Report Attacks African Nations' Justifications For Anti-Gay Laws

Report Attacks African Nations' Justifications For Anti-Gay Laws
In response to the increasing criminalization of homosexuality throughout Africa in recent years, an international team of researchers released a scientific report countering every government justification for enacting anti-gay laws.

A group of scientists shredded every argument used by African governments to justify the recent glut of anti-gay laws across the continent in a new, scathing report.

The report published Wednesday by the Academy of Science of South Africa excoriated leaders for unscientific claims that homosexuality is contagious, unnatural, learned or a medical condition.

“As variation in sexual identities and orientations has always been part of a normal society, there can be no justification for attempts to ‘eliminate’ LGBTI from society,” the report authored by 11 South Africans, one Ugandan and one American said. “Efforts should rather be focused on countering the belief systems that create hostile and even violent environments for those who are ‘othered’ within ‘heteronormative’ societies.”

Anti-gay laws are on the books in 38 of 53 African countries, the report said, including four of seven countries worldwide where same-sex activity is punishable by death.

Homophobic sentiments intensified in Africa in recent years, the journal Nature reported, with Uganda, Gambia and Nigeria introducing anti-gay legislation last year.

The reports findings are already accepted globally in the scientific community as fact. But the authors’ argued the reports must come from Africa to root out illegitimate ideas like sexual orientation being a choice or that homosexuality is a contagious disease while extolling public health benefits of tolerance.

“It had to be Africa-led,” Glenda Gray, co-chair of the report panel, told Nature. “If it were American-led, African governments would say that it was Western propaganda.”

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www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/06/10/africa-anti-gay-report_n_7557742.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

22 Stunning Same-Sex Wedding Photos That Are So Full Of Love

22 Stunning Same-Sex Wedding Photos That Are So Full Of Love
June may officially be LGBT Pride Month, but here at The Huffington Post, we prefer to celebrate all year round.

In that spirit, we present 22 gorgeous gay wedding photos that are brimming with life, laughter and love.

Keep in touch! Check out HuffPost Weddings on Facebook, Twitter and Pinterest. Sign up for our newsletter here.

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www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/06/10/stunning-same-sex-wedding-photos_n_7556952.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

News: McKinney, Michelle Kwan, Surfers' Butts, Mars

News: McKinney, Michelle Kwan, Surfers' Butts, Mars

RoadAn economics professor breaks down how the Empire built the Death Star.

Andre-hamann-shirtless-06102015-lead01-600x450 RoadMcKinney, Texas police officer who assaulted and threatened black teenagers leaving a pool party resigns. The local Chief of Police calls his actions “indefensible.”

RoadObama administration to deploy 450 more troops to Iraq to combat ISIS. 

RoadDoes Joyce Carol Oates think this Jurassic Park photo is real? 

RoadHumpday hotness courtesy of German model André Hamman. 

RoadIan McKellen and Patrick Stewart share a smooch.

RoadAfter 26 years of marriage, Homer and Marge Simpson are calling it quits. And Lena Dunham is to blame. 

2015-06-03-16-36-10 RoadSpeaking of The Simpsons, The Simpsons game “Tapped Out” celebrates Pride month.

RoadMichelle Kwan joins the Clinton campaign.

RoadRaven Symone joins The View.

RoadGet ready, Pitches: Pitch Perfect 3 is in the works.

RoadJared Leto looks positively frightening as the Joker in Suicide Squad

RoadScientists are going to study surfers’ butts to measure levels of pollution in the world’s oceans. 

O-IMPACT-GLASS-MARS-900 RoadViolence against gays and lesbians is down while violence against trans women and LGBTQ people of color is on the rise. 

RoadPope Francis creates tribunal to judge cases where bishops are accused of failing to protect children in from predators within the Church.

RoadFranklin Graham: President Obama and the gays are to blame for the end of times. 

RoadNasa Orbiter finds glass on Mars.


Sean Mandell

www.towleroad.com/2015/06/news-6.html

Arkansas Judge Uses Peanut Butter and Jelly Sandwiches to Explain Pro-Equality Ruling

Arkansas Judge Uses Peanut Butter and Jelly Sandwiches to Explain Pro-Equality Ruling

An Arkansas Judge threw some delicious shade at an antigay state official in yesterday’s ruling affirming the legality of more than 500 same-sex marriages in the state.

read more

Matt Baume

www.advocate.com/politics/marriage-equality/2015/06/10/arkansas-judge-uses-peanut-butter-and-jelly-sandwiches-explain

Why Caitlyn Jenner Deserves an ESPY

Why Caitlyn Jenner Deserves an ESPY
My 11-year-old son, Christopher, came home last night and told me about a discussion he had at school with his classmates. They talked about Caitlyn Jenner.

I’ve openly discussed this subject with my husband, Chris, and I’ve not filtered my words, in and outside the presence of our son. But I’ll admit, I was a little surprised to learn that this topic has been on our son’s radar as well.

In an attempt to get at what he knows and perceives — to understand the opinion he is forming about transgender people specifically, and about issues of sex and gender generally — I asked Christopher what he thinks about the Caitlyn Jenner news.

He verbalized his thoughts in this way: “It’s when sometimes, you’re a boy and you feel like a man, or you’re a girl and you feel like a woman, but sometimes you’re a boy but inside, you feel like a woman or you’re a girl but you feel like a man, and you want to look like what you feel.”

After hearing this, my husband and I were at once proud and humbled: proud that we are raising a boy who appeared to have no trace of judgment in his voice, and humbled by the fact that despite what we may or may not try to inculcate in him, our son will come to his own conclusions, and these conclusions will inform his opinion.

I feel only slightly negligent that I didn’t bring this subject up with him sooner. I wrongly assumed he wouldn’t understand; that he was too young or immature to get it. Children have a greater capacity for understanding and acceptance than we give them credit for. In his own way, Christopher is attempting to make sense of things I never had to confront when I was that age.

Which is why I am so glad that Caitlyn Jenner has been so brave.

Which is why I’m so glad ESPN is recognizing her bravery with the Arthur Ashe Courage Award.

I say that if an awards show can continue to promote a dialogue that needs to be had — that has been sadly late in the making — then let’s give Caitlyn lots of other awards. It is 2015, after all, and it’s about time we stop pretending that we are more accepting than we truly are. It is time we keep nurturing the conversation.

Yesterday, Bob Costas, a sportscaster I’ve admired for a long time, was aghast. He said ESPN’s decision was an attempt to raise ESPN’s viewership — never mind that the ESPYs this year will not even be telecast on ESPN, but on ABC. And I hardly doubt that ESPN struggles with gaining an audience as approximately three out of four Americans watch ESPN on TV.

Costas went so far as to say he felt that the award should go to someone more deserving, someone who has been more recently actively involved in sport.

In fact, ESPN has had a history of giving the award to those not actively or even closely associated with sport.

In 2002, the Arthur Ashe Courage Award was given posthumously to Todd Beamer, Mark Bingham, Tom Burnett and Jeremy Glick — four passengers aboard United Airlines Flight 93, who lost their lives on September 11. In 2009, Nelson Mandela received the Courage Award, and to my knowledge he never played amateur or pro sports.

Via a statement, ESPN said, “Sometimes courage is demonstrated over the course of a lifetime and sometimes it is demonstrated in a single act that shines a light on an important contemporary issue.”

I would be hard pressed to name a more contemporary culture issue that has inspired so much discourse, which intersects so directly with sports, and is being pervasively discussed and debated in every pocket of America — from our children’s classrooms to our own homes to the pages of our daily newspapers to the screens on our television.

Arthur Ashe, for whom the ESPY Award for Courage was named, once said: “Whereas, I don’t see myself as Jackie Robinson or even as Rosa Parks, neither trailblazer nor pawn of history, I do think I’m just a little bit of progress.”

The greatest human athlete of our time told the world that she is transgender. It took her her entire life to harness enough strength, enough bravery, to stand up and say this. In my opinion, she’s more than just a little bit of progress, and she deserves to be seen and heard. I for one can’t wait to hear her acceptance speech when she gets her ESPY.

— 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.

www.huffingtonpost.com/sandra-carreonjohn/why-caitlyn-jenner-deserves-an-espy_b_7553746.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

“Girl, He Hit The Pole” Is The Best News Interview You’ll See Today — Or Ever!

“Girl, He Hit The Pole” Is The Best News Interview You’ll See Today — Or Ever!

Screen Shot 2015-06-10 at 1.15.52 PMNot since ex-gay Antoine Dodson arrived on the scene with his tale of the bedroom intruder who was raping everybody have we been so riveted by a first-hand news report. On his way back from buying a “piece of burger from Burger King,” Courtney Barnes, a very spirited Mississippian with a lime green ponytail and matching nail polish who has appeared on So You Think You Can Dance, witnessed a “horrible, tragic” automobile accident involving a Jackson, MS police officer. In Barnes’ skilled hands this recount becomes an emotional monologue that would make Tennessee Williams weep with envy.

We mean, it was so intense that Barnes’ hunger just went away.

“When I seen the accident, girl,  I just began to be nosy and had to understand that somebody was experiencing this difficult moment,” Barnes shares before taking a short break to compose himself so he can continue to break it down for the MS News Now reporter.

“Girl, he hit the pole!” Barnes tells TV viewers. “The police car just twist around like a tornado, girl, and the lord just shook it up and the man got injured and now the the police don’t know if his life is gonna make it or he just gonna tap out.”

Can someone Autotune this STAT? Check out the dramatic interpretation below.

MSNewsNow.com – Jackson, MS

H/t: LoveBScott

Jeremy Kinser

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/ixr7pAeIiuw/girl-he-hit-the-pole-is-the-best-news-interview-youll-see-today-or-ever-20150610