Pat Robertson Says Sodom’s Sin Wasn’t Homosexuality, Hell Freezes Over

Pat Robertson Says Sodom’s Sin Wasn’t Homosexuality, Hell Freezes Over

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Pat Robertson, host of The 700 Club, told viewers yesterday that the “sin” of Sodom was pride and not homosexuality. Yes, that Pat Robertson. The same Robertson most famous for his routine rants that any pro-LGBTQ progress will lead to the destruction of America “like it did Sodom and Gomorrah,” two Biblical cities destroyed in the Old Testament book of Leviticus.

While scholars have long argued what the “sin” actually was–some contend that it was actually the sin of “inhospitality”–conservative Christians have adamantly declared that homosexuality was the true cause. They then invariably go on to claim we are destroying America, which is not only an inhospitable thing to say but makes us vulnerable to everything from discrimination to much worse. Moderate and progressive Christians cite another book of the Old Testament, Ezekiel, to claim the cities were destroyed because they were too prideful.

Ezekial 16:49 reads, “Behold, this was the iniquity of thy sister Sodom, pride, fullness of bread, and abundance of idleness was in her and in her daughters, neither did she strengthen the hand of the poor and needy.”

“Pride, the Bible says, idleness and abundance of bread, neither were they thankful, that was the sin of Sodom and Gomorrah,” Robertson told viewers. “He didn’t talk about homosexuality.”

Anyone want to take bets on how long it will take America’s Best Leviticus Lover to switch his mind and go back to proclaiming that gays caused the downfall of the two ancient cities?

 

(H/t RightWingWatch)

Bil Browning

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What Happens When A Hook Up Turns Into A Long Distance Relationship? – WATCH

What Happens When A Hook Up Turns Into A Long Distance Relationship? – WATCH

long

Last week, we told you about a new gay web series that follows two college guys, Dustin and Shane, whose frequent hook ups turns into something more. But what happens when that something more becomes a long distance relationship?

That’s the subject of this week’s episode that sees Dustin head off to Hong Kong and Shane left wondering what he will do now that he’s (physically at least) alone.

Watch the lovers navigate the perils of dating long distance, below:

RELATED: New Gay Web Series Looks at What Happens When a Hook-Up Turns Into Something More: WATCH

The post What Happens When A Hook Up Turns Into A Long Distance Relationship? – WATCH appeared first on Towleroad.


Sean Mandell

What Happens When A Hook Up Turns Into A Long Distance Relationship? – WATCH

Showdown Over LGBT Rights in Indiana Starts Today

Showdown Over LGBT Rights in Indiana Starts Today

The battle for LGBT nondiscrimination protections will flare up in Indiana today as the state legislature convenes to organize in preparation for next year’s session. Opponents and supporters of the measure will face off in dueling rallies at the Statehouse while lawmakers work to find a bipartisan solution that balances Democrats’ press for full equality and Republicans’ concerns about “religious liberty.”

Republican Senate President Pro Tem David Long confirmed Monday that a bill will be heard during the 2016 session. “We’re trying to do our best to get a balanced piece of legislation,” Long said during the Indiana Chamber of Commerce’s annual legislative preview luncheon. “It will be comprehensive.”

Religious leaders and antigay activists around the state have spread rumors that lawmakers plan to introduce, have hearings on, and pass LGBT nondiscrimination protections today. While it’s technically possible for a law to be passed in a single day, legislators do not hear legislation on Organization Day.

Both Republican and Democrat leaders have said the rumor, perpetuated by Eric Miller, one of the state’s foremost antigay activists, as a “sneak attack,” is false. Republican state senator Brandt Hershman went so far as to publicly challenge Miller to bet $10,000 that the legislature will not advance a LGBT rights bill today; Miller refused to accept the wager. The money would have gone to charity.

Supporters of LGBT protections will also rally today on the Statehouse lawn at noon.

Following the state’s controversial passage of a “religious freedom” bill that would have allowed businesses to actively discriminate against LGBT people, outraged activists and the media castigated state political leaders for promoting bigotry against the LGBT community. Several organizations canceled plans for conferences in the state, businesses put expansion or relocation plans on hold, and celebrities canceled planned appearances.

Governor Mike Pence, once considered a potential presidential candidate, supported the bill and became the face of the measure after refusing to answer whether the law would legalize discrimination during an interview on national television. Lawmakers quickly passed new legislation to “fix” the law to specify that it couldn’t be used to discriminate against LGBT people after national outcry, but fallout from the law had already caused an incredible amount of economic and public relations damage.

House Democratic Leader Scott Pelath said the state needs to pass protections based on sexual orientation and gender identity to move past the controversy. “It’s simple. It’s passable, and most of all it will put this issue behind Indiana. Get it over with,” he urged. “It would be, long term, the best political thing for everybody to do, but it would also be the right thing to do.”

Republican House Speaker Brian Bosma, who has long opposed any measure to improve the lives of LGBT Hoosiers, wasn’t as supportive of the proposed legislation but seemed resigned to the bill’s introduction. “It will be a big challenge,” Bosma told the Journal Gazette, adding that “we will not be blackmailed into a policy-making decision. Elected officials will not be bullied or badgered.”

“With the state’s top businesses, a majority of Hoosiers, and even the media calling for across the board protections for the LGBT community, Mike Pence’s negligence on one of today’s top issues puts him on the verge of once again embarrassing the state of Indiana,” said Drew Anderson, communications director for the Indiana Democratic Party, in an emailed statement. “But after putting Indiana in a $250 million economic panic this spring, Hoosiers know what kind of governor Mike Pence truly is for them. Pence’s agenda is one kneejerk reaction after another that consistently sides with his out-of-touch ideology.”

The Indiana legislature will officially reconvene on January 5.

Bil Browning

www.advocate.com/politics/2015/11/17/showdown-over-lgbt-rights-indiana-starts-today

Here's How To Respectfully Talk About HIV

Here's How To Respectfully Talk About HIV

Since July 3, 1981, when the New York Times published news of a “rare cancer seen in 41 homosexuals,” the media has wrestled with the ever-changing landscape that is HIV treatment and prevention: its stories, its unique vocabulary and most of all its subjects. In 2015 as ever before, we have an obligation to write about HIV while affirming the dignity of those who live with it. 

Today, actor Charlie Sheen disclosed on Today that he is HIV positive. Sheen is not the first celebrity to do so. There may be many more to come. And no matter who decides to come out as HIV positive, their stories should be told with respect.

— 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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Same-sex marriage prompted $813million wedding spend in the US this summer

Same-sex marriage prompted $813million wedding spend in the US this summer

Since the US Supreme Court ruling on same-sex marriage at the end of June, paving the way for marriage ceremonies to take place across the US, some 96,000 couples have taken advantage of the legislation to tie the knot in the first four months.

They and they’re guests (i.e. out-of-state visitors booking hotels, etc) have spent approximately $813million (€764million) on their associated wedding costs, according to a report issued Thursday by the Williams Institute, the think tank at UCLA School of Law that carries out statistical research of LGBT rights and the cost of discrimination.

Between beginning of July and end of October 2015, those marriages have also generated $52million (€49millions) in state and local sales tax revenue, which could support an estimated 9,700 jobs for one full year.

The study, Estimating the Economic Impact of Marriage for Same-sex Couples after Obergefell, was co-authored by Christy Mallory, Senior Counsel and Anna M. Curren, Fellow, who say that the study demonstrates how businesses and government have benefited economically from the legislation of marriage.

The 96,000 couples who married constitute an estimated 11% of all marriages to take place in the US in that four-month period, and 20% of all currently married same-sex couples.

If anything, the authors say that their report may be conservative in its estimates.

They note that average wedding spend in the US is $26,444 (€24,852), but that, ‘Same-sex couples may receive less financial support from their parents and other family members to cover wedding costs due to persistent stigma, resulting in less spending than their heterosexual counterparts.

‘Taking these factors into account … we estimate that same-sex couples spend one-quarter of the amount that different-sex couples spend on wedding arrangements.’

An earlier report by the Williams Institute estimated that the legalization of same-sex marriage across the US could lead to a spending boom of $2.6billion (€2.4billion) in the first three years following such a ruling.

 

Main image: Pixabay | CC0 Public Domain

The post Same-sex marriage prompted $813million wedding spend in the US this summer appeared first on Gay Star News.

David Hudson

www.gaystarnews.com/article/same-sex-marriage-prompted-813million-wedding-spend-in-the-us-this-summer/

Tina Fey Addresses Criticism That She Creates “Stereotypical” Gay Characters

Tina Fey Addresses Criticism That She Creates “Stereotypical” Gay Characters

tina-fey-reveals-pregnancy“I know people like Titus. If a person exists, it’s fair game. Titus makes Barbie clothes, for example, and that’s based on an old gay friend of mine who worked as a cater-waiter when he first moved to New York. He was too broke to go out, so he’d literally sit inside and sew Barbie clothes to kill time. I try to base everything in some kind of truth. I don’t worry about what the Internet says. Getting in trouble with the Internet is not real. The Internet is not a force you have to obey.”

Tina Fey, who tells The Advocate that her dream project is “a movie about Stonewall where I play all the people,” shortly before addressing criticism about Kimmy Schmidt’s character Titus being the stereotypical effeminate gay man.

Derek de Koff

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Inside Molenbeek, the Troubled Brussels Neighborhood Linked to Terror in Paris

Inside Molenbeek, the Troubled Brussels Neighborhood Linked to Terror in Paris

Molenbeek

By Paul Ames

LISBON, Portugal — The Brussels neighborhood of Molenbeek is in the world spotlight like never before, as police move in looking for suspects linked to Friday’s murderous attacks in Paris.

The gritty inner-city district with a majority Muslim population is being portrayed as a jihadist breeding ground, a no-go area for the police where extremists have been free to plot terror.

Besides the suspected links to Paris, a would-be gunman wrestled to the ground by American tourists on a high-speed train to Paris in August got his AK-47 from Molenbeek, prosecutors say.

Police prepare for a raid in the Brussels neighborhood of Molenbeek amid a manhunt for a suspect of #ParisAttacks pic.twitter.com/BmDGKoBUhC

— TIMES NOW (@TimesNow) November 16, 2015

The Frenchman of Algerian origin who killed four people at Brussels’ Jewish Museum was living there, as were two terror suspects shot dead by Belgian police in January.

“Almost every time, there is a link to Molenbeek,” Belgian Prime Minister Charles Michel said over the weekend.

Belgian authorities, who have long been criticized for a lax approach to radicals in the neighborhood, vowed to crack down. Justice Minister Jan Jambon pledged he’d oversee an operation to “cleanse” the area.

 But Molenbeek’s problems are not new. As Brussels correspondent for GlobalPost, I reported from the district in 2012, when Belgium’s then-foreign minister jokingly compared the area to Afghanistan and far-right websites were already calling it “Mullahbeek.”
Molenbeek made headlines that summer when violence broke out following an attempt by police to check the identity of a woman wearing a niqab, which has been illegal in Belgium since 2010. She resisted, and in a scuffle a policewoman suffered a broken nose.

In the neighborhood rumors spread that the woman had been stripped and manhandled by male officers. That night several dozen youths clashed with police.

Days later another policewoman and a male colleague were stabbed in a Molenbeek subway station by a suspected extremist who traveled from France to “avenge the honor” of the veiled woman.

The incidents sparked outrage among Belgian politicians. There were calls for Islamist extremists to be deprived of their Belgian nationality and deported.

Community leaders pointed out that the niqab-clad woman at the center of the incident was a native “Belgo-Belgian,” without roots abroad, while the two injured policewomen were Muslims of Moroccan origin.

Since then the area’s problems have worsened. Wars in Syria and elsewhere in the Middle East have fueled radicalization among disaffected youth.

A country of 10 million, Belgium is believed to have produced an outsized number of foreign fighters for the ranks of IS and other radical groups in Syria. It’s estimated more than 350 Belgian nationals may have joined the conflict.

Over half of Molenbeek’s population of about 95,000 is Muslim, mostly Moroccan immigrants and their descendents. The area shares many of the problems of high crime, rampant youth unemployment and overcrowded housing common to poor immigrant neighborhoods around Europe.

There are more journalists than Moroccans in #Molenbeek today. #ParisAttack pic.twitter.com/mt2gZ2HVPr

— Daniel Demoustier (@dandemoustier) November 17, 2015

Unemployment among people under 35 is above 30 percent.

“My dad was a steel worker, and when our parents’ generation came over here they focused on their work and the education of their children,” Noureddine Imnadine, a Moroccan-born architect, told me in 2012.

“Many of us studied hard and did well, became architects, engineers, entrepreneurs, but nobody talks about that,” he told me in his office in the neighborhood where he grew up. “Now times are different, there’s not so much work around for this younger generation, so you have these kids hanging around on the streets, feeling excluded, stigmatized, angry. We need a social framework for these kids, to get them engaged in work or in some activities to get them off the street.”

The tightly packed row-house streets at the heart of Molenbeek’s old industrial neighborhoods are just a short walk from the boutiques and chic cafes of downtown Brussels, but few well-heeled shoppers venture over the narrow canal that separates the district from the city center.

On the bright summer day when I visited, Molenbeek didn’t appear so scary. Cafe terraces were filled with men gossiping over glasses of mint tea. Matrons in bright “djellaba” robes shopped for pastries scented with saffron and orange blossom, while newer immigrants from Poland or central Africa mingled in the line for groceries at the Dial Soussi Moroccan supermarket.

“When Belgo-Belgians from outside do see the real Molenbeek, they are often astonished to discover that it’s not like they’ve been told,” local businessman Moutapha Beggar told me.

Sign posted in a pharmacy window in Molenbeek neighborhood of Brussels pic.twitter.com/2s7FqoFPCX

— Ivan Watson (@IvanCNN) November 17, 2015

After riots in the early 1990s the local officials in Molenbeek and Brussels city authorities launched efforts to improve integration. Services to fight “social exclusion” were set up, including a House of Cultures that sought to engage all sections of society in the arts. Funding was provided for a prestigious soccer academy for local youngsters.

Then gentrification began in parts of Molenbeek. Warehouses and factories were converted into fancy apartments, artists’ studios and office space to attract new residents and business into the area.

Yet staff at companies who moved in complained of robberies and vandalism. Women in particular accused Molenbeek city hall of minimizing street crime and harassment.

“Youngsters have snatched our handbags, they have broken the windows of our cars, they have insulted us verbally to the extent that we’re scared to our stomachs to go into the street,” employees of the BBDO advertising agency wrote to the then-mayor.

Social worker Ali Benabid told me Belgian politicians had repeatedly failed to deal with the area’s real issues.

The right fueled alienation by blaming the whole community for crime and social problems, he said, while the left turned a blind eye to intolerance from religious conservatives because of political correctness or fear of losing votes. Moderate Muslims were caught in the middle.

“There’s a sort of cultural relativism, there are some parties that are prepared to accept the unacceptable on women’s rights and other issues. They argue it’s a cultural thing, instead of upholding universal rights,” Benabid told me back in 2012. “That has to change.”

Three years on, the politicians may finally heed his words.

This article first appeared on GlobalPost.

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GlobalPost

Inside Molenbeek, the Troubled Brussels Neighborhood Linked to Terror in Paris

Rose McGowan to Caitlyn Jenner: 'We Are More than Deciding What to Wear'

Rose McGowan to Caitlyn Jenner: 'We Are More than Deciding What to Wear'

Actress Rose McGowan unleashed a barrage of insults at Caitlyn Jenner on Facebook, for a statement she made about being a woman in an interview with BuzzFeed last week:

“The hardest part about being a woman is figuring out what to wear. It’s always that way; I never thought it would come to this. I had really no sense of style.”

Media reports have attributed that statement to Jenner’s acceptance speech last week, when she was honored as one of Glamour’s Women of the Year, and given the Transgender Champion Award. However, Jenner never uttered those words in her speech.

McGowan referred to the Woman of the Year award several times in her post:

“Caitlyn Jenner you do not understand what being a woman is about at all. You want to be a woman and stand with us- well learn us. We are more than deciding what to wear. We are more than the stereotypes foisted upon us by people like you. You’re a woman now? Well fucking learn that we have had a VERY different experience than your life of male privilege. Woman of the year? No, not until you wake up and join the fight. Being a woman comes with a lot of baggage. The weight of unequal history. You’d do well to learn it. You’d do well to wake up. Woman of the year? Not by along fucking shot.

“Let me amend this by saying I’m happy for what she’s doing visibility wise for the trans community, and I’m happy she’s living her truth, but comments like hers have consequences for other women. How we are perceived, what our values are, and leads to more stereotyping. If you know you are going to be speaking to media About being a woman, maybe come to understand our struggles.”

Accompanying McGowan’s post were 15 memes originally shared by Troy Brown of Ohio, each with the quote “The hardest part about being a woman is figuring out what to wear,” over an image of a struggling woman: beaten, disfigured, stalked, raped and more. As Us Magazine reported, one photo depicted O.J. Simpson’s late wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, photoshopped to appear as if she were covered in bruises. Jenner’s ex-wife Kris Jenner was best friends with the model-actress.

 

The wisdom of Caitlyn Jenner!!!#Twitter @Troy_DennisTD#FollowMe

Posted by Troy Brown on Saturday, November 14, 2015

 

 

The widower of a prior Woman of the Year recipient recently returned his late wife’s award to Glamour, saying honoring Jenner ‘insulted’ his wife’s memory.

The Advocate reached out to Jenner for comment but as of press time we have not heard back. 

Dawn Ennis

www.advocate.com/caitlyn-jenner/2015/11/17/rose-mcgowan-caitlyn-jenner-we-are-more-deciding-what-wear