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GLBT News

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Re: GLBT News

Postby vix84 » Mon Jul 25, 2005 6:00 pm

From UK action group Outrage:

"A later news story by Iran In Focus, allegedly based on this original ISNA report, claimed the youths were executed for sexually assaulting a 13 year old boy. But the ISNA report does not mention any sexual assault.

"A report of the executions on the website of the respected democratic opposition movement, The National Council of Resistance Of Iran, also makes no reference to a sexual assault.

"The allegation of sexual assault may either be a trumped up charge to undermine public sympathy for the youths (a frequent tactic by the Islamist regime in Iran).

"Or it may be that the 13 year old was a willing participant but that Iranian law (like UK law) deems that no person of that age is capable of sexual consent and that therefore any sexual contact is automatically deemed in law to be a sex assault.

"If the 13 year old was sexually assaulted, why was he not identified and also put on trial (under Iranian law both the victims and perpetrators of sexual crimes are punished)?"
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Re: GLBT News

Postby Ben Varkentine » Sat Jul 30, 2005 1:16 pm

In the spirit of "it's so creepy, you just have to laugh," I recommend these couple of blog entries.

http://annezook.com/archives/002181.php

http://www.pandagon.net/archives/2005/0 ... .html#more

They're both referencing a story about another one of those "ministries" that purports to help gay men become "ex-gay." And yes, it does seem to be only gay men, as the first blogger notes:

lesbians seem to be a kind of second-class homosexual. Apparently hot girl-on-girl sex isn't as dangerous for society as hot boy-on-boy action. (Sorry, gals. Without a penis, you just don't rate.)


The examples of advice given to these men on how they can nail their closet doors shut defy belief. Here's just one but there are, as they say, many more.

men need to become “hard and masculine” in order to be able to enjoy the soft, mushy feel of a woman. In order to become firmer it is all right for a man to work out a little bit, he said, just don’t work out too much.


Enjoy.

ETA:

When in doubt, blame a lesbian.

The weasel Tucker Carlson's show on MSNBC has not been getting the ratings they'd hoped. In fact, the ratings have been sagging like...well, I don't actually have a full metaphor worked out here, but it's something like Jessica Biel something something.

Anyway, according to Accuracy in Media editor Cliff Kincaid, the reason for this isn't the aforementioned big weasel-ness of Carlson, or even that the country is finally starting to get sick of the conservative POV.

No, it's because of that mean old Media Matters having encouraged the show to be a little more "fair and balanced," and because--pause for gasps of horror--the show regularly features a short-haired lesbian as a guest.

I, for one, am appalled.

http://mediamatters.org/items/200508010007
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Re: GLBT News

Postby Warduke » Thu Aug 04, 2005 9:32 pm

From E! online...

Etheridge Clear of Cancer

by Josh Grossberg


Melissa Etheridge has beaten breast cancer.

In an interview that aired Wednesday night on the syndicated TV show Extra, the "Lucky" crooner announced that she has made a full recovery since undergoing a successful lumpectomy last October after being diagnosed with the disease and being forced to scrap a concert tour.

"I stand before you a totally healthy person," Etheridge said.

The singer, who also had a few lymph nodes removed and sports close-cropped hair these days thanks to chemotherapy treatment, told Extra that she plans on getting back into the recording studio and has scheduled publicity appearances in support of the October release of her greatest hits collection, The Road Less Traveled.

Etheridge, 44, also revealed that she and galpal Tammy Lynn Michaels, 30, were hoping to have a baby via artificial insemination and was quoted as saying: "It's already in the works."

The two time Grammy winner, who made it official with Michaels in a commitment ceremony in September 2003, already has two children, a boy and a girl, both carried by her former partner of 12 years, Julie Cypher, as a result of a sperm donation by fellow musician David Crosby.

However, Etheridge ruled out asking Crosby to be the biological father this time around.

"We won't be using my friend," she added. "David has been there and done that."

On Oct. 7, Etheridge announced that she had been diagnosed with breast cancer after discovering a lump on her breast during a self-examination. Her doctors said the cancer had been caught in the early stages and predicted a "complete recovery."

The raspy-voiced rocker didn't let the cancer get her down, triumphantly turning up with a bald head at February's Grammy Awards ceremony to perform the Janis Joplin classic "Piece of My Heart" with Joss Stone.

Etheridge ultimately credited Michaels--an actress best known for her role as high-maintenance princess Nicole Julian on the defunct WB series Popular--as the person most responsible for helping her through her ordeal.

"At the end of the whole thing when it was over, I came home to a bouquet that said 'in sickness and in health,' and she means it," she said. "And the love and support of someone like that is worth all the money in the world."

Etheridge's greatest hits set, due out on Island Records, features another rendition of "Piece of My Heart" as well as a scorching cover of Tom Petty hit, "Refugee," a song she was especially drawn to when confronted by her own mortality.

"I decided to cover 'Refugee' because I wanted a song that spoke to my heart, my mind and my soul about where I was at," the performer wrote on her official Website. "And a song I could share with an audience that I knew they could relate to, a song that was recognizable but that I could make my own. And considering what I'd been through, and what I seem to be representing now in my life, I think 'Refugee' speaks to it perfectly."

"Refugee" has been released to radio stations as a single and is also available for download via Apple's iTunes music store.

In the meantime, after recently issuing a concert CD and DVD titled Lucky Live, Etheridge is also writing songs for Disney's straight-to-DVD release Brother Bear 2 and may take a stab at the small screen as she's been developing a sitcom based on her own life.
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Re: GLBT News

Postby sam » Thu Aug 04, 2005 11:28 pm

That's really great and wonderful news to hear/ read :-D . Love sam xx
"Sometimes things happen between people that you don't really expect. And sometimes the things that are important are the ones that seem the weirdest or the most wrong and those are the ones that change your life." - Jessie Sammler. [Evan Rachel Wood]

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Re: GLBT News

Postby aceivan » Mon Aug 08, 2005 9:42 pm

There's a documentary on BBC 2 tonight about a gay man who wants to find out if its possible to 'unlearn' to be gay.

Link.

Sad to be Gay
Tue 9 Aug, 9:00 pm - 9:50 pm 50mins

David Akinsanya hates being gay. He has been living as a gay man for 20 years but if he could take a pill to make him heterosexual he'd pop it without a second thought. In Sad to be Gay, David sees if it's possible to go straight. David believes his homosexuality is learned behaviour, but will it be something he can unlearn?

David decides to attend a controversial treatment centre in America that promises "freedom from homosexuality through the power of Jesus Christ". Many of the centre's staff and its clients are also "struggling with same sex attraction".

David makes a revealing and tearful admission about his unhappy past to the group - yet he starts to doubt the centre's methods, and begins to question whether its prayers and support will succeed in making him straight.

The documentary follows the ups and downs of David's turbulent journey and asks whether being gay is something you can change.


There's also an interview with him in The Independant.

http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/this_britain/article304446.ece

Akinsanya travelled to Love in Action's headquarters in Memphis, Tennessee. The workshops advocate the hypothesis that homosexuality is a result of damaged childhood relationships. "I couldn't see how prayer would change my sexual preference, but I went in with an open mind," Akinsanya says. "But the course was very difficult for me because I did have a troubled childhood, and going over everything in a group therapy situation felt like hauling myself over the coals.

"At one stage, we were told to draw time lines of the positive and negative things in our lives, and present them to the rest of the group. When I saw how negative my life appeared, I cried. I didn't expect it to be so emotionally draining. And I found it difficult to understand some of the organisation's rules. I had to remove all my personal items such as jewellery and shave off my beard. We were completely cut off from the outside world and couldn't even do a simple task like take the rubbish out without an escort."

Four days into the course, Akinsanya walked out, realising that without the religious conviction of the other participants, he could go no further. "Even the course organisers, who claim to have been converted, admitted they still struggle with homosexual feelings," he says. "They seemed to be in some strange no man's land."


Once back from the United States, Akinsanya pursued another line of investigation: that his sexuality was determined before he was born, and that the unusual events of his childhood were incidental. He attended the laboratory of Dr Qazi Rahman at the University of East London, whose work on foetal development and testosterone levels is renowned. Akinsanya underwent a number of tests, including measurement of his response to sudden loud noises and assessment of such spatial skills as his ability to rotate cubes conceptually. Both types of tests differentiate strongly between heterosexual and homosexual subjects. Akinsanya says he came out as "gay, gay, gay!" in every test.



He sounds like a desperately sad guy who thinks that being straight will automatically give him a family. Many straight people would tell him that he's wrong.

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Re: GLBT News

Postby aceivan » Tue Aug 09, 2005 11:28 am

http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20050808/ap_en_ot/people_o_donnell_3

Rosie O'Donnell to Join 'Fiddler on Roof'

NEW YORK - Rosie O'Donnell will join Harvey Fierstein in the Broadway revival of the musical "Fiddler on the Roof" on Sept. 20, the show's producers said Monday.

Fierstein plays Tevye the milkman, and O'Donnell will play his wife, Golde, according to a statement. The show is running at the Minskoff Theater.

"As a 20-year friend of Rosie's, I couldn't be happier that we will finally share a stage together," Fierstein said in the statement. "With her understanding of Fiddler's important place in theatrical history, I am positive she will uphold that tradition excitingly."

O'Donnell, 43, made her Broadway debut in 1994, starring as Rizzo in a revival of "Grease." In 2001, she returned to Broadway to star as the Cat in the Hat in "Seussical."

In 2003, she produced Boy George's autobiographical musical, "Taboo." The $10 million Broadway production folded after three months of mediocre ticket sales.

O'Donnell won six Daytime Emmys in six years as best talk show host for "The Rosie O'Donnell Show." She has appeared in several films including "A League of Their Own," "Sleepless in Seattle" and the TV movie "Riding the Bus With My Sister."


A gay man and a lesbian playing one of the most ... uh ... traditional married couples! I love it.

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Re: GLBT News

Postby Warduke » Thu Aug 18, 2005 2:23 pm

From Yahoo...

Kanye West Calls for End to Gay Bashing

NEW YORK - Kanye West says "gay" has become an antonym to hip-hop — and that it needs to be stopped.

During an interview for an MTV special, the 27-year-old rapper launched into a discussion about hip-hop and homosexuality while talking about "Hey Mama," a song on his upcoming album, "Late Registration."

West says that when he was young, people would call him a "mama's boy."

"And what happened was, it made me kind of homophobic, 'cause it's like I would go back and question myself," West says on the show, "All Eyes on Kanye West," set to air Thursday night (10:30 p.m. ET).

West says he changed his ways, though, when he learned one of his cousins was gay.

"It was kind of like a turning point when I was like, `Yo, this is my cousin. I love him and I've been discriminating against gays.'"

West says hip-hop was always about "speaking your mind and about breaking down barriers, but everyone in hip-hop discriminates against gay people." He adds that in slang, gay is "the opposite, the exact opposite word of hip-hop."

Kanye's message: "Not just hip-hop, but America just discriminates. And I wanna just, to come on TV and just tell my rappers, just tell my friends, `Yo, stop it.'"

West, whose debut disc "The College Dropout" won a Grammy for best rap album, will see his second record in stores on Aug. 30.
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Re: GLBT News

Postby Warduke » Tue Aug 23, 2005 9:06 am

From Yahoo...

Cali Court Protects Kids of Gay Couples

By DAVID KRAVETS, Associated Press Writer


SAN FRANCISCO - In the latest ruling to recognize rights of same-sex couples, the California Supreme Court has said gay and lesbian couples who raise children are lawful parents and must provide for their children if they break up.

The state's custody and child support laws that hold absent parents accountable also apply to estranged gay and lesbian couples who used reproductive science to conceive, the high court ruled Monday.

Being a legal parent "brings with it the benefits as well as the responsibilities," said Justice Joyce Kennard.

The decision comes a month after the justices ruled that a California domestic partner law grants gays and lesbians who register with the state many of the same rights as married couples, but does not allow them to marry.

"The court is now protecting the children of same sex parents in gay families in the same way children are protected with heterosexual couples in heterosexual families," said Jill Hersh, who argued the case of a Marin County woman who was granted the right to be the second mother of twins after the birth mother moved out of state.

However, groups opposing gay marriage decried the justices' actions.

"Today's ruling defies logic and common sense by saying that children can have two moms," said attorney Mathew Staver of Liberty Counsel. "That policy establishes that moms and dads as a unit are irrelevant when it comes to raising children."

The ruling stemmed from three cases involving lesbian parents.

In the Marin County case, the court gave parental rights to Hersh's client, who had donated her eggs to her lesbian lover. The partner then had twins. After the couple split up, a lower court said the egg donor was not a legal parent because she did not give birth.

Lower courts and dissenting justices noted the woman, K.M., voluntarily signed a document declaring her intention not to become a parent of any resulting children, and should not be granted parental status.

But Justice Carlos Moreno, writing for the 4-2 majority, said a woman who supplies eggs to help impregnate her lesbian partner, with the understanding the child will be raised in their home, cannot evade her responsibility to that child.

In the other cases, an El Dorado County woman was ordered to pay child support for her former lesbian partner's biological children, and a woman from Los Angeles was told she could not legally terminate the parental rights of her former lesbian lover, years after obtaining a court order stipulating both were parents.

Both cases were decided unanimously.

Emily B., the El Dorado County woman whose former lover, Elisa B., must now pay to support the children, said she might be able to get off of welfare now.

"I'm absolutely overjoyed today," she said.

The court followed its 2002 decision in which it said men who establish themselves as parental figures may become legal fathers even if they did not help conceive the child.

"These legal principles apply with equal force in this case," Kennard wrote in a concurring opinion in the Marin County case.

In a sign of the broad acceptance same-sex parents have in California, the state attorney general's office supported the women who had asked the justices for an updated interpretation of the state's parental rights laws. Several child-advocacy organizations filed friend-of-the-court briefs taking the same side.
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Re: GLBT News

Postby aceivan » Fri Aug 26, 2005 10:00 pm

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/england/manchester/4189634.stm

Soldiers join march for gay pride

Soldiers will join gays and lesbians marching at Manchester's Pride Festival on Saturday.

About 10 soldiers will be on parade as well as manning a recruitment stall and will be joined by 20 RAF colleagues, who will be manning a float.

The RAF was the first of the armed services to join a gay pride festival when it took part in the parade at last year's event.

Their float this year will feature the cockpit of a plane.

Festival Director Claire Turner said: "I think its great the Army is coming. They're showing that they welcome gay people and the Army is something gay people can be interested in. I think it's an example of the confidence of the RAF that they can have the cockpit of a plane on a float. Last year was a great success for the RAF.

"We hope the Army will have more involvement next year and a float as well." Lt Col Leanda Pitt, Commander Regional Recruiting, North West, said: "We are delighted to be taking part in Gay Pride this year.

"As far as the Army is concerned, sexual orientation is a private matter and we are attending to promote the benefits a career in the Army can bring.

"Over the three days we will be able to reach a large audience and also enjoy the atmosphere that the festival brings to the city."

The Royal Navy said its decision not to attend was not intended as a snub, but was due to large numbers of servicemen and women being on leave and Manchester not being near a naval port.


It sounds like the Royal Navy feel left out. Things sure have changed for the armed forces over the last few years. :pride


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Re: GLBT News

Postby urnofosiris » Sat Aug 27, 2005 12:00 am

Cool, several bits of positive news in a row, very refreshing. :)
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Act Up and smell the coffee

Postby Ben Varkentine » Mon Aug 29, 2005 6:56 pm

http://www.wonkette.com/politics//women ... 122735.php

"Concerned Women for America" (a conservative, "faith-based" group) has found something to object to in the coffee cups at Starbucks. Or rather, on the coffee cups at Starbucks. It seems that the company is running a promotion whereby they include quotations from quotable noteables on the backs of cups.

And one, from Armistead Maupin (author of the well-known Tales of the City series), has aroused their ire. They feel there's something offensive to their people in his proclaimation that he doesn't regret being gay--rather the opposite.

And you know what--they're probably right. There is something offensive to them about that. Good thing, too. The things we choose to care about...
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Re: GLBT News

Postby Gatito Grande » Thu Sep 01, 2005 10:09 pm

State senate OKs bill legalizing same-sex marriage

Measure faces uphill battle in the Assembly

Lynda Gledhill, Chronicle Staff Writer

Thursday, September 1, 2005


(09-01) 14:33 PDT Sacramento (SF Chronicle) -- The California State Senate, in a historic vote Thursday, approved a bill legalizing same-sex marriages under state law.

It is the first time a state legislative body in the United States has voluntarily voted to approve same-sex marriage. Vermont and Massachusetts issued marriage licenses to gays and lesbians only after court rulings.

The California bill now moves to the Assembly, where it failed in a vote earlier this year and faces an uncertain fate as the legislative session draws to an end next week.

The 21 to 15 Senate vote followed more than an hour of emotional debate, where the issue of whether a civil licenses should be granted mixed with personal discussions of God, religious beliefs and family. The body’s three lesbian members all spoke of their emotions, while another senator spoke of his 50-year interracial marriage, drawing applause from both his Republican and Democrat colleagues.

“At its core, this bill is about affording all Californians dignity and respect,” said Sen. Sheila Kuehl, D-Santa Monica.

The bill does not require any religious organization to recognize or perform marriages for same-sex couples. AB 849 make marriage as defined by law gender neutral by taking out the notion that marriage is between a man and a woman.

California state law did not place gender into the marriage code until 1977.

Opponents said it violates the essence of what marriage is about — a family to raise children in.

“The reason marriage is fundamentally different from a civil contract is that marriage is formed for a fundamental purpose — that is to bring a new life into the world,” said Sen. Tom McClintock, R-Northridge.

The bill faces an uphill battle in the Assembly. Supporters, who said the bill could be heard as soon as Tuesday, hope the momentum of the Senate vote will help tip the scales in favor of the bill.

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger has not taken a position on the bill, his office said. Previously the governor has said the issue is up to the courts and the people to decide.

Both will ultimately have a say, as cases involving gay marriage are winding their way through the court system and at least two initiatives explicitly saying that marriage can only be between a man and a woman may be headed for ballots next year.

Several lawmakers said they believed their vote on the bill would be one of the most important they cast as lawmakers.

“When I leave this legislature, I want to tell my grandchildren that I stood up for dignity and the rights of all,” said Sen. Liz Figueroa, D-Fremont.

Sen. Dennis Hollingsworth, R-Murrieta, said members should listen to a higher power when deciding how to vote.

“I don’t think there is a member in this chamber who doesn’t somewhere — either readily on the surface or somewhere deep down inside — know that this is not the right thing to do,” he said. “Where does that come from? It comes from a higher power.”

But Sen. Richard Alarcon, D-Los Angeles, said he “absolutely believes this is right.”

“The last time I checked, a higher power created all of us. In the eyes of God, they are all human beings, all equal to him,” he said. “Why are they not equal to us?”


http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2005/09/01/MNsamesex01.DTL

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Re: GLBT News

Postby aceivan » Sun Sep 04, 2005 10:48 pm

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/4213328.stm

Anger at church's adoption stance

Scotland's most senior Catholic has come under fire after claiming that proposals to allow gay couples to adopt would place children "in peril".
Cardinal Keith O'Brien said youngsters would be guinea pigs in a "distorted social experiment".

He said studies had suggested that drug use, homosexuality, stress and mental illness were more common among those raised by same-sex couples.

But the cardinal was dismissed as being out of touch by gay rights activists.

Ben Summerskill, the chief executive of Stonewall, said: "We are saddened that a senior cleric is exhuming 19th Century prejudices rather than recognising the reality of life in the 21st Century.

"We're also saddened that he should be inciting prejudice against gay and lesbian people.

"There's no credible evidence to support the cardinal's view that the educational and social development of the children of gay and lesbian couples is any different from that of the mainstream population."

Green MSP Patrick Harvie, who also campaigns on gay rights, said Cardinal O'Brien was not willing to accept that same-sex relationships were as worthy as mixed-sex ones.

"I think it would be good if the cardinal caught up with the rest of society on this issue," he said.

Different views

The Scottish Executive said it would consider all the views it received during the consultation on the plans.

"We welcome the cardinal's views," said a spokesman. "Many people, however, will hold a different view."

The Catholic Church and the Church of Scotland have both spoken out against the proposals, which were unveiled in June.

People have until 31 October to have their say on the new legislation, which would allow unmarried and same-sex couples to adopt if they could prove that they were part of an enduring family relationship.

Writing in the Sunday Times, Cardinal O'Brien accepted that the current adoption system was failing children.

He urged Catholic families to come forward, predicting that if they did so there would be no need to widen the definition of those able to adopt.

He said the proposals were "gravely immoral" and would see children placed in an environment which was "not conducive to their full human development".

Role models

Cardinal O'Brien said one Spanish report had recorded a significant increase in low self-esteem, stress, confusion over sexual identity, increased mental illness, drug use, promiscuity, sexually transmitted infections and homosexual behaviour among children raised by same-sex couples.

"We ignore a wealth of global evidence and place innumerable children in peril if we forget certain immutable truths; children need a male and a female role model in a permanent relationship," he said.

"Scotland's adopted children must not become guinea pigs in some distorted social experiment aimed at redefining marriage, subverting the family and threatening the good of society."


I'm tempted to say how can people like Cardinal O'Brien sleep at night, but I'm sure he sleeps just fine and condemning ten percent of the population and opening up the Catholic Church to even more ridicule and contempt didn't give him a second thought.

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Re: GLBT News

Postby xita » Tue Sep 06, 2005 8:39 pm

From Yahoo.
Holdouts mark gay festival in New Orleans

PlanetOut Network 1 hour, 39 minutes ago

SUMMARY: In the aftermath of the deadly floods, two dozen revelers in New Orleans marched to commemorate the annual Southern Decadence party.

Hurricane Katrina's deadly floodwaters were not enough to rain on the parade of two dozen revelers in New Orleans who marched on Sunday to commemorate the annual Southern Decadence party.

According to press reports, the participants wore beads and colorful outfits and stopped at one of the only bars that remains open in the city's French Quarter. The marchers were mostly residents of the neighborhood who did not evacuate.

The historic French Quarter sustained less damage than most parts of the city, which remain under foul, toxic water after last week's hurricane. New Orleans has essentially been shut down, and officials estimate that thousands were killed by the storm.

The marchers said they wanted to show their determination to fight against despair.

"Everyone that survived is here," Matt Menold, one of the revelers, told the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. "They're saying New Orleans isn't going to be a town again, but it is."

"Hey, we've got to keep our morale up, too," said Jill Sandars, in a quote published by the Express-News.

Southern Decadence, the city's largest annual gay and lesbian celebration held on Labor Day weekend, was officially canceled after the hurricane devastated the city, nicknamed the Big Easy, and other parts of the U.S. Gulf Coast.

A Christian fundamentalist group has claimed that the deadly hurricane was God's vengeance on the "wickedness" of New Orleans, which is also known for its raucous Mardi Gras celebrations.
If you'd like to know more, you can find stories related to Holdouts mark gay festival in New Orleans.
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Re: GLBT News

Postby FineyMcFine » Fri Sep 09, 2005 10:08 am

I totally do not get this. Jeff Gannon - yes, THE Jeff Gannon - is now writing opinion pieces for the Washington Blade, the GLBT paper in the DC area. How, why, how does anyone at that newspaper think that this is a good idea?

Here's his article on John Roberts, also posted below.

Revisiting Roberts
Gay groups were quick to oppose Bush’s nominee, but they should reconsider winning via the courts.
Friday, September 09, 2005

LAST MONTH, FOUR gay advocacy groups announced their opposition to the nomination of Judge John Roberts to replace Sandra Day O’Connor on the Supreme Court.

The Human Rights Campaign and three other activist organizations predictably jumped on the bandwagon driven by Ralph Neas and the liberal People for the American Way. In a joint press release, the groups characterized Roberts as a “disciple” of an ideology that is “antithetical” to an inclusive America.

That claim is said to be based upon the review of thousands of documents and memos released by the Bush administration. The most overblown rhetoric proclaims that Roberts is “hostile” to gay rights. Fred Phelps, who pickets the funerals of those who die from AIDS, is hostile to gay rights; it is unlikely that Roberts or more than a handful of Americans share such extreme views.

What comes through loud and clear is that Roberts is a jurist who respects the Constitution and recognizes its original intent. That is precisely what these groups fear the most, since someone with that judicial philosophy would be a strict constructionist.

Roberts is antithetical to the judicial activism that has allowed the court to usurp the role of the legislative branch by making new law from the bench.

UNFORTUNATELY, THE GAY movement has fully invested itself in the courts to achieve its goals. The movement should consider abandoning a strategy that depends on the courts to further its agenda since the results so far have been disastrous, as evidenced by the gay marriage ruling in Massachusetts.

That decision instigated a push for a federal constitutional amendment banning gay marriage and played a key role in the 2004 national election. It also spawned 11 state referendums to prohibit same-sex marriage, all of which were approved by voters.

But it would be unwise to conclude that the Massachusetts decision unleashed a wave of homophobia. Voters were reacting to what they perceived as judicial tyranny; that four state court judges could mandate a fundamental societal change for the entire country. It is this judicial overreach that many conservatives seek to restrain.

Use of the courts to affect social change is the model exemplified by Roe vs. Wade, which many regard as a fundamentally flawed ruling. To reach its conclusion, justices had to first divine a “right of privacy,” which is not included explicitly in the Constitution.

Activists are demanding that Roberts be forced to profess fealty to Roe as “settled law,” with the implication that he would agree to never rule to overturn it. They also hope to convince the nominee to respect precedent, with the same result in mind. But it is important to point out that Plessy vs. Ferguson, a case that permitted racial discrimination, was also once considered “settled law.”

To discover a constitutional right to same-sex marriage would probably require justices to contort themselves in a legal game of Twister. It would be foolish to base that “right” on reasoning so flimsy.

GAYS HAVE MUCH more opportunity for lasting success in the legislative process. A far better strategy would be to win hearts and minds than have change imposed by people elected by no one.

Because elections have consequences, the ballot box should be where a civilized society determines its future, not at the feet of imperial jurists.

Opposing Roberts might be good for fund-raising, but it is bad politics, especially when the chances of stopping his confirmation are slim. To demonize this nominee with inflammatory rhetoric not only diminishes the process, but undermines the credibility of his opponents.

An independent judiciary with respect for the Constitution is essential for our republic, so that when duly passed legislation comes before it, those statutes can be viewed in the context of the expressed will of the people.


It's a fallacy that "the gays" are depending on a courts-only strategy. More GLBT-positive legislation was passed in state legislatures in 2004 than in any previous year.

Most of the statewide GLBT political groups I know of are working very smart legislative strategies, getting bills passed that are groundbreaking - like Illinois banning sexual orientation and gender identity and expression discrimination in employment, housing, public accommodations, and credit early this year, and California's marriage bill - as well as other bills that are "smaller" in scope but extend crucial rights to people and families.

Anyway, it's not even worth the effort it takes, miniscule as it is, to refute his arguments. I'm just stunned about why a GLBT paper thinks it's a good idea to give this guy a platform.
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Re: GLBT News

Postby sam7777 » Fri Sep 09, 2005 10:22 am

Since Jeff Gannon started writing opinion pieces for the Washington Blade, I dumped the Blade as a news source. They always leaned right with a sickeningly Log cabin republican POV but putting a HACK like Gannon on their payroll is the last straw for me.
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Re: GLBT News

Postby Gatito Grande » Sun Sep 11, 2005 3:12 pm

So is Gannon now officially OUT? Because I thought he (and his defenders) were passing off his call-boy career via the "youthful indiscretion/pre-repentent sinner" route.

Bottom-line: no self-respecting LGBT publication should publish a closet-case. Period. He must COME OUT, or GET OUT!

GG I can see it now: "Jeff Gannon" is out . . . just don't tell Ma & Pa Guckert! Out
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Re: GLBT News

Postby Warduke » Mon Sep 12, 2005 7:36 pm

From Yahoo...

2 Convicted of Murdering Transgender Teen

By MICHELLE LOCKE, Associated Press Writer


HAYWARD, Calif. - Two men who had sex with a transgender teen and then discovered she was biologically male were convicted Monday of her murder, but cleared of hate crime charges.

Michael Magidson and Jose Merel, both 25, face mandatory sentences of 15 years-to-life in prison for second-degree murder in the killing of Gwen Araujo, who was beaten, tied up and strangled.

The jury was deadlocked in the case of a third man, Jason Cazares, 25, marking the second time a jury was unable to reach a verdict in his case.

Araujo, 17, was born a boy named Edward but grew up to believe her true identity was female. The defendants, who knew her as Lida, met her in the summer of 2002. Magidson and Merel had sexual encounters with her, experiences that fueled suspicions about Araujo's gender.

The issue boiled over in the early hours of Oct. 4, 2002, in a confrontation at Merel's house in the San Francisco suburb of Newark.

In the first trial, the three defendants stuck together, with their lawyers attacking the chief prosecution witness, Jaron Nabors, who was also at the house the night Araujo died but was allowed to plead guilty to manslaughter.

But in the second trial, the defendants' united front cracked, with Merel implicating Magidson.

Nabors testified at both trials that Araujo was savagely attacked after her biological identity was revealed when her underwear was pulled aside. He said he didn't see the killing but saw Magidson pull a rope toward the teen's neck.

Magidson testified that he beat and tied up Araujo, adding that while he couldn't remember large parts of the night he was sure he had not strangled her. He said Nabors was the killer.

But Merel, testifying for the first time, broke down and cried when prosecutor Chris Lamiero asked him directly if Magidson had admitted strangling Araujo. He testified that Magidson had told him "if push came to shove" Merel should identify Magidson as the killer.

An autopsy found that Araujo died of asphyxiation associated with head injuries.

Nabors testified that Merel smashed Araujo in the head with a can and also hit her with a pan. Merel said he slapped Araujo and hit her a glancing blow with the pan, but he denied seriously injuring her.

Cazares said he was outside the house when the killing took place and only helped bury the body in a shallow grave in the Sierra Nevada foothills.

Merel's attorney said he was not guilty of anything more than felony assault, if that.

Magidson's attorney asked for a manslaughter conviction.
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Re: GLBT News

Postby FineyMcFine » Thu Sep 15, 2005 7:54 am

From 365gay.com

House Passes Gay Hate Crimes Bill
by Paul Johnson 365Gay.com Washington Bureau Chief

Posted: September 14, 2005 6:00 pm ET

(Washington) The House of Representatives passed legislation late Wednesday afternoon to expand federal hate crimes laws to include gays, lesbians and the transgendered.

The measure received bipartisan support, passing on a 233 - 199 vote.

Called the Local Law Enforcement Enhancement Act it has passed the Senate in previous congressional sessions only to die in the House.

A Senate version of the bill is currently before the chamber.

This legislation extends existing hate crimes laws that already cover crimes motivated by race, color, national origin and religion to include crimes based on actual or perceived gender, sexual orientation, disability and gender identity, including gender-related characteristics. The gender identity/characteristics language was added to this bill this year to make clear that anti-transgender crimes are covered.

The bill would allow the Department of Justice to assist local authorities in investigating and prosecuting cases in which violence occurs.

The bill was filed jointly in May by Reps. Barney Frank (D-MA), IIeana Ros-Lehtinen (R-FL), John Conyers (D-MI); Christopher Shays (R-CT), and Tammy Baldwin (D-WI) (story)

Passage in the House drew praise from LGBT rights activists.

"Every American child deserves the strongest protections from some of this country's most horrifying crimes," said Judy Shepard, the mother of Matthew Shepard, who was murdered by two men because he was gay, in 1998 in Wyoming. Shepard's slaying became the impetus for the legislation.

"Never before has the House of Representatives voted to protect transgender people in any way," said Matt Foreman, Executive Director of the Task Force. "And today marks the first time, outside of procedural motions, that the House has affirmatively voted to extend full hate crimes protections to lesbian, gay and bisexual people. This proves that even in times of adversity for our community, when grassroots voices keep up the pressure on our elected officials, decency can prevail."

Gay Democrats were equally pleased.

"This legislation will allow the federal government to enhance its law enforcement resources so that it may effectively combat crimes that attempt to terrorize groups of Americans," said Eric Stern, NSD Executive Director.

Passage of the bill came the same week as the conviction of two men in the slaying of transgendered teen Gwen Araujo. The jury, however, was unable to reach agreement on the sentence for a third defendant in the case. (story)

Last April a report released by the National Coalition of Anti-Violence Programs showed violence against members of the LGBT community is on the rise.

Overall, NCAVP’s report noted a 4% increase in reported incidents of anti-LGBT violence. Such incidents rose from 1,720 in 2003 to 1,792 in 2004.

Included in the rise in incidents for the year, was an 11% increase in anti-LGBT murders, which rose from 18 in 2003 to 20 in 2004. During 2004, the total number of victims rose 4%, from 2,042 in 2003 to 2,131 in 2004.

©365Gay.com 2005


(Editorial comments from Sally McFine: the headline doesn't reflect one of the more salient points about this bill, which is that it explicitely includes gender identity and expression. Also, this is the first time the substance of the bill has passed the House (in previous years the House was voting on procedure because Reps were unable to get the bill to the floor). This bill has previously passed the Senate by huge margins - so the real question is, will the President sign it?)
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Re: GLBT News

Postby WebWarlock » Fri Sep 16, 2005 7:13 am

Very interesting study, of course I am wondering what the long range implications are?

When these late teens and 20 somethings start to make their voices heard in politics and voting, what effect will this have on policy?

I do know some "former" bisexual women who are now married and consider themselves straight, but still remain active in supporting politics that support GLBT causes.

And I know others that for a lack of better word seem ashamed of their past and now go out of their way not to support these causes.

It is a curious social dynamic.

Here is the article.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/loca ... i-news-hed

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/9358339/

Survey Finds More Women Try Bisexuality

By MARTHA IRVINE
AP National Writer
Published September 15, 2005, 9:49 PM CDT


More women -- particularly those in their late teens and 20s -- are experimenting with bisexuality or at least feel more comfortable reporting same-sex encounters, according to a new report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The survey, released Thursday by the CDC's National Center for Health Statistics, found that 11.5 percent of women, ages 18 to 44, said they've had at least one sexual experience with another woman in their lifetimes, compared with about 4 percent of women, ages 18 to 59, who said the same in a comparable survey a decade earlier.

For women in their late teens and 20s, the percentage rose to 14 percent in the more recent survey. About 6 percent of men in their teens and 20s said they'd had at least one same-sex encounter.

While those who conducted the survey took measures to protect respondents' privacy, researchers say it's unclear whether the figure for men was lower because they're are more likely to avoid same-sex experiences or whether they're not reporting them.

It wouldn't surprise Kat Fowler, a 27-year-old art student who dates both women and men, if men were less likely to talk about their experiences.

"There's a certain higher level of discrimination (for men). It's a lot easier for women to have these kinds of experiences and be open about it because it's more accepted," said Fowler, who attends the University of Florida.

The findings on bisexuality and other aspects of Americans' sexual habits were taken from the National Survey of Family Growth, which included 12,571 in-person interviews, done from March 2002 to March 2003. Overall, researchers said the report shows that most people have relatively few partners and are at a low risk for sexually transmitted diseases.

"Instead of just anecdotes and stories that raise people's anxieties, I think it's best to have real numbers," said William Mosher, the statistician who oversaw the report. "And now we have those."

When it comes to women and same-sex relationships, Mosher said it would be worth studying why young women seek such relationships, and whether they may be trying to avoid diseases more commonly spread through sex with men.

But some experts who study sexuality say it's even more likely that many college students simply see experimentation as a rite of passage.

"It's very safe in the academic community; no one thinks anything of it," said Elayne Rapping, a professor of American studies at the University of Buffalo who has written about sexuality.

"But to some extent there's more talk than action," she added, noting that the bisexuality label has become a "badge of courage" for some college women, even those who only date men. Meanwhile, she said, men who have same-sex experiences are often less likely to talk about it publicly.

The trend among college women has prompted some sexual behavior experts to light-heartedly refer to the term "LUG," or "lesbian until graduation," said Craig Kinsley, a neuroscientist at the University of Richmond who studies the biology of sexual orientation and gender.

In other findings, the survey said that about 10 percent of females, ages 15 to 19, and 12 percent of males had experienced heterosexual oral sex but not vaginal intercourse. While no earlier data were available for young women, percentages for young men in 1992 were about the same, researchers said.

Those numbers dropped substantially for people in their 20s, who were more likely to have had vaginal intercourse.

The survey also revealed that 39 percent of men, ages 15 to 44, who'd had at least one sexual partner in the last year said they used a condom during their most recent sexual encounter. That figure rose to 65 percent for men who'd never been married -- and 91 percent for men who'd ever had sexual contact with another man.

Mosher said it was likely that men in higher-risk categories were heeding campaigns that encourage them to use condoms.

"Whether the levels (of condom use) are high enough is for others to judge," Mosher said. "But I think it's at least encouraging."

The survey of adults has a margin of error of 1 percentage point and 3 percentage points for the teen data.

* __

On the Net:

Federal survey results: http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/products/pubs/p ... /ad362.htm


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Re: GLBT News

Postby aceivan » Sat Sep 17, 2005 3:48 am

When these late teens and 20 somethings start to make their voices heard in politics and voting, what effect will this have on policy?


I was listening to a discussion on BBC Radio 4 yesterday and a guy was talking about changes in attitudes such as caring about the environment, vegetarianism, etc coming from the younger generations and not governments, ending with "old homophobes don't change, they just die." I tend to agree with him. I just hope the younger gay and gay friendly voters will be the ones who refuse to vote for homophobic politicians, unlike so many of my generation.

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Gay penguins head to Divorce Court

Postby xita » Mon Sep 19, 2005 10:41 pm

Gay penguins head to Divorce Court

Following in the footsteps of Brad and Jen, Renee Zelwegger and Kenny Chesney, and Tori Spelling and Tori Spelling's husband, the gay penguins of Central Park have reportedly become the latest celebrity couple headed towards Splitsville.

After six blissful years, the homo duo (Silo and Roy) have reportedly stopped spending time together, with Silo having the nerve to turn his affections to a new FEMALE hussy named Scrappy. While Silo explores this newfound hetero love with the nest wrecker, poor Roy is said to be in a lonely funk, pining for happier days of yore. Damn you, Scrappy!!

We hear that Roy is seeking half of the adulterous Silo's daily fish and squid earnings, total ownership of the couple's summer place in the Bronx Zoo, and full custody of the tourists.

Also at fox news
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Re: GLBT News

Postby aceivan » Wed Sep 21, 2005 11:54 pm

http://www.365gay.com/newscon05/09/092105heche.htm

Anne Heche 'Disgusted' By Mom's 'Ex-Gay' Message

Anne Heche has a message for her mother: "Stop calling me an ex-gay."

She is lashing out at her mother for being part of Focus on the Family's 'ex-gay' speaking tour. Nancy Heche frequently tells audiences that the power of prayer made her daughter dump Ellen DeGeneres and go straight.

"Ellen and I had a three and a half year relationship that ended sadly, not because we were both women, but because we both wanted different things for our lives," Heche says in a posting on her official website.

"This Nonsense about my mother praying for me is really making me angry. My mother never approved of my relationship with Ellen. Her hatred for our relationship is one of the many things that ultimately led to my breaking off all communication with her. (My mother, that is, not Ellen.)"

The actress also attacks the so-called 'ex-gay' movement.

"The "Ex-gay" events that are going on right now make me sick," she writes on her site.

"The fact that my mother is using my name to promote this movement makes me even sicker. I could not disagree more adamantly with what she and her group of unloving, unaccepting, Bible preaching hate mongers are doing. I do not believe that homosexuality is something that should be brainwashed out of someone. I do not believe that homosexuality should be anything but celebrated if that is the thing that makes an individual feel good about their life. I believe, as I have always said, that people should love who they want to love."

After her breakup with DeGeneres Heche married a man, but she repeats on her site that the split had nothing to do with lesbianism.

"And for anyone who ever thought that Ellen and I broke it off because of sexuality, you couldn't be more mistaken. And for anyone who thought my mother's prayers had anything to do with me marrying a man, forget it. I can safely say that my mother has nothing to do with any decision I make. It has always disturbed me the way religion can twist something to make people feel badly about themselves. Isn't a loving heart an accepting, caring heart? Certainly my mother has never been "loving." But that's just my humble opinion."

FOC's 'Love Won Out' conferences have been held across the country. Nancy Heche is regularly a featured speaker. The organization's website says Heche is "a single parent who experienced the international media rush during her daughter Anne Heche’s highly visible relationship with Ellen DeGeneres, and a widow who endured her husband’s diagnosis of and subsequent death from AIDS."

Nancy Heche frequently tells audiences that homosexuality can be cured with prayer and points to Anne as an example of this.



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Re: GLBT News

Postby WebWarlock » Fri Sep 23, 2005 8:48 am

More news from religion front.

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,170219,00.html

Christian School Expels Girl for Having Gay Parents

ONTARIO, Calif. — A Christian school expelled a 14-year-old student because her parents are lesbians, the school's superintendent said in a letter.

Shay Clark was expelled from Ontario Christian School on Thursday.

"Your family does not meet the policies of admission," Superintendent Leonard Stob wrote to Tina Clark, Shay's biological mother.

The school's policy states that at least one parent cannot engage in practices "immoral or inconsistent with a positive Christian life style such as cohabitating without marriage or in a homosexual relationship," Stob wrote.

Shay and her parents said they will not fight the ruling. Shay will attend public school next week.

Stob could not be reached for comment.

School administrators learned of the parents' relationship this week after Shay and another cheerleader were reprimanded for talking to the crowd during a Sept. 16 football game, according to Clark and her partner, Mitzi Gray.

After school officials told Clark that her daughter could no longer attend the school, the mother was ordered to remove Shay from cheerleading practice, collect the girl's belongings and leave the property.

The district refunded Clark and Gray $3,415 — Shay's tuition for half the year plus an art fee.

Clark and Gray, who have been together 22 years, have two other daughters aged 9 and 19.

Two weeks ago, a lesbian student filed a lawsuit against the Garden Grove Unified School District, alleging that officials suspended her several times and forced her to temporarily transfer to another campus because she refused their orders to stop hugging and kissing her girlfriend on school grounds.


Ontario Christian School can be found here, http://www.ocschools.org/

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Re: GLBT News

Postby Ben Varkentine » Fri Oct 14, 2005 3:22 pm

This will be good information to have on hand the next time someone starts going on with their ignorance...

Children of Same-Sex Couples Do as Well as Other Children

(Washington) — An analysis of multiple studies of 500 households shows that rearing children in a same-sex household does not affect the their self-esteem, gender identity, or emotional health, a Boston researcher reported.

"Pediatricians need to recognize that there are variations in families and learn what kind of advice to give them to optimize the child's development," said Ellen Perrin, MD, professor of pediatrics at Tufts-New England Medical Center in Boston, Massachusetts.

The researcher and colleagues looked at data from 15 studies evaluating possible stigma, teasing, social isolation, adjustment, sexual orientation, and strengths. The findings were presented here at the American Academy of Pediatrics National Conference and Exhibition.

"The vast consensus of the studies is that children of same-sex parents do as well as children whose parents are heterosexual in every way," Dr. Perrin said. "In some ways, children of same-sex parents actually may have advantages over other family structures."

It has been estimated that one to six million children are being reared by committed lesbian or gay couples in this country. Some children were born to a heterosexual couple and later raised by a same-sex couple; others were placed in foster homes, were adopted, or conceived through a surrogate mother through artificial insemination.

Previous studies of same-sex parenting have been criticized for being biased, but Dr. Perrin said the research team was extremely careful to select only solid, evidence-based research for review.

Based on nine studies from 1981 to 1994 of 260 children, aged three to 11 years, reared by either heterosexual mothers or same sex-mothers after divorce, the researchers found there was no difference in intelligence of the children, type or prevalence of psychiatric disorders, self-esteem, well-being, peer relationships, or parental stress. "The children all had a similar emotional experiences with divorce," she said.

What they did find was that after divorce children being reared by lesbian mothers had more contact with fathers than children reared by divorced heterosexual mothers, Dr. Perrin said. "There are interesting suggestions that these children are more tolerant of differences."

A separate longitudinal study of 37 children of 27 divorced lesbian mothers and an equal number of children with divorced heterosexual mothers found no differences in behavior, adjustment, gender identity, and peer relationships.

"What is exciting about this study was that they followed the children 11 years later when they became adults," Dr. Perrin said. "But they still found no difference in adjustment, self-esteem, psychiatric or psychological problems, family relationships, or in identifying sexual orientation."

Four other large studies of more than 100 couples that evaluated children either born or adopted into families found that same-sex parents were more likely to have contact with extended family for social support as well as a more equal division of labor in the home. However, children of same-sex parents did experience some stigmatization.

"The researchers found no differences in the parents other than that lesbian couples share household and child care tasks more equitably," said Dr. Perrin. "The children of lesbian couples also appeared to be less aggressive, more nurturing to peers, more tolerant of diversity, and more androgynous," playing with toys for both boys and girls.

A further analysis of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health used randomly selected representative data from 44 adolescents aged 12 to 18 years. The study compared children living with two women in a "marriage-like" relationship to teenagers living with two heterosexual parents.

The study showed that the adolescents were similar in intrapersonal adjustments such as self-esteem, depression, and anxiety. They also were similar in school success, family relationships, and neighborhood integration, Dr. Perrin said.

"What is striking is that there are very consistent findings in these studies," she concluded. "But further study conducted in a long-term systematic manner in community samples needs to be conducted."

Dr. Perrin pointed out that "as pediatricians we have a lot of different kinds of roles. We need to be extremely careful about confidentiality with these families and assure them that their family constellation won't be broadcast. This will give us a better chance of learning more about the family and providing needed advice and discussing some of the issues."

"This is valuable information," Carol Berkowitz, MD, told Medscape. She is the immediate past president of the AAP and professor and executive vice chair in the Department of Pediatrics at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center in Torrance, California. "This subject evokes a lot of emotions that have influenced some studies. Some studies in the past were weighted based on nothing more than their own views."

The value of this presentation is these are all evidence-based studies, Dr. Berkowitz said, adding this information will help pediatricians in their practices and for setting policy.


http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/514477?src=nldne
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Re: GLBT News

Postby FineyMcFine » Fri Oct 28, 2005 7:10 am

From the San Jose Mercury News via AP...

Posted on Thu, Oct. 27, 2005

George Takei, 'Mr. Sulu' of Star Trek fame, comes out

Associated Press

LOS ANGELES - Actor George Takei, best known for his role as Mr. Hikaru Sulu in "Star Trek," comes out as homosexual in the Oct. 26 issue of Frontiers, a biweekly Los Angeles magazine covering the gay and lesbian community.

Takei said his new onstage role, as psychologist Martin Dysart in "Equus," helped inspire him to publicly discuss his sexuality. Takei described the character as a "very contained but turbulently frustrated man." The play opened Wednesday at the David Henry Hwang Theater in Los Angeles.

The current social and political climate also motivated Takei's disclosure, he said.

"The world has changed from when I was a young teen feeling ashamed for being gay," he said. "The issue of gay marriage is now a political issue. That would have been unthinkable when I was young."

The 68-year-old actor said he considers himself as "having been out for quite some time." Takei and his partner, Brad Altman, have been together for 18 years.

Takei, a Japanese-American who lived in a U.S. internment camp from age 4 to 8, said he grew up feeling shameful about his ethnicity and sexuality. He likened prejudice against gays to racial segregation.

"It's against basic decency and what American values stand for," he said.

Takei began his acting career in 1959, appearing in "Ice House" with Richard Burton. He joined the "Star Trek" cast in 1973 as Mr. Sulu, a character he played for three seasons on television and in six subsequent films. Takei has appeared in scores of movies and television shows. He received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1986.

A community activist, Takei ran for the Los Angeles City Council in 1973. He serves on the advisory committee of the California Civil Liberties Public Education Program and is chairman of East West Players, the theater company producing "Equus." The play closes Dec. 4.
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Re: GLBT News

Postby LtSticks » Fri Oct 28, 2005 7:53 am

I wanted to post this a while back, just to show how, though the UK claims to be super tolerant of LGBTs, still has stuff like this :( I'm sure British kittens will have seen this at some point in the news, I just thought I would share it with the rest, as it disgusted me so much

A jury has heard how a Kent man was kicked and beaten to death because he was homosexual.


Thirty year old Lee Harvey was viciously attacked by two men in an isolated part of Margate after being tricked into meeting his killers.

Christopher May, prosecuting, told Maidstone Crown Court that 26-year-old Mark Honan of Godwin Road in Cliftonville, used a gay chatline to contact 30-year-old Lee Harvey of Chichester Road, Margate, and arrange to meet him in Northdown Road.

Mr Harvey drove Honan and another man Gary Crewe, who is 25, and from Millmead road in Margate to a deserted track near a cement works and this, said Mr May, is where they murdered him.

Crewe denies murder and another man Richard Brown, who is 36 of William Road in Margate, denies attempting to pervert the course of justice.

The jury was told that Honan had pleaded guilty. The case continues.
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Re: GLBT News

Postby Warduke » Fri Oct 28, 2005 9:11 am

George Takei Comes Out.

That's Mr. Sulu from Star Trek if you didn't know.
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Re: GLBT News

Postby AmbersSecretAdmirer » Sat Oct 29, 2005 5:03 am

Yes, it is very true that we here in Britain still have a very nasty anti-gay section. It is usually not as vocal, not as violent as the attack mentioned, so it comes as a genuine shock to the people of the UK when such attacks happen.

As a UK citizen, I know very well that equality for gay people is far off (you only have to look at the Civil Partnership Bill to see how little the Government values the LGBT community).

All such attacks are shameful.
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Re: GLBT News

Postby jago » Sat Oct 29, 2005 5:49 am

As a UK citizen, I know very well that equality for gay people is far off (you only have to look at the Civil Partnership Bill to see how little the Government values the LGBT community).


With their watered down Civil Partnership Bill and their treatment of asylum seekers the British government seems very wary of upsetting homophobes and racists.
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