These Catholic School Students Have A Lot Of Love For Their Gay Teacher

These Catholic School Students Have A Lot Of Love For Their Gay Teacher
These high school students know a thing or two about love.

Students at V.J. and Angela Skutt Catholic High School in Omaha, Nebraska, are speaking out in support of an English teacher and speech team coach who was told his contract would not be renewed after he informed the school he was engaged to his boyfriend.

Matthew Eledge has been teaching at the high school since 2010, the Associated Press reports. According to KETV, Skutt Catholic President Jon McMahon defended the decision in a letter to the school community.

“If a staff member cannot commit to Catholic church teachings and doctrines, he or she cannot continue to be on staff at Skutt Catholic,” he wrote, according to KETV.

But the students at the school are not happy to hear that their beloved teacher has to leave.

KETV reported that during the school’s annual fundraising walk, some students wore T-shirts that presented the Omaha Catholic school with a message and a challenge.

“I support Mr. Eledge,” the shirts read. The Human Rights Campaign logo was on the front, and on the back, the shirts quoted Jesus’ words from John 13:34: “Love one another as I have loved you.”

“We can’t force a change, but we can inspire a change,” Skutt student Darya Kaboli-Nejad told KMTV.

Over 95,000 people have signed a Change.org petition to show their solidarity with Skutt students.

Kacie Hughes, who the AP reports is a close friend of Eledge’s and helps coach the school’s speech team with him, started the petition. In the online document, she called Eledge “a living example of what it means to be a SkyHawk,” the school’s mascot.

Eledge told BuzzFeed that that he was fully aware of the risks of working at a Catholic school as a gay man.

“It always was a bit fearful for me to work in that environment,” he said.

Omaha has an anti-bias ordinance on the books that protects LGBT people from workplace discrimination. But experts told the AP that the school is likely protected by a religious exception.

Skutt Catholic High School and Eledge did not immediately respond to requests for comment. In a statement, Deacon Timothy F. McNeil of the Archdiocese of Omaha said, “I can confirm: Mr. Eledge is not returning to Skutt Catholic H.S. next year.”

These high schoolers certainly aren’t alone. Studies show that the majority of American Catholics don’t agree with the church’s official stance on gay marriage. The Public Religion Research Institute found that 61 percent of white Catholics and 60 percent of Hispanic Catholics in America support allowing gay and lesbian couples to tie the knot.

Younger Catholics are especially likely to favor legalizing same-sex marriage. A Pew Research Center study found that three-quarters of Catholics under the age of 30 support same-sex marriage.

For Hughes, Catholicism’s strong tradition of social justice far outweighs church doctrine towards homosexuality. She sees Eledge’s firing as discrimination.

In her petition, she writes:

When Mr. Eledge, or any other teacher, becomes engaged, what they do in their private life is between themselves and God. Not for us to assume or judge. Furthermore, if [the school fires] Mr. Eledge for engaging in a same-sex relationship, they must avoid discrimination. They will need to fire any single teacher who is living with their partner or engaging in sexual activity, any divorced person who has remarried without an annulment, or any married couple using contraceptives.

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This Rural Pastor Hopes To Sway SCOTUS Into Voting Against Marriage Equality With His Church’s Antigay Sign

This Rural Pastor Hopes To Sway SCOTUS Into Voting Against Marriage Equality With His Church’s Antigay Sign

Screen shot 2015-05-01 at 10.22.31 AMA pastor in Milledgeville, Georgia (pop. 19,256) is using the marquee outside his church to broadcast a message of hate towards gay people. He says he hopes the sign will sway the U.S. Supreme Court into ruling against marriage equality.

Pastor Robert Lee (pictured) of the Ten Commandments Church called homosexuality a “death worthy crime” on a billboard outside his church, and he’s not apologizing for it.

“Homosexuality is a terrible thing,” he told local TV station WGXA News. “It’s an abomination, so we are trying to inform people exactly what scripture says about it. Homosexuals are destroying this society.”

In a separate billboard Lee called gays and lesbians “disgraces to humanity.”

Related: Me Speak English Good: When Homophobes Fail With Their Antigay Signage

The unapologetic bitch said that he will happily continue posting the signs to get his point across and that he’d rather “die” than accept gay members into his congregation.

images“Homosexuality has to be at least as heinous as murder,” Lee opined to The Huffington Post. “My way of thinking comes from scripture. It does not come from any political view. I see a homosexual just like a murderer.”

But not everyone in Milledgeville agrees with Lee’s extreme views.

“This is the first time that I have ever seen anything that actually crossed the line and was inferring death upon a group,” Robert Owens told WGXA News.

Lee says he carefully timed the billboard to coincide with the Supreme Court hearing arguments about the constitutionality of gay marriage. He hopes the justices will notice it and get the message.

“The institution of marriage was instituted by God,” Lee told WGXA News, “and it should not be changed by people who deserve not to live.”

Related: Anglican Church Has A Message For Homophobic Christians: “Get Over It”

Graham Gremore

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Mernie And Karen Meier Share The Story Of Building Their Family Through Foster Care

Mernie And Karen Meier Share The Story Of Building Their Family Through Foster Care
Today, we launch National Foster Care Awareness Month by featuring a couple in our Huffington Post Gay Voices RaiseAChild.US “Let Love Define Family™” series who have a personal interest in improving the lives of foster children. RaiseAChild.US contributing writer Beth Hallstrom shares their story.

Mernie and Karen Meier are committed to changing the foster parenting paradigm by insisting that foster care does not mean just temporarily warehousing children, but providing a loving home and what foster kids crave most, permanency and stability, however long the arrangement lasts.

The La Crescenta, California, couple has a unique viewpoint on the foster care system. Mernie, 48 and a registered nurse, was raised in seven foster homes and is now a member of the influential Foster Care Project at All Saints Church in Pasadena.

Mernie and Karen, who is 47 and an accountant specializing in non-profit organizations, had their commitment ceremony at All Saints Church 15 years ago. They legally married in 2008.

Because of Mernie’s life experience in the foster care system and her work with the Foster Care Project at their local church, the couple became interested in fostering and adoption. During their training, they met future foster daughter Lydia, then 17.

“We originally signed on for a sibling set of two children between the ages of three and seven years old; however our foster care agency asked if we would take a 17-and-a-half year old and we felt we had connected with Lydia. She and her brother were teen trainers, speaking about how teenagers — and not just little kids — make great foster children,” Karen explained.

“Things happen for a reason,” Mernie said, picking up the story. “We had some things in common. Her parents are deaf and hard of hearing and I have a degree in Deaf Studies and am fluent in American Sign Language. Having met during our foster parent training, Lydia said she was interested in coming to live with us when her group home transitioned from housing girls to boys. The agency wondered if she would be comfortable living with a lesbian couple and she said she was ‘OK’ with it. Frankly, I think she was more interested in having her own bedroom and some peace and quiet.”

After a week-long trial visit, Lydia moved in and was told from the get-go she was a member of the family. Even though Lydia declined to be adopted by the women, she now refers to them as her “moms.”

“We told her that was OK, that she would always be our child. We have a love for her that transcends paperwork filed in a courtroom,” Mernie noted.

The new family embarked on a series of firsts for Lydia: her first airplane ride, first cruise, first family reunion, and first prom dress. Especially significant for Mernie and Karen, Lydia’s first birthday party when she turned 18.

“We wanted to make sure she knew we were a family that she wasn’t just passing through our lives. You have to remember, foster children’s lives are full of upheaval and chaos, and that impacts them deeply, affecting every avenue of their lives,” Mernie said.

“It’s hard to form healthy relationships when you move around so much. You end up missing so many important things, such basic life skills, like balancing a checkbook or learning how to plan and cook meals. We felt it was very important to show Lydia how a family deals with the normal ups and downs of life; and that it was OK to make mistakes, just like any other kid,” she continued.

Ever mindful of her own experiences in foster care, Mernie said she and Karen always included Lydia in decisions about her future. As a member of their family, Lydia was included in decisions made about things that happened in their home.

“When you’re in foster care, you have very little control over your own life. You’re told where to live, what to wear, and what to eat. We made sure Lydia knew we were a family; either we’re all in or none of us are,” Mernie said.

Making sure foster children have a voice is also a priority for the Foster Care Project (FCP) at All Saints Church in Pasadena, California where the women volunteer. It started 13 years ago with three members and has grown to include elected officials, health and human service professionals and, according to Mernie, “adults who use their resources and talents to make life better for foster children.”

Among the FCP Steering Committee’s current initiatives are providing trained, volunteer coach-monitors to provide court-ordered supervision so that children, removed from the care of their parents, can visit their parents in a physically and emotionally safe setting. In addition, they partner with agencies that help young adults leaving the foster care system find jobs and housing and continue their educations.

The steering committee also provides mentoring and tutoring, ensures every foster child in the Birthday Club receives a birthday gift, takes foster children shopping for new school clothes, and lobbies for law and policy changes. One of its larger annual efforts is the Christmas Angel Tree, which grants the holiday wishes of more than 700 children in foster care.

Recruiting and educating foster parents is another FCP priority, Mernie said, adding, “it’s important for prospective foster parents to see what the journey is like. You are inviting this child into your life and inserting yourself into his or her life. We want the new foster parents to know they are creating or adding to their families and aren’t just in a holding situation. While every situation isn’t permanent, it’s important to put some roots down with that child.”

“Members of the Foster Care Project care about children from a lot of different angles,” Mernie said.

Caring for their own child is a lifelong commitment for Mernie and Karen, too. Now 25 years old, living on her own and working toward a college degree, Lydia still calls each of them Mom and still turns to them for advice and returns home for holidays and other family celebrations.

“It’s exciting to see her blossom into the woman she’s become and see her live up to her own potential. Our biggest role at this point is to be that safety net while she’s figuring out her life. Every child needs and deserves encouragement, and help to get back up when they make mistakes and to keep going,” Karen said.

Added Mernie, “We’ll always be that for her. That’s our definition of family.”

On Sunday, May 3, 2015, RaiseAChild.US will celebrate National Foster Care Awareness Month with a reception hosted by All Saints Church, 132 N Euclid Avenue, Pasadena, California. Starting at 12:15 p.m. in The Guild Room, this free event will feature an exchange of information and welcoming foster and adoption resources like local agency, Five Acres.

RaiseAChild.US is the nationwide leader in the recruitment and support of LGBT and all prospective parents interested in building families through fostering and adopting to meet the needs of the 400,000 children in the foster care system. RaiseAChild.US recruits, educates, and nurtures supportive relationships equally with all prospective foster and adoptive parents while partnering with agencies to improve the process of advancing foster children to safe, loving and permanent homes. For information about how you can become a foster or adoptive parent, please visit www.RaiseAChild.US.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

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Ellen Has a Surprise for the Straight Guy and the Gay Best Friend He Invited to Prom: VIDEO

Ellen Has a Surprise for the Straight Guy and the Gay Best Friend He Invited to Prom: VIDEO

Prom_ellen

Last week we reported on Anthony Martinez, the gay student at Desert Oasis High School, who tweeted that he really wanted a guy as his date to prom. Jacob Lescenski, his straight best friend, stepped in with a “promposal” that is one of the sweetest we’ve ever seen.

Ellen invited the two best friends on her show to let more of the world know their story.

2_promposalLescenski, who is as sincere and genuine as his promposal, explained how he came to accept and embrace Martinez’s crush on him, and become a supporter of gay rights, deciding to express himself with a gesture of love for his friend.

Said Ellen:

“If that can’t be an example for people in the world to know that we just – that you have a date with your friend who you had a crush on and he’s open-minded enough to do this. We have teachers who drove in from Las Vegas, your parents are in the audience. Good for you.

I just wanted to say I know that there are some schools out there that don’t support this and wouldn’t allow this to happen and it’s really a shame because prom is very important to a lot of people.”

She then rewarded the couple for making a difference.

Watch, AFTER THE JUMP


Andy Towle

www.towleroad.com/2015/05/ellenpromposal.html

From Short Men To Sweatpants To Children, Karl Lagerfeld Hates Pretty Much Everything

From Short Men To Sweatpants To Children, Karl Lagerfeld Hates Pretty Much Everything

God bless Karl Lagerfeld.

The 81-year-old (or 76-year-old, depending on who you ask) German-born fashion designer has been working in the industry since 1955, when he was first hired as Pierre Balmain’s assistant. Since then he’s launched his own fashion house, as well as served as head designer and creative director for both Chanel and Fendi.

Related: The 15 Greatest Gay Designers

Now, the folks over at Four Pins have compiled a comprehensive list of all the things Mr. Lagerfeld hates. And to the surprise of no one, it turns out he hates pretty much everything. Or maybe it’s just that he has really, really, really high standards.

Scroll down for some of our favorites from Mr. Lagerfeld’s ever-growing list of things he can’t stand…

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Short men:

“What I hate is nasty, ugly people … the worst is ugly, short men.” (April 2003, Vogue)

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Sweatpants:

“Sweatpants are a sign of defeat. You lost control of your life, so you bought some sweatpants.” (August 2011, Vogue)

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Cooking:

“I hate the smell of cooking.” (April 2008, Prestige)

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Being touched by strangers:

“I cannot to go on airlines because people stare at me. You have to be touched by people. I hate that…I hate to be touched by strangers.”  (April 2008, Prestige)

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Children:

“That’s the last thing I want. I hate all children.” (April 2008, Prestige)

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Intellectual conversation with intellectuals:

“I hate intellectual conversation with intellectuals because I only care about my opinion, but I like to read very abstract constructions of the mind.” (March 2010, VICE)

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Manicures:

“I hate manicures. I do them myself. I’m pretty good at it. I cannot stand someone touching my fingers.” (September 2012, M magazine via Fashionista)

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New Years Eve:

“I hate New Year’s Eve! I think it’s terrible.” (February 2011, Savoir Flair)

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Flip flops:

“I hate sloppy footwear. What I hate most is flip-flops. I am physically allergic to flip-flops.” (September 2012, M magazine via Fashionista)

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Men who cross their legs:

“I like socks, but only up to the knee. I hate nothing more than when men cross their legs, and you see hairy legs, socks and pants–the worst. The worst!” (April 2014, BBC)

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And the thing he hates most in life:

“What I hate most in life is selfies.” (September 2014, Women’s Wear Daily)

and

“I hate selfies. …Don’t use your film for an ugly purpose.” (January 2015, The New York Times Magazine)

Bambi 2010 - Arrivals

And the other thing he hates most in life:

“I hate nothing more than my own past.” (June 2002, CNN Interview With Larry King)

h/t: Four Pins

Graham Gremore

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