How I Will Express My Religious Freedom in Indiana

How I Will Express My Religious Freedom in Indiana
Indiana’s Religious Freedom Restoration Act, Senate Bill 101, overwhelmingly passed in the House of Representatives today with a vote of 63-31. This bill would make it legal for businesses to refuse services to people based on religious beliefs. The bill will now go back to the Senate for some minor changes and quickly end up on the desk of Governor Mike Pence, who apparently can’t wait to sign his name, freeing those slaves who are unable to express their religious beliefs. Since the bill passed earlier in the day, I’ve received several texts and messages from people asking me what I think. After much thought and deliberation, the following is how I’ve decided to respond.

It is on days like today that I truly miss my mother. Although deeply political, she was able to stand back from any scenario and see humanity at the core of the issue. She taught me to be understanding of other people’s political and religious beliefs and freedoms because we must all be accepting of each other for democracy to work in a healthy manner. She truly understood democracy. One minute a rager with the Chicago Seven the next minute sitting on my father’s shoulders at a Janis Joplin concert at Ravinia. Later, as a mother, one minute reading Amelia Bedelia books to me in bed and years later, giving me a signed copy of Maya Angelou’s And Still I Rise for a birthday present. She loved Bob Dylan and Bob Marley equally, could overeat oranges or vanilla ice cream and loved to dance in the kitchen. In fact, dancing in the kitchen might have been her favorite thing in life. She attended church every Sunday and participated in the Kid’s Diner for underprivileged children in the church’s neighborhood. She was a woman of strong faith. But most of all, she believed in humanity. “Just as soon as you feel like the bottom has fallen out, people will rise back up and surprise you,” she’d was fond of saying.

My mother taught me five very valuable life lessons: Treat others the way you would want to be treated, love passionately and compassionately, forgive easily and refuse to be the victim of other people’s oppression. The fifth and final lesson was the most important; We are on borrowed time as it is.

I’ve thought a lot about that last statement today, because you see, my mother isn’t here anymore. She passed away seven years ago. And in those final moments in the hospital room, stillness and serenity on her lips, the only thing that remained, was between her…and God.

I don’t claim to know or understand God. I know there is one and I’m not it. I don’t need to reinvent the wheel but I also believe in religious freedom. But this isn’t about religious freedom. What knowing LGBT person would want to spend their money or hire someone who so opposed who they are at their core? Not me.

But I’m tired of fighting. I’ve been fighting since I was 5 years old to have other people accept me for something I never understood in the first place. And if I couldn’t understand it then I know they certainly can’t understand. And I’m done trying. I’m tired of explaining to people who would never be affected by such a bill how it haunts me and once again makes me feel different; less than.

My life is probably more than half over anyway. This is for our children. I refuse to fight so that when I’m 80 I can have my picture taken for the local paper because it’s such an honor that they finally passed some ridiculous bill of rights that I should have had all along. Nope. I’m done fighting. And to me, that is freedom. It is obvious that my word is not important anyway. It is obvious that my life does not matter to those voting in fear, hiding behind religious freedoms that do not specifically affect their personal lives. The best that I can do is step away.

In situations like today, I think a lot about my mother and the lessons she taught me that made her such an amazing role model. Respect for family values and a strong commitment to be a person of character have the led the life I’ve tried to live, as seen in through the actions of both of my parents.

In knowing that, I will move forward with those five lessons in place, knowing that I can’t change the circumstances, I can only change myself. Treat others the way I would want to be treated, love compassionately and passionately, forgive easily, refuse to be the victim of other people’s oppression and live as if I’m on borrowed time as it is, because I am.

And in the end, the truest conditions of my heart, those softest words and wishes that are only whispered between myself and my God, are what will matter most.

This is how I will be expressing my religious freedom.

Much love,

Peter

www.huffingtonpost.com/peter-monn/how-i-will-express-my-rel_b_6928860.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

Gay Couple Writes To Sex Expert Asking How To Incorporate Food Into The Bedroom

Gay Couple Writes To Sex Expert Asking How To Incorporate Food Into The Bedroom

Screen shot 2015-03-24 at 2.53.58 PMA gay man recently wrote into a U.K. sex expert asking how he and his partner might include food in their bedroom shenanigans.

“My boyfriend and I are quite adventurous when it comes to the bedroom and we’re wondering whether we could use fruits and vegetables and other foods as part of our activities?” the man asked. “Is it dangerous to insert things like cucumbers and carrots?”

The sexpert responded by saying fruits and vegetables are “a great way to excite and reignite your sex life,” provided they are used responsibly.

“Using soft fleshy, non-acidic fruit such as honeydew melons or watermelons can be an exciting way to get new sensations,” the sexpert suggested. “Simply put a hole in it and thrusting in and out will provide interesting brand new feelings.”

Interesting, indeed.

“Alternatively you can always use other foodstuffs such as chocolate spreads or even Marmite,” the sexpert continued.

In case you’re wondering what the hell Marmite is, it’s a thick, sticky, salty brown paste made from yeast extract.

“To answer your question about carrots and cucumbers,” the sexpert advised, “extreme caution must be used when inserting anything into your butt that doesn’t have a handle or give good grip. Many people have ended up in A&E after failing to retrieve a cucumber, banana or carrot lodged in their rectums. A painful experience that can actually lead to death if left untreated. We would urge anyone who has gotten anything stuck up there to seek medical advice immediately, no matter how embarrassed you feel.”

Good to know!

The sexpert then recommends the couple use a proper dildo or vibrator for any sort of anal play, but “if you are going to insert a carrot, gherkin, cucumber or banana, make sure you’re relaxed. Some of these vegetables can be much larger than a penis, so using lots of lube and taking your time is a must.”

Related stories:

This Sexually Active Gay Man Claims He’s Never Had An Orgasm

PHOTOS: Tasty Maneaters Stuffing Their Faces Make Us Wanna Put It In Our Mouths

Spiders That Give Men Four-Hour Erections Began Hatching In Bananas Purchased From Tesco

Graham Gremore

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Gen Con: We'll Pull $50 Million Convention Out of Indiana if Pence Signs Anti-Gay 'Religious Freedom' Bill

Gen Con: We'll Pull $50 Million Convention Out of Indiana if Pence Signs Anti-Gay 'Religious Freedom' Bill

The Gen Con gaming convention has sent a letter to Indiana governor Mike Pence threatening to pull its convention, with a weekend turnstile attendance of 184,699 and unique attendance of 56,614, out of Indianapolis should Pence sign a bill headed to his desk that would allow businesses to discriminate against LGBT people based on religious beliefs.

PenceAccording to the letter, Gen Con’s has an economic impact on the city of more than $50 million.

Said owner and CEO of Gen Con LLC in the letter:

“Legislation that could allow for refusal of service or discrimination against our attendees will have a direct negative impact on the state’s economy, and will factor into our decision-making on hosting the convention in the state of Indiana in future years…Gen Con proudly welcomes a diverse attendee base, made up of different ethnicities, cultures, beliefs, sexual orientations, gender identities, abilities, and socio-economic backgrounds,” she wrote. “We are happy to provide an environment that welcomes all, and the wide-ranging diversity of our attendees has become a key element to the success and growth of our convention.”

The Indy Star reports that Pence, who has said that he is “looking forward” to signing the legislation, remains motivated to do so:

“The Governor has been clear on where he stands on this issue and we don’t have anything to add at this time,” spokeswoman Kara Brooks said.


Andy Towle

www.towleroad.com/2015/03/gencon.html

From Lovestruck Gay Teens To Defiant Lesbian Queens: There’s Something For Everyone At The TCM Film Fest

From Lovestruck Gay Teens To Defiant Lesbian Queens: There’s Something For Everyone At The TCM Film Fest

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From top left: Boom!, Rebel Without A Cause, Calamity Jane, Queen Christina

If you’ve read The Celluloid Closet, Vito Russo’s seminal primer for queer cinema, or watched the 1995 documentary it inspired, and wanted to experience the early depictions of gays and lesbian on the big screen, het ready to exclaim “Hooray for Hollywood!”

Lisabeth Scott

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Julie Andrews

The 2015 TCM (that’s Turner Classic Movies) film festival will present big screen presentations of such landmark queer-interest films as Queen Christina, Calamity Jane, Rebel Without A Cause and The Children’s Hour later this week in the movie capital. Film buffs will have a chance to watch Greta Garbo, Doris Day, Sal Mineo and other silver screen icons portray coded LGBT movie characters that spoke to audiences when swinging open the closet doors was still taboo. Part of the fun at festivals like this is discovering unseen movies and if you’re not familiar with recently-departed film noir femme fatale Lizabeth Scott, you have a treat in store if you catch her in the steamy crime drama Too Late For Tears. The smokey blond bombshell with the husky voice was an intoxicating screen presence, but had her promising career compromised by being branded a “baritone babe” (code for lesbian) by the scandal rags of the 1950s. In if you just want some gay old entertainment in the classic sense of the word, there’s a lavish re-premiere screening of The Sound of Music with much of the original cast in attendance, including Academy Award-winners Julie Andrews and Christopher Plummer. So if you’ve already caught the latest film adaptations of Y.A bestsellers and Disney live-action remakes and happen to be in SoCal, brush up on your cinema history with the dozens of bona-fide classic alternatives here.

The festival takes place in Hollywood March 26-29. For more information, go here. Scroll down to see some of our picks for films you shouldn’t miss.

Rebel Without a Cause (1955)

What’s gay about it: Two of the screens greatest bisexual actors (James Dean and Sal Mineo) are featured in their most enduring roles here in this enduring epic about teenage angst. Even the most naive of viewers will detect the homoerotic longing of Mineo’s Plato for Dean’s Jim Stark.

The Children’s Hour (1961)

What’s gay about it: In director William Wyler’s second film adaptation of Lillian Hellman’s play (his first was 1936’s de-gayed These Three), a vicious, manipulative child spreads a rumor that her two schoolteachers (Audrey Hepburn, Shirley MacLaine) are lesbian and ruins their lives in the process. Shirley, who will be interviewed after the screening, has spoken in the past about how they botched the picture and there was never any discussion of the film’s lesbian themes during the shooting of the movie.

Calamity Jane (1953)

What’s gay about it: The great Doris Day stars as the tomboy-ish titular heroine of the Wild West who can hold her own against the roughest cowboy, but her jaw drops when she sees a pretty lady for the first time. The film’s theme song “Secret Love” was instantly adopted as an anthem about being in the closet.

Boom! (1968)

What’s gay about it: When John Waters calls a movie his favorite, you know it’s going to be not only demented, but loaded with queer appeal. The film is adapted from Tennessee Williams’ play The Milk Train Doesn’t Stop Here Anymore, stars legendary gay entertainer Noel Coward as “the Witch of Capri” and eternal icon Elizabeth Taylor in an outlandish series of gowns and headdresses.

Rebecca (1940)

What’s gay about it: This great gothic romance thrills audiences of all orientations, but Judith Anderson as terrifying housekeeper Mrs. Danvers caressing the panties of her former mistress…well, it’s just about the most sublime imagery for closeted lesbian longing in cinema herstory.

Queen Christina (1933)

What’s gay about it: Bisexual screen legend Greta Garbo has one of her most acclaimed roles — and written by her reputed lover Salka Viertel — as the lesbian monarch and though the censors of the time prevented an honest depiction, Garbo is often clad in men’s wear and is obviously smitten with one of her ladies in waiting.

Earthquake (1974)

What’s gay about it: There’s nothing specifically gay, but it’s a feast for camp lovers and probably the worst — and certainly the most unintentionally hilarious — of the many disaster films of the 1970s. Earthquake employs nearly every melodramatic cliché from the era and there’s the added bonus of Charlton Heston in clenched-jaw, savior of the western world mode and Victoria Principal bursting out of her T-shirt while wearing a wig best described as a Latina-fro.

Psycho (1960)

What’s gay about it: Alfred Hitchcock’s most-renowned thriller features Anthony Perkins, closeted for much of his life, in his signature role as murderous Mama’s boy Norman Bates.

The Loved One (1965)

What’s gay about it: Based on a 1948 novel by gay writer Evelyn Waugh, author of Brideshead Revisited, the film was billed as “the motion picture with something to offend everyone.” This tale that points a finger at the artificiality of Hollywood features a smorgasbord of gay performers including Tab Hunter, John Gielgud, Roddy MacDowell and even Liberace!

Imitation of Life (1959)

What’s gay about it: Queer cineastes have long held great reverence for director Douglas Sirk’s glossy melodramas and this is considered by many to be his crowning achievement. It’s easy to see a gay liberation message encoded in the story of a young black girl ashamed of her identity who tries to pass as white. Besides offering Lana Turner at her most glamorous, if you don’t cry during the film’s tear-jerking climax, you’re dead inside.

Lawrence of Arabia (1962)

What’s gay about it: While World War 1 hero T.E. Lawrence (Peter O’Toole, pictured) isn’t overtly portrayed as the gay sadomasochist he was purported to be in real life, there are plenty of subtle hints about his orientation in this David Lean epic which remains one of the screen’s greatest achievements.

Jeremy Kinser

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