Saturday, May 31, 2008

Leonard Pitts, April 27, 2008: Reject intolerance cloaked in faith

James Lawson is out of step with modern Christianity.
Take gay marriage. Speaking in support of a proposed state constitutional ban on same sex unions, one Rev. Hayes Wicker of First Baptist Church in Naples, Fla., was recently quoted by The Naples Daily News as saying, ``This is a tremendous social crisis, greater even than the issue of slavery.''
As asinine as that remark is, it is perfectly in step with much of modern Christianity, which has spent years demonizing gay men and lesbians. And then there's Rev. Lawson, who is scheduled to speak this weekend at the 10th anniversary conference of Soulforce, a group that fights church-based homophobia. Few things could be more out of step.
Lawson, you may know, is an icon of the civil rights movement; it was he who invited Martin Luther King Jr. to Memphis to support the striking sanitation workers. He sees his longtime involvement with Soulforce as part of the same struggle. ''The human rights issue is not a single issue,'' he told me recently. ``It is about all human kind. And all human kind has been endowed with certain inalienable rights.''
My interview with Lawson was set before Wicker's remark, but I leapt at the chance to ask him about it. ''Obviously,'' said Lawson, ``he does not know anything about the 250 years of slavery or the 143 years since slavery as the nation has largely failed to deal with the issue of slavery and its consequences. . . . And he knows even less about the gospel of Jesus. . . . Jesus broke all the social etiquette in terms of relating to people and bringing people into relationship with himself. He acknowledged no barriers or human divisions . . . no category of sinners from who he would isolate himself.''
Sadly, Wicker's brand of intolerance cloaked in faith has lately made inroads in black America. King's daughter, Bernice, has marched against gay rights. Others have peevishly rejected the idea that there are parallels between the black struggle and the gay one.
`We ought to know better'
Lawson finds the antipathy appalling. ``To unite with white Christian fundamentalism like Pat Robertson is an absolute disgrace. For black people to pretend that kind of Christian fundamentalism, which justified slavery and justifies racism, is a colleague in anything is to be blind to the realities that we're facing. We who have suffered and do suffer should be the most sensitive to the suffering of others. We don't want this undeserved suffering put on us, and we should therefore, clearly, not participate in putting such suffering on others. We ought to know better.''
Lawson knows his brand of Christianity is not the kind that nowadays dominates political discourse. Does it trouble him to be out of step?
''No. A part of the religion of Jesus is to be on the right side of history and the right side of God, especially when others are on the wrong side.'' Those who preach intolerance ``are the ones out of step. You have to be patient, and they'll catch up. Many of the black pastors were outraged when King, in '67, declared against the Vietnam war. Well, now, great numbers of the clergy are aware that war is a violation of the gospel of Jesus, and they are opposed to the Iraq war. They caught up.''
Some did, at least. Ours is still an era wherein war, hatred and intolerance often wear a clerical collar. As Lawson puts it, ``Much of Christianity in the United States has been more influenced by violence and sexism and racism and greed than by the teachings of Jesus.''
If that seems a radical thing to say, well, Lawson has no apologies. ''I am a follower of Jesus.'' he explains. ``That's what I've called myself for decades. And that is a radical faith that refuses to define any human being or group of human beings as being outside God's grace.''
James Lawson is out of step with modern Christianity.
Thank God someone is.

More Leonard Pitts

Deb Price: California Supreme Court adjusts people's vision on gay rights

When I took the eye exam for my driver's license as a teenager, I first tried without my glasses.

"Nice rows of blurry black lines, right?" I joked.

I slipped on my glasses. And, presto, crisp, distinct letters appeared before my eyes. The letters, of course, had always been there; I just couldn't recognize them.
When the California Supreme Court ruled May 15 that gay couples have the same constitutional right to marry as heterosexuals, it essentially said that one job of courts is to adjust the vision of people who simply haven't been able to see the injustice right in front of them.


Chief Justice Ronald George, a Republican appointee who wrote the 121-page majority opinion, said the nation's evolution in views and policies toward racial minorities and women teaches "that even the most familiar and generally accepted of social practices and traditions often mask an unfairness and inequality that frequently is not recognized or appreciated by those not directly harmed by those practices or traditions."

The 4-3 ruling -- the same split as in 1948 when California's top court became the first to strike down a ban on marriage between people of different races -- means gay couples can marry in California in about 30 days.

California follows Massachusetts, where more than 10,000 gay couples have married since 2004. But, unlike in Massachusetts, gay couples from any state will be able to marry there.

The breakthrough in the trendsetting Golden State -- home to one of every 8 Americans -- is gigantic.

As San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom, who triggered the court case in 2003 by allowing his city to issue licenses to gay couples, joyfully put it after the ruling, "As California goes, so goes the nation!"

The landmark ruling by the nation's most influential state court was immediately embraced by two California heavyweights: Republican Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a Democrat with the power to block any federal marriage amendment.

All is not sunny in California, though. Voters will likely have to decide on a state amendment aimed at once again restricting marriage to opposite-sex couples.
But Schwarzenegger and Pelosi will help protect this advance, which Chief Justice George noted flows from recognition that the right to marry the person of one's choice is a "basic civil right (guaranteed) to all Californians."

So, his court isn't creating a new right. It's just saying the state mustn't block gay couples from exercising the right to marry -- just as it mustn't block interracial couples: "An individual's sexual orientation -- like a person's race or gender -- does not constitute a legitimate basis upon which to deny or withhold legal rights."
Read more:

Equality South Dakota PAC Press Release:

EqSD PAC Endorses South Dakota Primary Candidates
SD LGBT Community and Its Friends Becoming More Politically Active

For the first time in South Dakota electoral history, a state LGBT group has given political action money to state legislative candidates.Equality South Dakota PAC (EqSD PAC) has recently provided over $5,000 in funding to both Republican and Democratic candidates involved in the June 3, 2008 South Dakota primary. Full details of all candidates provided funding can be found after May 23, 2008 on the South Dakota Secretary of State's website in the EqSD PAC's pre-primary contribution report.

"Besides EqSD PAC seeking candidates to endorse, candidates came to us wanting our endorsement and financial support," said Todd Epp, a straight lawyer from Harrisburg, SD and chair of EqSD PAC. "The fact that candidates were excited about our support and that almost all of the primary surveys were so positive about LGBT issues is exciting."

Among those EqSD PAC has provided funding to in June primary races:

* Elaine Elliott, Democrat, House District 2, Aberdeen.
* Darrell Solberg, Democrat, House District 11, Sioux Falls.
* Martha Vanderlinde, Democrat, House District 15, Sioux Falls.
* Caitlin Collier, Democrat, House District 17, Vermillion.
* Larry Lucas, Democrat, House District 26A, Mission.
* Kevin Killer, Democrat, House District 27, Pine Ridge.
* Jeff Nelson, Democrat, House District 33, Rapid City.

Following the primary election, EqSD PAC will endorse and provide funds to selected legislative candidates in the November general election who it believes have progressive views on LGBT issues. General election candidates have until June 10 to return their surveys to EqSD PAC.

All legislative candidates were sent a survey on critical LGBT issues. The survey included questions on 1) would they support adding "LGBT" to existing state law prohibiting employment discrimination; 2) whether the candidates would support anti-bullying state legislation; and 3) whether the candidates supported allowing domestic partner hospital visitation rights.

The survey is posted on the EqSD PAC web site (pac.eqsd.org). The candidates also provided biographical information and how they believed their campaigns can win.

"In addition to money, we hope to deliver volunteers, campaign support and ultimately enough votes to make the difference," said PAC board member Karen Mudd, a lesbian in Sioux Falls. "Please get involved to help elect these candidates."

EqSD PAC is the political action committee for Equality South Dakota (EqSD), a South Dakota non-profit corporation. EqSD PAC is a voluntary, non-profit, unincorporated association operating as a separate, segregated organization of EqSD.

ADDITIONAL QUOTES FROM THE S.D. LGBT COMMUNITY AND ITS FRIENDS ABOUT THE ENDORSEMENTS:
Don Frankenfeld, Rapid City--"Equality is a bipartisan issue. I'm glad that both Republicans and Democrats participated in our survey, and I'm proud that Equality South Dakota PAC is supporting highly qualified candidates from both parties," said Don Frankenfeld, a Republican former legislator and member of the EqSD PAC board of directors.

Lawrence Novotny, Brookings--"More and more South Dakotans want to see positive change in support of LGBT equality and know they need to actively work for and support legislative candidates with integrity who are willing to take a stand," EqSD PAC treasurer Lawrence Novotny of Brookings said. "That is why EqSD PAC was created," he added.

Curtis Price, Rapid City--"I'm very proud to be associated with an organization that is already changing the dialogue by supporting candidates that believe in fairness and respect for all South Dakotans and their families," Curtis Price, EqSD secretary from Rapid City said. "Fairness is a South Dakota value," he added. EqSD is a sister organization to EqSD PAC.

David Fischer, Aberdeen--"In 2008, on November's election night, I believe the dark clouds over America that have dumped an acid rain of social division to nourish the pockets and power of dishonest political addicts will dissipate. An eagle of truth and justice will soar again as citizens are led by people who know the value of individual fairness and equality. If this funding feeds this symbol of freedom, scatter it with the wind." said David D. Fischer, gay nurse anesthetist from Aberdeen, SD and Secretary of EqSD.

Paid for and authorized by EqSD PAC, 610 S. Grand Ave., Harrisburg, SD 57032, Lawrence Novotny, Treasurer.

Rapid City Journal: Obituary; Garold O. Kingsbury

RAPID CITY - Garold O. Kingsbury, 88, passed away on Wednesday, May 28, 2008, at Rapid City Regional Hospital. He was born on Sept. 25, 1919, to Orel and Gladys Kingsbury in Letcher. He grew up working the family farm and graduated from Letcher High School.

Garold moved to Rapid City in 1948, and began a new career in NAPA sales with Puritan Supply Company. He continued selling NAPA products extensively in western South Dakota for over 35 years.

On Sept. 2, 1950, Garold Kingsbury and Marion Robbennolt were wed in Rapid City beginning their 55-year marriage. As their family grew, they decided to build their new home in the developing West Chicago neighborhood of Rapid City. The new house involved the entire family in painting, carpentry and landscaping.

After Garold and Marion retired, they enjoyed traveling across the country and often visited friends and relatives. For several years they wintered in Apache Junction, AZ, with friends.

Garold was an avid hunter, fisherman and enjoyed camping with his family each summer in the Black Hills. Garold was a life member of the Elks Club and the Morning Optimist Club. He spent the last two winters with his son and his daughter's family in Hawaii, where he enjoyed year-round gardening, whale watching, ocean fishing, beach combing and warm weather. His trusty dachshund puppy named Hapuna constantly accompanied him.

He is survived by his daughter, Cindy Sakai and her husband, John of Hawi, Hawaii; his son Craig Kingsbury and his life partner, Vernon Paulson of Hawi and Rapid City; his sister Donna Fogelberg of Merced, Calif.; and numerous nephews, nieces and cousins in South Dakota, California, and Minnesota. His wife Marion preceded him in death.

Visitation will be from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. on Sunday, June 1, at Osheim & Schmidt Funeral Home. Services will be at 10 a.m. Monday, June 2, at Osheim & Schmidt Funeral Home, with the Rev. Phyllis Boernke officiating. Internment follows at the Mountain View Cemetery.

A memorial has been established in Garold's name. Friends may sign his online guest register and leave condolence wishes at www.osheim schmidt.com. Published in the Rapid City Journal on 5/31/2008.
Guest Book

Rapid City Journal: S.D. among 10 states urging Calif. court to delay marriage ruling

SAN FRANCISCO--The attorneys general of 10 states have joined conservative legal groups in urging the California Supreme Court to delay finalizing its ruling to legalize same-sex marriage.

In a friend-of-the-court brief filed late Thursday, they said they have an interest in the case because they would have to determine if their states would recognize the marriages of gay residents who wed in California.The states involved are Alaska, Colorado, Florida, Idaho, Michigan, Nebraska, New Hampshire, South Carolina, South Dakota and Utah. Except for Florida and New Hampshire, all of them have constitutional provisions banning gay marriage.

The attorneys general asked the court to stay its May 15 ruling until after the November election, when California's voters likely will decide whether to adopt a similar amendment, which would overturn the court's decision. The court's decisions normally take effect after 30 days.

What happens in California is being watched carefully elsewhere because unlike Massachusetts, the only U.S. state where same-sex couples can now marry, California does not have a residency requirement for obtaining a marriage license.

"We reasonably believe an inevitable result of such 'marriage tourism' will be a steep increase in litigation of the recognition issue in our courts," Utah Attorney General Mark L. Shurtleff wrote in the brief submitted on behalf of the 10 states.
Read more and Rapid Reply

Friday, May 30, 2008

Bay Area Reporter: Hate crimes against LGBTs increase in 2007

Hate crimes against LGBTs in San Francisco increased by 7 percent last year, according to an analysis conducted by national anti-violence groups.

Nationwide, increases in violence were not all attributable to increased reporting. Michigan saw a stunning 207 percent increase in the number of hate crimes against LGBTs committed in 2007. NCAVP attributes this dramatic upsurge in hate crimes to a three-year-long campaign by the attorney general's office to end domestic partner benefits.

"In Michigan and elsewhere in the U.S., these highly visible attacks on LGBT communities reinforce the idea that it is acceptable to target LGBT persons with violence," the report states. "There is frequently a corresponding surge in anti-LGBT incidents of violence and crime as these campaigns play out in communities and in the national and local media."

Hate crimes increased 24 percent nationally. Bias-motivated murders doubled between 2006 (10) and 2007 (21). Rapes committed as hate crimes increased by 61 percent nationwide.

Hate crimes in the Midwest increased significantly. In addition to the Michigan increase, Minnesota saw a jump of 135 percent, while Kansas City saw an increase of 142 percent, according to the report.

Reported hate crimes dropped in New York City (14 percent decrease) and Colorado (27 percent decrease), the report stated.
Read more:

Colorado Springs; The Gazette: Ritter signs bill giving gays equal access to accommodations

Gov. Bill Ritter on Thursday signed a bill that makes it illegal in Colorado to discriminate against gays, bisexuals and transgendered people when buying a home, renting an apartment or using public accommodations.

"The governor felt that this bill, SB200, was about fairness and treating people equally," said Evan Dreyer, spokesman for the governor's office. "It essentially updates anti-discrimination laws that in some cases have not been updated for 50 years." Bruce DeBoskey, regional director of Denver's Anti-Defamation League, a civil rights organization, said the law is a step forward for Coloradans.

"No one should be denied housing or public accommodations solely because of his or her sexual preference," DeBoskey said. One aspect of the law enables transgenders - those who were born one gender but identify with the other - to use public restrooms in which they feel most comfortable.

Beginning May 21, Focus on the Family and Colorado Family Action began sponsoring radio advertisements on four radio stations in Colorado Springs and Denver denouncing the bill. The ads warned that cross-dressing predators could endanger children by using restrooms designated for the opposite sex.

Focus founder James Dobson said Thursday: "Who would believe that the Colorado state Legislature and its governor would have made it legal for men to enter and use women's restrooms and locker room facilities without notice or explanation? "Henceforth, every woman and little girl will have to fear that a predator, bisexual, cross-dresser or even a homosexual or heterosexual male might walk in and relieve himself in their presence."

DeBoskey denounced Dobson's view. "It is unfortunate that they feel they have to exaggerate the dangers and play on people's fears," DeBoskey said. "This law is about fairness and justice for all people living in this state."
Read more:

Washington Blade: Activists alarmed over APA

Head of psychiatry panel favors ‘change’ therapy for some trans teens

LOU CHIBBARO JR Friday, May 30, 2008

Transgender activists have raised strong objections to a decision by the American Psychiatric Association to name a prominent Canadian child psychologist as head of a committee that will recommend changes in diagnosing persons with an ailment defined by the group as gender identity disorder.

In a flurry of blog postings and an online petition, trans activists and some gay rights supporters have called for the removal of University of Toronto psychiatry professor Kenneth J. Zucker as chair of the psychiatrist association’s Sexual and Gender Identity Disorders Work Group on grounds that Zucker supports therapy to discourage transgender children and adolescents from changing their biological gender.

The Work Group is charged, among other things, with making recommendations for changes in how transgender persons are classified under the APA’s internationally recognized Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, which is being revised for publication in 2012.

“We believe being transgender is just as innate as being gay or lesbian,” said transgender advocate and blogger Mercedes Allen of Alberta, Canada.“Our concern is that Zucker favors a form of reparative therapy for trans youth that amounts to the suppression of their true gender identity,” said Allen. In a telephone interview Tuesday, Allen said Zucker’s treatment philosophy for trans youth appears to yield to societal norms about gender conformity rather than acting in the best interest of the transgender child or adolescent.

But a prominent gay psychiatrist and former chair of the APA’s gay advisory committee, Dr. Jack Drescher, said the fears by trans activists are unfounded and that Zucker, while favoring possible therapy for some trans teens, supports gender reassignment therapy in most cases — for both youth and adults.

Drescher said he was especially concerned about claims by some trans bloggers that Zucker and at least one other member of the APA’s Sexual and Gender Identity Disorders Work Group would push for reinstating homosexuality as a diagnostic disorder under the APA’s revised diagnostic manual in 2012.
Read more:

CBS News: New York Governor Faces Gay Marriage Fight

Conservatives Vow To Counter Paterson's Memo Ordering State To Recognize Gay Marriages

(CBS/AP) Religious and social conservatives vowed Thursday to fight the governor's directive requiring state agencies to recognize gay marriages performed legally elsewhere, saying it flouts traditional values and is a big step toward legalizing same-sex unions in New York.

"The definition of marriage predates recorded history," said New York State Catholic Conference Executive Director Richard E. Barnes. "No single politician or court or legislature should attempt to redefine the very building block of our society in a way that alters its entire meaning and purpose."

Gov. David Paterson issued a memo earlier this month saying that gay New Yorkers who marry where it is legal will have the right to share family health care plans, receive tax breaks by filing jointly, enjoy stronger adoption rights and inherit property. He cited a February ruling in a New York Appellate Division court in which the judges determined that there is no legal impediment in New York to the recognition of a same-sex marriage.

Earlier this month, the California Supreme Court ruled that same-sex marriage in the nation's most populous state is legal. The ruling overturned a voter-approved ban on gay marriage. At a Manhattan news conference on Thursday, Paterson, a Roman Catholic, defended the directive, saying failure to issue it would have left the state open to lawsuits claiming the state deprived gay couples of civil rights enjoyed in other states.
Read more:

Thursday, May 29, 2008

CNN.com: New York to recognize gay marriages

NEW YORK (CNN) -- Gov. David Paterson of New York has told state agencies to recognize same-sex marriages performed in states and countries where they are legal, his spokeswoman said Wednesday.
The governor's legal counsel told state agencies in a May 14 memo to revise policies and regulations to recognize same-sex marriages performed in California and Massachusetts as well as Canada and other countries that allow gays and lesbians to marry, said Erin Duggan, the governor's spokeswoman.
The memo informed state agencies that failing to recognize gay marriages would violate the New York's human rights law, Duggan said.

Read more:

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Our Community Has Suffered a Loss

I just received a phone call from Vernon Paulson to tell me that his partner Craig Kingsbury's father, Garold, passed away today at noon here in Rapid City. Vernon says that Craig will be flying back from Hawaii in the next couple of days. Oshiem Funeral Home in Rapid City will be handling the arrangements and the funeral will be on Monday or Tuesday at the Unity Church in Piedmont.

I'll report more details as I receive them.

I think I speak for the entire community in expressing our condolences to Craig and Vernon and all of Craig's family. They have all been an important and valuable part of this community. They have our deepest symapthy and regards.

SLDN;Frontlines: MEMORIAL DAY -- Remembering Alan Rogers

Memorial Day is a special time for Americans who have lost loved ones to the service of our country. The families and friends of the more than 4,000 American service members killed in Iraq since 2003 share a special bond rooted equally in grief and pride, emotions we will share as we mark Memorial Day once again this year.

This Memorial Day is particularly salient for me this year as I remember the life of my friend and colleague, Major Alan Rogers. As many people now know, Alan was killed in Iraq by an IED on January 27, 2008. According to his commander, he shielded two others from the blast, who likely would have been killed were it not for Alan’s bravery. Alan was laid to rest at Arlington National Cemetery on March 14th, 2008, in the presence of more than two hundred grieving but proud friends, fellow soldiers, and family members.

I knew Alan through my work here at Servicemembers Legal Defense Network and through our mutual activism in the DC Chapter of American Veterans for Equal Rights. He was a student at Georgetown University, pursuing a master’s degree through a prestigious Army fellowship program, when I first met him.
Because of my familiarity with the legal ins and outs of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” and
the
Military Readiness Enhancement Act, a bill that would repeal that law, Alan interviewed me for his final paper for school. I used to chide him for being so “out” to so many people, and worried that some day the fact that he was gay would get back to the military and spell the end of his career. I worried that his choice of topic for his final paper might raise eyebrows, and cause him to be discovered. But he seemed fearless, confident that he’d make it through his career without his sexual orientation getting in the way. In the end, I guess he was right.

When I first learned of Alan’s death through an email I received at work from a mutual friend, I was stunned. I walked dazed into the office of a good friend and colleague and cried bitterly. I cried because none of us would ever see Alan’s beautiful smile again, except in photographs and in our minds’ eyes. I cried because it was unbearable to think of this beautiful and gentle person being ripped apart by an IED in a foreign land. I cried because Alan was so good. He was one of the kindest, most generous, thoughtful, genuinely good people I have ever known. And he was gone, and nothing would ever change that.
Read more:

Wayne Besen: I'm Having Nunn Of It

When former Sen. Sam Nunn (D-GA) endorsed Barack Obama in April and announced he would serve as a national security advisor, pundits naturally began speculating on his vice presidential prospects. The argument in favor of Nunn is that he is a former Chairman of the Armed Services Committee, which would help negate one of the McCain campaign's largest advantages.Nunn's position is strengthened because he appears to be on the same rhetorical page as Obama. Last year, for example, he helped lead a bipartisan conference at the University of Oklahoma with the goal of ending political squabbling in Washington. In April, the conservative southern Democrat articulated his reasons for backing Obama:
"Demonizing the opposition, oversimplifying the issues, and dumbing down the political debate prevent our country from coming together to make tough decisions and tackle our biggest challenges," said Nunn.This statement was curious, considering Nunn's crass conduct during the fierce 1993 "gays in the military" battle. Instead of leading in a contemplative manner, Nunn exploited his position of power to cheapen the national dialogue and dumb down the debate - the opposite of what he now says he stands for. This "statesman" brazenly exploited every last negative anti-gay stereotype for political gain and temporarily derailed Bill Clinton's nascent presidency in the process. Nunn's grandstanding was an unforgivable act of bigotry and betrayal and helped set back the GLBT movement for years.

Read more:

Sacbee.com: Field Poll: Majority of Californians now support gay marriage

Signaling a generational shift in attitudes, a new Field Poll on Tuesday said California voters now support legal marriage between same-sex couples and oppose a state constitutional amendment to ban gay marriage.
By 51 to 42 percent, state voters believe gay couples have the right to marry, according to a May 17-26 poll of 1,052 registered voters.
However, the same poll revealed a California electorate that remains sharply divided over gay marriage – split by age, political affiliation, religion and the regions where they live.


The poll was taken after the May 15 California Supreme Court decision overturning a state ban on same-sex marriages. The results marked the first time in more than 30 years of state polling that a majority of Field Poll respondents favored making gay marriage legal.
In 2000, more than 61 percent of voters approved Proposition 22, a statute declaring that only marriage between a man and a woman is valid in California.
The state Supreme Court ruling overturned Proposition 22. Opponents of gay marriage have circulated an initiative likely to appear on the Nov. 4 ballot that would amend the state constitution to ban same-sex marriage – negating the court decision.
Based on the Field Poll, the ultimate outcome of the gay marriage issue in California could hinge on the age of the electorate.
Reflecting stark differences in generational attitudes, 68 percent of voters between 18 and 29 years old said they favored allowing same-sex couples to marry. Fifty-eight percent of voters 30 to 39 and 51 percent of voters 40-49 favored gay marriage. That compared with 47 percent of voters 50-64 and 36 percent of those over 65 who supported the idea.
"As young people are replacing older people, voters are more supportive," said Mark DiCamillo, director of the California Field Poll. "The trend line itself is historic. The lines are crossing. This is a major sociological event in California."

Read more:

Monday, May 19, 2008

Hog House Blog: Equality SD endorses candidates

By Denise Ross
Welcome back, Hoghouse readers. Sorry things went radio silent for much of last
week. I got sucked into another project -
the documentary - which is nearing completion at long, long last.

I return bearing gifts.

First is the list of legislative candidates endorsed by Equality South Dakota, the relatively new LGBT advocacy group. Later today, there will be video of an interview with the Democratic campaign manager from Mississippi who won the special congressional election last week. (I swear it’s true.)

OK, so Equality South Dakota endorsed seven Democrats. Here’s the list. (Read the full press release by clicking “CLICK HERE to read more” below.

Elaine Elliott, House District 2, Aberdeen. Candidate Elliott is in a three-way primary against longtime legislator Paul Dennert and candidate John Graham for two spots on the general election ballot.

Darrell Solberg, House District 11, Sioux Falls. Candidate Solberg faces fellow candidates Don Rose and Shawn Anderson in a three-way primary for two ballot spots.

Martha Vanderlinde, House District 15, Sioux Falls. Candidate Vanderlinde faces fellow candidates John Madigan and Patrick Kirschman in a three-way primary for two ballot spots.

Caitlin Collier, House District 17, Vermillion. Candidate Collier faces former legislator John Reedy, incumbent Eldon Nygaard and candidate Thomas Jones in a four-way primary for two ballot spots.

Larry Lucas, House District 26A, Mission. Incumbent Lucas faces candidates Calvin Jones and Paul Joseph in a three-way primary for one spot on the ballot.

Kevin Killer, House District 27, Pine Ridge. Killer faces fellow candidates Robert Fogg, Joseph White Bear Claws and Ed Iron Cloud III in a four-way race for two ballot spots.

Jeff Nelsen, House District 33, Rapid City. Candidate Nelsen faces fellow candidate Kimberly Henderson and perennial candidate Gary Loudner in a three-way race for two ballot spots.
Read more:

Deb Price: California Supreme Court adjusts people's vision on gay rights

When I took the eye exam for my driver's license as a teenager, I first tried without my glasses.
"Nice rows of blurry black lines, right?" I joked.
I slipped on my glasses. And, presto, crisp, distinct letters appeared before my eyes. The letters, of course, had always been there; I just couldn't recognize them.
When the California Supreme Court ruled May 15 that gay couples have the same constitutional right to marry as heterosexuals, it essentially said that one job of courts is to adjust the vision of people who simply haven't been able to see the injustice right in front of them.

Chief Justice Ronald George, a Republican appointee who wrote the 121-page majority opinion, said the nation's evolution in views and policies toward racial minorities and women teaches "that even the most familiar and generally accepted of social practices and traditions often mask an unfairness and inequality that frequently is not recognized or appreciated by those not directly harmed by those practices or traditions."
The 4-3 ruling -- the same split as in 1948 when California's top court became the first to strike down a ban on marriage between people of different races -- means gay couples can marry in California in about 30 days.
California follows Massachusetts, where more than 10,000 gay couples have married since 2004. But, unlike in Massachusetts, gay couples from any state will be able to marry there.
The breakthrough in the trendsetting Golden State -- home to one of every 8 Americans -- is gigantic.
As San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom, who triggered the court case in 2003 by allowing his city to issue licenses to gay couples, joyfully put it after the ruling, "As California goes, so goes the nation!"
The landmark ruling by the nation's most influential state court was immediately embraced by two California heavyweights: Republican Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a Democrat with the power to block any federal marriage amendment.
All is not sunny in California, though. Voters will likely have to decide on a state amendment aimed at once again restricting marriage to opposite-sex couples.

Read more:

Commentary on Marriage Equality Victory in California

In These Times

California Rules!
A Defeat for Right-Wing Activism On and Off the Bench

By Hans Johnson

Refusing to be boxed in by election-year timidity or political threats from the religious right, a majority of the California Supreme Court ruled May 15 that same-sex couples have an equal right to civil marriage in the state. The judgment stands on a sturdy foundation of precedents involving equal protection of the law. Its reasoning and force rebut a far-right charge that has cowed other courts despite being perfectly backward.
In a ruling that the state will not appeal, California’s highest court ordered officials to begin granting marriage licenses to same-sex couples June 15. The clarity of the ruling is a reminder that people outside the ranks of a social movement can sometimes best articulate its progress.
“In contrast to earlier times,” wrote Chief Justice Ronald George, “our state now recognizes that an individual’s capacity to establish a loving and long-term committed relationship with another person and responsibly to care for and raise children does not depend upon the individual’s sexual orientation.”
Sixty years ago, against a steep and contrary bent of public opinion, the same court upheld the right of a Mexican American woman, Andrea Perez, to marry her African-American sweetheart, Sylvester Davis, in Los Angeles. It took two decades for the U.S. Supreme Court to finally follow California’s lead and nix all such bans on interracial marriages.
In the current marriage case, Carlos Moreno, the court’s sole Latino justice, and two others joined the ruling by George, an appointee of former Republican governor Pete Wilson. George became the court’s chief justice the very month (May 1996) that fellow Californian Anthony Kennedy, a Reagan appointee to the U.S. Supreme Court, confounded religious conservatives by striking down an antigay amendment to the Colorado constitution. The measure aimed to obliterate and forever outlaw any protection in any area of life against antigay bias, no matter how severe. Kennedy countered with simple declarative grace that even a majority of voters cannot make gay people “strangers to the law.”
Seven years later, in 2003, Kennedy infuriated the far right again with his ruling against a Texas sodomy statute so prone to abuse that police could wield it to barge into the homes and bedrooms and arrest unsuspecting adults. Today, at its fifth anniversary, the Lawrence standard nullifying all state sodomy laws and extending privacy continues to gain traction in politics and case law in part because of its author’s conservative credentials.
Even the farthest right-wing fringe refrains from demonizing Kennedy due to his status as a swing vote on the Supreme Court. Instead, like prison wardens mocked by defiance of a noncompliant inmate, they direct their rage at justice David Souter, the moderate appointee of Bush 41, and the aged but unflagging jurist John Paul Stevens, a Ford appointee whose demise some on the right actually pray for.

Read more:


The Huffington Post


Bowing to Fear, candidates ignore historic nature of CA decision

Lane Hudson

On Thursday, the California Supreme Court issued a historic ruling that overturned a law denying gays and lesbians equal access to civil marriage. For millions of people like me, it was a moving moment - a moment where we were recognized as being equal in every way in the eyes of the law. A moment that we aspire to see become reality in every corner of America.
Hillary Clinton had this to say about this incredibly important ruling:
"Hillary Clinton believes that gay and lesbian couples in committed relationships should have the same rights and responsibilities as all Americans and believes that civil unions are the best way to achieve this goal. As President, Hillary Clinton will work to ensure that same sex couples have access to these rights and responsibilities at the federal level. She has said and continues to believe that the issue of marriage should be left to the states."
Barack Obama had this to say:
"Barack Obama has always believed that same-sex couples should enjoy equal rights under the law, and he will continue to fight for civil unions as President. He respects the decision of the California Supreme Court, and continues to believe that states should make their own decisions when it comes to the issue of marriage."
Seventy-five words and fifty-four words, respectively, about a 172 page ruling that time will surely find to be the definitive ruling on marriage equality. This ruling will be cited in every marriage case that will be argued in the future. The thoughtful, well-written decision provides the pathway to ending one of the last vestiges of civil discrimination in America. Yet, our presidential candidates couldn't even muster the effort to acknowledge its importance. Disappointing would be a mild word to describe my feelings about them on this issue.
In 1948, California became the first State in America to overturn a ban on interracial marriage. In its decision on Tuesday, the California Supreme Court cited its own words from that 1948 decision. This
New York Times piece, titled 'Same-sex marriage, racial justice find common ground' shows the parallels drawn between the two issues by the Court itself:
Not long into the oral argument before the California Supreme Court in March over whether gay and lesbian couples have a constitutional right to marry, Chief Justice Ronald M. George showed his hand.
Three times he quoted from the court's 1948 decision in Perez v. Sharp that struck down a state ban on interracial marriage, a high point in the history of a prestigious and influential court.
"The essence of the right to marry is freedom to join in marriage with the person of one's choice," Chief Justice George said, quoting Perez.
Without doubt, this is the next step in America's journey to live up to the founding principle that all men are created equal. After the Perez decision in 1948, it took the U.S. Supreme Court until 1967 to overturn the remaining unconstitutional laws banning interracial marriage. Even then, public support for interracial marriage was incredibly low.
Today, America is closely divided on the issue. But we know where this is headed. It is in keeping with the tradition and history of America. After all, our nation has a history of making people equal.

Read more:

Sunday, May 18, 2008

The Titusville Herald: ACLU claims students' right to free speech violated

The American Civil Liberties Union has accused Oil City Area School District of violating students' right to free speech under the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution and has threatened legal action if the district doesn't provide written assurance that such a violation will not happen again.

In a letter addressed to Joseph L. Carrico, district superintendent, and Scott Stahl, Oil City Senior High School principal, the ACLU states that several students were sent home on April 25 for refusing to remove or cover up their “Day of Silence” shirts and other students were told to remove Day of Silence stickers.

The Day of Silence is a day to protest the bullying and harassment of gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender students and their supporters.

The ACLU letter, which was signed by ACLU staff attorney Sara J. Rose and legal director Witold Walczak, states that the school justified its ban on the Day of Silence T-shirts by pointing to its policy prohibiting homemade T-shirts. However, the ACLU did not find any such policy in the student handbook, stated the letter, adding that if such a policy did exist it would be unconstitutional to the extent that it prohibits students from wearing homemade shirts with expressive messages.

The student handbook prohibits “visibly altered clothing,” but does not define the term, the ACLU wrote.

The letter also stated that the ACLU has learned that students have previously been permitted to wear homemade shirts bearing other school messages.
Read more:

Classic Ann Landers: May 18

Dear Ann Landers:

My husband has been clinically depressed for most of his adult life. A while back, "Herman" began seeing a female therapist who focused on my husband's early years to see whether something in his childhood might be the cause of his depression. His therapist discovered that during adolescence, Herman had been a cross-dresser.

He apparently had worn women's clothing in his early teens but repressed it as an adult. Now Herman wants my permission to express this part of his personality around the house. He says he would not go out in public.

This disgusts me, Ann. The thought of my husband in makeup, wig and high heels makes my skin crawl. His therapist told me I need to be more tolerant. She doesn't seem to think his behavior is abnormal or sick.

Herman is artistic and sensitive, a gourmet cook and an avid sportsman. More importantly, he is a terrific father to our two sons. I used to think he was the most masculine man alive. Now I don't see how I ever can look at him the same way or stop wondering whether he is gay. I don't want to break up our marriage, but if anyone found out about the makeup, wigs and high heels, I would be devastated. I need your advice. — N. Carolina

Dear N. Carolina: You need to have a better understanding of your husband's cross-dressing. Herman is a transvestite. Some transvestites are gay, but many are not. They get their thrills from dressing up in women's clothing, but that's as far as it goes. Please go to the public library and read up on the subject. The more you know the less you will fear it.
ANN LANDERS (R)

Saturday, May 17, 2008

The Bilerico Project:California Supreme Court OKs Marriage for Gays - But It Ain't Over Yet

Filed by: Karen Ocamb
May 15, 2008 7:00 PM
That joyful noise you hear rumbling across America is the sound of equality
applauding: today the
California Supreme Court ruled 4-3 that lesbian and gay couples have the same constitutional right to marry as heterosexuals.
The decision could be overturned, however, if a constitutional amendment to ban same-sex marriage makes it onto the November ballot, as expected, and is passed by voters.
The right-wing reaction to the court's ruling from Karen England, executive director for the antigay Capitol Resource Institute, is typical. She said in a statement issued via email:

Read more


LINK to ACLU on Marriage decision

Youtube on celebration

Wayne Besen: TWO Ecstatic Over Historic California Marriage Ruling

Ruling Undermines ‘Ex-Gay’ Propaganda And Lets Potential Recruits See The Truth About Same-Sex Relationships
NEW YORK – TruthWinsOut.org expressed jubilation over the California Supreme Court’s decision to overturn a ban on same-sex marriage. The momentous 4-3 ruling is one of the biggest victories in the GLBT equality movement’s history. It also undermines “ex-gay” propaganda that demeans gay relationships to recruit new members.
“We are thrilled to be a part of history and experience a monumental victory for marriage equality,” said Wayne Besen, TruthWinsOut.org’s Executive Director. “The court made a bold decision and confirmed that all relationships, regardless of sexual orientation, are equal in California.”
“Under these circumstances, we cannot find that retention of the traditional definition of marriage constitutes a compelling state interest,” the court said in a majority decision. “Accordingly, we conclude that to the extent the current California statutory provisions limit marriage to opposite-sex couples, these statutes are unconstitutional.”
The California court also said that the right to marry in the state’s constitution “guarantees same-sex couples the same substantive constitutional rights as opposite-sex couples to choose one’s life partner and enter with that person into a committed, officially recognized, and protected family relationship.”
“This ruling is a devastating blow to ‘ex-gay’ cults, because it undermines their propaganda, which claims that same-sex relationships don’t work,” said TWO’s Besen. “The images of happy couples marrying undercut their efforts to recruit vulnerable people.”
The ruling will take effect and marriages will begin in 30 days. Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger issued a statement that said he will “respect the court’s decision and will “uphold its ruling.” He also said that he “will not support an amendment to the constitution that would overturn this state Supreme Court ruling.”

TruthWinsOut

Going a little slow at The Center West

Things may be moving a little slower at The Center West for awhile. I just got out of the hospital having gone in with some chest pains and other problems. They sent me home. But, still haven't really figured out what is wrong.

I'll try to keep up as best I can. But, I hope everyone can be a little patient. Good things still happening.

The Old Man
(Mike)

Brookings: Male kiss receives raves at SDSU

by Lawrence Novotny

Everyone is familiar with Charlie Brown and his gang. This cast of lovable characters was made popular by Charles Schultz in his comic strip Peanuts and the TV Christmas show. There is now a new version -- a theatre play written by gay playwright Bert V. Royal called Dog Sees God: Confessions of a Teenage Blockhead. This play was performed as part of South Dakota State University's Experimental Theatre on April 27-29.
Royal's play which debuted in 2004 is an "unauthorized parody" of the Peanuts gang. Royal has changed the names of the characters probably to prevent copyright infringement.
In Dog Sees God the gang are now high school teenagers trying to be cool (peppering their language with 4-letter words). C.B. (Charlie Brown) is in mourning since his dog became rabid and was euthanized. C.B. is now asking his friends if there is life after death but his friends are to occupied with there own issues.
C.B.'s sister (Sally) is bouncing from pagan to Goth. The philosopher turned Buddhist Van (Linus) has replaced his security blanket (he smoked it) with pot. Van's sister (Lucy) is still practicing psychoanalysis but in a new location. Marcy (Marcie) and Tricia (Peppermint Patty) are now slutty cheerleaders who spike their lunch milk cartons with booze. Matt (the former dirt bag Pig-Pen) is a germ-phobic neat-freak homophobe who is obsessed with sex.
The play begins on a humorous note but becomes serious when the piano playing Beethoven (Schroeder) appears. The sexually questioning Beethoven is completely ostracized by the rest of the gang because he was raped by his dad. The play ends with the gang trying to rationalize Beethoven's suicide after he was gay bashed.
The highlight of the play was the male-male kiss which was very well received by a full audience in the 200-seat studio theatre.
One of the actors said afterwards they were a little apprehensive at first because they did not know how the audience would respond. On opening night several people walked out. On the third and final night, the actors had to hold the lip-lock for at least a minute while the audience cheered them on!
SDSU Experimental Theatre and the actors are to be complemented for taking on the timely and controversial topics of bullying, gay bashing, seeking one's identity, suicide, drugs, and child abuse. The audience left with much to ponder. Thanks, SDSU theatre gang for a performance very well done.

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

SoDAkNorml.org: Meade County sentencing hearing illuminates absurdity of the law

Bob Newland
South Dakota’s marijuana laws put Meade County Judge Jerome Eckrich in an untenable position during a sentencing hearing last Monday (April 28). He managed to handle it in a compassionate, though still unjust, manner.

The defendant, Tom Faltynowicz, a rancher in southern Meade County, had been arrested in October for growing marijuana, having been turned in by his daughter after an altercation. Faltynowicz uses the herb to manage the nausea and loss of appetite caused by the chemical cocktail he is prescribed for AIDS.

In a plea agreement negotiated between Faltynowicz’s lawyer, Joe Ellingson, and Meade Co. State’s Attorney Jesse Sondreal, Tom pled guilty in January to the lowest-grade felony possession of marijuana, for which the maximum sentence is two years in the penitentiary and a fine of $4000.00. He was in court to be sentenced.

Faltynowicz’s doctor, Doug Traub, of Rapid City is an internal medicine specialist who’s been in the business for over 30 years. He appeared telephonically to testify for Tom. He said that he’d treated Tom for over ten years and that during that time Tom’s health had improved somewhat, rather than having declined as might be expected of an AIDS patient with the “indicators” Tom’s blood exhibited in 1998.

Maintaining a healthy diet is a principal problem among patients who must take certain medicines loaded with toxic chemicals, such as AIDS sufferers and those undergoing chemo-therapy for cancer, Traub explained. “I prescribed Marinol (synthesized THC, the main psychoactive in marijuana) for appetitie stimulation. We also discussed smoked marijuana, which many patients find more effective, with less negative side-effects than Marinol. I was aware that Tom was using marijuana for his wasting syndrome.”

“Tom has plainly benefited from using marijuana.” Dr. Traub said this in a courtroom in South Dakota, under oath. South Dakota law proclaims that marijuana has “no accepted medical use in the United States.”

Judge Eckrich asked, “Is smoking marijuana clinically necessary for Mr. Faltynowicz?” "Yes," Traub replied.

“Is there a mechanism by which we can differentiate, in a urinalysis, as to whether a person is smoking marijuana or using Marinol?” The quandary Eckrich was addressing with this question is that Marinol use is banned by South Dakota probation departments, because its indicators in urine are the same as those for smoked marijuana. "None that I know of," Traub answered.

Marinol is legal for doctors to prescribe and for patients, at least those not in jail or on probation, to use. Doctors may recommend marijuana use, but they are barred from actually delivering it to a patient or writing a prescription for it.

Ellingson began to make an argument clearly based on the intra-contradictory nature of the situation, but was cut off by Eckrich. “I’m not going to legalize medical marijuana out of this courtroom today.” He then sentenced Faltynowicz to eight months in the penitentiary, suspended except for seven days to be served in the Meade Co. jail during the next 90 days; a fine of $400.00; supervised probation for a year, during which he was not to possess or use illegal drugs; and subjection to arbitrary search at any time. Generally, a probation violation results in institution of the primary sentence.

“Does that mean I can’t use Marinol?” Tom asked. “That’s not what I said,” Eckrich answered, “I said no illegal drugs.” The probation department officer in the courtroom took note.

What Eckrich had done was legalize the use of marijuana for this particular convicted and to-be probation-supervised criminal, as long as he didn’t get caught with it.

Earlier, during Dr. Traub’s testimony, defense attorney Ellingson asked if his advocacy for therapeutic marijuana was professionally difficult. “Socially maybe,” Traub replied, “but as physicians, we use the tools available.”

So do cops and lawyers and judges. Every person in the legal system who touched this case acted as if they did not believe that marijuana has “no accepted medical use.” The result was a farce played out with a pawn whose life hung, and still hangs, in the balance.

Knowing that a man with a fatal disease used a commonly available herb to sustain his life, cops, lawyers and a judge arrested him, charged him with a crime, prosecuted the crime, and sentenced him for the crime of possessing the herb and using it to sustain his life. Granted, the result was one that Tom can survive, with luck.

He’s still stuck with the same problem he’s had since first being diagnosed with AIDS twenty years ago; an essential element in his therapy is illegal to obtain, have or use. He will use it. What will happen if he slips up or has a little bad luck, and gets caught with the one medicine he can’t have under the terms of his probation?

Will Judge Eckrich then put him in prison for eight months, where the state will have to bear the weight of his $4000 per month legal medicine bill while denying him the medicine that balances the toxic drugs with beneficial appetite stimulation? Dr. Traub said in court that there was no chance that the prison system could deal with Tom’s condition.

Would a probation violation then amount to a short “life in prison” sentence?

The So. Dak. legislature needs to deal with the patently absurd characterization of marijuana, in law, that it has “no accepted medical use.” Until it does, we will have to continue to watch farcical contortions like these--that illuminate the absurdity of the law--played out in court. It is unconscionably cruel to deny an effective remedy to sick, disabled and dying people.
SoDakNorml

365Gay: Md. Gov. Signs Inclusive Bully Law

(Annapolis, Maryland) Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley has signed into law one of the nation's most sweeping laws against bullying, aimed at protecting all students, including those who are LGBT.

The new law requires state and county school boards to develop policies that ban bullying. It mandates counseling to offered to both the victim and the bully. And it extends not only to school property but also electronic devices, including cell phones, computers or pagers.

The law makes Maryland just the 11th state to protect students from bullying and harassment based on sexual orientation and only the seventh to protect students on the basis of gender identity or expression.

"This is a historic day for Maryland students,” said Kevin Jennings, the Executive Director of the Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network.

"Feeling safe in school is directly related to academic achievement and student success. This law is an important step in reducing bullying, improving school climate and making school better for all Maryland students.”

A GLSEN survey released in 2005 found that bullying and verbal harassment is a national problem across the country.

The National School Climate Survey found that three-quarters of students surveyed across America said that over the past year they heard derogatory remarks such as "faggot" or "dyke" frequently or often at school, and nearly nine out of ten reported hearing "that's so gay" or "you're so gay" - meaning stupid or worthless - frequently or often.

Over a third of students said they experienced physical harassment at school on the basis of sexual orientation and more than a quarter on the basis of their gender expression.

Nearly one-in-five students reported they had been physically assaulted because of their sexual orientation and over a tenth because of their gender expression.
Read more

From the "Got to be Kidding" Dept: Page One: State House candidate: Separate bathrooms for gay kids

A Republican seeking a state House seat in the land of Larry Craig advocates segregation based on sexual orientation.

Retired Idahoan Walt Bayes, 70, says in campaign literature that it is "absolutely wrong to force any student to share the same bathrooms and showers with homosexual teachers or students."

"I don't really have an answer for it," the Wilder resident told the Idaho Press-Tribune Saturday, "but we're going to have to do something if there's going to be a considerable number of our people who are going to [be gay]."

It would have been "an absolute catastrophe," Bayes said, if he were allowed to shower with girls when he was 18 years old, which is the rationale he uses to advocate such a "separation."

Bayes' political experience consists of a run for State Senate in 2004 and a run for Governor in 2006, which he kicked off with a hunger strike, holding out for almost two months until a state passed a law to challenge Roe v. Wade; South Dakota did so. According to the Gem State Voter Guide, Bayes opposes stem cell research and anti-discrimination law based on sexual orientation and gender expression. He supports challenging evolution teachings in public schools and posting the Ten Commandments on public property.

A short video of Walt Bayes, outlining his campaign platform, is available to view at the Idaho Statesman.
Page One:

PageOneQ: Right-wing lawyers: HRC anti-bullying program indoctrinating kids

Representatives of a conservative legal organization contend that a program aiming to foster a healthy learning environment is actually a Trojan horse for the "homosexual agenda."

"The Human Rights Campaign can say what they want, but the program speaks for itself," said Alliance Defense Fund legal counsel Austin Nimocks on Tuesday, "and it's designed to get kids to believe that their sex is not a biological fact, but an inconvenience that's changeable based on how they feel."

"You have the largest homosexual advocacy group in the country now attacking one of the largest public school districts in the country in order to affect the most children that they can with one blow," Nimocks continued.

The Alliance Defense Fund has written a letter of "warning" to Minneapolis school officials about the perceived insidiousness of HRC's "Welcoming Schools" guide.

"As you are aware," the letter opens, "your schools have been targeted by the Human Rights Campaign (HRC) as one of their pilots for instituting its 'Welcoming Schools' project. HRC defines itself as the 'largest national gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender civil rights organization.' In other words, HRC represents only 4.1% of those adults (not children) in America who define themselves as either gay or lesbian. We respectfully request that this memorandum be considered on behalf of the remaining 95.9% of the population, including all children."

The letter goes on to say that HRC's program introduces controversial subject matter on gender identity and "unproven scientific theory that runs counter to American cultural and scholastic interests" to students. Nimocks and colleague Brian Raum also compare the fostering of free gender variance and expression among the "afflicted" to denying a schizophrenic access to medications.

Compiled in response to concerns from parents and teachers, "Welcoming Schools," currently being tested in three school districts including Minneapolis, offers guidelines to parents, guardians, teachers and administrators on promoting an inclusive and welcoming elementary school environment for all students, regardless of their gender expression or family configuration.
Read more:

Wayne Besen: The AIDS Blame Game

What is it about gay sex that makes U.S. health officials want to play Chicken Little with AIDS prevention and public safety?" Tony Valenzuela writes in the latest Poz magazine, where he criticizes, "The clueless tabloid and public health hysteria over man-on-man sex."

Valenzuela points to "an imaginary 'super strain of HIV to the sci-fi MRSA superbug." And, he is correct that it seems the media and society seem to always take on the absurd posture that gay sex is a mysterious ticking time bomb.

It is important to remember that gay bashing is a multi-million dollar industry. There is a vested interest by fundamentalist groups to convince the public that gay people are morally inferior and diseased, thus a threat to children, society and themselves.The notion that AIDS is a punishment from God is a staple of right wing literature.

Instead of focusing on the condemnation of unsafe sexual practices, extremist groups say that the very nature of being gay makes one a candidate for an early death. For example, the so-called "ex-gay" group Exodus International uses the Bible to justify their belief in God's wrath and fury against homosexuals."Those who practice these sins 'receive in their own persons the due penalty of their error,'" writes former Exodus Executive Director Bob Davies in 'A Biblical Response to the Pro-Gay Movement.' "In today's society, homosexuality is reaping a bitter harvest...homosexual involvement reaps deep devastation in the lives of many who practice it."

The Traditional Values Coalition has published what they call a "fact-based report on the dangers of homosexuals and homosexual behavior to children and to our society." One "fact sheet" is called, "Homosexual Sex = Death From HIV Infection."Focus on the Family offers that, "solid, irrefutable evidence proves that there are lethal consequences to engaging in the defining features of male homosexuality..."Of course, blaming victims for deadly diseases is nothing new and has ushered in some of the most shameful and horrific acts in world history.

In a recent New York Times magazine article, epidemiologist and physician Gary Slutkin (the article was about gang violence, not HIV) spoke of how Chinese Americans were once thought to be inherently prone to disease.
Read more:

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

365Gay.com: Federal Court Rules For Gay Students In Button Case

(Ponce De Leon, Florida) After a two-day trial in which a Florida high school principal testified that he believed clothing, buttons or stickers featuring rainbows would make students automatically picture gay people having sex, a federal judge today ruled that the school violated the First Amendment rights of students.

Heather Gillman, a 16-year-old junior at Ponce de Leon High School, sued the school with the help of the American Civil Liberties Union after she was told she could not wear buttons, stickers or clo0thing that supported LGBT civil rights.

After she received the warning the ACLU last November sent a letter to the school board’s attorney on behalf of Gillman, asking for clarification as to whether a variety of symbols and slogans, such as the rainbow flag or “I support my gay friends,” would be allowed at the school.
The school district replied that it would not allow any expressions of support for gay rights at all because such speech would "likely be disruptive."

The district then said that such symbols and slogans were signs that students were part of a "secret/illegal organization."

Judge Richard Smoak of the United States District Court issued an order Tuesday that forces the school to stop its censorship of students who want to express their support for gay people. The judge also warned the district not to retaliate against students over the lawsuit.

"Standing up to my school was really hard to do, but I’m so happy that I did because the First Amendment is a big deal to everyone," said Gillman in a statement.

During the trial, which was held in Panama City yesterday and today, Ponce de Leon High School’s principal David Davis admitted under oath that he had banned students from wearing any clothing or symbols supporting equal rights for gay people.
Read more:

The Star Press: Ball State student says attack was hate crime

MUNCIE -- A gay Ball State University student said he and his friends were attacked in The Village early Friday morning because of their sexuality.

I consider it a hate crime," said the student, Kyle Flood.

Flood, 21, Indianapolis, suffered a swollen eye, cuts and bruises and a scratched cornea that required treatment at Ball Memorial Hospital.

No arrests had been made as of Monday.

Ball State University Police Chief Gene Burton said attacks on gay students were rare.

"Let me put it this way, I've seen it before," Burton said. "But I could not tell you the last time."

News of the attack had started to spread among students as of Monday, according to Travis Schilla, president of Spectrum, an advocacy group for gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender students.

Students should not panic, Schilla said, but be reminded to be aware of their surroundings and travel to and from bars and social events in groups.

"Ball State is a really a safe campus and the administration has taken this seriously," Schilla said. "Everyone is taking this seriously. It's been really good to see that people care."

Crimes based on sexual orientation represented 15.3 percent of all hate crimes reported in FBI hate crime statistics in 2006, according to Mark Potok, director of The Southern Poverty Law Center's Intelligence Project, a hate crime monitoring group.

Read more:

PFLAG National Blog: PFLAG Moms & Dads on ‘Brothers & Sisters’

On Sunday night, ABC’s hit drama Brothers & Sisters took one big step into history with network television’s first same-sex wedding between two series regulars.

Sunday’s episode - which included one character’s lament that not all parents can be as accepting as PFLAG parents - may be the most talked about GLBT television moment since Ellen DeGeneres came out in primetime. And this morning, The Daily Herald talks to PFLAG members in the Chicago area about their reactions to the Brothers & Sisters vows.

“It was amazing, because 11 years ago, people gathered in their room to watch ‘Ellen,’ and all she did was accidentally turn around and say, ‘I’m gay’ in front of a microphone,” Barbara Schon-Lundberg, editor of the suburban newsletter for PFLAG, tells columnist Burt Constable. “And now, they were kissing and there wasn’t an uproar. … They had a wedding, and it was so beautiful. There were so many things that just touched my heart.”

“From the time Ellen came out, as far as what goes on TV now, it’s certainly lightened up a lot,” PFLAG leader (and mom) Shelley Carlson adds.

“When we watched Ellen, it (homosexuality) was really the main issue on the show,” says Dennis Blaha, a PFLAG dad who was living in Elk Grove Village then. “This (’Brothers & Sisters’) was like, ‘oh yeah, these two guys are getting married.’ … The other thing I liked is that it was two guys who were in love. It wasn’t about sex.”
Read more:

Monday, May 12, 2008

Washington Blade; The moral compass of Mildred Loving

Civil rights pioneer embraced cause of same-sex marriage

IT IS A rare privilege to meet a person whose life has had a profound effect on the shaping of history. Last May, our organization's founder, Mitchell Gold, along with myself and another colleague, were offered that opportunity as we spent a warm and breezy afternoon with Mildred Loving.

Our visit preceded a celebration of the 40th anniversary of the Supreme Court's decision in Loving v. Virginia. Faith in America sponsored the event and organized it along with Freedom to Marry and numerous other civil rights advocacy groups.

As a young black and Native American woman, Mildred married Richard Loving, a white man, in the District of Columbia because interracial marriage was illegal in their native Virginia. The couple returned to Virginia and was arrested in the middle of the night for cohabitation as a married couple.In January 1959, they were convicted and given a sentence of one year in prison, but the judge suspended the sentence upon condition that they leave the state and never return together for 25 years. Several years later, the Lovings sued Virginia to overturn their conviction. After losing the case on appeal to the Supreme Court of Virginia, the couple appealed to the Supreme Court of the United States, which heard oral arguments in 1967.

On June 12 of that year, the Supreme Court ruled that not only did Virginia's miscegenation law violate the Lovings' right to equality protected by the Equal Protection Clause, it also violated their fundamental right to marry as protected by the Due Process Clause. The resulting decision of Loving vs. Virginia struck down the laws of Virginia and 15 other states that banned interracial marriage.

Since the founding of the American colonies and the first importation of Africans as indentured servants and slaves, marriage between blacks and whites was illegal in America. Maryland instituted the first criminal law to that effect in 1664. They were among some of the oldest laws in America.

DURING LAST YEAR’S celebration of the decision in Washington, Faith in America drew attention to words written by a Virginia appeals court judge in the case in 1965: "Almighty God created the races white, black, yellow, malay and red and he placed them on separate continents."

Our intent in drawing attention to that statement was to show how religion-based bigotry was once used as a moral and religious stamp of approval in preventing Mildred and Richard from uniting their lives in marriage. We also intended to show that rejection, aspersion and discrimination receives the same religious and moral stamp of approval in America today as it relates to not only gays and lesbians having the right to marry and other rights but also to their very being.

During our visit with Mildred on that warm afternoon in rural Virginia last May, we asked her how she reacted 40 years ago when she read the words of that judge. I recall noticing a worn Bible resting near her that afternoon as she responded.
Read more:

State News: Benefits banned (More proof of negative effects of gay marriage ban)

Although Penny Gardner has been with her partner for 11 years, they still don’t depend on each other when it comes to their health. As a visiting professor in Women, Gender and Social Justice, Gardner isn’t enrolled for health benefits due to her fixed term on campus. But a Michigan Supreme Court ruling has made benefits inaccessible by prohibiting public universities from offering them to partners of gay employees.

“If we were married, we wouldn’t have to jump through all of the hoops,” she said.
Because Gardner and her partner don’t have joint finances, they are ineligible under MSU’s revised health benefits plan.

Wednesday’s Supreme Court ruling states that the 2004 ban on gay marriage also prevents state universities from offering health coverage for partners of gay workers.

“It’s deeply disturbing and disappointing, in a broader context of the many ways the campus commitment to rights has been challenged by state legislation,” said Brent Bilodeau, director of the Lesbian, Bisexual, Gay, Transgender Resource Center.

“What’s most disturbing about the value it shows of LBGT families. It gives the signal that LBGT families are not supported in this state.”

As of October 2007, the university had 54 employees who had a partner enrolled for benefits. Comparatively, there are 7,471 married spouses who are enrolled for benefits.

The university began offering health benefits to same-sex partners of MSU employees in 1997.

In 2004, state voters approved an amendment to the constitution that defined marriage as a union between a man and a woman, banning gay marriage in state.
After the Michigan Court of Appeals ruled the current plan unconstitutional, the university shifted its health benefits policy in July 2007, to a program that does not specifically cover domestic partners.

The new program made benefits available to Other Eligible Individuals that met certain criteria, including joint residency and finances.
Those changes make the recent ruling largely irrelevant to MSU’s benefits plan, said Grant Littke, president of MSU’s Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender, Faculty, Staff and Graduate Student Association.

Gardner said the benefits offered by the university are good, but not enough.
Read more;

Victory Fund News: Austin Texas; Randi Shade unseats incumbent

Victory Fund-endorsed candidate Randi Shade won a seat on the Austin City Council on Saturday, soundly defeating incumbent Jennifer Kim with 64 percent of the vote to Kim's 27 percent. A third candidate, Ken Weiss, earned nine percent.
First-time candidate Shade, an 18-year resident of Austin, will be the city council's first openly gay member.

"I'm thrilled," Shade told the Austin American-Statesman. "I knew it would be an uphill battle to run against an incumbent. But we built a broad coalition of support, and I think people are ready for a change."

The campaign between Shade and Kim became increasingly heated in the weeks leading up to the election, with both candidates launching strong offensives. The American-Statesman reports that Shade accused Kim of being ineffective and inaccessible. She also criticized the incumbent for spending money on things like velvet Christmas stockings and for sending misleading automated calls.

"The attacks that the incumbent made against me were surprising, disappointing and in most instances based on fiction," Shade said.

Box Turtle Bulletin: Former Ex-Gay Spokesperson: “I Was Disowned”

NoĆ© Gutierrez has experienced quite a few twists and turns in his young life. He originally appeared in the gay-affirming video “It’s Elementary,” which teaches school children the importance of respecting diversity. Later, he entered the ex-gay movement and was featured in Dr. Warren Throckmorton’s 2004 video “I Do Exist.” In early 2007, he issued a statement regretting that his story became a part of the “divisive message of the ex-gay movement.” Now he talks about how quickly the ex-gay movement has disowned him, an experience that has an eerily familiar ring among other ex-gay survivors I’ve talked to.

In a long but fascinating statement posted on his web site last month, Gutierrez describes his first-hand account of his involvement in the ex-gay movement. He recounts that while the ex-gay movement preaches about love and compassion toward the ex-gay movement, he found little evidence of it:

"Forgiveness and reconciliation were a promise held at the far end of a road filled with sacrifice, self-discipline, and a commitment to never practice anything related to homosexuality. The amount of mental/emotional stress these ministries place on their members is insurmountable. Everyone seemed to manage the stress through various coping strategies. The most successful coping strategy seemed to be for someone to remain immersed in ex-gay ideology. You could accomplish this by becoming a member of a weekly support group or joining a ministry team as a volunteer or staff. The more active you were in a ministry the less likely you were to doubt your ability to achieve change. In short, you would have to eat, live and breathe ex-gay ministry."
Read more