Young Girl with Gay Pride Flag Faces Down Street Preacher: VIDEO

Young Girl with Gay Pride Flag Faces Down Street Preacher: VIDEO

Street Preacher

A first-grader named Zea was captured by photographer Mara Gruber as she faced down a street preacher holding a sign saying “Jesus Saves from Hell” at ComFest in Columbus, Ohio on Saturday after the U.S. Supreme Court ruling on marriage equality.

She was offered high-fives from passers-by as she stood courageously with her rainbow flag in the face of hatred.

Watch below:

The post Young Girl with Gay Pride Flag Faces Down Street Preacher: VIDEO appeared first on Towleroad.


Andy Towle

Young Girl with Gay Pride Flag Faces Down Street Preacher: VIDEO

About Friends

About Friends
My gang in college was comprised of ten or so guys, all slightly left of conventional. We banded together by striving to be a bit disrespectful (though not so much as to fail classes). Meeting late at night in smoke-filled dormitory rooms (often mine), we plotted strategies to run for campus offices and rule the dorm. (None of us had joined a fraternity.) I was the least radical of any of us.

We graduated midway through the 1950’s; some got drafted in the Army, all went on to traditional careers.

The exception was Will (as I’ll call him). A couple of years after graduation, Will entered law school in a large city near the university. One night he committed suicide in his apartment.

What I liked about our gang was its composition of guys from differing backgrounds and many parts of the country. Will had not come from some large center of culture that prepared him for a university but from a poor family in a small Midwestern town, where, we decided, he must have become more or less self-taught. No one was a more natural for our group. He was thin and intense, had a plodding kind of walk, wore un-trendy clothes, and knew voluminous facts about law and history. Perhaps the smartest of the group, it was not beyond imagining him a future Supreme Court justice.

When word got around about Will’s death, it was accompanied by the knowledge that when he died, in his closet were found women’s cosmetics and women’s clothes in his size.

Stop! Could that predilection be what downed someone so smart? Was he gay, or did he just like cross-dressing? Who cared? Whatever the issue, why did he not seek counsel, help, relief, perhaps acceptance? I felt angry at him when I heard the news, as if he deserted not just his family but those of us who esteemed him so highly, we who would be the least likely ever to stigmatize him.

Will was not my closest friend at school, maybe because I was intimidated by his brilliance. And I hadn’t kept up with him afterward, partly because we settled in different cities. But that didn’t matter. His suicide of fifty years ago made me shudder and does so still today. Time in college was scarce, when you lived in one another’s pockets and formed intense friendships even in the knowledge that they might fade before long. At no other period in my life did the people I meet and like have that kind of impact on me.

I don’t remember that Will dated girls in college, but even those of us who did date girls didn’t form relationships that lasted later. Those were mostly puppy-love, finding-your-way affairs. And three or four of us turned out to be gay. He might have been one of us.

As decades have passed, I’ve sadly lost other college pals. But neither at the time of Will’s death, nor since, did I know of the suicide in his early twenties of a man not smart but brilliant. Taking his own life was an act beyond understanding, deeply unworthy of his intelligence.

I ask myself if what happened to Will could happen today. Of course it could. Although our world is far more accepting, cross-dressing does not make the headlines it once did, and gay marriages are now sanctioned nation-wide, inner tortures haven’t all been wiped away.

Whatever were our individual hurdles to overcome, each of our gang from college managed to go on to successful careers and live long enough to enjoy good lives. That didn’t happen to Will.

But it might have.

. .
Stanley Ely writes about many friends in his book, “Life Up Close,” in paperback and ebook.

— 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.

feeds.huffingtonpost.com/c/35496/f/677065/s/47b6dd4e/sc/33/l/0L0Shuffingtonpost0N0Cstanley0Eely0Cabout0Efriends0Ib0I76910A860Bhtml0Dutm0Ihp0Iref0Fgay0Evoices0Gir0FGay0KVoices/story01.htm

Bobby Jindal Invites State Employees To Sue Him Over Marriage, Faces Unexpected GOP Challenger

Bobby Jindal Invites State Employees To Sue Him Over Marriage, Faces Unexpected GOP Challenger

Screen shot 2015-06-30 at 11.58.59 AMLouisiana Governor and 2016 Presidential hopeless Bobby Jindal is making good on his promise to do everything he possibly can to fight the gays.

Just days after marriage equality became the law of the land in the United States, Jindal, also known as “America’s least popular governor,” signed an executive order allowing government employees the legal right to refuse marriage licenses to same-sex couples on religious grounds.

“State employees who express a religious objection to involvement in issuance of same-sex marriage licenses, and judges and justices of the peace may not be forced to officiate a same-sex wedding ceremony when other authorized individuals who have no religious objection are available,” the order read.

Related: Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal Calls Antigay Religious Freedom Laws “Common Sense”

What happens if there are no other “authorized individuals who have no religious objection available,” you ask?

The answer: Nothing. No marriage. And no disciplinary action for the insubordinate state employee either. Imagine the pandora’s box of faith-based objections to serving LGBTs this creates. State medical workers don’t want to treat gay men because they don’t like them? No problem! Public school teachers who disapprove of gay teens? No problem!

According to Jindal, despite the Supreme Court’s ruling, clerks in Louisiana can still deny same-sex marriage licenses, and they needn’t fear any consequences because “numerous attorneys have committed to defend their rights free of charge” should any of them be disciplined for refusing to do their jobs.

That’s right. Jindal has personally wrangled up a gaggle of lawyers willing to work pro bono for any state employee who wants to sue the state. Sadly, judges and clerks still need to be paid for processing these nuisance suits. Courthouses must keep the lights on.

The memo concludes: “Louisiana is resolved to protect the inalienable rights of all it citizens.”

In other Jindal-related news, the governor is currently facing an unexpected local challenger for the 2016 GOP Presidential nomination. A Louisiana crawfish has announced its candidacy and proclaimed itself a “harbinger of doom” for Jindal.

When asked why people should vote for Crawfish instead of Jindal, Crawfish’s campaign said “Crawfish is NOT Bobby Jindal, which really, is reason enough.”

An official Facebook page titled “Can This Crawfish Get More Supporters Than Bobby Jindal?” currently has almost 20,000 followers.

Related: The Best Responses To Gov. Bobby Jindal’s Antigay Executive Order (So Far)

h/t: New Civil Rights Movement

Graham Gremore

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/iDHK2B9Oo7E/bobby-jindal-invites-state-employees-to-sue-him-over-marriage-faces-unexpected-gop-challenger-20150630

Misguided Wingnuts Fight Facebook’s Rainbow Profile Pics with American Flag Avatar Maker

Misguided Wingnuts Fight Facebook’s Rainbow Profile Pics with American Flag Avatar Maker

flag wars

In a lame and misguided form of anti-gay protest, conservatives are trying to use American flag avatars to counter the 26 million Facebook rainbow profile pics that users created after SCOTUS legalized same-sex marriage nationwide, the Independent reports.

The tool to do so was being provided by rightwingnews.com.

Want to counter the Rainbow Flag FB profile pic? t.co/kkBq1MCdW4  #tcot #rednationrising #lnyhbt pic.twitter.com/gw69TLUFqp

— Brandon Davis (@Pim_Pen) June 30, 2015

Want to counter the Rainbow Flag FB profile pic?

American Flag Your Facebook Profile t.co/jHsrXMtSry #tcot #rednationrising #lnyhbt

— JON The Meme’ifier ✏ (@JonJayGroden) June 30, 2015

American Flag your Facebook or other Profile Pictures t.co/mta3D0d3Vp

— Donna L Cook (@DonnaCook5) June 30, 2015

Gizmodo adds:

“They can understand where using the American flag might be confusing, right? Some might say that never in its entire history has the American flag stood for equal rights as much as it does right now. “

The post Misguided Wingnuts Fight Facebook’s Rainbow Profile Pics with American Flag Avatar Maker appeared first on Towleroad.


Andy Towle

Misguided Wingnuts Fight Facebook’s Rainbow Profile Pics with American Flag Avatar Maker

Redefining The ‘Traditional' American Family In 7 Stunning Images

Redefining The ‘Traditional' American Family In 7 Stunning Images
When we don’t see ourselves reflected in the media we consume on a daily basis, we can feel invisible. And when images that are meant to represent meaningful relationships fail to reflect the diversity of love and family, many groups are made to feel invisible and an opportunity to change perspective is lost. Two companies have teamed up to bring more diversity to stock images by highlighting LGBT families.

On June 26, the Supreme Court affirmed the rights of same-sex couples to marry across the U.S., agreeing with the majority of Americans who support marriage equality. To honor the historic moment decades in the making, we’ve compiled nine gorgeous images from the Lean In stock photo collection that illustrates LGBT families.

Sheryl Sandberg’s organization Lean In has partnered with Getty Images to bring realistic stock photos of all kinds of families to online editors and readers. The results are stunning and highlight a group of people that are often underrepresented in the images used in the media we see every day.

The images fully represent the ever-changing “traditional” American family. Each picture depicts families of all colors who happen to have same-sex or gender non-conforming parents.

The Huffington Post spoke with Jessica Bennett, an editor and curator of the Lean In Collection, about what Lean In is trying to accomplish by creating more diverse stock photos. “Stock images are one of those things we may not think about, but come across a dozen times a day,” Bennett said. “The reality is that even the most benign images have power — they send a message about who can do, and be, what in our culture.”

This past year, Lean In has created more and more diverse stock photos that represent women and men more realistically than the typical stock image does. In February, Lean In partnered with Getty Images to reimagine the white-washed and stereotypical feminine woman so often found in stock photos. This past March, Lean In partnered with Getty again to highlight all the different type of fathers there are in the world.

“We hope that we can do our part so that image by image, we’re re-picturing a more equal world,” Bennett said. Take a look at the Lean In images below that are “re-picturing” an equal world, one stock photo at a time.

— 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.

feeds.huffingtonpost.com/c/35496/f/677065/s/47b62b4e/sc/7/l/0L0Shuffingtonpost0N0C20A150C0A60C30A0Credefining0Ethe0Etraditional0Eamerican0Efamily0E0In0I7653520A0Bhtml0Dutm0Ihp0Iref0Fgay0Evoices0Gir0FGay0KVoices/story01.htm