Posts for 2011

FL Congressman: Gay Marriage Will End Society

Jim Burroway

June 3rd, 2011

Right Wing Watch is following the proceedings at Phyllis Schlafly’s Eagle Forum Collegians, and caught this video of Rep. Allen West (R-FL) warning that marriage equality is an “oxymoron” and will end society:

The term ‘gay marriage’ is an oxymoron. Because marriage is a union and a bond between a man and a woman to do one single thing: the furtherance of society by procreation, through creating new life. Have you ever read the book America Alone by Mark Steyn? It’s about demographics. And if we continue with a cycle of debt and punishing our unborn then it just becomes a matter of time before you don’t have society.

VA Legislator Charges Fed With Promoting A “Class 6 Felony”

Jim Burroway

June 3rd, 2011

Virginia Delegate Robert G. Marshall (R-Prince William) sent a letter to the Richmond Federal Reserve Bank demanding that they remove the rainbow flag that is flying outside the building in honor of Pride month:

In a letter to Richmond Fed President Jeffrey M. Lacker, Marshall says the homosexual behavior “celebrated” by the bank “undermines the American economy” and is a class six felony in Virginia.

“The Richmond Fed’s endorsement of costly, anti-social, immoral behavior is rejected by 6,000 years of Western Religious and moral teaching,” writes Marshall, who is among the General Assembly’s most conservative members and has long been outspoken on gay-rights issues. “You want the American people to trust your [judgment] in economic matters when your spokesperson celebrates an attack on public morals?”

Marshal seems to have missed the memo in which the U.S. Supreme Court struck down sodomy laws in 2003’s Lawrence v. Texas.

The Daily Agenda for Friday, June 3

Jim Burroway

June 3rd, 2011

TODAY’S AGENDA (OURS):
Smithsonian Observes 30 Years of AIDS: Washington, D.C. and online. Beginning today, the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History will observe the 30th anniversary of the first reports of what became known as AIDS with a three-part display and website. At the National Museum of American History’s “Science in American Life” exhibition, “HIV and AIDS Thirty Years Ago” will examine the early scientific and political reactions between 1981 and 1987. The Smithsonian’s Archives Center will host “Archiving the History of an Epidemic: HIV and AIDS: 1985-2009,” which includes archival material and quotes from oral histories of those who were affected by the epidemic, along with a panel from the AIDS Memorial Quilt honoring Roger Lyon, who died of complications from AIDS in 1984 shortly after testifying before Congress. The online website, “HIV and AIDS: 30 years ago,” can be accessed here.

Pittsburgh Pride Advocacy Rally: Pittsburgh, PA. Pittsburgh Pride will hold a rally on he steps of the City-County Building, 414 Grant Street, in downtown Pittsburgh beginning at 6:00 p.m. The rally will feature:

  • Stuart Milk, Executive Director of the Harvey Milk Foundation and Harvey Milk’s nephew
  • Zach Wahls, the 19-year-old University of Iowa student who spoke last February about the strength of his family during a public forum on a proposal to ban same-sex marriage in Iowa.
  • Rev. Mary Kay Totty, pastor of Dumbarton United Methodist Church in Washington, D.C., whose church in 2010 voted unanimously to adopt a statement of support of marriage equality.

EQCA Town Hall: San Diego, CA. Equality California will host a “Back to the Ballot?” Town hall meeting in San Diego to discuss whether we should wait for the courts to restore the freedom to marry — a decision which could have a nationwide impact — or whether Californians should try to overturn Prop. 8 through a ballot measure in 2012. The town hall will take place this evening at the San Diego LGBT Community Center, 3909 Centre Street, 6:00 to 8:00 p.m.

NGLTF Pink and Purple Weekend: Washington, DC. This event takes the place of the former DC Leadership Awards and DC Recognition Evening. The goal of Pink & Purple is to bring together different facets of the LGBT community in one weekend with a series of events. The weekend will include a woman’s event, a mini-power summit to include Academy for Leadership and Action participants, a dance event and an awards brunch to honor community leaders and allies. For details and a complete schedule, please see the event’s web site.

Pride Celebrations This Weekend: Athens, Greece; Albuquerque (Los Ranchos), NM; Boiling Springs (Spartanburg) SC; Bucharest, Romania; Buffalo, NY; Cambridge/Kitchner/Waterloo, ON; Columbia, MO; Cork, Ireland; Davenport (Quad Cities) IA; Dayton, OH; Detroit, MI; Ft. Collins, CO; Greensboro, NC; Guerneville, CA; Hampton Roads, VA; Honolulu, HI; Huntington/Charleston, WV; Kalamazoo, MI; Kansas City, MO; Queens, NY; Sacramento, CA; Salt Lake City, UT; Spencer, IN; Staten Island, NY and Winnipeg, MB.

Other Celebrations This Weekend: Gay Days, Orlando, FL and Razzle Dazzle Dallas, TX.

AIDS Walk This Weekend: Boston, MA; London, UK; Long Beach, CA, and Syracuse, NY.

TODAY’S AGENDA (THEIRS):
TheCall Alaska: Wasilla, AK. Lou Engle’s TheCall goes to Wasilla because “We believe that Alaska is key for the future of this nation.” The last time Engle put on TheCall was in Uganda last year, in which he lent support to that nation’s Kill-The-Gays effort. Feel free to expect similarly-sinister hatred expressed as “love” here, as well as the usual bats-in-the-belfry craziness we’ve come to expect from Engle. The two day event continues tomorrow.

Eagle Forum Collegians Summit: Washington, D.C. Phyllis Schlafly parties with conservatives one-fifth her age. as her Annual Eagle Forum Collegians Summit winds up its second and final day. The shindig at The Heritage Foundation in Washington, D.C. features former Virginia Sen. George “Macaca” Allen, Stanley “The Scandinavian Marriage Sky IS Falling” Kurtz, and Tea Party Express leader Amy “No Social Agenda” Kremer, and Kevin Williamson, Deputy editor of The National Review. It all culminates with a final address by the grande dame herself before ushering everyone onto awaiting buses for the…

Faith and Freedom Conference and Strategy Briefing: Washington, D.C. Put on by Ralph Reed’s Faith and Freedom Coalition, this conference (and strategy briefing!) opens this morning for a two-day confab at the Renaissance Washington, D.C. Downtown. The line-up is a veritable who’s who of anti-gay politics: House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH), Reps. Alan West (R-FL), Mick Mulvaney (R-SC), Paul Ryan (R-WI), Michele Bachmann (R-MN), Thaddeus McCotter (R-MI), Mike Pence (R-IN), Louie Gohmert (R-TX), Pete Sessions (R-TX), Eric Cantor (R-VA), Lynn Westmoreland (R-GA), Steve King (R-IA), Tom Price (R-GA), Tim Huelskamp (R-KS), Vicki Hartzler (R-MO), and Chuck Fleischmann (R-TN). Add to that bill Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbor, Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY), Family “Research” Council’s Tony Perkins and former Sen George “Macaca” Allen (R-VA), and you’ve only reached lunchtime. The evening session features Tim Pawlenty, Mitt Romney, Donald Trump, Grover Norquist, and the national coordinators of the Tea Party Patriots Jenny Beth Martin & Mark Meckler (remember: no social issues!).

TODAY IN HISTORY:
Aversion Therapy in Management of 43 Homosexuals: 1967. An article under that title by M.J. MaCulloch and M.P. Feldman appeared in the June 3, 1967 edition of the British Medical Journal. While electric shock aversion therapy was an expensive form of therapy, it was surprisingly common. The authors reported the results of 41 men and two lesbians who they treated at Crumpsall Hospital in Manchester, U.K. The treatment consisted of administering painful electric shocks while projecting photos of attractive men (or women, in the case of the two lesbians). Of the 43 subjected to this torturous treatment, five were between the ages of 15 to 20. Eighteen were being treated under court order. Seven dropped out without completing the treatment, and 11 were “unimproved.” That left 25 who claimed that they were “improved” after twelve months. The “failures,” they said, tended to have a higher Kinsey rating — in other words, they didn’t have a basis in bisexuality to work with.

The authors concluded that “In our opinion the approximately 60% rate of improvement achieved in our series (over other reported studies) is mainly due to the use of an aversion therapy technique which has been carefully designed to make the most effective use of the findings of the experimental psychology of learning.” Ten years later, researchers from Hollymoor Hospital in England would present the results of their own study which failed to replicate MacCulloch and Feldman’s findings. Among the second group’s problems was a very high dropout rate which was much higher than what MacCulloch and Feldman reported. “It appears that the Feldman and MacCulloch group had undergone some clinical preselection before referral,” they wrote. Ten years later still, aversion therapy would finally be largely abandoned — for ethical reasons as well as the growing realization that it simply didn’t work.

TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS:
Alla Nazimova: 1879. The larger-than-life Russian-born Hollywood silent film star was as exotic and flamboyant off the screen as on. Her screen debut in 1916 led to eleven more films in two years. Her specialty was outrageously exotic yet tragic characters. Her most famous role was that of the title character Camile, a 1921 film which featured Rudolf Valentino. It was at about that time that she became a producer, specializing in experimental artistic masterpieces which, unfortunately, were commercial flops. 1923’s Salome was particularly scandalous, as was her thinly concealed bisexuality off screen. Her “marriage” with gay actor Charles Bryant didn’t fool anyone. Her home, which she named “Garden of Allah,” was the scene for many glamorous private parties, and her name was connected with several Hollywood starlets and women of the arts. She is the credited with coining the phrase “sewing circles” to refer to lesbian or bisexual actresses who concealed their true sexuality. Her career ended in 1925 with the advent of the Hayes Code, although she had some minor film appearances in the 1940s (she was Doña Maria in The Bridge of San Luis Rey). She died in 1945.

Other Birthdays Today: Josephine Baker: 1906; Allen Ginsberg: 1926; Anderson Cooper: 1967.

If you know of something that belongs on the agenda, please send it here. PLEASE, don’t forget to include the basics: who, what, when, where, and URL (if available).

Federal Reserve Flies The Colors

Jim Burroway

June 2nd, 2011

The rainbow flag is flying at the Richmond, Virginia branch of the U.S. Federal Reserve Bank:

“We strongly support a diverse and inclusive culture at the Richmond Fed and have learned that it is important to value and embrace differences, both seen and unseen,” Sally Green said, chief operating officer at the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond.

“We are flying the ‘Pride’ flag as an example of our commitment to the values of acceptance and inclusion,” Green added.

The flag is being flown at the request of PRISM, an employee LGBT group started at the Fed’s Richmond branch last year, and will fly throughout the month of June. Predictably, the sight of the rainbow flag has anti-gay activists seeing red.

LaBarbera Award: Bryan Fischer

Jim Burroway

June 2nd, 2011

Admittedly, the American Family Association’s Bryan Fischer could qualify for this award virtually every day, so we’ve had to raise the bar for his nomination for this award. (He’s won three times before.) Yesterday, Right Wing Watch caught Fischer saying this:

You’re going to have the homosexual lobby committing one hate crime after another against service members, especially officers, who have deeply held convictions about the acceptability of homosexual behavior. And so I’m predicting that things are about to get very ugly in the United States military for people of faith. We are going to see principle-driven officers, one after another, are going to become to victims of systematic hate crimes. This is going to be a pogrom, this is going to be virtual genocide, military genocide, career genocide for people of faith in military, perpetrated by the homosexual lobby.

Newt Gingrich and Tim Pawlenty have both appeared on Fischer’s program trolling for anti-gay votes.

The Daily Agenda for Thursday, June 2

Jim Burroway

June 2nd, 2011

TODAY’S AGENDA (OURS):
Philadelphia Trans-Health Conference: Philadelphia, PA.Based on pre-registration figures, conference organizers expect the 10th Annual Philadelphia Trans-Health Conference to be the largest yet. Last year’s event drew 1,500 attendees, and is the largest trans-specific conference in the world. It all kicks off today at the Pennsylvania Convention Center and continues through Saturday, and is open to transgender community members, activists, allies, and service providers. Continuing Education Units and Continuing Legal Education Units will be available for certain workshops. Please check their web site for more information.

Rally In Raleigh: Raleigh, NC. The Sexuality and Gender Alliance (SAGA) and GetEQUAL NC will unite today with other groups and individuals to fight the proposed constitutional amendment to make same-sex marriage even more illegaler. The rally begins at noon at the State Government Halifax Mall, adjacent to the N.C. Legislative Building at 16 W. Jones Street in downtown Raleigh.

Pride Celebrations This Weekend: Athens, Greece; Albuquerque (Los Ranchos), NM; Boiling Springs (Spartanburg) SC; Bucharest, Romania; Buffalo, NY; Cambridge/Kitchner/Waterloo, ON; Columbia, MO; Cork, Ireland; Davenport (Quad Cities) IA; Dayton, OH; Detroit, MI; Ft. Collins, CO; Guerneville, CA; Hampton Roads, VA; Honolulu, HI; Huntington/Charleston, WV; Kalamazoo, MI; Kansas City, MO; Queens, NY; Sacramento, CA; Salt Lake City, UT; Spencer, IN; Staten Island, NY and Winnipeg, MB.

Other Celebrations This Weekend: Gay Days, Orlando, FL and Razzle Dazzle Dallas, TX.

AIDS Walk This Weekend: Boston, MA; London, UK; Long Beach, CA, and Syracuse, NY.

TODAY’S AGENDA (THEIRS):
Eagle Forum Collegians Summit: Washington, D.C. Who knew that 86-year-old Phyllis Schlafly is throwing a party for conservative college students? Well, her two-day hootenanny known as the Annual Eagle Forum Collegians Summit begins today at The Heritage Foundation in Washington, D.C. It looks like a pretty big deal. Speakers include Reps. Michele Bachmann (R-MN), Trent Franks (R-AZ), Vicky Hartzler (R-MO), Tim Huelskamp (R-KS), Steve King (R-IA), Adam Kinzinger (R-IL), Jim Jordan (R-OH), Tom Price (R-GA), Paul Ryan (R-WI), and Allen West (R-FL). That’s just today’s schedule. The conference is free.

Vatican AIDS Summit: Rome. Pope Benedict XVI’s comments last year about condom use appeared to have been a small step toward removing the Catholic Church’s longstanding opposition to using condoms to reduce HIV transmission, but the Vatican’s newspaper has since then run a series of articles reinforcing the church’s position that abstinence and fidelity in marriage are the best ways to curb HIV.  But at least the Church’s conference, which begins today, won’t be an empty echo chamber. Dr. Michel Sidibe, executive director of UNAIDS, will speak at the conference. The U.N. agency maintains that condoms are an “integral and essential” part of prevention programs, and calls for their inclusion in education programs alongside information about delaying the start of sexual activity, limiting sexual partners and marital fidelity. Organizers insist however that the Vatican AIDS Summit won’t result in any changes to the church refusal to heed the scientific consensus on AIDS prevention.

Family Values Conference: London, UK. The U.S.-based World Congress of Families will host a regional hand-wringing today at Baden Powell House, Queens Gate, South Kensington. Speakers include Concerned Women for America’s Janice Crouse (who believes that Methodists shouldn’t marry Jews) and Don Feder (a featured speaker at a 2007 Watchmen On the Walls conference in Riga, Latvia).

TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS:
Candace Gingrich-Jones: 1966. The lesbian advocate and kid sister to GOP presidential candidate Newt Gingrich, Candice has publicly called her brother to task over his support for California’s Prop 8. “What really worries me is that you are always willing to use LGBT Americans as political weapons to further your ambitions,” she wrote. “That’s really so ’90s, Newt. In this day and age, it’s embarrassing to watch you talk like that.” Things haven’t changed much for Newt. He’s still running like it’s 1994. But Candace is married to her wife, Rebecca, and works as the HRC’s Associate Director for the Youth and Campus Outreach Program.

If you know of something that belongs on the agenda, please send it here. PLEASE, don’t forget to include the basics: who, what, when, where, and URL (if available).

Rhode Island civil unions move along in the Senate

Timothy Kincaid

June 1st, 2011

Gay advocates are disappointed by the bill, anti-gay advocates oppose anything like it. In fact, there may only be about 100 people in all of Rhode Island who really want the civil unions bill and all of them may be in the legislature.

I once said, decades ago in college student government, that a perfect compromise is one in which neither side wins. And while that language is perhaps less than poetic, it has truth. While I don’t believe that this is an area in which we should settle for less than full equality, nor do I see any reason for incremental steps in Rhode Island, in term of compromise this is not a bad one. For an unnecessary compromise.

But civil unions are what Rhode Island is getting, and all it’s getting for now, so perhaps we should decide to be happy about it.

Tomorrow the Senate Judiciary Committee will hold a hearing on the bill.

Marriage’s final frontier

Timothy Kincaid

June 1st, 2011

In what has been, to me, a surprisingly short period of time, the fertile, tamed gay-supportive territory has come to support marriage equality. Democrats overwhelmingly are supportive, and independents have joined them to the extent that now a majority of Americans favor legalized same-sex marriages.

But Republicans – especially conservative evangelical Republicans – have held to their opposition with little exception. The red state, red meat, tea partying folk have not been receptive in any manner to talk about Teh Gheys being real people with real rights, especially the right to marry the person of their choosing.

Until recently. Very very recently.

Perhaps it took the high-profile support over unquestionably-conservative Ted Olson to make it possible for conservative Republican support to be considered. Perhaps the hopeless – but fascinating and visible – presidential campaign of Fred Karger introduced the possibility. Maybe it was Meghan McCain, Barbara Bush, or other young Republicans willing to talk back to their elders. But whatever allowed it, change has begun.

Marriage equality has finally set foot in this wild frontier, planted a flag, and claimed its place. In, of all places, Iowa’s activist Republican community. Today, Jeff Angelo, a former State Senator from Ames has launched a new group: Iowa Republicans for Freedom.

Angelo is a heterosexual father of three who identifies as an evangelical Christian. He regularly attends the Ames Evangelical Free Church. While he still considers himself “very much an activist Republican,” Angelo said he, and other Republicans, are recognizing banning same-sex marriage violates the widely-held conservative belief of personal freedoms.

But don’t assume that Angelo is just some “squishy moderate” who has let his liberal side take over. Angelo’s anti-gay credentials couldn’t be stronger. (DMRegister)

Angelo, who formerly lived in Creston, had opposed gay marriage while serving in the Iowa Senate and was co-sponsor of the Iowa Defense of Marriage Act in the late 1990s. In 2006, he was the lead sponsor of a proposed state constitutional amendment to define marriage as between a man and a woman. He said he gradually came to a realization after leaving the legislature that his stance on same-sex marriage was wrong and hurtful.

Like many, he had believed the lies he told himself. Especially the old “my gay friends” fiction. (Iowa Independent)

“I previously bought into the notion that I could tell my gay friends how much I loved them, that I just disapproved of their lifestyle and they would be OK with that,” Angelo admitted. “But they told me that I made them feel lesser in my eyes or that I made them feel like a second-class citizen. I labored under delusion for some time that [what my friends said] wasn’t true, that they really believed I loved them and that I was their friend.”

And he found that once he questioned his presumptions, it turned out that this new respect for his fellow man fit better with his ideals than had his prejudices. So he’s now sharing that message.

“Far too often, the conversation on marriage can get lost in rhetoric,” Angelo said. “But this debate really centers around one idea: whether government has the right to say whom a person should love and marry. As a proud conservative, I believe in smaller, limited government, and that government should have no more of a right to say whom I can marry than they should be able to tell my gay and lesbian brothers and sisters whom they can marry.”

“It is time for conservatives to get back to their roots,” Angelo said. “Through Iowa Republicans for Freedom, we will begin a conversation about whether our party and our state will stand for true conservative values, or whether we will allow ourselves to get lost in senseless debates that do nothing but demean our neighbors and threaten the rights of our fellow Iowans.”

Jeff Angelo is a very welcome advocate. His voice can reach those who simply cannot hear what our community is trying to say. I truly wish him well.

How anti-gays view the world (it ain’t smart and it ain’t pretty)

Timothy Kincaid

June 1st, 2011

We generally ignore the rantings that the anti-gay activists write to each other to bolster their resolve to fight on in their lost cause. No one outside of their fellow-thinkers read them and the head-bobbing dolls will never see our challenges to their predetermined beliefs.

But today I think it’s worth exploring both how this crowd perceives the world and how very far from reality they really are. Our example is an article by Peter Heck in which he delivers his response to Don Lemon’s coming out.

Let me start by saying that it can be tempting to believe that folks like Heck are just making a buck off of the ignorance and malice of their audience. And while that might be some part of it, don’t doubt for a second that he really believes what he says. This is his crowd, his social circle, his political allies, this is where he lives his life.

Heck’s worldview is an uncomplicated one. Everyone is easily fitted within a compartment, and there are only two. There are good moral born-again Bible believers, and the evil vile rest of humanity. And everything fits nicely along with everyone. Good is good and done by good people, bad is bad and done by bad people, and there’s no need for any of that liberal, gray-area, situational ethics type of thinking.

Let’s begin.

CNN host Don Lemon recently became the latest in a string of high profile individuals to “come out of the closet” and inform everyone who would listen that he enjoys practicing homosexuality.

Doubtlessly, you too missed the interview in which Lemon talked about how he enjoys practicing homosexuality. Because, of course, it didn’t happen. Lemon didn’t talk about enjoying anything or practicing anything. He simply spoke about the reality that he is a person who is attracted to persons of the same sex and is neither ashamed of that nor seeking to change it. In a word, he’s gay.

But in the world of anti-gays, there is no such thing as a gay person; and in the world of extremist anti-gays, there is no such thing as a same-sex attractions. Anti-gays can only process homosexuality in terms of behavior so everything is presented as though that is what Lemon discussed.

First, why do the very people that constantly tell us that what a person does in their bedroom is no one else’s business, simultaneously find it necessary to inform everyone of what they do in their bedroom? If this is a private matter, Don, then let’s keep it private. Perhaps I’m the only one who feels this way, but frankly, I don’t care to know what kind of sex the evening news anchor is into.

It’s hard to find a response to this, it’s so wrong on so many levels. Unlike Heck, I didn’t hear Lemon’s announcement and suddenly know what kind of sex he is into. I don’t know what goes on in his bedroom, if anything.

But in Heck’s world, just as there are only two “kinds” of people, there are only two “kinds” of sex: that which meets the requirements of his sexual code, and that which does not. And any mention of one’s orientation is an announcement that you have abandoned sanctioned sex and are delighting in practicing debauchery.

But the real purpose of Heck’s rant – and what seems to be a growing trend in anti-gay rants – is to whine and moan about how mistreated are those who seek the legal and societal harm of gay people. Why if “a Bible-believing, born-again follower of Jesus Christ whose faith teaches him that homosexuality is morally improper” simply call a gay person an oddball decadent sexual anarchist, then they are labeled a “hater”!! How intolerant!!

And Heck sees plenty to blame. It’s the fault of gay “proponents of sexual anarchy”, the “uber-leftist Joy Behar” (a Christophobe), Charles Barkley (“whose most famous contribution to his profession was spitting on opposing fans in the crowd”), and “vile and perverted” Lady Gaga. They are the one’s who are calling him names.

And the funny thing is that Peter Heck really doesn’t think that he’s a “hater”.

Yes, everything he writes would give that impression. Words of contempt flow from his keyboard. He dismisses those with whom he disagrees in the meanest possible way. And yet he doesn’t see himself in terms of “hate”. Real love, you see, is that which reminds the sinner of his depravity and warns of eternal punishment. So really anything, anything whatsoever at all, is “loving” provided that it is done by those he considers good.

I believe that a good many people who oppose our equality can be reached, including many in Heck’s target demographic. Yes, they have preconceptions, but they are not completely closed off to facts. They have prejudices, but can over time be persuaded to rethink their views.

But people like Peter Heck are beyond our reach. Their “reality” is impervious to facts, to logic, to reason. They know what they know and nothing is going to dissuade them. Good people already agree with them and the views of those on the evil vile side of humanity are, by definition, wrong.

Congratulations, Illinoisans

Timothy Kincaid

June 1st, 2011

Today same-sex couples in Illinois can be joined in civil union and gain many of the state-granted advantages, obligations, and rights of marriage.

Our congratulations to all Illinoisans. To same-sex couples for expanded rights. To gay people for a step up in recognition of your worth as a fellow citizen. And to all other residents for your inclusion in the still-small number of states that have expressed their willingness to place humanity ahead of tradition, animus, or exclusion.

San Francisco Giants: “It Gets Better”

Jim Burroway

June 1st, 2011

There’s hardly a gay male alive who wasn’t tormented by jocks while in school, which is why this video by the San Francisco Giants so incredibly moving. The video features four current players — pitchers Matt Cain and Sergio Romo, outfielder Andres Torres and Cy Young Award winning pitcher Barry Zito — and Giants hitting coach Hensley “Bam Bam” Muelens.

Obama Issues Pride Month Proclamation

Jim Burroway

June 1st, 2011

President Barack Obama issued a proclamation last night declaring the month of June the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Pride Month:

The story of America’s Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender (LGBT) community is the story of our fathers and sons, our mothers and daughters, and our friends and neighbors who continue the task of making our country a more perfect Union. It is a story about the struggle to realize the great American promise that all people can live with dignity and fairness under the law. Each June, we commemorate the courageous individuals who have fought to achieve this promise for LGBT Americans, and we rededicate ourselves to the pursuit of equal rights for all, regardless of sexual orientation or gender identity.

…Every generation of Americans has brought our Nation closer to fulfilling its promise of equality. While progress has taken time, our achievements in advancing the rights of LGBT Americans remind us that history is on our side, and that the American people will never stop striving toward liberty and justice for all.

President Obama’s declaration also notes that this June marks the 30th anniversary of the known AIDS epidemic (we now know that AIDS had already been killing people for many decades before it was reported by the CDC in 1981), and urges a recommitment to AIDS awareness. “This landmark anniversary is an opportunity for the LGBT community and allies to recommit to raising awareness about HIV/AIDS and continuing the fight against this deadly pandemic.”

William Tapley Sees Penises at the Denver International Airport

Jim Burroway

June 1st, 2011

He calls himself The Third Eagle of the Apocalypse and “the co-prophet of the End Times.” I wonder if the sight of church steeples thrusting over the skyline gives him the vapors?

The Daily Agenda for Wednesday, June 1

Jim Burroway

June 1st, 2011

TODAY’S AGENDA:
Open For Question: 30 Years of AIDS: Washington, D.C. and online. In observance of the upcoming 30th anniversary of the Centers for Disease Control’s first report on a strange illness that we now know of as AIDS, the White House will facilitate a live online discussion on the AIDS epidemic. Surgeon General Dr. Regina Benjamin, Director of the White House Office of National AIDS Policy Jeffrey Crowley and Director of the Division of AIDS at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, NIH, Dr. Carl Dieffenbach will host the forum beginning at 3:00 p.m. EDT. You can submit your questions in advance and tune in to WhiteHouse.gov/live to watch the discussion.

Organized Labor Announces Support for Marriage Equality: Albany, NY. Representatives from several labor unions and associations will join Empire State Pride Agenda Executive Director Ross D. Levi as they call on the New York Legislature to pass marriage equality this session. A press conference will take place this afternoon at 1:00 p.m. in the LCA Press Room (Room 13) of the Legislative Office Building in Albany. Many unions in New York have already declared support for marriage equality, including the AFL-CIO, RWDSU, United Federation of Teachers, CWA, 32BJ, Teamsters Local 237 and Affiliates of the New York City Central Labor Council.

Registration Deadline for Suicide Prevention Symposium: Waltham, MA. The American Foundation for Suicide Prevention will hold a symposium on LGBT Suicide Prevention on Saturday, June 18 at Bentley University in Waltham, Massachusetts. The keynote speaker will be Dr. Caitlin Ryan of the Family Acceptance Project, and the symposium will feature several breakout sessions on social media, mental health, and suicide prevention strategies for transgender and gay people across the lifespan. Registration for the day-long event ends today.

EQCA Town Hall: Redlands, CA. Equality California will host a “Back to the Ballot?” Town hall meeting in Redlands to discuss whether we should wait for the courts to restore the freedom to marry — a decision which could have a nationwide impact — or whether Californians should try to overturn Prop. 8 through a ballot measure in 2012. The town hall will take place this evening at the University of Redlands in the Casa Loma Room from 6:00 to 8:00 p.m.

Gay Days: Orlando, FL. This week is the annual celebration n Orlando. It began in 1991 as a day for Orlando visitors to “Wear Red and Be Seen.” An estimated 3,000 attendees participated that year, but has grown to more than 150,000 celebrants from all over the world. When city officials decided to officially welcome Gay Days in 1998, televangelist Pat Robertson famously predicted the eminent destruction of the entire nation. “It’ll bring about terrorist bombs; it’ll bring earthquakes, tornadoes, and possibly a meteor,” he warned. We’ve somehow managed to soldier on, and Gay Days this year comes roaring back to mark its 20th anniversary.

Pride Celebrations This Weekend: Athens, Greece; Albuquerque (Los Ranchos), NM; Boiling Springs (Spartanburg) SC; Bucharest, Romania; Buffalo, NY; Cambridge/Kitchner/Waterloo, ON; Columbia, MO; Cork, Ireland; Davenport (Quad Cities) IA; Dayton, OH; Detroit, MI; Ft. Collins, CO; Guerneville, CA; Hampton Roads, VA; Honolulu, HI; Huntington/Charleston, WV; Kalamazoo, MI; Kansas City, MO; Queens, NY; Sacramento, CA; Salt Lake City, UT; Spencer, IN; Staten Island, NY and Winnipeg, MB.

AIDS Walk This Weekend: Boston, MA; London, UK; Long Beach, CA, and Syracuse, NY.

If you know of something that belongs on the agenda, please send it here. PLEASE, don’t forget to include the basics: who, what, when, where, and URL (if available).

Teen pop-stars matter

Timothy Kincaid

May 31st, 2011

I don’t pay much attention to Miley Cyrus. I’m not a 15 year old girl, I am suspicious when children of celebrities get cast in television shows, and I’ve seen way too many child stars implode. But, so far at least, Cyrus (now 18) seems to be transitioning well from her Hannah Montana role to a solo artist, has not got down Lindsay Lohan Lane, and may well be able to face adulthood with a sense of perspective.

And, okay I’ll admit it, Party in the USA is infectious.

Yet still, Cyrus is not on the short-list of people I’d select to fight for my equality. For one thing, her audience can’t vote.

But Cyrus can do one thing that even the most seasoned politico cannot achieve. She can influence where the parents of little girls spend their money. And she’s not hesitant to do so.

Last week, Urban Outfitters had a little public image problem over some jewelry that they sold which was similar to that of a small independent jeweler. Miley Cyrus used it to raise a different issue (Vancouver Sun)

Cyrus Tweeted, “Love that everybody is hating on Urban Outfitters.” She added, “Not only do they steal from artists but every time you give them money you help finance a campaign against gay equality. #SHADYASHELL”

Hashtags aside, Cyrus also pointed out, “IF WE ALLOW GAY MARRIAGE NEXT THING U KNOW PEOPLE WILL BE MARRYING GOLD FISH” – Rick Santorum UO contributed $13,000 to this mans campaign”

You and I may not care what Miley Cyrus thinks. The voters in your state may not care what Miley Cyrus thinks. But retailers of clothing very much care what Miley Cyrus thinks, especially when she’s tweeting to a million kids that could be their customers.

And Cyrus’ tweet is indicative of something larger that we are just beginning to see.

For decades we have relied on the decency of corporate executives, the economic advantage of a diversity, the loyalty of gay shoppers, and (in rare cases with limited success) on boycotts of the most egregious offenders.

But now, corporations are discovering the cost of being associated in any way with anti-gay causes or politicians. Target discovered this past year that contributing to a politician whose economic policies they prefer can lose you customers if he also has anti-gay social policies. And earlier this year the CEO of Urban Outfitters admitted how his boss’ association with Santorum is problematic. (Philly.com)

“You all probably know, till the day he dies Dick Hayne’s going to be famous for giving Rick Santorum some money 15 years ago,” said Senk, who has often described Hayne as a mentor and was referring to his well-known political leanings. “Dick Hayne’s a Republican, OK?”

“I’m the first openly gay CEO of a Fortune 1000 company, and I supported Bob Casey, who dethroned Santorum,” Senk continued. “So, obviously, Dick and I don’t agree, politically. Now, Dick has moderated over the years, and I probably have moderated over the years, because we have learned from each other…”

And as time goes on, as the kids who are Cyrus’s audience become a larger part of the market, more and more companies are going to find themselves trying to explain why they supported politicians who treated gay people as inferior. No longer will support for or against equality be a matter of little concern for kids who have grown up seeing gay folk as maybe a little different but no lesser than themselves.

And as we approach the 2012 election cycle, you can be certain that many a corporate executive will consider the ramifications of writing a check. And more than a few will decide that they don’t want Miley Cyrus, or anyone else, linking their name with someone best known for their anti-gay statements and positions.

Is it too much to hope that Miley Cyrus just doomed Rick Santorum’s presidential campaign?

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