Boy Scouts Move Closer To Ending Ban On Gay Adults

Boy Scouts Move Closer To Ending Ban On Gay Adults
The Boy Scouts Of America is one step closer to ending its longstanding ban on gay adults serving as employees and volunteers.

The National Executive Committee on Monday unanimously approved a resolution ending the ban. The National Executive Board still has to approve the resolution, and is expected to vote July 27.

This is a developing story. Check back for updates.

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REVIEW: Beagle – Hoxton, London

REVIEW: Beagle – Hoxton, London

The Beagle is a cafe, bar, and restaurant nestled beneath Hoxton station in inner-east London.

This is a busy place, but they’re serving really good food so it’s no surprise.

We called in for a late breakfast on a Sunday and were lucky to get a seat.

Perfect poached eggs and top quality bacon – we chose simple options but easily one of the best breakfasts I’ve had in a long-time.

Service was a little off but perhaps we just caught them on a bad day.

Definitely worth checking out.

The interior of Beagle in Hoxton London
Perfect poached eggs at Beagle in Hoxton
Bacon doesn't get much better than this at Beagle in Hoxton

Read more from Gareth Johnson

Read more restaurant reviews

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Gareth Johnson

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Recognizing LGBT Pride in Midway, Kentucky, the Eighth City with LGBT Fairness Protections

Recognizing LGBT Pride in Midway, Kentucky, the Eighth City with LGBT Fairness Protections

As we look back on an historic LGBT Pride Month this year, great things are happening all around the country, including in the town of Midway, Kentucky.
HRC.org

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Someone Leaked The New X-Men Trailer, And Sh*t’s About To Get Biblical

Someone Leaked The New X-Men Trailer, And Sh*t’s About To Get Biblical

If there’s one super hero franchise we’ll never tire of, it’s those lovable mutants at Professor Xavier’s School for Gifted Youngsters.

In the next installment called X Men: Apocalypse scheduled for a summer ’16 release, Bryan Singer is back to direct. And by the looks of this leaked trailer from Comic-Con, Singer went headfirst into the darker themes of the series.

And if the name wasn’t enough to clue you in, it’s about to go all Old Testament on us.

Watch below, and try not to get bothered by the shoddy camera capture:

Dan Tracer

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God V. Gays Is a False Narrative

God V. Gays Is a False Narrative
In the days since the Supreme Court ruled that same-sex couples have a constitutional right to marry, a number of false narratives have started dominating our airwaves and social media.

People of faith are pitted against the LGBT community, which is positioned as both godless and faithless. Let’s be clear — many LGBT citizens are people of faith and hold strong religious beliefs. And every faith community in this country includes LGBT people in its pews.

The talking heads on cable claim that religious people’s beliefs are under assault and that their churches will be forced to solemnize same-sex nuptials.

Let’s unpack those concerns.

Freedom of religion, enshrined in the establishment clause of the first amendment, makes it crystal clear: “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.”

The right of every citizen to freely practice his or her religion is fundamental and inviolate — as is the separation of church and state. That means that everyone is free to practice and believe what he or she likes. That was true on June 25 and remained true in the wake of the marriage decision on June 26.

It has always been the prerogative of each religious institution to decide whom it would and would not marry and if that marriage would take place in its sanctuary. Those decisions remain solely in the hands of clergy and congregations. Some churches will decide that they will perform weddings for same-sex couples, others will not. Some clergy will perform marriages and others won’t. For some perspective, my very straight Catholic mother and Episcopalian father were not permitted to marry inside my mother’s parish Church. (For the record, they were granted permission to marry on the steps outside of that Church.)

It is essential to understand that the marriage ruling granted same-sex couples a civil right to marry with no religious component whatsoever. That’s why wedding officiates — from judges to rabbis to priests — conclude marriage ceremonies, saying, “by the power vested in me by the state…”

Another false narrative that has emerged is the notion that people of faith are having their religious freedom trampled because LGBT couples can now marry in every state. They argue that they should be allowed to refuse services based on their personal religious convictions.

Let’s examine the not so hypothetical case of the county clerk who feels that his freedom of religion is under assault because he must now issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples. The clerk, a civil servant, holds deep religious convictions and feels that marriage should only be between a man and a woman. The clerk is unfettered to believe that and freely express his opinion. Nevertheless, as a civil servant, employed by the county and being paid by the people of that county to carry out certain duties, he cannot start picking and choosing which civic duty he will perform based on his personal religious belief. If he won’t issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples, he has a very simple option to find a job that better conforms to his conscience. The free expression of his religious belief remains completely untrammeled.

One reason these false narratives flourish is that the media picks the most extreme anti-LGBT religious spokespeople to make a case. A 2012 study by the University of Missouri examined 316 news stories about LGBT issues over three years on TV and in print. 1,387 different religious sources were quoted in those stories. The study found that “three out of four religious messages came from people whose religions have formal policies opposing LGBT equality.”

That unbalanced dynamic has been in overdrive since June 26, excluding the voices of so many people of faith who hold more accepting views of LGBT people and giving a megaphone to those who don’t.

As an LGBT person of faith, I hope that we set aside these false narratives and start the hard work of building understanding and acceptance.

While I fully understand that some people with firm religious beliefs may never agree with me, I have faith that many more will. Especially if we can cut through the noise and start focusing on what should unite us, which is love and the golden rule.

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Jane Lynch Weighs In On Hollywood’s Infamous (And Crowded) Closet

Jane Lynch Weighs In On Hollywood’s Infamous (And Crowded) Closet

Jane-Lynch-360x240Jane Lynch may be one of the most recognizable out celebrities after she was catapulted into the mainstream aboard the SS Glee, but the 54-year-old actress says she never had a “coming out moment.”

“I’m an actor and when people started taking an interest in me, where they wanted to write about me, I didn’t say I wasn’t gay, so — I never had that,” she said in an interview on SiriusXM Progress. “And I have to give kudos to people like Melissa Etheridge and k.d lang and Ellen Degeneres and Rosie O’Donnell, all of those people who came before and at the height of their career, when they had a lot to lose, stood up and said this is who I am. And the world kind of went [gasps]…and then, nothing happened. That was really great and they kind of cleared a path for me to just stroll down.”

She’ll be appearing in a new CBS comedy series, Angel from Hell, in the fall, and is currently promoting the third season of NBC’s Hollywood Game Night. Lynch says she’s happy that other out celebrities like Zachary Quinto and Jesse Tyler Ferguson regularly appear on the show.

“There are still parts of the country where it’s hard, when you realize you’re gay, it’s like a death sentence,” she said. “And to give those kids some hope, I love that.”

Turning her attention to the infamous Hollywood closet, she said, “Everybody has their own way to deal with it. I don’t concern myself with other people’s — whether or not they want to come out, it’s not something for me think about.”

And yet there are many anecdotal stories of performers still being pressured not to come out. Asked what it says about the industry as a whole, Lynch said:

“I don’t know what it says. That says more about them than it does about anything, [or], I think, a meta statement to be made. Everybody has their own psychology, their own issues, their own subconscious material. For me to make a broad statement — it’s like outing people. I think that was a horrible thing. You might be dealing with a very fragile part of someone’s psyche. So I think everybody has to go their own path…That’s ridiculous, in this day and age, if somebody’s telling somebody not to [come out].”

h/t: HuffPost

Dan Tracer

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Ian Somerhalder and Chris Wood Recreate Steamy ‘Vampire Diaries’ Kiss in the Rain: WATCH

Ian Somerhalder and Chris Wood Recreate Steamy ‘Vampire Diaries’ Kiss in the Rain: WATCH

vd

In a sizzle reel that debut at San Diego Comic Con over the weekend, romance and pure evil mix as Vampire Diaries co-stars Ian Somerhalder and Chris Wood recreate one of the show’s iconic kiss scenes in the rain.

“Promise me this is forever,” Wood whispers. “I promise” replies Somerhalder.

Now if only those insufferable Twilight movies would have had more steamy scenes like this…

Watch Somerhalder and Wood lock lips below [kiss occurs at end of video]

The post Ian Somerhalder and Chris Wood Recreate Steamy ‘Vampire Diaries’ Kiss in the Rain: WATCH appeared first on Towleroad.


Kyler Geoffroy

Ian Somerhalder and Chris Wood Recreate Steamy ‘Vampire Diaries’ Kiss in the Rain: WATCH