Category Archives: NEWS

News: Jim Webb, Donald Trump, California’s ‘Kill the Gays’ Bill, Disney Princes

News: Jim Webb, Donald Trump, California’s ‘Kill the Gays’ Bill, Disney Princes

CI8ZNfnUMAAFpbF> US demands extradition of 7 FIFA officials as part of its sweeping probe on corruption at the organization.

> Matt Damon has a ponytail now.

> Former Virginia Senator Jim Webb announces he will be running for the Democratic Party’s nomination for President. 

> Tom Cruise rumored to be leaving Scientology.

batman-vs-superman-01> 7 simple tips for a successful Christian marriage according to the Bible. 

> Hillary Clinton’s emails signal that she fought for LGBT rights behind the scenes before her famous 2011 “Gay rights are human rights” speech. 

> Joy is dead. Meet the bubble wrap that doesn’t pop. 

> First look at Batman v. Superman: Dawn of Justice.

> NYC reviewing its contracts with Donald Trump. Serta cancels its partnership with the GOP hopeful. Ricky Martin pulls his charity event from a Trump golf course. And America Ferrera thanks Trump.

> Marisa Tomei is coming to Empire season 2.

> Ranking churches based on their acceptance of homosexuality.

> That time when Nixon was drunk during the middle of the Arab-Israeli war.

CI8l4CFUsAAGwpz> US Navy to hold first west coast LGBT Pride event. 

> California Attorney General Kamala Harris shoots down proposed “Kill the Gays” bill once again. 

> Rihanna slays in new music video, “B*tch Better Have My Money.”

> If Disney princes were Magic Mike strippers.

The post News: Jim Webb, Donald Trump, California’s ‘Kill the Gays’ Bill, Disney Princes appeared first on Towleroad.


Sean Mandell

News: Jim Webb, Donald Trump, California’s ‘Kill the Gays’ Bill, Disney Princes

Bobby Jindal Gives Up Last Stand Against Gay Marriage Licenses In Louisiana

Bobby Jindal Gives Up Last Stand Against Gay Marriage Licenses In Louisiana
Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal (R) has been relentlessly resisting the Supreme Court’s historic decision that made same-sex marriage legal in every state. On Thursday, the federal trial court in New Orleans released a ruling that ended Jindal’s nearly weeklong effort to hold out.

U.S. District Judge Martin Feldman officially struck down the state’s same-sex marriage ban and directed all state agencies in Louisiana to recognize gay marriage, the New Orleans Times-Picayune reports. Jindal’s administration finally relented and agreed to abide by the ruling.

While most of the remaining states with gay marriage bans immediately began issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples last Friday, the day of the Supreme Court ruling, state officials in Louisiana looked for ways to postpone the inevitable.

Jindal himself took a particularly extreme stance. Last Friday, the 2016 presidential hopeful denounced the Supreme Court and suggested it would be better to just disband the nation’s highest court.

“The Supreme Court is completely out of control, making laws on their own, and has become a public opinion poll instead of a judicial body,” Jindal said. “If we want to save some money, let’s just get rid of the court.”

Louisiana Attorney General Buddy Caldwell (R) meanwhile said that because the Supreme Court’s June 26 ruling did not directly order states to begin issuing marriage licenses to gay couples, “there is not yet a legal requirement for officials to issue marriage licenses or perform marriages for same-sex couples in Louisiana.” Local court clerks were instructed to hold off for 25 days. Clerks across Louisiana issued licenses anyway, except in New Orleans. In the state’s largest city, a state agency, which reports to Jindal, has control over marriage licenses.

Jindal argued that he wanted to wait until a lower court applied the Supreme Court’s decision to Louisiana. On Wednesday, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit formally overturned Louisiana’s gay marriage ban, seemingly giving Jindal the go-ahead.

But the governor persisted in his stall, releasing a statement indicating that he would wait for a ruling from the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana. When that court said this means you on Thursday, Jindal had no choice but to give up his resistance.

— 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.

feeds.huffingtonpost.com/c/35496/f/677065/s/47cabac4/sc/7/l/0L0Shuffingtonpost0N0C20A150C0A70C0A20Cbobby0Ejindal0Emarriage0Eequality0In0I77180A880Bhtml0Dutm0Ihp0Iref0Fgay0Evoices0Gir0FGay0KVoices/story01.htm

Hood County, Texas Still Not Issuing Same-Sex Marriage Licenses as Anti-Gay Hate Spikes – VIDEO

Hood County, Texas Still Not Issuing Same-Sex Marriage Licenses as Anti-Gay Hate Spikes – VIDEO

Screen Shot 2015-07-02 at 4.49.05 PM

Earlier this week, we told you how Katie Lang, the clerk of Hood County, Texas, said she would finally begin issuing same-sex marriage licenses after previously attempting to claim a religious exemption.

Screen Shot 2015-07-02 at 5.46.55 PMAs it turns out, Lang (right) still has not done so, and she says it may take weeks before the county can update the necessary forms.

On Thursday, Texas Values President Jonathan Saenz (above), whose ex-wife left him for a woman, organized an anti-gay hate rally outside the Hood County Courthouse. Based on photos from the rally, attendance was rather underwhelming. Meanwhile, a gay couple of 27 years who’ve been trying to obtain a marriage license in Hood County told reporters they plan to file a lawsuit next week if they don’t receive one before then.

The Star-Telegram of Fort Worth reports:

Jim Cato and Joe Stapleton just want to get married.

But the two men haven’t been able to get a license from the Hood County Clerk’s office despite asking nearly every day since last week’s Supreme Court ruling legalized their pending union. …

On one side of the courthouse, Cato and Stapleton told the crowd that their attorney is sending a letter to Lang …

On the other side of the courthouse, dozens of people gathered to show their support for Lang and for religious freedom.

Lang didn’t attend the rally, and Saenz claims it was out of concern for her safety. Saenz later issued this statement:

“On the eve of our Independence Day, the Texas and American values of religious freedom and personal liberty are just as important now and as they ever have been. We will not stand by and watch as LGBT radicals try to destroy the guarantees of the First Amendment of our Constitution and ruin the personal lives of Texans who support marriage between one man and one woman. We will not be silent. We will proudly rise up with the timeless colors of red, white and blue as our backdrop, for God and country.”

More from The Dallas Morning News:

As a result, two attorneys from Austin are on their way to Granbury at this very moment. They want just one thing: for the clerk’s office to issue a marriage license for their clients, Jim Cato and Joe Stapleton, who have been waiting to marry for 27 years. If they do not get one, says attorney Jan Soifer, she and attorney Austin Kaplan will sue the Hood County Clerk’s office first thing Monday morning.

“After [Lang] changed her tune Tuesday, my clients gave her a day and waited till this morning to get their license,” says Soifer. “They said, ‘No, no, no, it will take three weeks.’ They said, ‘We’re not ready to do it, we don’t have the forms ready.’ We sent them the link to the website with the form they are supposed to use. It’s posted. It’s available to them. We know 205 other counties in Texas have already been issuing them.”

Also this week, WFAA-TV reported that Hood County residents are attempting to get the LGBT-themed children’s books “My Princess Boy” and “This Day in June” removed from the public library in Granbury, the county seat.

Screen Shot 2015-07-02 at 5.21.22 PMLibrary Director Courtney Kincaid (right) is defending the books, and the board voted to keep them, but more than 50 residents have signed “challenge forms” after a parent raised concerns and took them to City Councilwoman Rose Myers, who has since posted a longer statement about the issue on Facebook. Now, the Hood County Commission is set to consider the issue later this month.

From WFAA:

The challenge forms are filled with comments questioning why the books are in the children’s section. Other submitters indicate the books should be banned outright because they promote “perversion” and the “gay lifestyle.”

Granbury City Council member Rose Myers said she was approached by a constituent a few weeks ago that raised concerns about the placement of the books.

She said in a statement provided to News 8:

“My decision to sign a protest regarding the book My Princess Boy was clearly based on the fact that if the library would not move the books and keep them in an appropriate location, then they should be removed […] Can a four year old understand the content of this book without the help of an adult? In my opinion, No!”

John Wright

Hood County, Texas Still Not Issuing Same-Sex Marriage Licenses as Anti-Gay Hate Spikes – VIDEO

The Hypocrisy of 'Religious Freedom'

The Hypocrisy of 'Religious Freedom'
It’s not freedom when you are advocating taking away the liberty and rights of other human beings. It is not religious, especially not “Christian,” to be intolerant and bigoted against your fellow citizens.

And while I admire Kirsten Powers for being a reasonable and at times progressive voice at Fox News (and calling out Bill O’Reilly on his show for his stance about racism not being a substantial problem in our society), I have to disagree with her premise in her recent book, The Silencing: How the Left is Killing Free Speech. We are not killing free speech, only calling out hate speech.

As a member of the LGBT community, I can say we are not silencing the religious right, but standing up for our own God-given rights. Having grown up a gay American in the 1950s and ’60s, I can tell you that silencing is what was done to us in those decades. It has been said that “a child should be seen and not heard.” We were taught to be neither. We lived in the shadows, hiding our imposed societal shame, leading secret lives that we hoped no one would find out about.

Looking back, I forgive myself for not being more open and true to myself. I was bombarded by school, friends, family and my Baptist church with a silent, deadly belief that who I was deep down inside was sinful and perverse.

After all, as Brian McNaught so deftly points out in his book, Growing Up Gay and Lesbian, we didn’t have any role models to look up to then. Ellen hadn’t come out yet. It was before Stonewall. There were no gay characters in the movies, or if there were they were portrayed as losers.

They first gay film I remembered watching on TV as a teen was 1961’s “The Children’s Hour.” Based on the play by Lillian Hellman, it starred Shirley McClaine and Audrey Hepburn as friends who owned and ran an all-girls’ boarding school. One of the residents started a rumor that Audrey and Shirley were intimately involved and it ruined them and their reputations and forced the school to close. Turns out that Shirley’s character really was a lesbian and she ended up committing suicide in the end. Although, this film touched me deeply inside (I think seeing a woman profess her romantic feelings of love to another woman stirred something in me), it was hardly a movie that would make one want to come out of the closet.

As McNaught points out in his book, we had no one to turn to discuss our attractions growing up. Not the school teachers nor administrators, not the Church leaders, not even our own parents. If a child of a different race or ethnicity got bullied they could go to their parents for sympathy. But if a gay kid did that the parent might ask: “Why were you called a queer?” And they may not really want to hear the answer to that.

Indeed, there is an old joke that goes: “Which is easier, being black or being gay? Black, because you don’t have to tell your parents.”

As for racial relations in the ’50s and ’60s, there was a term called “separate but equal.” Problem was it was segregation with inequality. But at that time, African Americans had an identity. They had separate bathrooms, movies, radio programs, TV shows, music, Negro baseball league, and Armed Forces battalions. They had their own culture and still do to this day. Homosexuals were invisible.

I remember certain clues I was given growing up that were meant to guide me into a “normal” heterosexual lifestyle. When I was in the fifth grade, I shared with my mom that I really liked a fourth grade girl who was a piano prodigy. She gently reminded me “you mean you admire her.”

When I was around twelve years old I had a best friend from the church that I hung around with at the community pool. Driving home with my whole family in the car, my older sister said “I couldn’t believe Joan and Courtney were holding hands at the pool.” This shocked me because for the first time I had to question an innocent gesture of affection I showed to a close friend.

My dad used to tell us he always considered homosexuals deviants who would were looked down upon in the military. Happily, my parents and siblings evolved on the issue and continued to love me when I came out to them at the age of 29. I know other gays were not as lucky as me in that regard.

I knew no gays in high school (this was before the gay/straight alliances), nor college, nor even graduate school.

As McNaught writes, back in the day, you couldn’t even go to the library and find any books on Homosexuality (this was before the Internet.)

And the Baptist Church, though I loved the people and the Pastor there, scared me the most into staying in the closet. I remember in a pre-teen Sunday School class we were given a booklet that described homosexuality as an addiction or disease. There were pictures of deformed couples holding hands and the pamphlet said that most homosexuals do not want to be that way and presented it as a choice. Basically, I was taught by the church that it was a crime against God and nature.

I was creeped out by the whole thing and the indoctrination worked as I decided then and there I didn’t want to go down that path even though I really liked the piano prodigy and loved my friend from church and had a crush on my gym teacher in Junior High school. I didn’t want to go to Hell.

In essence, I stuffed my emotions and attractions and tried to fit in. I dated guys but had enough sense to never get married even when presented with an engagement ring. I drank too much in college, I think because I was so conflicted and finally came out to myself after I moved to California (for a music gig in the San Jose Symphony) in the late ’70s.

It was easier to declare being gay in California than the East coast in those days. It is remarkable how the country has changed through the years and now gay marriage is a reality in many states and may soon be legal in the nation.

I believe the Internet and TV and movies and the current administration have influenced this new generation to come out with pride. Intolerance is quickly becoming passé and that’s a good thing.

But we must not forget our history and the sacrifices my generation made to allow this to happen. Stonewall, the gay rights movement, Harvey Milk, PFLAG, and the fight against AIDS and DADT and DOMA all contributed to lay the foundation for our finally being given our basic human rights.

Some in the religious right want to cling to “traditional” values and view our liberation as an abomination. Unfortunately, that is the same thinking I was indoctrinated into as a young teen in my Baptist church. Apparently, not all have evolved on the issue. I say we will no longer be shamed or silenced.

Coming out to me was a mental, physical, and yes, spiritual process. For a number of years in the late ’90s, I was a member of a Metropolitan Community church that was founded for LGBT folks and their straight allies. It brought me back to my faith and made me realize that I am gay by God. And no so-called “Religious Freedom” can take that away from me. Our ancestors escaped persecution to achieve true religious freedom in the new world. This included the right to worship and I do not see the gay movement as taking this away from anyone.

Rather, LGBT people want what past generations came to this country for: the right to marry, have and adopt children, worship as we please, serve in the military, equal job opportunities, protection from persecution in the workplace, and the pursuit of happiness.

The genie is out of the bottle and we can never go back to being invisible again.

— 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.

feeds.huffingtonpost.com/c/35496/f/677065/s/47c9ed31/sc/7/l/0L0Shuffingtonpost0N0Cjoan0Ee0Edowlin0Cthe0Ehypocrisy0Eof0Ereligious0Efreedom0Ib0I76638240Bhtml0Dutm0Ihp0Iref0Fgay0Evoices0Gir0FGay0KVoices/story01.htm

Federal court orders Louisiana to issue same-sex marriage certificates in New Orleans

Federal court orders Louisiana to issue same-sex marriage certificates in New Orleans

Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal was handed a stinging defeat in his crusade against marriage equality.

Today, 2 July, the Eastern District Court of Louisiana ordered the Department of Vital Records, located in New Orleans, to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples.

According to the Times-Picayune, court clerks in the entire state have been processing paperwork for LGBTI families this entire week.

However, Orleans Parish is the only place in the state where a state agency, not a court clerk, is in charge of marriage certificates.

The Republican governor, who is  running for the White House, used his power to block Big Easy weddings. Same-ex couples who wanted to marry in New Orleans, were required to travel to nearby Algiers.

‘Today the Eastern District Court of Louisiana ordered the Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals to begin issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples who complete a marriage application at the Department’s Office of Vital Records in Orleans Parish,’ said Olivia Hwang, spokeswoman for the agency, according to the Times-Picayune.

While the federal court’s ruling ended Jindal’s machinations, he declined to comment.

‘This order directs the agencies to comply and all questions about processing benefits should be directed to them,’ Mike Reed, a spokesman for Jindal’s office, said to the Times-Picayune.

The post Federal court orders Louisiana to issue same-sex marriage certificates in New Orleans appeared first on Gay Star News.

James Withers

www.gaystarnews.com/article/federal-court-orders-louisiana-to-issue-same-sex-marriage-certificates-in-new-orleans/

10 Fun Facts About Christian Extremist Becky Wegner Rommel

10 Fun Facts About Christian Extremist Becky Wegner Rommel

Screen-shot-2015-07-01-at-11.11.09-AM-360x273When it comes to spewing nonsense, it seems Becky Wegner Rommel can dish it out, but she can’t always take it.

Yesterday, Queerty was the first to report on the 64-year-old Indiana housewife’s recorded meltdown over marriage equality. It included tears, screaming, yelling, crying for Jesus, and jabs at gays, gay-loving Christians, Muslims, women who have abortions, and, of course, President Obama.

Related: Christian Extremist Records Herself Imploding Over Marriage Equality In Must-See Video

After we posted the video, several other major media outlets picked up the story (some without attribution). And, just like that, Becky became either national laughing stock or a conservative heroine, depending on where you sit on the political scale.

Well today, Mrs. Rommel’s Facebook page (along with the fascinating video, unfortunately) has been deleted. And it appears she’s begun scrubbing the internet of her existence. Luckily, we were able to track her down on Instagram before she deleted that account, and it turns out, she’s quite a colorful character. She also might be a tad forgetful when it comes to the good book. For instance, chapter 19, verse 28 in the book of Leviticus (which is where most of the antigay folks find the scripture they twist and misinterpret) reads: “You shall not make any cuts on your body for the dead or tattoo yourselves: I am the Lord.” Lo and behold, Becky’s foot is sporting some stylish ink that might have led to her being stoned in days of yore. And don’t get us started on the hair…

Seriously, though, it might be fun to have a drink with her some time, but only in a gay bar of course. Upon inspection, we think she has more in common with gay men than she seems to think. Other than her political views, she’s really pretty fabulous.

Without any further ado, here are 10 things we learned about Becky Wegner Rommel from her now-defunct Instagram account…

1. She loves cats

10844088_1502228770058723_2003716218_n

2. She loves showing off her QVC jewelry

10691716_362425973920181_2099351204_n

3. She knows how to rock a denim vest and knee high boots in front of a fireplace

1171860_618203428229885_671222619_n

4. She makes great funny faces

10593532_1552182268343343_1129531112_n

5. Her husband has a cool porn ‘stache

10890971_278284285628893_223486747_n

6. She’s not a natural blonde

10401702_735206076539596_468019628_n

7. Did we mention she loves showing off her QVC jewelry?

11274357_1110184232330245_1649004373_n

8. She has a tattoo on her foot that says “Joy Unspeakable”

11333666_915176718544314_1674290690_n

9. When it comes to hair, bigger is better

11330736_1037432062955325_1078650949_n

10. This is the pillow she rests her head on every night

11265960_1444570845853131_206296905_n

Graham Gremore

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/GbPBwc8CSdM/10-fun-facts-about-chrisitian-extremist-becky-wegner-rommel-20150702

Did Southern Baptist Baylor University Just Sign Off On Gay Sex Among Students?

Did Southern Baptist Baylor University Just Sign Off On Gay Sex Among Students?

1422334817r-University-Logo2

Gay sex may no longer be explicitly prohibited at Baylor University, as long as the two people are married.

The Southern Baptist school in Waco, Texas, has removed “homosexual acts” from its misconduct policy. However, the policy still states that “physical sexual intimacy is to be expressed in the context of marital fidelity.”

It’s unclear whether the change comes in response to the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling in favor of same-sex marriage. From The Waco Herald-Tribune:

“These changes were made because we didn’t believe the language reflected the university’s caring community,” Baylor spokeswoman Lori Fogleman wrote in an email. “The university has a responsibility to articulate clearly and consistently Baylor’s commitment to its values as a Christian university.”

Fogleman would not elaborate on whether the policy opens the door for married same-sex couples at Baylor in light of the Supreme Court’s ruling knocking down bans on same-sex marriages.

Fugleman also told the newspaper that the policy change was part of a two-year review of all university policies. And she said the misconduct policy — which is now actually called the “conduct” policy — is to be “interpreted in a manner consistent with the Baptist Faith and Message of 1963,” which states:

Marriage is the uniting of one man and one woman in covenant commitment for a lifetime. It is Gods unique gift to reveal the union between Christ and His church, and to provide for the man and the woman in marriage the framework for intimate companionship, the channel for sexual expression according to biblical standards, and the means for procreation of the human race.

The husband and wife are of equal worth before God, since both are created in Gods image. The marriage relationship models the way God relates to His people. A husband is to love his wife as Christ loved the church. He has the God-given responsibility to provide for, to protect, and to lead his family. A wife is to submit herself graciously to the servant leadership of her husband even as the church willingly submits to the headship of Christ. She, being in the image of God as is her husband and thus equal to him, has the God-given responsibility to respect her husband and to serve as his helper in managing the household and nurturing the next generation.

Baylor also still has a Statement on Human Sexuality posted on its website, which says the following:

Baylor University welcomes all students into a safe and supportive environment in which to discuss and learn about a variety of issues, including those of human sexuality. The University affirms the biblical understanding of sexuality as a gift from God. Christian churches across the ages and around the world have affirmed purity in singleness and fidelity in marriage between a man and a woman as the biblical norm. Temptations to deviate from this norm include both heterosexual sex outside of marriage and homosexual behavior. It is thus expected that Baylor students will not participate in advocacy groups which promote understandings of sexuality that are contrary to biblical teaching

Nevertheless, a former student who fought to change the misconduct policy two years ago, Trenton Garza, says it’s a victory:

“In this case, they are applying things universally, to where it’s equal, it’s fair, and by removing anything that would enumerate one subset of students and could be used to subject them to any sort of negative feelings at Baylor,” said Garza, who now works in political and marketing consulting. …

“The fact that the university took the initiative to nix and replace the wording of the previous code and to establish this new policy, I think that is a sign of acknowledgement that the previous code was egregious or was (creating) a sense of separation among its students,” he said.

The post Did Southern Baptist Baylor University Just Sign Off On Gay Sex Among Students? appeared first on Towleroad.


John Wright

Did Southern Baptist Baylor University Just Sign Off On Gay Sex Among Students?