Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Brody's Notes... Minnesota School District Changes "Neutral" Policy On Sexual Orientation

Anoka-Hennepin School Board In Session
By Brody Levesque | COON RAPIDS, MINNESOTA -- The Anoka-Hennepin school board which oversees the state's largest school district, adopted the “Respectful Learning Environment” policy on a 5-1 voice vote Monday night. The new policy replaces the Sexual Orientation Curriculum Policy that required teachers to stay neutral when sexual orientation came up in class, a policy critics charge led to a climate of anti-gay bullying and the suicides of at least nine LGBTQ teens attending the district's schools.
Last summer, the Southern Poverty Law Center and the National Center for Lesbian Rights filed a lawsuit on behalf of five students in the district for alleged disregard of bullying in schools under the neutrality policy. The Justice Department has also opened an investigation of the school district in conjunction with the Department of Education's Office of Civil Rights. U.S. Magistrate Judge Steven Rau has scheduled the next round of settlement talks for March 1 and 2 in two lawsuits filed by students, former students and parents against the neutrality policy.
“Today is the first day in nearly 18 years that Minnesota’s Anoka-Hennepin School District no longer has a harmful policy that singles out lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender students. Although we would have preferred for the District to have repealed this stigmatizing policy without replacing it, we are pleased that the new policy expressly requires district staff to affirm the dignity and self-worth of all students, including LGBT students,” the SPLC said in a press release. “The repeal of this policy is an important first step, but the District must do much more to create a safe, welcoming, and respectful learning environment for all students, including LGBT and gender non-conforming students, and those perceived as such.”
The new policy takes effect immediately for more than 38,500 students and 2,800 teachers.
Yesterday's actions by the board occurred less than two weeks after Rolling Stone magazine published an article reporting on a “cluster” of nine teen suicides in the district with at least four of the nine either gay or perceived to be gay. Anoka-Hennepin officials condemned the article, calling it a “grossly distorted portrayal" of the school system and the old policy.
The new Anoka-Hennepin policy obligates the school system to providing “a safe and respectful learning environment for all students.” The new policy states  that when contentious political, religious, social matters or economic issues come up — it does not specifically cite sexuality issues — teachers should not try to persuade students to adopt particular viewpoint. It calls for teachers to foster respectful exchanges of views. It also says in such discussions, staff should affirm the dignity and self-worth of all students, regardless of race, religion, gender or sexual orientation.

In Brief

Staff Reports
Joint Maryland House Committees Vote 25-18 To Advance Same Sex Marriage Bill For Floor Vote
ANNAPOLIS, MARYLAND -- Maryland's Democratic Governor Martin O'Malley's bill to allow same sex unions was approved in a joint 25-18 vote by the House of Delegates' Judiciary Committee and the Health and Government Operations Committee Tuesday making it possible for the Free State to becoming the eighth state to legalize same sex nuptials.
A spokesperson for the Governor told LGBTQNation Tuesday afternoon after the panels had voted that although O'Malley's legislation is expected to go to the full House for a floor vote on Wednesday, she indicated that supporters weren't positive that there were the 71 votes needed for passage. The Governor would be meeting in private to shore up support for the bill including a meeting with Montgomery County Delegate Sam Arora, a Democrat who had abstained, whose vote is deemed critical to the bill's passage.
A moment of surprise came when Republican delegate Robert Costa lent his support and voted yes although Delegate Costa was quick to point out that although he personally opposes same sex marriages, he believes that "government should not be involved with determining how two people chose to live," adding,"This is between and individual and god."
Governor O'Malley told reporters after the vote he had lobbied hard support for the measure and needed only a handful of extra votes to secure passage this year.
The Maryland Senate, which passed the bill last year, was expected to consider the measure as early as Friday, said Senator Brian Frosh, head of the Senate Judicial Proceedings Committee.
The Maryland committee's vote came one day after Washington became the seventh state to legalize same sex marriage, although that law will not take effect until June 7th at the earliest. Last week, the U. S. Ninth Circuit Court Of Appeals declared a voter-approved same-sex marriage ban in California unconstitutional. Opponents of same-sex marriage in Maryland have threatened a ballot initiative to overturn the measure should it pass the state's legislature and is signed into law as promised by the governor.

Clay Aiken: Proposed NC Anti-Gay Marriage Amendment "Goes Too Far."
Clay Aiken
RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA -- North Carolina native, singer Clay Aiken loves his home state but is deeply unhappy about proposed amendment to the North Carolina constitution that would ban same sex marriages. The former American Idol contestant spoke out about the amendment in a video posted to YouTube Monday. "Families looks different. They have always looked different. You have single-parent families, families with parents of different races, families with parents of different religions," he said in the video. "No matter what we want a family to look like, we can't put into a constitution – a document that is supposed to protect our rights – one narrow definition." Aiken, who is openly gay was featured in the video for the group Protect All N.C. Families. The amendment, which will appear on May's primary ballot, would define marriage as being between one man and one woman and outlaw civil unions.
The singer, who is also a parent of a son, said the amendment will harm children of LGBTQ families;
"I think an amendment like this goes way too far," he said. "It will take away protections from kids who, right now, may have access to healthcare because one of their parents has healthcare at work." 
One of the leading proponents of the amendment, Raleigh pastor Patrick L. Wooden, anti-gay activist who has made a series of virulently anti-gay statements claiming for example that older gay men have to wear diapers after a lifetime of shoving a variety of objects and animals up their anuses, appeared recently on anti-gay activist Peter LaBarbera's Americans For Truth About Homosexuality Radio Hour, where he told LaBarbera the Bible defines marriage as being between one man and one woman. "We just believe that the definition should be redefined in the state of North Carolina," he said. North Carolina is the only state in the Southeast without a constitutional amendment limiting marriage to one man and one woman, but same sex marriage is against the law already. Wooden said that giving the Bible's definition of marriage constitutional protection is the "will of the people."
According to a poll published last September by Elon University poll published in September, 56-percent of North Carolina residents oppose the amendment.
WATCH: 

Monday, February 13, 2012

In Brief

Staff Reports
Clerics to MSNBC: Don't Give Tony Perkins Airtime
Tony Perkins via CNN
NEW York, New York -- A group of progressive clergy led by openly gay Episcopal bishop Gene Robinson are asking MSNBC to cease giving airtime to Tony Perkins, head of the antigay Family Research Council.
“FRC has been designated a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center for using dishonest, incendiary rhetoric about gay and lesbian Americans. But MSNBC has continued offering a friendly venue for Perkins, neither informing their viewers of FRC’s status nor including any rebuttal from progressive religious leaders. Perkins has appeared on MSNBC more often this year than on any other cable news network.” ~ Press release from Faithful America.
Continue reading here.

Brody's Notes... Washington Governor Chris Gregoire Signs Same-Sex marriage Bill

Staff  & Wire Service Reports
 Governor Chris Gregoire 
OLYMPIA, WASHINGTON -- Washington Democratic Governor Chris Gregoire signed into law Senate Bill 6239, the measure passed last week by the legislature that legalises same-sex marriage, making Washington the seventh in the nation to allow same-sex couples to marry. As Governor Gregoire signed the bill into law surrounded by LGBTQ Equality Rights activists and supporters she told the audience; "I'm proud our same-sex couples will no longer be treated as separate but equal."
The law, which takes effect June 7, is being decried by anti-gay forces, some of whom plan to file a referendum challenge Monday afternoon that could stay the law from taking affect pending the outcome of a November ballot initiative vote.
The ceremony which was held in the main public reception room at the Capitol was packed with hundreds of LGBTQ activists and at least 40 lawmakers from both bodies of the legislature.
State Senator Ed Murray,(D-Seattle) who is openly gay and a sponsor of numerous bills advocating for gay rights told the boisterous audience "My friends, welcome to the other side of the rainbow. No matter what the future holds, nothing will take this moment in history away from us."
As the Governor signed the legislation, Bob Struble, 68, of Bremerton shouted, "Do not betray Christ!" Struble was removed from the room and given a warning by Capitol Police. Struble said he believes the state will halt gay marriage in a public vote. "We'll be doing everything we can to overturn this unfortunate law," he said.
Gregoire's signature comes nearly a week after a federal appeals court declared California's ban on gay marriage unconstitutional, saying it was a violation of the civil rights of gay and lesbian couples.
Washington state has had domestic partnership laws since 2007, and in 2009 passed an "everything but marriage" expansion of that law, which was ultimately upheld by voters after a referendum challenge.
Opponents said they would file a ballot challenge after Gregoire signed the measure that would require voters in November to either uphold or overturn the law. If the referendum gets enough signatures by June 6 the law is put on hold pending the outcome of a November vote.
"I think in the end, people are going to preserve marriage," said Joe Fuiten, senior pastor at Cedar Park Church in Bothell who is involved in the referendum effort. ~ The Associated Press
Same-sex marriage is legal in New York, Connecticut, Iowa, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Vermont and Washington, D.C.

Sunday, February 12, 2012

Des DownUnder On Sundays

By Desmond Rutherford | ADELAIDE, AUSTRALIA -- Shredding the Constitution
Many of us outside the U.S.A. look on their Presidential election process with some concern, not because of how the elections are conducted, though that is also worrisome in a number of ways, but because of the nature of how the policies are represented.
The philosophy behind the U.S. Constitution is not all that difficult to comprehend. This is especially so if we examine the effects of the philosophical influences in existence when the Constitution was first discussed and written. There was a clear and decisive attempt to avoid the models of the old world Western European countries, in favour of an utopian but practical realisation of government, which avoided the pitfalls of corrupt aristocracy. No matter what the benefits were of the European aristocratic nobilities, they all too often degenerated into frivolous pursuits of the idled rich. What was achieved somewhat unintentionally under the aristocratic model, and in counterbalance to its corruption, were not only some enlightened and intelligent discussions, philosophical questions, and scientific investigations, but also justified revolts against the slavery of ordinary people by tyrants who wielded power and authority.
The division between the nobility and the peasantry had to change. It was no longer acceptable for some men to be subjected to the 'King's pleasure', anymore than it would eventually be for a woman to be subordinate to her husband's will, anymore than it would be for one group of people with a particular skin colour to be enslaved by another group with a differently toned skin.
Overall, the U.S. Constitution established many of the criteria needed to destabilise Man's tyranny over men...and women and children. Since the original documents were written, there have been many amendments that have asserted, enabled, and ameliorated the original document towards further advances of freedom for individuals and communities. All of this is echoed in Lincoln's declaration that America would be a nation of government of the people, by the people and for the people, effectively recognising it as a representative democracy, a republic.
In simple terms, this means that the majority of representatives make decisions that are binding on all the citizens. The biggest advance on this simple model is to recognise that it is an individual's right to decline to be bound by the majority's rules, but whoever does so will have to accept any consequences of their rejection of the rules. This is of the utmost importance and doesn't seem to be well understood.
The heart of democracy is not the rule of the majority over everyone; it is the right of the individual to reject the majority decision. It should be understood that any actions taken, due to that rejection, may involve consequences, but it must be action which attracts any such consequences; simply disagreeing with majority decisions is a protected state of mind for individuals and groups.
Without this right of rejection, a democracy cannot work. The democratic elective process depends on people accepting or rejecting the candidates striving to become their representatives. Abstaining from voting is another question, and need not concern us here for further discussion.
What differentiates simple Majoritarianism from the more sophisticated concept of democratic governance is that the individual representatives are increasingly constrained, in order to protect citizen's rights, from what they could do, as a majority. That such representatives are elected by secret ballot is essential. No one knows who votes for whom. The right to reject the majority decision is preserved, and what's more, the individual is protected from any consequence of his (secret) voting decision.
Inherent in this argument is the idea of minorities being protected. However the minority has some protection because it is their right to reject the majority decision, and as that is the cornerstone on the democratic process, that right is inalienable; it is a human right.
Wherever the law attempts to remove the inalienable right of an individual to reject the decision of the majority, then the democracy has descended into rule by mob decision.
By extension, if the elected majority encroaches, by legislation or regulation, on the inalienable human rights of an individual or a group, to freely pursue their own lives, then those rights have been violated. Note that those rights must be inalienable, and as such they must be common, inherent to all humans.
Confusion arises when a religion demands that inalienable rights be subjected to the laws of that religion. The Constitutional First Amendment foresaw this problem and sought to protect religion (any belief system, including non-belief) from interference by the government. The foundational premise of the democracy and the logic of the amendment also protects the individual from being subjected to the demands of religion. This effectively results in that well known concept that the State and the Church must be kept separate, and it must remain so if the U.S.A. is to retain any semblance of a representative democracy, with protections for the minorities, including individual belief.
Whilst this argument is basic to the aims of the Constitution, the current attitudes expressed by many people who adhere to religious belief indicates significant numbers who do not grasp how the state preserves their right to believe whatever they wish, while simultaneously affording that same freedom to those who do not subscribe to a particular, or indeed to any, religion.
It is a human right to think and believe what you like. It is not a human right to proclaim that others, including the government, must submit to your beliefs. If your religion leads you to believe that eating meat on Fridays is wrong, then don't do it. If your religion believes that marriage is between a man and a woman, then you should only marry someone of the opposite sex. You cannot vote to make a crime of eating meat on Fridays just because it is wrong according to your religious belief, anymore than you can tell people who they can marry. A religion can refuse to marry any couple, but they cannot instruct the state to act on behalf of their belief that meat shall not be eaten on Fridays.
What your religion must not do, does not have the right to do, under the law, is stop other people from marrying someone of the same sex; even if your religious leaders feel it is wrong. Your religion has no authority outside the jurisdiction of its own beliefs and over its own followers. Similarly, religion does not have the right to impose upon the State and its citizens, restrictions over abortion, adoption, matrimony, birth control and other personal matters pursuant to your life.
Since the inception of the U.S. Constitution, there has been significant progress all around the world in the realisation and extension of the individual's intrinsic human rights. One of those was the outlawing of slavery, which unfortunately still exists under many guises, including that of 'paid work' at subsistence levels. Another area of concern is the liberation of women, from male or patriarchal dominance, and this freedom too, is constantly being advanced as a human right.
The biggest threat to realising our freedom comes from the groups attempting to impose that which they believe should replace our inalienable human rights.
If two people of the same sex want to marry under the law of the state, hold hands in public, or do any of the other things that opposite sex couples do, then people of any religion do not have the right to object. They would be objecting to the equality of the inalienable right of human beings to show affection to each other, for each other, and by loving and living with each other. The religious do not seem to understand that when they deny the expression of love to others, they leave the door open to their own affections being denied. The only protection the religious have is their own individual status as a protected minority to practise their religion. Even if their religion does tell them to go out to convert others, they don't have the right to insist that others believe, or act as if they believe, and that includes the indoctrination of children. Those are the children who are indoctrinated in their parent's hateful religious beliefs, and who then see nothing wrong with bullying and intimidating other kids into committing suicide. And still the religious do not admit their culpability in these child victim deaths, insanely claiming the suicide is due to the child victims accepting their sexuality. They spread their insanity as if it is a Holy Relic when in fact it is a poisoned chalice.
As for the Presidential candidates for the Republican party, we have seen and heard many vitriolic statements that can in effect, be deemed as nothing short of being unconstitutional, in defiance of representative democracy, and certainly mounting a denial of our inalienable human rights. One could be forgiven for thinking that every single Republican candidate, whether at the CPAC (Conservative Political Action Conference) or not, would, if they could, shred the Constitution and use it for toilet paper.
All their cries to protect the 'fabric' of American society, and to conserve past values, fail to hide that, unlike so many of their glib failures to address the human condition, they are in fact telling the truth when they say that they seek to protect society...however, it is their own self made aristocratic mob rule that they would call 'society' and then shield with restrictive legislation to protect it. Their shrewd ignorance, their lack of respect for the U.S. Constitution, and their own megalomania means they have lost whatever compassion they may have once had. The consequence of their actions risks leaving the people without their individual inalienable human rights; once again slaves unto their self-appointed arrogant and sanctimonious masters.
Meanwhile it should be no surprise that people in every nation are seriously wondering if the Republican plan is to get the rest of the Earth's population to jump off the edge of the world. It makes one think about the idea that Heaven is not somewhere one would want to go if it is populated by the likes of those religious extremists who are trying to run things on Earth. Heaven is indeed looking more like Hell on Earth, with every passing comment from the bigots, or slogan from the Republican candidates' misinformation machine

Saturday, February 11, 2012

Editorial... 15 Year Old Leaps To His Death- School Officials Say Bullying Isn't Cause? Bullshit!

Drew Ferraro via Facebook
By Brody Levesque | LA CRESCENTA, CALIFORNIA -- Yesterday during a busy lunch hour break with hundreds of students milling about the central open quad of Crescenta Valley High School, fifteen year old sophomore Drew Ferraro, took a running start before leaping off a three story classroom building into the courtyard below ending his life. A spokesperson for the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department said that Sheriff's detectives were looking for a note while Glendale Unified Schools spokesperson Steven Frasher told the media; “There’s no indication, whatsoever, that bullying played into this scenario." In fact, according to Frasher, last week the district held a student assembly on ways to cope with bullies. Glendale Unified Supt. Dick Sheehan told reporters, "As a district, we take bullying very seriously."
But that's not what Drew's friends and others are saying. In a series of interviews with CBS News, the young man's friends maintain that he was bullied to the point that he was in despair, telling one, he didn't want to go to school any longer.
Olin Tellefsen told CBS Los Angeles that he was a close friend of Ferraro's. He said Ferraro was a bright kid, who played football and loved heavy metal. He added that Ferraro was taunted by other male students. Last year, Ferraro was involved in a fight with several boys that upset him, but Tellefsen didn't know how much that fight might have affected him.
“He always seemed like he had something on his mind but it was never…never indicative of anything like this," Tellefsen said at a candlelight vigil last night.
Another friend who actually saw him jump said that the bullying got to Ferraro badly enough that he didn't want to go to school. Meghan Dorosy told CBS Los Angeles, “He definitely was bullied, and he didn’t want to go to school. I know how it feels because I was bullied and I didn’t want to go to school."
Now, there's been absolutely no mention of Drew's sexual orientation thus far, in fact, details are sketchy at this point as to why an apparently bright yet quiet young man was driven to such a tragic act. A classmate wrote of Drew:
The last thing you expect when you come out of class is to see someone laying there, someone who took his life just seconds before. I could see him there. but I couldn’t believe it. While everyone was panicking and telling each other what happened, I kept thinking that he just tripped or fainted. But then you could see the blood near his head and instantly, you knew he was gone. I don’t know how I feel. I have no idea what drove him to take his own life. Having an anti-bullying assembly a week before didn’t help. They say suicide is a cry for attention but he did it without any hesitation. Not craving attention just jumping off the roof of the school without anyone around. You can’t say that suicide is the coward’s out. How can you blame someone when they have no desire to live. All it took was that final push. We’ll never know what it was.
You know stuff like this you hear about but never except to happen in your life. Adults were supposed to take control of the situation but seeing even the principal, teachers, and students cry was a horrible sight to see. Sitting on that field, waiting to be released to our parents, I remembered his innocent face. I remembered those times during practice during the football season we were doing defensive drills. Drew tackled me and the coach gave him praise. I was so jealous that he was good at hitting. Me and Drew being the new guys competed for that corner back spot. He was always quiet but that smirk when he got a good hit would even make me smile.
I’m not sure what to say. There are things we could learn from this. Treat everyone well because you don’t know what they’re going through. I don’t think I would be able to live knowing that I was a reason for someone to take their life. Love more and hate less because life is precious. Life is unpredictable and not a second of it should be wasted. Appreciate everything you have. Friends, family, and everything else you are blessed with. Words hurt, think about what you say before you say them. Something small could have a big impact on another person’s life. Spend time with those you love and constantly remind them that you are thankful to have them in your life. Drew, for you, I’ll become a better person. I’ll try to be nicer and if anyone needs me to listen, I will be here. I’m terribly sorry I couldn’t do that for you. That’s something I regret.
Today was a reality check. Our school lost a fellow falcon and friend. Drew made an impact on the school and the community. I hope those reading this will get something out of this message. From the bottom of my heart, I wish his family, friends, and those affected comfort through this tragedy. You are gone but not forgotten. Rest in paradise Drew Ferraro.
The young man writes eloquently about his friend and expresses pain and loss that will spread beyond this suburban Los Angeles County community. Why? Drew's death is yet another sad loss for all of us. Gay, Straight, Pink with Poka-dots, it just doesn't matter. Simply because the American culture has become toxic for adolescents and in particular, LGBTQ youth. But as members of the HUMAN race, we all bear the responsibility to stop bullying before young people like Drew take their lives because they see no hope.
District officials said they would have grief counselors stationed at the campus for days as the student body struggles to cope with this tragedy. Well that's nice- how about those same officials take a closer look at the toxic environs that caused the boy to leap off a building BEFORE another child takes his or her life?
As a journalist, I tire of reporting these type of stories. This is made worse as I have been attending the CPAC function here in Washington this weekend and have had to listen to speaker after speaker rail against this minority group or that gay group, spouting ideology that becomes a veritable petri dish that grows a toxic fungus [message] that will cause kids to see no hope, feel no sense of their being human, and thus see no worthwhile endeavors or reasons for living further. Which, of course is fueled by bullies whose parents send the message that being different is not okay and somehow less human.
Do I believe that Drew was bullied? Yes, I do. Does it matter if he was Gay or not? No, not one damn bit. I think that Americans have a disease that is killing their future and it appears as a society are doing absolutely nothing concrete to address it. There's alot of speeches, videos, and feel good after the fact statements and discussions, but I ask, when are people going to get serious about a cure?

Friday, February 10, 2012

In Brief

Staff Reports
Des Moines, Iowa Church Sign Causes Backlash
DES MOINES, IOWA -- A suburban South Des Moines, Iowa church and its pastor are under fire after Pastor Mike DeMastus posted the message “Gay is not okay” on the church's back-lit marquee sign. According to the Pastor, "Gay is Not Okay," is the title of his next Sunday sermon and as he does with all of his sermons, he promoted it by putting the title on the church's illuminated marquee outside.
Demastus, pastor of the Fort Des Moines Church of Christ said that over the past couple of weeks, he’s had several conversations with people about homosexuality. Desmastus claimed that this will be the second time he has devoted an entire sermon to homosexuality during his 14 years with the church.
A local resident, Patrick Boltinghouse, got off work that night and while running an errand, drove past the marquee with its anti-gay message.
Boltinghouse, who is gay, said it was not the first time he’d something like this. Usually, he just ignores it. He said he wasn’t sure what made this time different. “Not everyone can laugh something this offensive off,” he said. He snapped a picture of the sign and posted it on Facebook with this message: “Greetings from the southside of DesMoines, IA … Just wanted you all to know Jesus loves you, even if it’s not ok to these biggots :) xoxoxoxo.” Soon, people were commenting on the picture, sharing it on their profiles. Someone created a Facebook page: “People against the bigots at Fort Des Moines Church of Christ.” The page had about 400 “likes” Thursday night. Another Facebook page announces plans for a protest from 8:00 to 11:00 am targeting Sunday’s service, and almost 200 people have said that they planned to attend. ~ The Des Moines Register
"Some people will go into the closet and pretend to have a family. Some people will go home and take their life," Boltinghouse said. "All because somebody thought their opinion from a religious belief should be fact."
The outcry that followed shocked pastor DeMastus, who told local television ABC5 News;
"When I did take it down it was when I received messages that indicated simply my address and the message, 'Hope you feel safe at home,'" DeMastus said."It's sad," DeMastus said. "This is the community that cries wanting us to be tolerant and I said gay is not okay, I didn't say gays are not okay."
Pastor DeMastus still intends to give his sermon this Sunday.
"I'm not going to have people threaten my family and my life because of a church sign, but I am gonna preach the truth from God's word," he said.
DeMastus has heard protesters will show up on Sunday. He says they can protest around the church, but will be arrested if they come onto church property.
Demastus said he knew the title was “provocative” but didn’t expect the reaction he has received. He changed the marquee at 244 E. Army Post Road on Wednesday night to read, “Adultery is not okay.” Desmastus also shut down the church’s Facebook page, after he said people had posted “vulgar” messages on the page. He filed a police report after stickers were placed on the outdoor marquee. He said he reported three threats to his home and family to police. ~ ABC5News 
Boltinghouse’s said he has no problem with religion; he grew up Catholic and his mother is a teacher at a Catholic school. What he has a problem with, he said, is an organization trying to judge and condemn people for being who they are. “A sign like this doesn’t bring people closer to God, it scares people away from God."
For his part, the pastor thinks people are misinterpreting his intent. His message was not to condemn homosexuals; but rather homosexuality., he claimed. “We are a group of people that love everybody,” he said. Desmastus said he has heard about the plans for protest. The church is working with police about having a presence at the church Sunday. He said protesters are welcome outside. “They are not welcome in our church service in any way,” he said.
Ben Stone, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Iowa, told local media outlets that the controversy is “exactly what make the First Amendment a beautiful thing." Desmastus' message created a conversation which has turned into a protest giving birth to a news story which has led to considerable debate and discussion.

Maryland House Of Delegates Committees Hear Same-Sex Marriage Arguments
ANNAPOLIS, MARYLAND -- Two committees of the Maryland House of Delegates are hearing arguments on passage of two separate measures regarding gay marriage. Governor Martin O'Malley's bill to legalise same-sex marriage in the state along with another measure which political observers say is not expected to pass, that would create an amendment to define marriage as between one man and one woman to the state's constitution.
O'Malley, appearing before the House Judiciary and Health and Government Operations Committees Friday afternoon, testified that his bill to legalise same-sex marriage offers more protection to religious freedoms than any other same-sex marriage proposal in the country. The Governor told lawmakers to pass his bill to legalise gay marriage in order to provide children with stable homes.
Responding to questions from Republican Delegate Neil Parrott, O'Malley said Friday his bill would adequately protect religious freedoms of people who oppose same-sex marriage.
Parrott asked the governor to consider amending the bill to create specific protections for teachers, students and parents who worry that theories about gay marriage would be taught in schools. O'Malley responded that he opposes anything that violates religious freedoms.
Last year, the state Senate approved legislation to allow same-sex marriage, but the bill stalled in the House when some lawmakers retracted their support over religious and family values concerns.

Thursday, February 9, 2012

In Brief

Staff Reports
Maryland Schools Superintendent Calls Ex-Gay Fliers Reprehensible
ROCKVILLE, MARYLAND -- Montgomery County, Maryland schools superintendent Joshua Starr, called fliers sent home with students from five of the county's high schools claiming that homosexuality is a choice that can be changed "reprehensible and deplorable. In a town hall style meeting held Tuesday at Thomas Wootton High School, Starr told students and faculty that the school district's hands were tied after a 2006 court ruling that prevents district officials from choosing who can distribute information to students. Starr also said that non-profit organisations are allowed to distribute fliers four times per school year. "We can't really do much about it unless we wanted to cut off all flier distribution, which is an option," he said.
Last week, the anti-gay organisation, Parents and Friends of Gays,(PFOX) sent a flyer home with students from Wootton, Albert Einstein, Poolesville, Damascus, and Rich Montgomery high schools that stated; "Those with unwanted same-sex attractions can seek help and information on overcoming their [homosexual] feelings." Superintendent Starr observed, "This group has figured out how to use that law to spread what I find to be a really, really disgusting message, frankly."
According to Peter Sprigg, a member of PFOX's board of directors and a spokesperson for The Family Research Council- a Southern Poverty Law Center listed hate group- told reporters from local television stations that students would be receiving more similar fliers in April.
"We know that many adolescents experience confusion about sexual identity- that's a normal part of growing up Sprigg said. "Some experience same-sex attraction as something unwanted to them, and we want to ensure those kids do not have to adopt a permanent fixed identity at this point in life."
A large number of parents and students were outraged by the contents of the fliers, which said, in part: "Every year thousands of people with unwanted same-sex attractions make the personal decision to leave the gay identity [...]"
In response to Starr's remarks Tuesday, Regina Griggs, executive director of PFOX said Thursday:
"We call on the Montgomery County Board of Education to enforce its Nondiscrimination Policy and censure Superintendent Starr immediately. The Policy mandates that schools provide 'an atmosphere where differences are understood and appreciated, and where all persons are treated fairly and with respect in an environment free of discrimination and ... abuse.' Clearly Starr has violated the Board's Policy.
Starr's verbal abuse, disrespectful behavior, and slurs against the ex-gay community amount to hate and illegal sexual orientation discrimination, which are all forbidden by the Policy. Starr does not respect diversity and is creating an unsafe school environment," said Griggs.
Montgomery County schools sexual education curriculum teaches students that there is a growing amount of scientific consensus and data that sexual orientation is an immutable characteristic.

Atlanta Police Chief: Investigators ID Suspects In Viral Beating Of 20 Year Old Gay Man
Brandon White
ATLANTA, GEORGIA -- In an emergency public safety meeting held Thursday by the Pittsburgh Community Improvement Association, Atlanta's Police Chief George Turner said police have identified suspects in a videotaped attack of a gay man leaving a convenience store on McDaniel Street in the southwest Atlanta neighborhood. "We've identified two of the three individuals, and we're working on warrants," Turner said.
Around 70 community members gathered to discuss solutions for what they see as a problem with crime and violence that centers around the store at 1029 McDaniel Street, where 20-year-old Brandon White was beaten.
White's attackers yelled anti-gay slurs during the beating Saturday. The video of the beating was posted online and had gone viral.
Mayor Kasim Reed put up a $10,000 reward today for anyone who leads to the arrests of the assailants, doubling it from a $5,000 award he announced yesterday.
White said that because the gang members decided to upload the video to WorldStarHipHop.com early this week, where it was picked up by The Smoking Gun and went viral, he felt it was his responsibility to share his story. The undated video was posted with the headline, "Dead Wrong: Man Wearing Skinny Jeans Gets Sucker Attacked & G'z Throw a Tire On Him for Being Gay."
“Jack City, no faggots,” a man says at the start of the video. “Jack City” is an apparent reference to a street gang.
“By them going public, I feel they wanted the attention,” White said.
He said the gang members apparently wanted to show how “brave” they were in a three-against-one attack. He also said he has seen the video of his attack and described it as “very, very brutal.”
“In my opinion, I'm the brave one,” he said to applause.
White said he did not know he was being videotaped when he was attacked leaving the convenience store on McDaniel Street in the Pittsburgh community. The store is a well-known haven for crime, according to White as well as other residents of the neighborhood. A push is being made to shut it down.
White said he heard them shouting “faggot” at him repeatedly but did not know any of his assailants. ~ The Georgia Voice
“I want justice served,” he said. “I shouldn’t have to look over my shoulder just because I’m gay,” White told reporters during a news conference Wednesday. “Who’s to say they won’t try to come after me again? Who can say they won’t try to kill me?”
The Georgia Voice is also reporting that the U.S. Attorney's Office is investigating the attack as a possible hate crime. Because Georgia is one of five states without a state hate crime law, the attackers would have to be prosecuted under the federal statute, the Byrd-Shepherd Hate Crimes Act. Some activists are urging lawmakers to see this attack as a need to call for Georgia to pass a state hate crimes law.

Brody's Notes... Howard Stern Defends Ellen & The LGBTQ Community

Sirius Satellite Radio personality Howard Stern
By Brody Levesque | NEW YORK, NEW YORK -- On his Monday show, Sirius Satellite Radio personality Howard Stern angrily denounced anti-gay pronouncements and efforts by the far right conservative christian group One Million Moms to force retail giant J.C. Penny to remove Ellen DeGeneres as the company's new spokesperson. Stern said that he backed Ellen and would defend her from the "f-----g" bigots.
Stern along with co-host and news director Robin Quivers discussed anti-gay leaders Minnesota Congresswoman Michelle Bachmann and former Pennsylvania U. S. Senator rick Santorum's ongoing effort to marginalise the American LGBTQ community. Stern made reference to a Rolling Stone article published last week that highlighted the rash of suicides in the Anoka-Hennepin school district- which is located in Bachmann's Congressional district- taking aim at what Stern termed as "f-----g ludicrous" efforts by so-called soccer moms in their "No-Homo" campaigns that Stern denounced as causing innocents kids their own lives.
LISTEN: 

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

In Brief

Staff Reports
Same-Sex Marriage Bill Introduced In Illinois
SPRINGFIELD, ILLINOIS -- Three Illinois lawmakers, State Representatives Greg Harris, Deb Mell, and Kelly Cassidy introduced a marriage equality bill in the state's General Assembly Wednesday, HB 5710, the “Religious Freedom and Marriage Fairness Act.”
Democrat Harris, who co-sponsored and was a crucial element in obtaining passage of legal same-sex civil unions in Illinois last year, told reporters he doesn't know whether same-sex marriage legislation will undergo serious consideration during the General Assembly's spring session. He thinks the new bill will need a period of lobbying in order to build support. After the ruling in California on overturning the Prop 8 ban on same-sex marriage, along with gay marriage gaining ground across the country, he said, Illinois could consider it soon. “The numbers all tell the same story — that in the last year, for the first time, the majority of Americans believe in full marriage equality,” said Harris.
Some political analysts have said that legislators could be hesitant to support same-sex marriage legislation in an election year, and the measure is likely to trigger strong opposition from conservative groups. The editor of conservative website Illinois Review, Fran Eaton said;
“We're not bigots for trying to hold the line on our religious beliefs, and that will be a concern in this fall's elections."
The LGBTQ equality rights group, Equality Illinois, is excited at the prospect of full marriage equality. During the debate and later passage of the Illinois Civil Unions law, the group's executive director Bernard Cherkasov, had remarked; “Separate is not equal."
After today's announcement, in a press release, Cherkasov said; "We commend these leaders for taking yet another step towards full equality for lesbian and gay families in Illinois, and we are grateful to them for their leadership. This is just the beginning: the road to marriage equality is sure to be long, but it is one that we must travel together."

State of Tennessee Cuts Funding for HIV Testing
Will Batts
Courtesy of the MGLCC
MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE -- The Memphis Gay and Lesbian Community Center was forced to suspend its Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) testing programme Wednesday after a representative from Planned Parenthood informed MGLCC that the organisation does not have the funds necessary to provide the HIV testing for the foreseeable future because the State of Tennessee has denied Planned Parenthood access to grants for HIV prevention. The cut in funding for Planned Parenthood has put MGLCC’s model HIV testing program in jeopardy. For more than three years, MGLCC has collaborated with Planned Parenthood to provide the only regularly-scheduled, after-hours HIV testing in the Mid-South.
In a phone interview with LGBTQNation Wednesday afternoon, Will Batts, Executive Director of MGLCC, said; “Our strong collaboration with Planned Parenthood to provide HIV testing has improved the lives of hundreds of people every year. Losing this vital program will put the health and well-being of many Memphians at risk. MGLCC considers the setback to our HIV testing program a great tragedy, but we hope the setback will be only a temporary one.”
Batts noted that despite the MGLCC’s core mission to focus on the needs of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender (LGBT) community, the HIV testing program offered at MGLCC has always been open to anyone needing a test. "MGLCC does not discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity. MGLCC believes that helping clients find out their HIV status and find access to appropriate HIV care is an essential service not only for the individual, but for the health and well-being of our entire city. More than 500 individuals have been tested by the HIV testing program offered by MGLCC since the program’s inception in 2008."
Batts also told LGBTQNation that the MGLCC has been working diligently to obtain direct funding to expand their testing capacity and to create a stronger HIV education and outreach program for the LGBT community. He said that the infection rate in Memphis had reached a critical pandemic rate and that the loss of funding from Planned Parenthood was a serious blow. He added that the MGLCC will continue to explore other avenues of support so that the centre can resume this vital, life-saving service to the Mid-South.

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

In Brief

Staff Reports
Rally Held In New Hampshire To Repeal Same Sex Marriage Law And Replace It With Civil Unions
New Hampshire State Representative David Bates
CONCORD, NEW HAMPSHIRE -- New Hampshire Republican State Representative David Bates led a rally of more than 200 people Tuesday outside the capitol building interested in repealing New Hampshire's same sex marriage law and replace it with civil unions for any unmarried adults, including relatives.
Bates' who is the chief sponsor of a measure to repeal the law told the crowd there is no truth more self-evident under the federal Constitution than men and women were created for each other. "Other arrangements are unnatural and incapable of sustaining the human species," he said.
The state's Republican-controlled Legislature has not scheduled a date for the measure to be voted on in this year's session, and Democratic Governor John Lynch has repeatedly warned lawmakers he will veto attempts to repeal the law, which he signed in 2009. Lynch had signed the civil unions law enacted in 2007 which was replaced that with the marriage law two years later.
Supporters said the proposed repeal bill would not apply to gay marriages that have already occurred, but would stop new ones. Since 2010, 1,866 New Hampshire gay couples have married, according to the state division of vital records. Repeal opponents say Bates' bill has conflicting provisions that appear to bar the courts from recognizing same sex relationships as valid, while declaring same sex marriages in effect before the repeal took effect to remain valid. Bates has said he is working on an amendment to clarify that and several other issues. Republican House Speaker William O'Brien called the gay marriage law an attack on the family that must be reversed. While O'Brien and other were speaking, Concord resident Marcia Blackman at the back of the crowd yelled: "Why do you hate me? Why do you hate my family?" O'Brien ignored the outburst and spoke louder into the microphone. "We must vote to back marriage for our children," he said.
The Episcopal Church's first openly gay bishop, Bishop Gene Robinson who is a resident of the state observed; "I'm surprised at how small the crowd is." Robinson also indicated that he had not heard of any clergy suffering an ill effect because of the law or that any individuals suffered ill effects. Bishop Gene Robinson said New Hampshire polls show a majority oppose repealing the law adding, "We haven't seen the end of Western civilization as we know it."
GOP National Committeewoman Phyllis Woods said her party's platform includes a statement that marriage is between one man and one woman. 
"To define homosexual unions as marriage is contrary to what the founders of the Constitution believed was natural law," she said.
Bates' bill would not enact the same civil unions law that was in effect before gays were allowed to marry. That law granted gays all the rights and responsibilities of marriage except in name. The proposed civil unions law would be open to any two adults and would let anyone refuse to recognise the unions. It also would allow anyone to discriminate against the couples in employment, housing and public accommodations based on religious or moral beliefs.

Brody's Scribbles... Is Simple Self Removal Fair?

By Bart Vogelzang | VANCOUVER ISLAND, BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA -- Surprisingly, and pleasingly, the City of Vancouver (B.C. Canada) Police Department, has only failed to resolve 4 disappearances out of over 3500 reported in 2011. (CBC News). It shows a commendable effort on their part, but the locating of the latest person raises an interesting question.
It seems that the young adult deliberately, and for undeclared reasons, departed, leaving no hint of his whereabouts or even that he was leaving purposefully. This left not only his family and friends searching frantically, but put pressure on the police system as well.
Obviously it is the right of every adult to leave their situation if it is no longer tenable to them (excepting legal requirements such as child support, parole, etc.), but is there not some kind of moral requirement to at least notify the authorities that one has left deliberately, without coercion from others? Shouldn’t one head off the waste of hundreds or maybe thousands of hours of police work, volunteers searching, and family and friend expenses in posters and private detectives, not to mention the angst of not knowing what happened? Even if you hate your family so much that you want to make them suffer, it is still not right to make the police victims of your disappearance.
Some will argue that it is your right to do that, but if enough people do that very thing, we could pay a severe price, in that at some future time the police won’t even look for any adult at all, even if they may have been kidnapped. It has already headed in that direction, as you can see by the number of parents who have to practically scream to the police that the disappearance of their adult child is not normal behavior, that their kid has been nothing but reliable in the past. The delays in effective searching for that missing person may well doom them. The sooner a search is mounted, the greater the chance of success.
Sadly, the need for some to disappear deliberately is sometimes based on rejection by their own family or friends. It may be a case of being homosexual in a homophobic environment, with continual harassment by those who are supposed to love you, causing you to leave. Or maybe it is a matter of being involved in gangs and needing to escape. Whatever the reason, none of them justifies wasting taxpayer money by not letting the authorities know you have left voluntarily; it simply isn’t fair.
Understandably of course, if you have an actual or perceived grievance against the state or community from which you departed, you may well feel that they deserve to waste money, time, and effort trying to find you.

Brody's Notes... Anoka-Hennepin School District Superintendent Condemns Rolling Stone Article

Anoka-Hennepin Schools Superintendent
Dennis Carlson via Minnesota Public Radio
By Brody Levesque | MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA -- Anoka-Hennepin School District Superintendent Dennis Carlson angrily denounced the article published last week in Rolling Stone magazine, that highlighted the rash of teen suicides that occurred within his school district over the past three years and the links some of those deaths had to anti-gay bullying. Rolling Stone political reporter Sabrina Rubin Erdely, in the article- One Town's War on Gay Teens- describes the school district's officials and school board as largely unresponsive and catering to the Parents Action League- a conservative parent group- which is a small but virulent anti-gay faction which seeks to oppose recognition of LGBTQ youth.
Superintendent Carlson denounced Erdely's article as a "brutal and distorted attack," the head of Minnesota's largest school district said in a voicemail fired off to his staff, adding that, "This is a vicious insult to all of you who have worked so hard to make this district and this community a better place.”
Minnesota newspaper, The Pioneer Press, reports:
Some in the community said the piece fairly accurately reflects the situation; others said it unfairly made most of the school district seem anti-gay. "From everything I know and have seen, it's an accurate article," said Tammy Aaberg, an Anoka-Hennepin parent who lost her son Justin, a gay teenager, to suicide in 2010.
But the superintendent, who said he received scores of hate emails over the article, said it has inaccuracies and ignores the district's efforts to better protect gay students. The district conducted staff awareness training after the suicides and offered additional training when teachers said they were confused about the sexual orientation policy, according to a statement on the district website. The school board is considering replacing the policy and will vote on a new one Monday. "We did have a cluster of suicides, and we got very concerned," Carlson said. "We started taking immediate steps, and we haven't stopped....We told (the writer) of the efforts, and she mentioned none."
Erdely defended her writing telling the newspaper that she spent four months talking to dozens of community members, including other parents, teachers and students.
"Between all of them they gave me a very full sense of what was going on in the district," Erdely said. "If (Carlson) thinks this was a distorted version of the truth, maybe he is too far removed." 
Erdely also claimed that the article is not a generalization. "Granted, the headline is a little over the top, but anyone who reads beyond that can see that I don't label the entire area as anti-gay extremists, Erdely said.”What I do say is that these anti-gay policies were passed by a school board to appease a small vocal minority."
According to Carlson, all it has done is create distraction from the work the teachers and administrators already are doing. "Kids are bullied for being gay across this county on a daily basis, and we need to make sure all schools are safer for them, absolutely....This vicious debate going on does not help."

Monday, February 6, 2012

In Brief

Staff Reports
Washington State House Committee Approves Same-Sex Marriage Bill: Sends It To Full House For Vote
OLYMPIA, WASHINGTON -- The Washington State House Judiciary committee on Monday advanced the House version of a bill to legalise same-sex marriage by a 7-5 vote Monday. The measure is now slated to head to the full house for a vote as early as Wednesday. The state Senate passed their version in a late evening session last Wednesday by a 28 to 21 vote.
Washington's Governor Chris Gregoire has already committed to signing the measure into law and according to sources in her office, that may occur as early as next week.
Same-sex marriage opponents have publicly promised a ballot referendum challenge.

New Jersey Senate Will Vote On Same Sex Marriage Bill February 13; House Assembly To Vote Three Days Later
TRENTON, NEW JERSEY -- New Jersey's Democratic majority leadership in the state's legislature announced Monday that legislative measures to legalise same sex marriage in the New Jersey will advance to floor votes by both houses. The majority leadership announced that the Senate had scheduled a vote for February 13 followed by a House vote three days later.
This action puts added pressure on Republican Governor Chris Christie who has publicly vowed to veto any same-sex legalisation, instead calling on the state's lawmakers to put the issue before the voters on the 2012 November general elections ballot.
Should the Governor make good with his promise to reject the bill, lawmakers from both parties acknowledge that the legislation will need to win the support of two-thirds of both houses -- the threshold for overriding a governor's veto.
The state has allowed same-sex civil unions since 2007. A recent Quinnipiac University poll found New Jersey voters support same-sex marriage by a margin of 52 to 42-percent.
More than 38 states ban or refuse to recognize same sex marriage, but six states, as well as the District of Columbia, allow it. Same sex marriage is legal in New York, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Vermont, New Hampshire and Iowa.

Brody's Notes... U. S. Appeals Court To Issue Ruling In California's Prop 8 Case Tuesday

By Brody Levesque | SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA -- A spokesman for the the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals sent a notice Monday that the appellate court will rule Tuesday on the constitutionality of Proposition 8, the 2008 ballot measure that banned same-sex marriage in California. Legal analysts stated that the circuit court's ruling undoubtedly will be appealed to the nation's highest court, which could decide in its 2013 session whether same-sex couples nationwide have the right to marry. The legal experts also agreed that during oral arguments in the hearings, the three appellate court justices appeared to be leaning toward upholding U.S. District Court Chief [retired] Judge Vaughn Walker's ruling striking down the marriage ban.
Walker, a conservative appointed by former President George H. W. Bush, ruled in August 2010 that Proposition 8 violated the due process and equal protection rights guaranteed in the U.S. Constitution.
ProtectMarriage- opponents of same-sex marriage and the sponsors of the sponsors of Proposition 8- had appealed his ruling to the 9th circuit. They argued that Walker should have recused himself from hearing the case because he is gay and has a long-time partner with whom he was not married at the time of his ruling.
The 9th circuit panel will also rule on whether or not ProtectMarriage has legal standing to appeal the case, which the court last year had sent a certified question to the California Supreme Court asking for clarification as to whether is not the proponents do have the right to appeal a ballot initiative when none of the state's constitutional officer's named as defendants chose to do so. The State's High Court indicated that they in fact did, but that it was only applicable in State court actions.
Shannon Minter, the legal director of the National Center For Lesbian Rights, who has been closely following the Prop 8 case told LGBTQNation that "its looking pretty good that the court will affirm the [Walker's] ruling."
"I'm pretty oprtimistic about the outcome," Minter said, "it is very likley it could even be a unamoius decision in favor of upholding Judge Walker's decision."
The 9th Circuit Court panel's decision is scheduled to be released by 10 a.m. Pacific Time Tuesday.