Restore Pizza’s Good Name And Help Homeless LGBT Youth With #Pizza4Equality

Restore Pizza’s Good Name And Help Homeless LGBT Youth With #Pizza4Equality

heart-shaped-pizza-garry-gayIn light of recent discriminatory dinner (or hungover breakfast) donations, the gold standard of bachelor delivery has had its gooey name sullied. But one group is trying to change all that.

Religious freedom Inequality lovers Crystal and Kevin O’Connor of Indiana’s Memories Pizza have raised $842,592 after they said they’d turn away business based on their feelings about LGBT people. A campaign called #Pizza4Equality is now underway to restore pizza’s good name while raising cash for Cyndi Lauper’s True Colors Fund benefitting homeless LGBT youth.

Supporters are asked to donate the cost of one pizza in their area (though larger donations are welcomed) in an effort to match the unsettling $842,592 raised by Memories. As of this post, a respectable $47,097 has been reached.

The campaign’s creator, Scott Wooledge, writes:

Cyndi Lauper’s True Colors Fund has set April 29 as the first national #40toNoneDay  to end #LGBT youth homelessness! And I thought, would it not be totally awesome if we equality supporters (and pizza lovers) could match that #MemoriesPizza  “charity” by April 29?  Can we match their amount and help homeless youth get off the street, learn life skills and get an education and jobs? I’m an dreamer, but I say yes, we can!

Head here for more info.

Dan Tracer

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/I6CS8Y5fWU8/restore-pizzas-good-name-and-help-homeless-lgbt-youth-with-pizza4equality-20150406

ABC News to Air 'Far-Ranging and Exclusive' Interview Between Diane Sawyer and Bruce Jenner April 24

ABC News to Air 'Far-Ranging and Exclusive' Interview Between Diane Sawyer and Bruce Jenner April 24

JennerBruce Jenner will sit down for a two-hour interview with ABC News’ Diane Sawyer airing April 24, Variety reports:

ABC News declined to offer much detail on the content of the talks, but said in a statement that the interview was “far-ranging and exclusive” and would appear as a special two-hour edition of “20/20″ starting at 9 p.m. Eastern on Friday, April 24.

Back in February, Jenner was involved in a fatal car accident on Pacific Coast Highway in Malibu. 

Previously, “Jamie Foxx Mocks Bruce Jenner’s Reported Transition at ‘iHeartRadio” Music Awards” [tlrd]


Kyler Geoffroy

www.towleroad.com/2015/04/abc-news-to-air-far-ranging-and-exclusive-interview-between-diane-sawyer-and-bruce-jenner-april-24.html

Adults of Gay Parents: A Case of Misattribution

Adults of Gay Parents: A Case of Misattribution
I just read an article posted on the Washington Times website (“Adults with Gay Parents Say Same-Sex Marriage Isn’t Good For Kids” — March 27th, 2015), in which Robert Oscar Lopez — founder of the International Children’s Rights Institute — argues that same-sex marriage should be prohibited. He hopes the U.S. Supreme Court does not legalize same-sex marriage because, well, honestly, it appears he is a dysphoric gay man and blames having been raised by lesbian mothers for his current sexual orientation.

He has encountered other disgruntled adults who were raised by gay or lesbian parents who also oppose same-sex marriage because of their own unhappy childhoods. For example, one of Lopez’ acquaintances was raised by a transgender father who allegedly fondled her as a child. Another woman reports that when she once brought home a male classmate from high school, her gay father had allegedly propositioned the boy for sex. Another “theme” coming from adults who were raised by gay or lesbian parents is having yearned, as children, for a “normal” family, including wanting to connect with their missing biological parent.

I will assume these stories are true, and with that assumption made, they indeed are tragic situations. But, to attribute these social maladies to having gay parents is rather mistaken.

Let’s consider some ideas born out of my experiences, unless noted otherwise:

1. Gays and lesbians have been around forever. Until just recently (last 20 years, perhaps), a minority of gay or lesbian parents has begun having their own children. Thus, logically, it appears that the majority of gays and lesbians in the world — historically and currently — have been born and raised by heterosexual parents. No one is questioning heterosexual marriages because of the frequency with which some of those marriages produced gay children. If Lopez is attracted to men, it is not because he had lesbian parents. It’s because he was born gay.

2. According to the literature on child development, it is not uncommon for adolescents to question their sexuality, and for those who are destined to be gay or lesbian to struggle accepting their sexual orientation — an orientation that is fiercely condemned by much of society out of irrational prejudice. So, Lopez — who reported that he was “emotionally confused” as a teenager over his budding orientation — simply experienced what many adolescents, particularly gay adolescents, went through. He is confused for attributing that situation to having had lesbian mothers.

3. According to a meta-analysis (based on 22 studies in 19 countries and reported in the journal Clinical Psychology Review in 2009), the vast majority of adults who engage in sexual activity with children are heterosexual (because well over 90 percent of humans are heterosexual). When a heterosexual man sexually abuses a girl (which is the most common case of pedophilia), no one makes an issue over the man’s heterosexuality. They focus — appropriately — on his pedophilia. But when a gay man sexually abuses a boy, people who are anti-gay focus on the perpetrator’s sexual orientation as if that is relevant. A gay pedophile’s sexual orientation is no more relevant to his abusive behavior than a straight pedophile’s sexual orientation.

4. Finally, according to the social science literature and clinical anecdotes on single-parenting, the “yearning” for a normal family and the desire to find a missing parent are nothing new to children. In a culture where roughly 50 percent of marriages end in divorce and single-parenthood is more the norm than an exception, it is not uncommon for children raised by heterosexuals to be yearning for a “normal” family and wishing to have a missing biological parent present in their lives. Moreover, adopted children often struggle with similar challenges whereby they yearn to be “normal” (i.e., with their biological parents instead of with adoptive parents) and even pass through a phase in which they resent their adoptive parents (which, by the way, is another example of misplaced blame: Their adoptive parents committed to raising them; their biological parents did not).

I hope the justices on the U.S. Supreme Court are keener in logic than Lopez and those like him and recognize the fallacies of their misattributions. Sadly, there are far more adults who had unhappy childhoods than ought to be, yet, in all likelihood, other factors explain those unhappy childhoods rather than their parents’ sexual orientation.

www.huffingtonpost.com/charles-negy-phd/adults-of-gay-parents-a-c_b_6961540.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

Bobby Jindal Doesn't Want to Create 'Special' Rights Protecting LGBT Individuals From Discrimination: VIDEO

Bobby Jindal Doesn't Want to Create 'Special' Rights Protecting LGBT Individuals From Discrimination: VIDEO

Jindal

In an interview with Meet the Press on Sunday, Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal said that while he “doesn’t think there should be discrimination against anyone” he remains uncomfortable with creating “special legal protections” that prohibit discrimination against LGBT individuals. 

Said the likely 2016 GOP presidential candidate:

I don’t think certainly that there should be discrimination against anybody in housing and employment. That’s not what my faith teaches me. I don’t think that’s appropriate and I think the good news is our society is moving in a direction of more tolerance. My concern about creating special legal protections is historically in our country, we’ve only done that in extraordinary circumstances. And it’s not evident to me, it doesn’t appear to me we’re at one of those moments today.

Watch the interview, AFTER THE JUMP

 


Kyler Geoffroy

www.towleroad.com/2015/04/jindallgbt.html