Federal Courts Enter Frustrating Standoff Over Freedom To Marry

Federal Courts Enter Frustrating Standoff Over Freedom To Marry

Supreme_Court_US_2010We’ve been waiting years for the U.S. Supreme Court to make a decision about marriage, and now an off-the-cuff comment from Ruth Bader Ginsburg has just provided a hint that the Supreme Court might’ve been waiting for us this whole time. Somehow, marriage equality has turned into a lame chicken-and-egg joke.

Here’s the problem: there are a bunch of marriage cases that are ready for the Supreme Court to take. But the Supreme Court might not want to take it (RBG hinted last week) because all of those cases agree that marriage bans are unconstitutional, and the court would prefer to wait until lower courts disagree with each other.

So far, only one federal judge has upheld a marriage ban since the Windsor decision, and he’s at the bottom of the ladder: a District Court judge. Before that case gets to the U.S. Supreme Court, it has to pass through an appellate court, which could take years.

So if Ginburg’s comment is any indication, the Supreme Court might not take a case for years. Or maybe it will take a case next week! There is literally no way to know what the hell they’re going to do, other than wear robes and look solemn.

Making things even more complicated: some courts (but not all courts) are afraid of stepping on the Supreme Court’s toes, so they’d decided to freeze their marriage lawsuits until the Supreme Court rules. But the Supreme Court might not want to make a decision until those cases advance further. And that means that the whole legal system’s in a traffic jam, waiting for someone to get out of the way and figure out where they’re going.

And that, apparently, is now important issues are settled here in the land of the free.

matt baume

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/CMhwj267rIE/federal-courts-enter-frustrating-standoff-over-freedom-to-marry-20140922

Indonesian Sharia Province May Punish Gay Sex With 100 Lashes

Indonesian Sharia Province May Punish Gay Sex With 100 Lashes

Caning aceh indonesia

Politicians in Aceh province, Indonesia, are considering passing a new law that will punish gay sex with 100 lashes, reports Malaysian Digest.

Aceh is the only part Indonesia to enforce Islamic Sharia law, which is has been slowly implementing since 2001.

The draft law, which also punishes adultery with 100 lashes of the cane, would criminalize anal sex between men and “the rubbing of body parts between women for stimulation.” It would also apply Islamic laws and punishments to non-Muslims.

Aceh Party’s Ramli Sulaiman, who heads the commission that drafted the law, said:

“We have studied the implementation of sharia in countries like Saudi Arabia, Brunei Darussalam and Jordan to draft this law and we are happy with it.”

Amnesty International has expressed concern over the bylaw and has said that caning goes against international laws on torture and rights, as well as Indonesia’s own constitution.


Jim Redmond

www.towleroad.com/2014/09/indonesian-sharia-province-may-punish-gay-sex-with-100-lashes.html

'Not Alone' Reminds Us Women Who Have Abortions Are Our Daughters, Mothers, Grandmothers And Friends

'Not Alone' Reminds Us Women Who Have Abortions Are Our Daughters, Mothers, Grandmothers And Friends
“Not afraid. Not ashamed. Not alone.”

That’s the tagline of Not Alone, a website that offers women a platform to share their abortion experiences through video testimonies and essays. “We are here to let women who have had abortions know that they are part of a community,” the website reads. “We are not ashamed of our experiences; we are not anonymous; and we are not alone.”

Not Alone was founded in 2013, after Beth Matusoff Merfish wrote a New York Times column about her mother’s experience of getting an abortion in Texas in 1972, where the procedure was illegal. The outpouring of support and appreciation the Matusoff Merfishes received in response moved them to provide a space for women to share their experiences with terminating an unwanted pregnancy.

Emily Letts, a former New Jersey abortion patient advocate, joined the team in the spring of 2014 after her own video documenting her abortion received national attention. Both Letts and the Matusoff Merfishes heard from women all over the world who were eager to share their stories.

“When you see one of our videos you see an actual person testifying to their actual lives,” Letts told The Huffington Post. “They are no longer a statistic on a piece of paper that the anti-abortion groups can smear with hatred. They are men and women just like your sisters and brothers.”

Emily M
“I now feel so much appreciation of being a woman and what my body can do and I feel a greater appreciation of what motherhood may one day be, should I choose to conceive.”

The concept is pretty simple. Anyone, regardless of gender, can share their experiences with abortion. Testimonies are shared through video or written essay.

Not Alone works closely with Provide, an organization that supports women’s health and reproductive care in rural areas of the United States. Not Alone donates money to Provide for every video testimony submitted.

Each testimony confronts the stigma that surrounds abortion, encouraging women (and men) to recognize that exercising the right to choose is an experience shared by millions and is nothing to be ashamed of.

With 68,000 women dying worldwide from unsafe abortions every year, Beth Matusoff Merfish argues that it’s time to humanize this issue and communicate that abortion is much more than a policy issue debated on Capitol Hill. “When we learn that those who terminate — 1 in 3 women in this country — are our mothers, sisters, grandmothers, partners, daughters and friends, this issue gets a human face,” Matusoff Merfish told The Huffington Post.

Sophia
“I am so proud of myself for standing up and doing this.”

Abortion isn’t a topic that can be brushed under the rug. According to the Guttmacher Institute, Fifty percent of women in the U.S. will have an unintended pregnancy before the age of 45 and 21 percent of all pregnancies end in abortion.

“We need to start realizing that these people are our loved ones and they deserve the freedom to choose what happens to their bodies,” Letts said. “They deserve to have accurate information and they deserve to realize that they are not alone.”

Research shows that women who terminate unwanted pregnancies come from all walks of life. Almost 60 percent of women who choose to have abortions are in their 20s with white women accounting for 36 percent, black women for 30 percent, Hispanic women for 25 percent and other races for 9 percent. About 61 percent of women who get abortions already have one or more children.

Letts says the feedback she’s received from Not Alone’s community changed her outlook on her own abortion experience. “When I was sharing my own abortion story the only person I felt responsible for was myself. As more and more women and men submit their stories, bravely disclosing their identities along with their stories, I want to ensure their experiences are positive,” Letts said. “I feel very maternal towards the amazing people who join in the fight to destigmatize abortion. For this reason we try to stay in contact with them, letting them know we always have their back if they every feel uncomfortable.”

Judy
“By the time I got home from the second procedure, which involved surgery, I was near dead.”

Not Alone has created a community of about 30 testimonies and just under 100 others who have pledged to share their stories personally with their families.

Letts noted that although a large part of Not Alone’s mission is to support women, it is critical that the conversation also include men. “Most of the time the man’s perspective is forgotten on this journey,” Letts said. “We hope to shed light on their intimate feelings as well.”

As Matusoff Merfish put it, “These stories together, in a collective, will change the national conversation around women’s health, and I am deeply proud to be a part of that.”

To share your story or read more about Not Alone head over to their website.

www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/09/22/not-alone-abortion-stories_n_5828912.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

The Excruciating Answer To Which Hurts More, Child Birth Or A Kick To The Balls?

The Excruciating Answer To Which Hurts More, Child Birth Or A Kick To The Balls?

630x420_KickMeInTheNutsIt’s a true question of the ages: which hurts more, child birth or getting whacked in the nuts? Inquiring minds want to know.

Well if the subject has ever come up as lively dinner party debate (or even if it hasn’t), here’s some information that will put the discussion to rest. Science to the rescue.

But in true scientific fashion, the correct answer seems to be as vague as your best red wine-fueled opinion.

Basically, both hurt. A lot. And pain is subjective, so there’s no real way to measure it. Though we’re guessing that won’t go over too well with your mommy friends.

You may have to direct them to this video:

Dan Tracer

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Former Australian PM Julia Gillard: Gay Marriage is Coming to 'Most Parts of the Developed World'

Former Australian PM Julia Gillard: Gay Marriage is Coming to 'Most Parts of the Developed World'

Gillard

Former Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard, who opposed same-sex marriage during her tenure, tells Channel 9 News this week in an interview ahead of the publication of a new memoir that she has accepted it will be a reality, ABC News reports:

She told Channel Nine she now accepted things would change.

“I’ve got what may be in the modern age a kind of old-fashioned, feminist view about, can we take the traditional institution of marriage and stretch it? Or do you create some other way of solemnising relationships and recognising them as of worth and status?” she said.

“When I was a young feminist I would’ve said overwhelmingly the gay community was on that track too, but things have changed.

“I accept the course of human history now is that we are going to see same-sex marriage here and in, you know, most parts of the developed world.”

Though she was pressured heavily while in office and may even have a “valuable lifetime commitment” to a gay man, Gillard

Australia’s current Prime Minister Tony Abbott also opposes gay marriage.


Andy Towle

www.towleroad.com/2014/09/former-australian-pm-julia-gillard-gay-marriage-is-coming-to-most-parts-of-the-developed-world.html