PHOTOS: Toronto Shows Off Its Pride
As with many of the Pride parades this year, the rain only made Toronto’s parade more fun, cooler, and more photogenic.
Christopher Harrity
www.advocate.com/pride/2015/07/04/photos-toronto-shows-its-pride
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PHOTOS: Toronto Shows Off Its Pride
As with many of the Pride parades this year, the rain only made Toronto’s parade more fun, cooler, and more photogenic.
Christopher Harrity
www.advocate.com/pride/2015/07/04/photos-toronto-shows-its-pride
Polyamorous Attorney Agrees SCOTUS Decision Could Lead To Group Marriage
One of the conservative right’s favorite arguments against legalized same-sex marriage nationwide is that it’s a slippery slope that could lead to polygamy — and if you’re Justice Anthony Scalia or Ben Carson, it could even lead to beastiality. Others argue that drawing a connection between gay marriage and plural marriage is both an irrelevant and unfounded argument. However, one attorney argued on HuffPost Live on earlier this week that polygamy could have legal precedent.
Andy Izenson, an attorney with Diana Adams Law and Mediation who also identifies as polyamorous, explained to host Nancy Redd that the same legal reasoning to protect same-sex marriage under the 14th Amendment “could plausibly” be extended to protect group marriages, presuming it’s consensual.
“The idea that a three-person or four-person union between consenting adults is not fundamentally different from a two-person union between consenting adults is absolutely legit,” Izenson said.
But she added that the conservative “slippery slope” rhetoric that somehow leads to “beastiality and then people marrying their toasters” is baseless because it negates the need for consent. Izenson said Scalia invokes these presumptions as a means of scaring people because he’s perturbed by the country’s current socio-political climate.
“He’s just trying to scare people. It’s not actually a thing to be concerned about. It discounts the fact that as individuals, and as a society, we actually have the capacity to make rational reasoned choices about what we do,” she said, later adding, “But as long as you’ve got a consensual union between adults who know what they’re doing, then I think the logic is sound.”
Watch the full HuffPost Live conversation about marriage law here.
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Mormon church makes first ever donation to LGBTI charity
The Church of Jesus Chris of Latter-Day Saints donated for the first time ever to an LGBTI charity in Salt Lake City, Utah.
As reported on Thursday in a local news source, the Church donated $2500 (€2250) to the Utah Pride Centre, a homeless and poor youth support centre. It cited the charity as a ‘worthy project’.
This represents a first step in building relations between the Mormon church and the gay community: the Church supported Proposition 8, the 2008 legislation to ban gay marriage in California. It was ruled unconstitutional.
The Utah Pride Centre provids food and counselling to around 40 homeless LGBTI people a week, as well as sex-safe kits and mental health support services.
‘We are grateful for their generosity and the emerging relationship’ Kent Frogley said, the chairman of the centre’s board of directors.
He added this was: ‘a significant moment’ in its relationship with the church.
‘I think it’s these first steps that really help us to understand each other, build some trust and realize that it’s possible for people who aren’t in complete sync in everything to be a force for good and to make positive change in the world.’
It is estimated the between 20 and 40% of homeless youth in America are LGBTI.
The post Mormon church makes first ever donation to LGBTI charity appeared first on Gay Star News.
Jack Flanagan
www.gaystarnews.com/article/mormon-church-makes-first-ever-donation-to-lgbti-charity/
Recognizing LGBT Independence this Fourth of July

While each year we celebrate America’s independence with family and friends, this year we have something extra to celebrate.
HRC.org
Amber Heard: 'I Don’t Want to Have to Deny My Sexuality in Order to Be Me'
The bisexual actress says roles have been harder to come by since coming out.
Eliel Cruz
www.advocate.com/bisexuality/2015/07/04/amber-heard-i-don-t-want-have-deny-my-sexuality-order-be-me
Watch a gay Nigerian activist remember the moment he changed someone’s mind
The impact of a single person can be amazing.
Last week, the Bisi Alimi Foundation released a report which found acceptance of homosexuality increased 9% in Nigeria since 2010, but unacceptance is still high (86%).
In an interview with GLAAD, Bisi Alimi, a Nigerian activist and founder of the the foundation, tells his story as a gay Nigerian.
GLAAD’s Claire Pires asked Alimi if a moment really stood out for him in his career: one that ‘kept him going’.
He said there was. ‘There was one particular one in January last year, I had just finished an interview on CNN. It was on my birthday actually.
‘I was so exhausted. This is not the way I wanted to celebrate my birthday.
‘I got back home, and I went on Facebook and Twitter because I wanted to see what was going on.
‘I’d got a message from a middle-aged woman, who said: “I just watched you on TV. Thank you so much for…’ Bisi then paused to stop himself from crying.
The woman’s message said she’d thrown her son out after catching him with another man.
But she testified she loved him and ‘wanted the best for him.’
Alimi called her and told her took for her son. His parents kicked him out after he came out, and he never got over it. He said: ‘They will never get the son they kicked out’; alluding to the irreparable damage rejection creates.
‘I will never forget that at a very confused time in my life, they kicked me out.’
The mother took his advice, and is now a very active member of his fan club on Facebook.
‘For me, there is one other man, one other man out there, and I need to get across to that person.’
Regarding the survey results, Alimi says: ‘I feel really proud of my country.’
There will be a Twitter chat today with the Bisi Alimi Foundation, as well as two other activist groups in Nigeria, at 12pm EST (4pm GMT).
Watch Alimi’s story below:
The post Watch a gay Nigerian activist remember the moment he changed someone’s mind appeared first on Gay Star News.
Jack Flanagan
PHOTOS: Big Daddies Keep Naughty Go-Go Boys In Check
Legendary cub promoters the Boulet Brothers hosted Big Daddy’s at Precinct, Downtown L.A.’s brand spankin’ new gay bar. Tattooed daddies kept the randy go-go boys in check, while DJs and drag queens kept the party raging well into the early hours of the morn.
Scroll down for some pictures of the night, and see the full gallery over at GayCities…
Photo credit: Rolling Blackouts
Graham Gremore
First openly gay Texas legislator files ethics complaint against AG over same-sex marriage ruling stance
Former state Rep. Glen Maxey, the Texas Democratic Party’s county affairs director and the first openly gay legislator in Texas, on Friday filed a complaint against Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton with the State Bar over the latter’s insistence on defying the US Supreme Court’s ruling that legalized same-sex marriage nationwide.
Following the ruling, Paxton issued a statement telling Texas county clerks they can decline to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples if it violated their religious beliefs.
Although he warned that they could face lawsuits, he promised that ‘numerous lawyers stand ready to assist clerks defending their religious beliefs, in many cases on a pro-bono basis.’
He added, ‘I will do everything I can from this office to be a public voice for those standing in defense of their rights.’
Maxey said in a prepared statement, ‘It’s irresponsible for an elected official — and a lawyer — to tell other elected officials to break the law.’
‘He’s misleading county and state officials based on a false premise that they can discriminate against same-sex couples. This past Friday, the Supreme Court was clear with their decision to let same-sex couple marry. Paxton took an oath to defend and protect the constitution, he must comply with the court’s decision. Paxton is no stranger to shady business. This just gives us another reason to question his legitimacy as a Texas Attorney General, lawyer, and trustworthy individual,’ the Dallas Morning News reported Maxey as saying in a statement.
150 Texas attorneys signs letter threatening to file complaint against Texas AG for denying same-sex couples marriage licenses
Some 150 attorneys in Texas have also signed a letter threatening to file a complaint with the State Bar of Texas against Paxton.
Rockport attorney Stever Fischer, a former director of the State Bar of Texas, and Brian Bouffard, a Fort Worth military and criminal defense attorney who collected the signatures said Paxton ‘has violated several sections of the Texas Rules of Disciplinary Conduct by encouraging state employees in their non-compliance with the United States Supreme Court.’
Fischer also told the Dallas Morning News that he believes Maxey, who is not an attorney, may have acted too soon as they wanted to give Paxton a chance to reconsider.
The post First openly gay Texas legislator files ethics complaint against AG over same-sex marriage ruling stance appeared first on Gay Star News.
Sylvia Tan
Hillary Clinton to gay teen unsure of his future: ‘Your future will be amazing’
Democrat presidential candidate Hillary Clinton’s encouraging words to a gay teen on Facebook has gone viral since it was posted on Friday.
Photographer Brandon Stanton posted a photograph of a young unnamed male teenager to his wildly popular Humans of New York Facebook page which has over 13 million likes.
The teen was quoted as saying, ‘I’m a homosexual and I’m afraid about what my future will be and that people won’t like me.’
The post has garnered over 350,000 likes and 30,000 shares.
Using her official Clinton campaign account, the former US Secretary of State posted her comment which read, ‘Prediction from a grown-up: Your future is going to be amazing. You will surprise yourself with what you’re capable of and the incredible things you go on to do. Find the people who love and believe in you – there will be lots of them. –H’
The message was signed ‘-H’ to indicate that she had written the post herself.
Her comment along with the original post was also shared on Twitter by Kristina Schake, deputy communications director for the Hillary for America campaign.
The post of the gay teen was reportedly removed by Facebook, according to Jezebel.com.
Stanton reportedly posted a message saying his privileges to upload photos to the page were temporarily removed.
‘Seems that Facebook removed the young man’s brave statement and is now preventing me from uploading any further photos. I’m hoping it was a mistake. It is currently still on Instagram and I’m trying to figure out how to get it back up,’ he said.
The post Hillary Clinton to gay teen unsure of his future: ‘Your future will be amazing’ appeared first on Gay Star News.
Sylvia Tan
11 Religious Americans Who Fought For Freedom
The Fourth of July commemorates the United States declaring its independence from Britain, but the Revolutionary War did not win freedom for all Americans. The 10 activists and religious leaders below are just a handful of people throughout American history who spent their lives working to extend freedom to all. The liberty to worship, vote, love and pursue happiness are rights that had to be fought for and won — and we are by no means done with the struggle.
As we celebrate the Fourth of July this year, we honor the fearless individuals who turned to faith to advocate for freedom for all people.
Although born in England in 1603, Roger Williams lived almost his entire adult life in the American colonies. A deeply spiritual man who started the first Baptist church in America in 1638, he founded the colony of Providence Plantation on the premise of religious freedom, envisioning it as a refuge for religious minorities.
Williams may have been partly inspired by his close relationship with New England Native Americans, having learned the Algonquin language and engaged in trade with the Narragansett and the Wampanoag tribes. A staunch advocate for Native American land rights, Williams believed that there were no inherent differences between Native Americans and Englishmen, and that all should be respected and treated as equals.
Richard Allen was born a slave in Philadelphia in 1760. He became a Christian at the age of 17 after hearing a white Methodist minister preach against slavery. The experience was so powerful that he later wrote, “My dungeon shook, my chains flew off, and glory to God, I cried. My soul was filled.” He purchased his freedom for $2,000 and started preaching to white and black congregants in South Carolina, New York, Maryland, Delaware and Pennsylvania. He became an assistant minister at St. George’s Methodist Episcopal Church in Pennsylvania. It was a racially mixed congregation, but discrimination still persisted. As more black converts were drawn to the church by Allen’s preaching, the white ministers and parishioners of the church began to act with hostility toward them — at one point pulling praying members off their knees in the middle of a service.
With the help of other leaders in the community, Allen raised the funds needed to purchase a plot of land so that black Methodists could worship freely. That congregation, now known as Mother Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church, became the mother church of the first independent black denomination in America.
It is hard to imagine there was a time in American history when women were not free to vote, and couldn’t even do what they wished with their own property. Lucretia Mott, born in 1793, was among the brave Americans who fought for women’s rights, drawing from her Quaker faith to argue that all people are created equal in the eyes of God. Mott was one of five women who organized the landmark Seneca Falls Convention in 1848, which drew roughly 300 people to address the need for women’s civil rights.
In addition to her role in the women’s rights movement, Mott spent much of her life fighting for abolition, and in 1833 organized the Philadelphia Female Anti-Slavery Society with roughly 30 other women. Mott did not live long enough to see women win the right to vote in America, and she was already in her 70s when slavery ended in this country. But her efforts set a precedent for religiously inspired civil rights activism that would resonate for generations to come.
Sojourner Truth is best known for being one of the most prominent 19th century leaders fighting against slavery and fighting for women’s rights and human rights. She fought for freedom for all people because she herself was born a slave and did not experience freedom until she was 30 years old. Truth was a deeply spiritual person, having experienced a vision of Jesus that inspired her to become a preacher. In her iconic “Ain’t I A Woman” speech at the 1851 Women’s Rights Convention in Akron, Ohio, Truth used her faith to argue for women’s equality, saying:
“That little man in black there, he says women can’t have as much rights as men, ’cause Christ wasn’t a woman! Where did your Christ come from? Where did your Christ come from? From God and a woman! Man had nothing to do with Him.”
Sitting Bull, also known as Tatanka-Iyotanka, was a Hunkpapa Lakota chief and a holy man who bravely fought to preserve his people’s way of life, despite facing hostility from the United States government. The Fort Laramie Treaty of 1868 officially prevented whites from settling the Black Hills of Dakota Territory, which many Native American tribes considered sacred. But the treaty was set aside after gold was discovered in the area. Fortune seekers began rushing in, and the government attempted to purchase the land. When the tribes refused to give up their sacred space, the government demanded that all Lakota in the area resettle into reservations.
True to his name, Sitting Bull wouldn’t budge. Instead, he called neighboring tribes to his camp and led them in a sun dance ritual dedicated to the Great Spirit. It was during this ritual that he saw a vision predicting that he would triumph over the white soldiers. Sitting Bull went on to wipe out Gen. George Custer’s troops during the Battle of Little Bighorn in 1876. It would take several more years before the chief surrendered to the U.S. Even then, he did so begrudgingly, saying, “I wish it to be remembered that I was the last man of my tribe to surrender my rifle.”
Dalip Singh Saund was the first South Asian American elected to Congress. Born in 1899 to a Sikh Indian family, Saund came to America in 1920 to study at the University of California. He reportedly removed his turban soon afterwards, but stayed deeply connected to his religion. In his autobiography, he wrote, “My religion teaches me that love and service to fellow men are the road to earthly bliss and spiritual salvation.”
For years, he was frustrated by the fact that his ethnicity barred him from becoming an American citizen. He organized a coalition to fight against this rule, which eventually led to the Luce-Celler Act of 1946 and opened citizenship up to immigrants of South Asian descent. In 1949, Saund become a citizen himself. Soon after, he was elected as a local judge. He went on to serve three terms in the U.S. House of Representatives.
Human rights activism was deeply embedded in the life, history and spiritual philosophy of Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel. Born in Warsaw, Poland in 1907, Heschel lived through the rise of the Nazis and narrowly escaped the horrors of the Holocaust by fleeing to London in 1939 and later arriving in New York City. By the time he entered the Civil Rights movement, Heschel had already established himself as a professor of ethics and Jewish mysticism and had what his daughter, Susanna Heschel, called “a heightened sensitivity to the suffering of all people.”
After marching alongside Martin Luther King Jr. at the 1965 Selma march, Heschel famously remarked: “Even without words, our march was worship. I felt my legs were praying.” Fighting for the rights of all people — as he did in the Civil Rights and anti-war movements — was a key component of Heschel’s faith. As his daughter Susanna wrote: “He said [the Selma march] reminded him of the message of the prophets, whose primary concern was social injustice, and of his Hasidic forebears, for whom compassion for the suffering of other people defined a religious person.”
Yuri Kochiyama was a visionary whose activism crossed racial boundaries. Born in 1921, Kochiyama lived a typical suburban American life, excelling in high school and becoming a Sunday school teacher at a California church. Her political awakening came during World War II, when she was sent to an internment camp with her family. Kochiyama spent the rest of her life fighting for the rights of poor blacks, Latinos and Asian Americans. She campaigned against the Vietnam War and advocated for the rights of prison inmates.
Activist Deepa Iyer wrote that Kochiyama’s “life and legacy is a reminder to Asian Americans and to all those who believe in social justice, of a basic value: To show up whenever and wherever injustice occurs and to engage in acts of resistance and solidarity.”
Born in Omaha, Nebraska, in 1925, Malcolm X emerged as a prominent leader of the Nation of Islam, promoting black nationalism and challenging racial integration as the goal of the Civil Rights movement. He broke from the Nation of Islam in 1964 but remained committed to religious life as a vehicle for human rights activism. While on the hajj pilgrimage in Mecca, he wrote a letter remarking on the “spirit of true brotherhood” he had witnessed.
“There were tens of thousands of pilgrims, from all over the world,” he wrote. “They were of all colors, from blue-eyed blondes to black-skinned Africans. But we were all participating in the same ritual, displaying a spirit of unity and brotherhood that my experiences in America had led me to believe never could exist between the white and non-white.”
Malcolm had a deep compassion for humanity that carried him around the country preaching equality, his daughter Ilyasah Shabazz wrote. He was just 39 years old when he was assassinated in 1965.
Civil rights leader and preacher Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. had a dream — not only that black Americans would be granted full equality but that all people, regardless of race, religion or creed, would have the right to life and liberty. King is perhaps best known for promoting nonviolence and peaceful resistance as avenues for human rights activism, frequently putting his own life on the line by demonstrating, organizing and speaking out against bigotry and discrimination.
“Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere,” King famously said in his 1963 Letter from a Birmingham Jail. “We are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly.”
In 1964 at just 35 years old, King became the youngest person at the time to win the Nobel Peace Prize. In his acceptance speech, he championed “unarmed truth and unconditional love” as the ultimate victors in history. King was assassinated in 1968 at the age of 39.
Rev. Mineo Katagiri was a United Church of Christ minister who fought for minority rights. He was born in Hawaii to parents of Japanese ancestry, and experienced discrimination during World War II. After moving to Seattle in 1959, he acted as an advocate and defender of the city’s gay community. He later founded the Asian Coalition for Equality, which brought Asian Americans together to campaign against intolerance and joined with African Americans who were also seeking equality.
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