clear whether they will.

The case also is moving through the criminal courts. Tyler Clementi's roommate, 19-year-old Dharun Ravi, is charged with 15 criminal counts, including invasion of privacy and the hate crime invasion of privacy. He could face 10 years in prison. A trial is scheduled for February.

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Exhibit Honors Pioneering Gay Candidate

http://www.advocate.com/News/Daily_News/2011/11/13/Exhibit_Honors_Pioneering_Gay_Candidate/

The Advocate
November 13, 2011 11:08:44 PM ET

Exhibit Honors Pioneering Gay Candidate

By Trudy Ring

Before Elaine Noble, Allan Spear, and Harvey Milk, there was José Julio Sarria — believed to be the first openly gay candidate to run for public office anywhere in the world and now the subject of an exhibit at the San Francisco GLBT History Museum.

Sarria ran for the San Francisco Board of Supervisors in 1961, 16 years before Milk became the first out gay candidate to win a post on that body. Although Sarria did not win the election, by receiving 5,600 votes he demonstrated that there was a gay voting bloc in the city, the museum notes. Sarria was also a popular drag performer at the city’s Black Cat bar.

The exhibit, which includes many of Sarria’s campaign materials, runs through January 1.
______________________________________

MORE:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jose_Sarria

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New Options For Gay Retirees

SmartMoney
November 14, 2011

New Options For Gay Retirees

Demand for gay and lesbian senior facilities is growing as are the choices.

By CATEY HILL

Not too long ago, there was no such thing as a gay retirement community in America. But as the number of retirement facilities which cater specifically to seniors with a common interest, hobby or trait has multiplied, so too have the options for gays and lesbians.

There are currently about a dozen seniors-only housing developments that are marketed specifically to gays and lesbians, says Andrew Carle, the founding director of the senior housing administration at George Mason University. That's up from just a few a decade ago. And retirement experts expect the trend to continue.

"As the economy and the real estate market improve, we may see more of this," says John Migliaccio, the director of research for the MetLife Mature Market Institute, who has studied the aging gay and lesbian population extensively.

continued:
http://www.smartmoney.com/retirement/planning/new-options-for-gay-retirees-1321237045923/

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Catholic bishops prepare religious liberty fight

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/n/a/2011/11/13/national/a101333S43.DTL

The Associated Press

Catholic bishops prepare religious liberty fight

By RACHEL ZOLL,
AP Religion Writer
Sunday, November 13, 2011

(11-13) 10:13 PST (AP) -- The nation's Roman Catholic bishops meet in Baltimore this week amid growing church-state tensions.

The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops wants broader religious exceptions to laws on issues ranging from mandatory contraception coverage to gay marriage.

The bishops have created a new committee on religious liberty overseen by an attorney who is a specialist in the field. Church leaders also plan to hire a lobbyist.

New York Archbishop Timothy Dolan met last week with President Barack Obama and discussed many of the issues that have caused problems between the administration and the church hierarchy.

The bishops are intensifying their focus on religious liberty at a time when many bishops believe the country is becoming increasingly hostile to Christianity.

Many Catholics say the bishops are overreacting.

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Regular Military Have No Problem With Gays in Armed Forces

Rose McGowan: Regular Military Have No Problem With Gays in Armed Forces

rose mcgowan red carpet 640
 
Actress and gay rights activist Rose McGowan is still glowing over the announcement that the U.S. Military policy “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” – put into place by the Clinton administration in 1993 – was repealed in July, allowing openly homosexual men and women to serve in the armed forces.
“It's amazing, and I think primarily how it's been reacted [to] within the troops has been more inspirational than anything,” she told FOX411’s Pop Tarts column at amfAR’s Inspiration Gala Los Angeles to benefit the Foundation’s AIDS research programs. “My brother flies F16's in the Air Force, and for him, it's been a non-issue this entire time, and for most military people I know it's the same. It's us out here in the public that has a problem with it, which I think is a pity. Just like anything, it's new and uncomfortable for them at first, and then it's normal.”McGowan recently revealed to this column that she was preparing to embark on a second USO tour to Afghanistan.
“(The troops) get really sad and forget because they feel like people have forgotten them," she said.. "So I'm just a representative, a vessel, showing that people are thinking of them.” 
But professionally speaking, the former “Charmed” star said it’s a dream come true, scoring a role in the Lifetime movie “The Pastor’s Wife,” which centers on the true life story surrounding the 2006 death of Matthew Winkler (Michael Shanks), a beloved minister and community leader who was mysteriously shot and killed in his Selmer, Tennessee, home.  
During their investigation, the authorities soon focus in on Matthew’s wife, Mary (McGowan), as the crime’s prime suspect.
“I'm a true crime junkie. I even remember when she was on the cover of People magazine. I was kind of strangely obsessed with it, and I said, 'No, no, no, I don't want to do another television thing,' but honestly, the script was so good and so different,” she added. “I play this little invisible church lady from a population of1200 in Tennessee. I couldn't pass it up. It's so opposite (from roles I've done before)."
"It was really weird being invisible," the voluptuous camera-magnet said. "She's like the invisible woman, the kind of woman you just walk by at Disneyland, the mom you never notice, she drives a minivan, you just don't see anything, and that was unusual.”
Deidre Behar contributed to this report.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/2011/11/14/rose-mcgowan-regular-military-have-no-problems-with-gays-in-military/#ixzz1diaH8nYz

Don't Ask Don't Tell Couple Openly Attend Marine Ball

http://www.kvoa.com/news/don-t-ask-don-t-tell-couple-openly-attend-marine-ball/

KVOA-TV
Tucson AZ
Nov 11, 2011 9:14 PM
Updated: Nov 13, 2011 8:49 PM

Don't Ask Don't Tell Couple Openly Attend Marine Ball

TUCSON - It is an extra special Veteran's Day for one Navy Lieutenant and his spouse. On Friday night, they attended the 236th Marine Corps Birthday Ball at Fort Huachuca.

Gary Ross and his husband, Dan Swezy, were the first couple to wed after the repeal of "Don't Ask Don't Tell".

In the past they've had to go on double dates, each taking a woman as their guest to military functions. They've been together for 12 years, and for 12 years they lived in secrecy for fear of harming Ross' military career.

"Everyone knows we are a couple and there's no hiding, no pretending, no double dates, nothing like that. It's just pure honesty," Swezy said.

Tonight they attended the Marine Ball for the first time as a couple.

"I was highly encouraged by my Marine coworkers at work to go to the ball and it's amazing the feeling of inclusion that's been stepped up ever since the repeal of ‘Don't Ask Don't Tell'," Lt. Ross said.

Both Lt. Ross and Swezy said since the repeal their experience has been nothing but positive.

"It means a lot to be able to step out and be together and not fear for Gary's career," Swezy said.

Even though a weight is lifted off their shoulders they both said the work isn't done. They've joined a lawsuit with seven other couples and Servicemembers Legal Defense Network. They are suing federal agencies to ensure gay, married couples receive the same benefits and family support as their straight, married peers.

"Now that ‘Don't Ask Don't Tell' is gone we can speak up and we are going to speak up," Swezy said.

They said not having those basic rights adds stress to those who are deployed.

"As an officer I can't go out to sea and watch people in my division worried about whether their loved ones are back home getting taken care of. I need them focused on the job," Lt. Ross said.

Friday night was a night of celebration and firsts.

"There's no longer living two lives and trying to remember what you say in one life and what you say in the other and keeping everything separate. Now I can be at peace," Lt. Ross said.

Lt. Ross was very adamant that the statements he made are his personal opinions and in no way reflect his official position with the military.

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Brazil Grants Residency Based on Same-Sex Marriage

http://www.foxnews.com/world/2011/11/14/brazil-grants-residency-based-on-same-sex-marriage/

The Associated Press
Monday, November 14, 2011

Brazil Grants Residency Based on Same-Sex Marriage

Brazil's government for the first time has granted a foreign citizen the right to live permanently in the country based on a same-sex relationship with a Brazilian citizen, according to a notice published Monday in the country's Federal Register.

Spanish man, Antonio Vega Herrera, and his Brazilian partner live in the town of Aracatuba in Sao Paulo state.

The action grows out of an October ruling by country's Supreme Court that recognized same-sex marriage, giving gay couples the rights such as the ability to jointly file taxes and to jointly adopt a child.

Gay rights activists lauded the new announcement as an important victory.

"We're advancing our rights as part of a conversation about democracy in this country," said Julio Moreira, president of the Rio de Janeiro gay rights group Arco Iris, which means rainbow in Portuguese. "Our constitution says no one should be discriminated against, so we see this in the same terms as the fight against racism and sexism."

The next step is to push Congress to pass legislation guaranteeing those rights, Moreira said, so that each case doesn't have to be petitioned separately to the courts.

"The legal system is closing these gaps in rights, but Congress has to legislate to tie it all together," he said.

In the United States, same-sex couples that include a foreigner have petitioned for permanent residency based on the relationship, but none so far have been granted the right. A bill pending in U.S. Congress would allow that right.

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The Story Behind Harry Connick's Gay Romance on Broadway

The Story Behind Harry Connick's Gay Romance on Broadway

By Jeremy Kinser
Harry Connick Clear Day (Palma Kolansky)X390
Harry Connick, Jr. And David Turner Palma Kolansky
Harry Connick, Jr. Plays a straight psychiatrist who falls in love with his male patient in the revival of On a Clear Day You Can See Forever, but don't call it a gay twist says out director Michael Mayer.

In an interview with Playbill, the director, who won a Tony Award for directing Spring Awakening, discusses the re-imagining of the classic 1965 musical that became a 1970 Barbra Streisand film, says he's loved the cast album since he was a kid but knew the show's book was "extremely problematic."

In Mayer's revamp playwright Peter Parnell has replaced Daisy (previously played by Streisand in the film and Barbara Harris on stage) and her paranormal abilities with David (David Turner), a gay florist. Connick, Jr. Headlines as widowed Dr. Mark Bruckner, who learns that David's previous life was Melinda (Jessie Mueller), a 1940s jazz singer. "David falls in love with Mark, a man who's unavailable because he's heterosexual," Mayer tells Playbill. "Mark falls in love with Melinda, but he can't have her because, well, she's dead. Now that's a love triangle."

"It's easy to label this On a Queer Day, but that's so reductive, and it actually bugs the hell out of me," Mayer insists. "A gay character doesn't make it a gay twist. I take the work seriously, and my collaborators and I are trying to do something real here. It's not some gimmick."

On a Clear Day... Is currently in previews at New York's St. James Theatre and will officially open December 11.

Washington State Aims for Marriage Equality

Washington State Aims for Marriage Equality

By Michelle Garcia
Two years after Washington approved a contentious, wide-ranging domestic partnership law, legislators are now looking to enact full marriage equality.

A coalition of civil rights groups, under the moniker Washington United for Marriage, will announce a push to legalize marriage equality on Monday, the Seattle Timesreports. Leaders of the groups said they plan to pressure the legislature to pass the bill in 2012, but they said they are also prepared to defend it from a referendum challenge.

Currently, Democrats control the senate and house, and Governor Chris Gregoire supported the domestic partnership bill in 2009. Still, openly gay State Sen. Ed Murray told the Times that some Republicans will have to be swayed to vote in favor of the bill, as some conservative Democrats have voted against gay rights in the past.

Murray, a lead sponsor of the bill, said he will work with the coalition to raise funds and organize efforts to raise public support of the legislation. Additionally, Rep. Jim Moeller announced Thursday that he and several other representatives will introduce the bill this week to the house.

In 1998, Washington passed its own Defense of Marriage Act, which defines marriage as only being for heterosexual couples. While the state supreme court upheld the law in 2006, Moeller told The Columbian that times have changed, and support for marriage equality is growing.

According to the Victory Fund, a recent poll shows that 55% Washington voters would support a marriage equality law if passed by the state legislature.

Herman Cain Doesn't Like "Sissy" Pizza

Herman Cain Doesn't Like "Sissy" Pizza

By Lucas Grindley
HERMAN CAIN PIZZA PARTY X390 (GETTY, FAIR) | ADVOCATE.COM
Herman Cain
Pizza mogul and Republican presidential frontrunner Herman Cain says there's "manly" pizza, and "sissy" pizza. And it all comes down to how much meat is piled on top.

In an interview with GQ, Cain decries any adherence to political correctness and then uses a term that will probably offend.

"When you learn how to be politically correct, you sound like all of the other politicians," he told GQ. "People like my directness and my bluntness. What happens when you become so worried about being politically correct, you find yourself not saying anything. Because you're trying to offend the least number of people. I'm trying to attract the greatest number of people. Different strategy."

Over a pizza lunch, Cain offered his take on what makes a "manly" pizza. The use of sausage was high on his list. But vegetables were "sissy" pizza.

"I'm very particular about the pizza that I eat," he explained, saying men want a harmony of "abundance" and "taste."

"What can you tell about a man by the type of pizza that he likes?" asked reporter Chris Heath.

"The more toppings a man has on his pizza, I believe the more manly he is," Cain declared. "Because the more manly man is not afraid of abundance," he added with a laugh.

"A manly man don't want it piled high with vegetables! He would call that a sissy pizza," Cain said.

Of the pizzas on his table, his favorite was covered in sausage, salami, capocollo, red peppers, portobello, and red onions.

"Now that's a manly-looking pizza!!"
he said.

Texas's Baylor Univ. Offers Class on Evils of Gay Life

Texas's Baylor Univ. Offers Class on Evils of Gay Life

By Neal Broverman
BAYLOR HOMOSEXUALITY AS GATEWAY X390 (SOURCED) | ADVOCATE.COM
Baylor, a private Baptist university in Waco, Tex., was offering until late last week a class called "Homosexuality as Gateway Drug." Now, the course is entitled "Family Studies."
When sites like Reddit and Buzzfeed became aware of "Homosexuality as Gateway Drug" last week, Baylor renamed the class to "Family Studies" within 24 hours. 
It's not clear what exactly is taught in the class — part of Baylor's Sociology program in the College of Arts and Sciences. An inquiry to Baylor regarding the nature of the course was not immediately returned. Read more here.

Soccer pro David Testo’s former teammates show support: “He’s in a position where he can inspire a lot of people.”

Soccer pro David Testo’s former teammates show support: “He’s in a position where he can inspire a lot of people.”

http://instinctmagazine.com/images/stories/blogs/jhigbee/november2011/davidtesto2.jpg

http://www.advocate.com/uploadedImages/ADVOCATE/NEWS/2011/2011-11/2011-11-10/TESTOX390.jpgI’m so happy for former Major League Soccer player David Testo who came out during an interview with the CBC.
Some of his former teammates have quickly come to his support publicly.
Montreal Impact striker Eduardo Sebrango (pictured below with Testo), who was also Testo’s teammate in Vancouver, told the Montreal Gazette that the two have long been close friends and that he learned a lot from Testo and his homosexuality.
“I come from a country where there’s really, you know, a macho mentality,” said Sebrango, a Cuban-born Canadian citizen. “I think things are getting better, but for guys who are gay in professional sport, especially, things are a lot harder.
“But being in Quebec and Montreal, especially, people here are much more accepting, and I think David felt like this was home for him, more than when we were in Vancouver.
Another Impact teammate, Nevio Pizzolitto, had this to say: “I’m sure it was something that weighed on his mind for a long time, which is why I think he finally came out with it. I’m glad he did, because he’s in a position where he can inspire a lot of people to do the same. Even though we’re professional athletes, we’re also human beings, and maybe something like this will change the minds of those in the same position. What David did was great.”
With this kind of support, it’s such a pity that Testo was dropped from the team last month. I hope he lands with another team soon!
David Testo (left) and Nevio Pizzolitto take a break during first day of the Impact-MLS evaluation camp at Saputo Stadium in Montreal on Oct. 3.
FILE