Category Archives: NEWS

Irish Bishop Says Opposition to Marriage Equality Has Nothing to Do With 'The Gay Lifestyle' – VIDEO

Irish Bishop Says Opposition to Marriage Equality Has Nothing to Do With 'The Gay Lifestyle' – VIDEO

Doran

Irish bishop Kevin Doran has said that his opposition to same-sex marriage is “not about homosexuality or the gay lifestyle, it is about the meaning of marriage”, reports the Irish Times.

Iona Institute

Doran, the bishop of Elphin since July and Secretary General of the Eucharistic Congress 2012, made his comments during a talk organized by anti-gay activist group the Iona Institute on “Marriage and the Common Good.” Members of the Iona Institute sued state broadcaster RTE earlier this year after drag performer Panti Bliss accused them of homophobia.

Doran, an unmarried celibate, warned the Irish government that legalizing same-sex marriage would remove “the unique relationship between marriage and procreation.”

Opening what is likely to be an unpleasant debate with a hysterical suggestion that marriage equality will lead to people marrying their pet hamsters, Doran said:

“Since [procreation] is probably the principal reason for the State to have any interest in regulating marriage … why bother regulating it at all? One might even ask, why in that case would the State restrict marriage to two people? What, in the final analysis, is the difference between a ‘sexual friendship’ (in which the State has no interest) and a marriage?”

Ignoring the realities of day-to-day life and insulting same-sex families into the bargain, he added:

“As they mature, children benefit from the love and care of both mother and father, and from their parents’ committed and exclusive love for each other. Unlike friendships, which vary in kind and degree and formality, marriage … has enough objective structure, apart from the spouses’ preferences, to be legally regulated.”

Watch Doran talk about preparations for the 2012 Eucharistic Conference, AFTER THE JUMP

A referendum on same-sex marriage is expected in Ireland early next year.  Doran’s comments are likely to be seen as an opening salvo in the Catholic church’s opposition.


Jim Redmond

www.towleroad.com/2014/12/irish-bishop-says-opposition-to-marriage-equality-not-about-the-gay-lifestyle-video.html

A Black Family Call to Action to Address the HIV/AIDS Epidemic

A Black Family Call to Action to Address the HIV/AIDS Epidemic
Since the first cases of HIV were reported over 30 years ago, Black people and our families have been the most impacted. We all carry with us the stories of relatives, friends, neighbors and other loved ones who are no longer with us due to HIV/AIDS. We have collectively allowed stigma, fear and a lack of communication to hinder us from standing up to support our loved ones living with HIV/AIDS. Their cries of despair are ingrained in our memories during a time when most people willingly neglected those living with HIV/AIDS because of ignorance, shame and a lack of compassion. Today, we have made incredible advances in the knowledge and treatment of HIV/AIDS, but too many of us remain silent around the issue. However, our families continue to be the public face of HIV/AIDS. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the rate of new HIV infection in African Americans is eight times that of whites based on population size. We must recognize and embrace that HIV/AIDS is a Black health issue, and we must stand up to end this epidemic.

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www.cdc.gov/

Just like diabetes and hypertension are Black health issues where we all rally to support our loved ones living with these chronic conditions, we must publicly open our hearts to our family members living with HIV/AIDS. Yes, there are wonderful campaigns targeting the Black community around HIV, but this is not enough. The fact remains that Black people still experience the highest infection and mortality rates from this treatable condition. This is unacceptable, and we all have a role in helping to prevent infection for our family members most at-risk and supporting those who are living with HIV/AIDS. We must recognize that Black people face a number of health challenges that undermine our community’s health as a whole. We are more likely to suffer from certain health conditions, and we are more likely to get sicker, have serious complications, and even die. Our community is more prone to have heart disease, to be obese, to have a stroke, and is more susceptible to asthma, just to name a few. When we add HIV/AIDS into the equation, the status of our health as a community is dismal. Predominantly Black cities like Washington, D.C., have been compared to West Africa when it comes to HIV infection rates among its population.

As HIV/AIDS continues to disproportionately impact Black people, it is important to recognize key factors contributing to high rates of HIV infection. Because of the large proportion of people living with HIV/AIDS in Black communities and the fact that Black people tend to engage in sexual relations with members of the same race/ethnicity, we face a greater risk of HIV infection with each new sexual encounter (CDC: HIV Among African Americans). In addition, Black people are less likely to secure or afford health insurance, which makes preventing or treating HIV even more burdensome for our community.

A path to ending the epidemic is for us to collectively support the well-being of our community living with HIV/AIDS. President Obama has led in this effort by introducing the nation’s first National HIV/AIDS Strategy aimed at reducing the epidemic, with a special interest in reaching out to communities of color. Central to the strategy is the HIV/AIDS Care Continuum, which is a plan focused on getting HIV positive people in treatment as early as possible and receiving the full range of health benefits to combat this manageable condition. It should be noted that Black people are the least likely racial demographic to be in ongoing care or to have the virus under control according to the CDC.

At the National Black Justice Coalition (NBJC), we are working to reframe HIV/AIDS by placing it once again as a chief pillar of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender (LGBT) equality agenda, while simultaneously holding Black America accountable to build support structures to fight the epidemic in our own communities. In 2015, we will roll out a Black family health narrative around HIV to combat the epidemic. Our advocacy will rest on the principle that we are our brother’s and sister’s keeper because we recognize that we all have a vested interest in the health and stability of our community. NBJC’s efforts will provide culturally competent resources to heal, educate and affirm the whole family impacted by the HIV/AIDS epidemic. We are organizing a national call-to-action, where the Black family is central in the conversation about care and prevention. This will be a movement that calls on the entire Black community, especially families, to take personal responsibility in preventing new cases of HIV, while supporting and improving the care for those living with HIV/AIDS.

The Black LGBT and same-gender loving (SGL) population is disproportionately impacted by heath disparities. Black LGBT/SGL people live at the intersection of multiple identities and represent more than 1 million African Americans. Both cultural and systemic factors such as poverty, racism and stigma contribute to this dire status. Despite this reality, few health and wellness initiatives directly target Black LGBT/SGL people, and as a result, Black LGBT/SGL people suffer in silence. This is profoundly evident in the HIV/AIDS epidemic in our nation when African Americans account for an estimated 44 percent of all new HIV infections among adults and adolescents (aged 13 years or older) in 2010, despite representing only 12 percent of the US population. The CDC states that gay and bisexual men account for most new infections among African Americans, and young gay and bisexual men (ages 13 to 24) are the most affected within this population. In the wake of the national conversation being had about #BlackLivesMatter, we need to make sure that this includes ALL Black lives, inclusive of the Black LGBT/SGL community. It is in this spirit that the National Black Justice Coalition calls to action the Black family to mobilize to end the HIV/AIDS epidemic in our country.

At the foundation of Black America is the Black family. The family is the core institution that builds our perspective as Black people on who we are and how we should operate in society. Revered theologian Dr. Howard Thurman put it best: “It is the family that gives us a deep private sense of belonging. Here we first have ourselves defined for us.”

Key to this movement is the elimination of stigma around HIV/AIDS in Black America, which places many of our family members at-risk affecting whether they seek and are able to receive health services, including HIV testing, treatment and other prevention services. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. eloquently stated, “Of all the forms of inequality, injustice in health care is the most shocking and inhumane.” As such, Black America, made up of family and community, has a responsibility to speak truth to power and fight the forces that contribute to Black people being disproportionately impacted by the HIV/AIDS epidemic. We all share in this opportunity to make a positive difference in the fight against the epidemic by being present in the health care decisions of our loved ones. We must build affirming and loving spaces where we all are able to thrive no matter our differences. As the African proverb states: “It takes a village to raise a child.”

At NBJC, we know it will take a village, including supportive Black families, to end the HIV/AIDS epidemic in the Black community.

Sharon J. Lettman-Hicks serves as the Executive Director and Chief Executive Officer of the National Black Justice Coalition (NBJC), a national civil rights organization dedicated to empowering black LGBT people. NBJC’s mission is to end racism and homophobia. As America’s leading national black LGBT civil rights organization focused on federal public policy, NBJC has accepted the charge to lead black families in strengthening the bonds and bridging the gaps between the movements for racial justice and LGBT equality. For more information about NBJC, visit nbjc.org.

www.huffingtonpost.com/sharon-j-lettmanhicks/a-black-family-call-to-action_b_6246442.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

Elton John Reveals The Reason For His Controversial Relationship With Rush Limbaugh

Elton John Reveals The Reason For His Controversial Relationship With Rush Limbaugh

rush3_1695329cI’ve been sober for 24 years now, and one of the best lessons it taught me is to listen. When it comes to people like Rush Limbaugh, or people who might enrage you sometimes, dialogue is the only way. You have to reach out. Whether you make an impact in one year or 30 years, it doesn’t matter. You have to put your foot in the water and start the process. Better to build a bridge than a wall.”

Elton John in a wide-ranging interview with the New York Times

Jeremy Kinser

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12 Insanely Tacky Gay Decorations To Make Your Christmas More Mary

12 Insanely Tacky Gay Decorations To Make Your Christmas More Mary

OK, now that we’re just about through with Thanksgiving, it’s finally an appropriate time to talk about Christmas. Break out the wreaths and lights and baubles and whatnot!

While many gays have a decorator’s eye, other gay households … how to put this nicely … don’t exactly have a style queen at the ready. And that’s OK! We can’t all be Martha Stewart. If you don’t have a knack for decorating, all you have to do is commit to going as tacky and hideous as possible.

We’ve rounded up some inspiration for you below, starting with James and Sebastian, who have decided to go with a rainbow motif this year. When you’re done using it under your tree, you can fashion it into a hoop skirt and wear it to the spring cotillion.rainbow skirt

 

We’re going to have to balk at any ornament that involves putting the word “sex” all over a Christmas tree.

sex city

 

 

We can’t hate this testacle-ornament too much, since it’s designed to raise awareness of testicular cancer. So, OK, fine. We’re aware. We don’t know what good it does for us to be reminded of cancer every time we look at a Christmas tree, but anyway, mission accomplished. Maybe you can invite all your friends over and do a self-check together while sipping cocoa.

bauballs

 

Albinism can strike anyone, even trees. Be sure to pair your ghostly apparition with a topless painting of a woman who sort of resembles Rita Moreno.

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If you’re going to decorate homosexually, you can either go big or go home. We actually love what the Homorazzi team has done here, slathering a gingerbread house with so much glitz and noise that it’s become completely inedible and a little threatening, just like Lady Gaga herself. What could be more appetizing than a gingerbread lady with actual hair? And the meatroof is a perfect touch. The chimney appears to have caught on fire.

homorazzi-christmas-team2-a

 

Oh, look, it’s a tree made of Pepto-Bismol.

pink tree

 

Just the thing for the man in your life who adores both football and The Little Mermaid. It’s a difficult sport to play under the sea, and the Homecoming bonfire is always a bust, but this jock perseveres.

gay-football-star6

 

Two men cavort next to what appears to be a snowman made of sand. One of them is raising his taint so that he may express an anal gland to scent-mark his work. This is how gay men communicate.

sandman

 

Not quite sure what’s going on with this one. It appears to be two bald Mister Cleans in an apocalyptic hellscape, or possibly World 8 of a Mario Bros game. One of them is about ot knee the other in the groin.

christmas

Here’s a tasteful holiday wreath. Nothing unseemly here, no sir. Dick the halls!

penis wreath

 

You can also wear your hideous decor with pride, as did Fausto Fernós of Feast of Fun. He appears to be doing the robot, a traditional Christmas dance.

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But perhaps the most horrifying of the bunch is this: an original John Waters bauble, complete with dead cockroach. Happy holidays!

john waters oranament

matt baume

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Gay Marriage News Watch: MS, AR, FL, WY, MI – VIDEO

Gay Marriage News Watch: MS, AR, FL, WY, MI – VIDEO

Afer

AFER’s Matt Baume reports on federal judges striking down gay marriage bans in Mississippi and Arkansas, Florida refusing to issue drivers’ licenses to a couple after they legally married and changed their last name, and support for marriage equality skyrocketing in Wyoming.

Watch, AFTER THE JUMP

 


Kyler Geoffroy

www.towleroad.com/2014/12/gay-marriage-news-watch-ms-ar-fl-wy-mi-video.html

Once, When Gay Men Were Heroes

Once, When Gay Men Were Heroes

Queerty contributor Mark S. King posted this World AIDS Day remembrance on his blog My Fabulous Disease.

My brother Richard smiles a lot. He has an easy laugh. But there was a time, years ago, when he held a poisonous drink in his hands and begged his dying lover not to swallow it. A time when Richard held the concoction they had prepared together and wept.

Emil couldn’t wait. He took the drink from Richard quickly, because the release it offered was something more rapturous than the appeals of his lover of thirteen years.

DickEmil-300x195It was Emil’s wish to die on his own terms if living became unbearable, a promise made one to the other. When that time arrived, however, Richard wanted another moment, just a little more time to say, “I love you, Emil,” over and over again, before the drink would close Emil’s eyes and quietly kill him.

Richard has a charming store in my hometown today, where he sells collectibles and does theater in his free time. The drink was consumed over twenty years ago.

There were people who displayed remarkable courage then. People who lived and died by their promises and shared the intimacy of death, and then the world moved forward and grief subsided and lives moved on. But make no mistake, there are heroes among us right now.

There is a shy, friendly man at my gym. There was a time when his sick roommate deliberately overdosed after his father told him that people with unspeakable diseases will suffer in hell. My gym friend performed CPR for an hour before help arrived, but the body never heard a loving word again.

There is courage among us, astonishing courage, and we summoned it and survived. And then years passed. We got new jobs and changed gyms.

There was a time when old friends called to say goodbye, and by “goodbye” they meant forever. When all of us had a file folder marked “Memorial” that outlined how we wanted our service to be conducted. When people shot themselves and jumped off bridges after getting their test results.

There is profound, shocking sadness here, right here among us, but years went by and medicine got better and we found other lives to lead. Our sadness is a distant, dark dream.

My best friend Stephen just bought a new condo. He’s having a ball picking out furniture. But there was a time when he knew all the intensive care nurses by name. When a phone call late at night always meant someone had died. And just who, exactly, was anyone’s guess.

Stephen tested positive in the 1980s, shortly after I did. A few months after the devastating news, he agreed to facilitate a support group with me. We regularly saw men join the group, get sick and die, often within weeks.

Watching them disintegrate felt like a preview of coming attractions. But Stephen was remarkable, a reassuring presence to everyone, and worked with the group for more than a year despite the emotional toll and the high body count.

There is bravery here, still, living all around us. But the bravest time was many years ago, and times change and the yard needs landscaping and there’s a brunch tomorrow.

There was a time when I sat beside friends in their very last minutes of life, and I helped them relax, perhaps surrender, and told them comforting stories. And lied to them.

Jeremy lost his mind weeks before he died. Sometimes he had moments of sanity, when we could have a coherent conversation before his dementia engulfed him again. It was a time when you were given masks and gloves to visit friends in the hospital.

He was agitated with the business of dying, and told me he couldn’t bear to miss what might happen after he’d gone. I had an idea.

“I tell you what,” I offered, “I’m from the future, and I can tell you anything you would like to know.”

“OK then, what happens to my parents?” he asked. I thought it might be a distracting game, but Jeremy’s confused mind took it very seriously.

“They went to Hollywood and won big on a game show, so they never did need your support in their old age,” I answered. He barely took the time to enjoy this thought before his hand grabbed my wrist, tightly, almost frantically. He pulled me closer.

“When…” he began, and a mournful sob swelled inside him in an instant, his eyes begging for relief. “When does this end?” There was an awful, helpless silence. His eyes beckoned for a truth he could die believing.

“It does end,” I finally managed, although nothing suggested it would. “It ends, Jeremy, but not for a really long time.” He digested each word like a revelation, and slowly relaxed into sleep.

There is compassion here, enough for all the world’s deities and saints acting in concert. Infinite compassion for men who lived in fear and checked every spot when they showered for Kaposi sarcoma, and for disowned sons wasting away in the guest room of whoever had the space. But we get older, and friends don’t ask us to hold their hand when they stop breathing, and the fear fades and I bought new leather loafers and the White Party is coming.

Mark TV 1987The truth is simply this, and no one will convince me otherwise: My most courageous self, the best man that I’ll ever be, lived more than two decades ago during the first years of a horrific plague.

He worked relentlessly alongside a million others who had no choice but to act. He secretly prayed to survive, even above the lives of others, and his horrible prayer was answered with the death of nearly everyone close to him.

To say I miss that brutal decade would only be partially true. I miss the man I was forced to become, when an entire community abandoned tea dances for town hall meetings, when I learned to offer help to those facing what terrified me most.

Today, the lives of those of us who witnessed the horror have become relatively normal again, perhaps mundane. We prefer it. We have new lives in a world that isn’t choking on disease.

But once, there was a time when we were heroes.

Mark

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