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LIVESTREAM: President Obama's 2015 'State of the Union' Address

LIVESTREAM: President Obama's 2015 'State of the Union' Address

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Tonight, President Obama will address a joint session of Congress and deliver his sixth State of the Union address. The address is set to begin at 9 PM ET.

The President has been urged to address LGBT issues in tonight’s address by key advocates, particularly the question of non-discrimination protections for LGBT Americans as The Washington Blade notes.

Andy also reported earlier that Congresswoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz has invited a gay couple from Florida who were the second same-sex couple to wed in the Sunshine State after its ban on gay marriage came down earlier this month. Be sure to watch for them in the chamber.

Watch the livestream of the President fulfilling his duties under Article II of the Constitution, AFTER THE JUMP…

Do you think President Obama will address protections against discrimination for LGBT Americans? If so, will the President (and any proposed legislation) receive applause from both sides of the aisle? Or will Congress continue to make us sick? Watch tonight to find out.

Congress


Sean Mandell

www.towleroad.com/2015/01/livestream-president-obamas-2015-state-of-the-union-address.html

Wearing Dad Jeans and Other Premium Benefits of Mentoring a Young Gay Man

Wearing Dad Jeans and Other Premium Benefits of Mentoring a Young Gay Man
I recently had lunch with Griffin.* He was back in Nashville to start his final semester as an undergraduate. During his break he found out that he didn’t get accepted into the grad school of his choice. His sister, who’s a heroin addict, stole some of his Christmas gifts to fund her habit. And he filled me in on his burgeoning relationship with Paul,* whom he met when he was home over the summer. They felt a spark during the holiday, and he’s really in love, he said, but he’s nervous about the distance between them over these next few months.

My 23-year-old friend is going through some major growing pains. All Griffin’s plans for the future are suddenly in the air, and he’s not sure how to factor Paul into plan B.

My advice to him: Keep putting one foot in front of the other. Focus on graduating, and keep an eye open for internships in your field. Trust that everything happens as it should, and that your right path will be revealed. Enjoy being in love, but make fulfilling your own life your top priority. As for your sister, forgive her, set good boundaries, and keep praying that she’ll find her way back.

I hope my words to him made a difference. And if not the words, then at least the time I spent with him.

I met Griffin when he was a sophomore. A mutual friend introduced us at the Nashville AIDS Walk. We hit it off immediately. Soon after, we developed a strong friendship with lots of texting (as the young people do) and occasional dinners and movie nights. At some point, he started referring to me as his “gay dad.” It shocked me until I did the math and realized that I am reasonably old enough to be his father (I’m 42). To add insult to injury, I showed up to dinner one night, and he asked me, “What’s up with the dad jeans?” I looked down and realized that I hadn’t updated my denim in about eight years. In a world where hipsters and skinny jeans rule, I am now a break-a-hipster. The boot cut is the deepest.

Aside from the clanging chimes of aging doom, my role as Griffin’s gay dad has been one of the most rewarding of my life. I get to share with him some of the wisdom I’ve gleaned over the years: how to navigate the brutal and egocentric world of gay dating, what it means to have integrity, how to keep a healthy sense of self while wading through narcissism in social media, and why he should look on the bright side of whatever life throws his way.

Griffin is close to his own parents. They love him and are supportive in every way. But they don’t know what it’s like to be gay. Griffin has told me time and time again how meaningful it is to have a gay mentor in whom he can confide. While his parents took him and his boyfriend on a mini-vacation to Florida over the holidays, he can’t talk to them about the complexities of gay sex. He feels reticent to share the depth of his emotions with them. With me, he can be frank about anything.

While I judge that our relationship is good for Griffin, it is healing to me as well. When I think back to my own life at his age, I would have given anything to have an older gay friend to show me the rainbow ropes. I wish I’d had a shoulder to cry on after every false start at love. And, as for those couple of years I spent as a go-go dancer, I wish I’d had someone to tell me that to shine in the world, I could be so much more than my body, that my intellect and my humanitarian gifts were more than enough to light my way.

I don’t think we, as a community, offer enough support to youth who are navigating the world as LGBTQ adults for the first time. There are no healthy rites of passage for young people as they emerge from the closet. To gather as gay people, we mostly meet in bars, which promulgate all the human vices and prove over time to be our only enduring social structure.

My own early years acclimating as a gay man carry some of the deepest wounds of my life. For a while, I sacrificed my education, carried shame about my sexuality, made horrible dating choices, and looked for my self-esteem in the nightclubs. Now, through Griffin, I have a golden opportunity to bring light into those dark places. I have a deep and visceral need to give him the advice and friendship from an older gay man that I didn’t have.

I’m glad I can now dust off my past — with all my mistakes and failures — and use it constructively to mentor Griffin. I know I don’t have all the answers he seeks, but I always have a listening ear.

Maybe, though, it’s time I listen to him and get rid of those dad jeans.

*Names have been changed to protect privacy.

www.huffingtonpost.com/del-ray-zimmerman/wearing-dad-jeans-and-oth_b_6481536.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

Alexis Arquette Drops Another Big Bombshell About Sex With Jared Leto

Alexis Arquette Drops Another Big Bombshell About Sex With Jared Leto

alexis-arquette-jared-leto-sexMeanwhile, people are asking about Jared Leto’s penis size. Is that what it’s come to? I wasn’t trying to get people to believe anything. I mentioned it in passing at the end of the interview. I was dressed as a man when it went down. I was trying to give some hope for the gay men out there! But the idea that the dude could be bisexual — whoa, that’s just too much for people to handle. I did find out after our tete-a-tete that he did end up with a trannie I know, and she was on top.”

 

Alexis Arquette, who during an interview with Michael Musto expressed surprise that her previous revelation about hooking up with Oscar winner Jared Leto generated so much attention

 

Jeremy Kinser

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/ldS3WWWVXO8/alexis-arquette-drops-another-big-bombshell-about-sex-with-jared-leto-20150120

Billy Crystal's Homophobic Remarks Require Context

Billy Crystal's Homophobic Remarks Require Context

Billy Crystal Television Critics Association

As we are all fully aware at this point, legendary comedian Billy Crystal wedged his foot down his esophagus during his Television Critics Association press circuit, saying that gay characters on television are “a bit too much,” “Sometimes, it’s just pushing it a little too far for my taste,” and of course the old saw of ‘shoving it in his face.’

The Hollywood Reporter figured that the remarks had to be taken out of context, particularly given that Crystal had played one of the first openly gay characters on primetime television, and investigated further. Crystal clarified, saying:

What I meant was that whenever sex or graphic nudity of any kind (gay or straight) is gratuitous to the plot or story it becomes a little too much for my taste.

Huffington Post editor Noah Michelson had similar concerns and also went looking for further context, though whereas the The Hollywood Reporter was willing to take Crystal’s statement to them at face value, the interview Michelson found at Xfinity’s tv blog was more damning. There, Crystal said:

But when I feel it’s a cause, when I feel it’s “You’re going to like my lifestyle,” no matter what it is, I’m going to have a problem and there were a couple of shows I went ‘I couldn’t watch that with somebody else.’

[…]

We live in a very scary time in many ways. You can’t say this, you can’t say that, you can’t offend this group, that group. People come up to you and ask if you were offended. I don’t understand that. I understand it why everyone is watching out for the other person. That’s offensive to me.

Which brought Michelson to his conclusion:

Beneath all of the progress we’ve made, the shit — from disgust with our sex lives to frustration with our wanting to push our “cause” and “lifestyle” — still exists. We can pass all of the laws we want and we can give queer people all the same rights as non-queers, but if the fundamental feeling about us is still “Ew! Yuck! I don’t want to see that!” or “Stop shoving that in our faces!” I hardly call that progress.


Christian Walters

www.towleroad.com/2015/01/billy-crystals-homophobic-remarks-require-context.html

State of Our Gay Military Unions

State of Our Gay Military Unions
It was an honor and privilege to be a personal guest of the First Lady for President Obama’s 2013 State of the Union address. I was selected because I co-founded an organization called the Military Partners and Families Coalition (MPFC), a non-profit organization to focusing exclusively on LGBT military families following the 2012 repeal of Don’t Ask/Don’t Tell. My wife Brigadier General Tammy Smith, the nation’s first openly gay military general/flag officer, attended the White House reception with me and we were greeted by Mrs. Obama and Dr. Jill Biden.

The state of our gay military unions has transformed considerably since I represented military families at this event. In 2013, I personally witnessed the President make this promise: “We will ensure equal treatment for all servicemembers, and equal benefits for their families — gay and straight.” The President’s words were powerful, and I was eager to hear them. I stood up and cheered at his words.

The repeal of Don’t Ask/Don’t Tell (DADT) was incredibly significant. Gay and lesbian Servicemembers could finally serve the nation without fear of discharge. But repeal was neutral for gay military families. Despite the Department of Defense commitment to provide a safety net and benefits for all military families, gay military families were excluded regardless of DADT repeal. We remained second-class families, supporting our Servicemembers without the support of the military institution.

This situation was bittersweet. We were collectively relieved that there was no longer a fear of discharge from the military for simply being gay or lesbian, but our families did not exist legally. The Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) cornered us into the second-class citizen status.

After the State of the Union address, I met face to face with President Obama. He looked me in the eye and promised that gay military families would have access to military benefits and he assured me: “We are going to get this done.”

He was right, and the Windsor Supreme Court DOMA case triggered the amazing change for gay military families. In record time for a bureaucracy, the Pentagon issued a statement that it would recognize same-sex married couples for purposes of family status and benefits. The Department of Defense put in place procedures to recognize married couples regardless of gender combinations following the Windsor decision. On September 3, 2013, I went to a Defense Eligibility Enrollment Reporting System (DEERS) site at Ft Bragg, North Carolina and was declared “equal” to all married military couples. I received my military family member identification card. I was no longer a second-class citizen. This simple act that straight couples take for granted was a moment of celebration for my wife and me.

Since the 2013 State of the Union our gay military families continue to experience many firsts — our military families are now living on military installations in family housing. We are bearing children in military hospitals with our wives at our side. Servicemembers discharged under DADT have rejoined the military and reaffirmed the oath with their spouse looking on. Our spouses have been recognized at change of command ceremonies, promotions and retirements. Gay and lesbian Servicemembers have attended unit organizational days and also invited Ally Servicemembers to help plan pride celebrations at their installations.

We have so much to be grateful for in 2015, but we are not finished. We still have pockets of second-class citizen status. Status of Forces Agreements (SOFA) still limit access to assignments with same-sex families in certain countries, creating unequal access to competitive assignments. Certain military chaplain denominations are working to exclude interacting with us, even to perform last rites on the battlefield, under the outrageous banner of “religious liberty.” Our transgender brothers and sisters still suffer silently, completely unaffected by our forward progress. Neither Servicemembers nor families have status as a protected class within an Equal Opportunity category, leaving space for discrimination without recourse. This is unacceptable for Americans who choose to serve their country. We need to hold on to our victories but we must continue to push forward, working until the President’s words “equal treatment” become a reality for all our military families.

I am thankful that I got to look President Obama in the eye and hear him promise me that our families would be treated equally in the future. He made good on that promise, with some help from the Supreme Court. As I reflect on the State of our Unions, I know that the State of Our Gay Military Unions are strong. We have made amazing progress since 2013. Our families must commit to being out, being visible, and integrating fully into military communities. Together we must break the barriers remaining that result in a second-class citizen status, and we must continue to fight until all military families are treated equally.

www.huffingtonpost.com/tracey-hepner/state-of-our-gay-military_b_6508968.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices