Russia's 'Gay Propaganda' Laws Are Targeting Teachers Amidst Rising Anti-LGBT Sentiment

Russia's 'Gay Propaganda' Laws Are Targeting Teachers Amidst Rising Anti-LGBT Sentiment
ST. PETERSBURG, Russia (AP) — Alevtina is one of several teachers who lost their jobs in St. Petersburg after being outed by an anti-gay activist. While most resigned quietly, the 27-year-old music teacher decided to fight her dismissal in court — an unusual step in Russia where gays have faced increasing pressure in recent years.

The rising anti-gay sentiment has coincided with the passage of a controversial Russian law that prohibits exposing children to gay “propaganda.” The law has made it easy to target teachers, because they work directly with children. The hardening of lines against gays is thrown into stark relief by an Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research poll. The survey found that Russians’ tolerance of gays has plummeted in recent years, with 51 percent of those surveyed late last year saying they would not want a gay neighbor. This was up from 38 percent in 2012.

A majority of 63 percent said gays should not be accepted in society, with only 20 percent saying they should be accepted. The poll had a margin of error of plus or minus 2.4 percentage points.

The 2013 enactment of the gay propaganda law — which makes it illegal to provide information to children about homosexuality — was a turning point in the deterioration of Russian views of gays, said Nika Yuryeva, a spokeswoman for LGBT rights group Vykhod.

“I can see it even in my family, who are tolerant of my sexual choice, but now I also hear them speaking about the topic using the terms of Russian TV,” Yuryeva said. “To my mind, this law legitimizes the persecution of LGBT people, including the cases of their dismissals or forced resignations from schools.”

Alevtina, the music teacher, said she was stunned when the director of her school called her into his office last fall and urged her to quit.

“I left the director’s office almost in hysterics. I didn’t know what to do. I had so many creative plans with my students,” said Alevtina, who only gave her surname because she did not want her mother to know she was gay. “I’d put my soul into this work, and I also knew that I wasn’t guilty of anything.”

She refused to resign and was fired for “immoral behavior incompatible with pedagogical activities” — effectively ending her teaching career. The school director could not be reached for comment, despite repeated calls to his office.

Alevtina said only a few close friends knew she was lesbian and she never attended gay pride rallies. Her sexual orientation was exposed by Timur Isayev, an anti-gay activist representing an organization called Parents of Russia.

In the past year, at least six teachers who were either gay or gay rights activists found their jobs threatened after being targeted by Isayev, said Kseniya Kirichenko, a legal support specialist at Vykhod. Three resigned, and Alevtina was the only one to take legal action, Kirichenko said.

Isayev’s anti-gay campaigning was cut short in December when he was arrested on charges of stealing money from a firm where he worked in 2004. He was sentenced to 2 1/2 years in prison.

His arrest, however, has not made things easier for Alevtina, whose appeal is pending. Her lawyer, Dmitry Bartenev, said the teacher is asking to be reinstated at the school and to receive compensation. The court hearings were closed to the public at the teacher’s request.

Homosexuality has increasingly been portrayed on Russian state television as part of a decadent, immoral Western culture that threatens traditional values. And the AP-NORC poll also showed a sharp rise in anti-Western sentiments.

Those reporting an unfavorable view of the United States rose to 65 percent from 25 percent in 2012, while those with an unfavorable view of the European Union rose to 49 percent from 11 percent.

_____

The AP-NORC Center poll was conducted by NORC at the University of Chicago with fieldwork for the in-person survey by GfK Russia from Nov. 22 to Dec. 7., 2014. It was based on 2,008 in-person interviews with a nationally representative random sample of Russians age 18 and older.

Funding for the survey came from NORC at the University of Chicago.

Online: AP-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research: www.apnorc.org

www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/04/02/russia-gay-law-teachers_n_6994274.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

Malta Passes Comprehensive Gender Identity, Gender Expression and Sex Characteristics Act

Malta Passes Comprehensive Gender Identity, Gender Expression and Sex Characteristics Act

Yesterday, lawmakers of the Mediterranean island country of Malta unanimously adopted the Gender Identity, Gender Expression and Sex Characteristics Act (GIGESA).
HRC.org

www.hrc.org/blog/entry/malta-passes-comprehensive-gender-identity-gender-expression-and-sex-charac?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

Naked Prank Makes Office Coworkers Rethink Sushi Forever

Naked Prank Makes Office Coworkers Rethink Sushi Forever

If you’re fans of BuzzFeed’s perenially-nude “Try Guys” (and, really, who among us isn’t?), you were probably wondering how the playful boys would celebrate their favorite holiday, April Fool’s Day. Naturally, they found a new way to get naked, surprise their coworkers and potentially ruin sushi for everyone forever. As one of the guys says, “We have a weird job.” Indeed. Will their warm bodies turn the sushi into baked fish? Watch the video below to find out.

The Try Guys’ Naked Sushi PrankIt’s a “California Roll” reversal. The Try Guys provided their coworkers with a delicious sushi lunch. The twist? Instead of plates, everyone had to eat off the Try Guys’ bodies. #NailedIt

Posted by The Try Guys on Wednesday, 1 April 2015

Jeremy Kinser

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/wcNImSYedVg/naked-prank-makes-office-coworkers-rethink-sushi-forever-20150402

New York Boy Scouts Make History Hiring Openly Gay Eagle Scout to Serve as Youth Leader

New York Boy Scouts Make History Hiring Openly Gay Eagle Scout to Serve as Youth Leader

Pascal

18-year-old Pascal Tessier became one of the first openly gay youth to receive the rank of Eagle Scout back in February and has now been hired by the Greater New York Councils of the Boy Scouts of America to serve as a leader at its scout camps this summer, Buzzfeed reports:

When asked on Wednesday if there was any change to the national policy regarding out gay adult leaders, Boy Scouts of America spokesman Deron Smith responded, “[T]here isn’t.” Smith did not immediately respond on Thursday to a request for comment regarding Tessier’s hire specifically.

The Greater New York Councils, however, is ready for Tessier to get to work.

“We’ve accepted him, he was put through the normal process,” Richard Mason, a board member of the Greater New York Councils and spokesman for the councils, told BuzzFeed News. “They have not, to my knowledge, rejected him, so, as far as we are concerned, this young man is coming to work, is ready to do so this summer.”

Prop 8 lawyer David Boies has already stepped up to represent Tessier should the BSA reject Tessier’s hire. Boises says he’s “hopeful” Tessier’s hire “signals the end of the last vestige of the Scouts’ discrimination.”


Kyler Geoffroy

www.towleroad.com/2015/04/boy-scouts.html

Bryan Fischer’s Latest Fantasy: Gay People As Slave Masters Forcing Christians To Perform Involuntary Labor

Bryan Fischer’s Latest Fantasy: Gay People As Slave Masters Forcing Christians To Perform Involuntary Labor

BryanFischerBDSMQueertyWhile pretty much everyone (except for Jeb Bush and a few other rouge conservatives) now agrees that Indiana’s “religious freedom” bill signed by Gov. Mike Pence one week ago today is totally discriminatory and draconian and awful, at least one person is standing up for it.

Any guesses as to who?

That’s right! It’s AFA’s resident closet case homophobe Bryan Fischer. The conservative radio host, who loves nothing more than talking about men having sex with other men, took to airwaves yesterday to speak in favor of Indiana’s law, claiming that, wait for it, forcing Christians to serve gay people is tantamount to slavery.

Yes, slavery.

Fisher is very unhappy with Gov. Pence for announcing this week that he now feels the bill needs to be re-written to eliminate any language that grants businesses owners the right to deny services to gay people.

“I’m afraid Gov. Pence is dangerously close to allowing the homosexual lobby to get the state of Indiana to compel people…to provide labor against their will,” Fischer babbled. “What do we call it when people are compelled to provide labor against their will? Involuntary labor. What do we call that, ladies and gentleman? That is involuntary servitude! That is slavery! That is something that is forbidden by the 13th amendment!”

See Fischer run his mouth in the clip below.

Related stories:

Bryan Fischer Can’t Stop Talking About Guys Humping Other Guys

Gay Activists Are Insatiable Leeches, According To Bryan Fischer

Bryan Fischer Wants The World To Know “I Love Black Males”

Graham Gremore

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/8ssCPV8ulMo/bryan-fischers-latest-fantasy-gay-people-as-slave-masters-forcing-christians-to-perform-involuntary-labor-20150402

2016 GOP Hopefuls Line Up to Defend Indiana's Discriminatory 'Religious Freedom' Law

2016 GOP Hopefuls Line Up to Defend Indiana's Discriminatory 'Religious Freedom' Law

Gop

The leading GOP contenders for the 2016 White House race have spoken out about Indiana’s new “religious freedom” law and the #BoycottIndiana backlash – with all candidates supporting the law to varying degrees.

Find out exactly what each right-winger said to get a glimpse into how the debate over these “license to discriminate” proposals will likely play out over the coming election, AFTER THE JUMP

Sen. Ted Cruz, the only officially declared candidate right now, came out swinging at a campaign stop in Iowa today:

“The Fortune 500 is running shamelessly to endorse the radical gay marriage agenda over religious liberty to say: ‘We will persecute a Christian pastor, a Catholic priest, a Jewish rabbi. “Any person of faith is subject to persecution if they dare disagree, if their religious faith parts way from their political commitment to gay marriage.”

Former Hewlett-Packard CEO Carly Fiorina, meanwhile, took a more moderate position on gay rights but similarly blasted the business community’s support for #BoycottIndiana:

The debate about gay marriage is really a debate about how the government bestows benefits and whether they should be bestowed equally. I believe they should. I also believe that people of religious conviction know that marriage is a religious institution with a spiritual foundation because only a man and a woman can create life, which is a gift that comes from God. We must protect their rights as well.

I hope that we come to a place in this country where we are prepared to have respectful differences and tolerate those two views. Religious liberty and tolerance are too important to our country.

It is frankly sad to me that politics has become a fact-free zone. It is sad that so many people on the left were quick to turn this into a divisive and destructive debate so they could further their own brand of identity politics. It is sad that CEOs took to Twitter before checking their facts, adding to the division instead of helping build tolerance.

This debate represents what so many believe is wrong with our politics. It has taken an emotional issue for people on both sides and politicians have used it to divide and to score points with their team.

It has been tough for some in the media to understand my position because I refuse to join the game of name calling and vitriol. Politics shouldn’t be a game, however. We must find a way to respect one another, to celebrate a culture that protects religious freedom while condemning discrimination.

Jeb Bush, who earlier this week voiced his unequivocal support for Pence and the anti-LGBT “religious freedom” law, has since shifted his tone, The New York Times reports:

At the Four Seasons in East Palo Alto, Mr. Bush was asked by an attendee to clarify his position. He said that he supported protecting religious freedom and that it must be done specifically in each state.

“By the end of the week, I think Indiana will be in the right place, which is to say that we need in a big diverse country like America, we need to have space for people to act on their conscience, that it is a constitutional right that religious freedom is a core value of our country, “ Mr. Bush said.

But “we shouldn’t discriminate based on sexual orientation,” he said.

He continued, “So what the State of Indiana is going to end up doing is probably get to that place.”

Said Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker in a press conference recently:

“In our state there’s a balance between wanting to make sure that there’s not discrimination [and] at the same time respecting religious freedoms. … We do that in different ways than what they’ve done in Indiana.

“Certainly that’s going to be part of the debate here and across the country.”

Said Marco Rubio to Fox’s The Five:

“I don’t think Americans want to discriminate against anyone. I think the fundamental question in some of these laws is should someone be discriminated against because of their religious views? So no one here is saying it should be legal to deny someone service at a restaurant or a hotel because of their sexual orientation. I think that’s a consensus view in America. The flip side of it is, though, should a photographer be punished for refusing to do a wedding that their faith teaches them is not one that is valid in the eyes of God.”

Said New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie [via NJ.com]:

“Well, we should not have a situation where people perceive that anybody will be denied service. But, I can tell you this, I know Mike Pence, and he’s got nothing but love in his heart for people and I just do not believe that in any way Mike Pence would intend for anything that happen in his state on his watch to be discriminatory towards any person,” Christie said in a statement.

“And so, my guess is that he’ll fix the problem and move on,” Christie said. “Because that’s the kind of guy he is. I will tell you, amongst the governors, there is nobody that I’ve met amongst the governors who is more sincere in his faith and in his love for people than Mike Pence. So, I just don’t believe any of this stuff is true and to the extent that something needs to be fixed to clarify that no one will be denied service for discriminatory reasons, I’m sure that’s exactly what Mike will do.”

Mike Huckabee told Fox News’ Megyn Kelly the situation in Indiana was a “manufactured crisis” by the Left:

“If [the Left] manufactured as many products as they do crises like this one, which is an utterly phony attempt to create some kind of division, 92 million Americans who are jobless would have jobs. I’ve never seen anything so utterly off the mark in my life as trying to pretend that the RFRA law is actually discrimination. It is most certainly not. It simply gives you access to the court. And there’s no guarantee that you’re going to win when you go.”

Ben Carson told Breitbart News:

“It is absolutely vital that we do all we can to allow Americans to practice their religious ways, while simultaneously ensuring that no one’s beliefs infringe upon those of others. We should also serve as champions of freedom of religion throughout the world.”

Rick Santorum, speaking to students at George Washington University:

“The only sensitivity training we need is to respect every person. Tolerance is the most misused word in the English language. Tolerance means you can say really horrible nasty things that I hate and offend me. That’s how we get along. You have a right to be mean — a right to be nasty to people. That’s how this country works, because we have thick skins and we aren’t offended.  Should a gay or lesbian-owned printshop have to print signs for the Westboro Baptists that say ‘God hates fags’? Should a Jewish printshop have to make signs for the KKK? Should a kosher deli have to serve non-kosher food? It’s a two-way street. Tolerance is a two-way street. If you’re saying that ‘your religious liberties are not as important as my — fill in the blank,’ then I’ve got a problem with that.”

Former Texas Gov. Rick Perry’s spokesman Travis Considine said he supported the law:

 “Governor Perry has always fought to expand religious freedoms, which is why Texas became a beacon for liberty during his leadership. He believes it’s up to the states and their leaders to determine what’s in the best interests of their citizens,”

Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal said ““I oppose discrimination and I reject the notion that the Religious Freedom Restoration Act is discriminatory,” adding:

I will note that President Clinton signed the Religious Freedom and Restoration Act at the federal level and Secretary Hillary Clinton has now said she opposes this law. It would be interesting to learn if Secretary Hillary Clinton silently opposed this protection of religious liberty when President Clinton signed it, or if she has just recently ‘evolved’ on that. The great irony is that in the minds of today’s liberals the only bigotry to be tolerated is their own bigotry against religious beliefs.

Rand Paul has yet to comment publicly on the situation. 


Kyler Geoffroy

www.towleroad.com/2015/04/2016-gop-hopefuls-line-up-to-defend-indianas-discriminatory-religious-freedom-law.html