Dismissed: Federal Suit Against All Homosexuals
‘A federal court is not a forum for debate or discourse on theological matters,’ chided the judge.
Sunnivie Brydum
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Dismissed: Federal Suit Against All Homosexuals
‘A federal court is not a forum for debate or discourse on theological matters,’ chided the judge.
Sunnivie Brydum
Celebrating and Embracing All Students and Identities at Prom

Every year, millions of high school students across the country eagerly await prom.
HRC.org
The Ten Hottest, Weirdly Hottest, Or Just Plain Weird Moments From Cazwell’s “Downtown” Music Video
Cazwell’s just released a new video for his song “Downtown,” and it’s naturally packed with booze, boys and blunts. He enlisted help from a whole bevy of porn stars including Boomer Banks, Levi Karter, Liam Riley and Tayte Hansen to assist him in creating a low-lit underwear party.
Here are the ten hottest, weirdly hottest, or just plain weird moments:
Initial ass shot — hot.

Nearly naked pizza in bed — weirdly hot.
Human jockstrap coffee table — weirdly hot.
This lap dance — hot.
This other lap dance — hot.
Four handed massage — hot.
Silver on gold — hot.
“The overflower” — weirdly hot.
Undies + blunts — hot.
This gun-in-mouth moment — weird. Just weird.
Watch the video below:
Dan Tracer
Ben Carson Says Obama Can Ignore Pro-Equality SCOTUS Gay Marriage Ruling: VIDEO
Speaking with Newsmax TV earlier this week, retired neurosurgeon and 2016 presidential candidate Ben Carson once again proved how ill-equipped he would be to lead our nation, much less a middle school level social studies class.
“First of all, we have to understand how the Constitution works,” Carson explains before jumping into why President Obama is under no Constitutional obligation to follow the Supreme Court’s upcoming ruling on gay marriage.
Watch, AFTER THE JUMP…
[via Right Wing Watch]
Kyler Geoffroy
Op-ed: What Really Happens at GSAs
An out high school student explains why GSAs are indispensable and explains what happens when LGBT students and their straight supporters join forces.
Nick Wilkins
www.advocate.com/commentary/2015/05/07/op-ed-what-really-happens-gsas
Jimmy Kimmel Finds A Way To Reveal The New Middle Finger Emoji
He can’t show you the middle finger emoji but he can show you these upside-down ice cream bar emoji!
On “Jimmy Kimmel Live” this week, Jimmy revealed Microsoft’s new middle finger emoji that will be released with Windows 10. Kimmel’s standards and practices people wouldn’t allow him to show the actual middle fingers, but Jimmy found a way to get around that.
The middle finger emoji come in six different skin colors, leading Kimmel to point out that “finally, Dr. Martin Luther King’s dream has been realized.”
“Jimmy Kimmel Live” airs weeknights at 11:35 p.m. ET on ABC.
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Moms Fight for Their Family in Mississippi
Belle Goes to 'WeHo' in Todrick Hall's New Brilliant 'Beauty and the Beast' Musical Parody: VIDEO
Set around West Hollywood’s gay downtown and its numerous businesses, Todrick Hall’s parody of “Belle” from Beauty and the Beast stars YouTube personality Colleen Ballinger wandering the Santa Monica strip as the Disney princess in search of aspirations beyond her “little town.”
RuPaul, Daniel Franzese, Ross Mathews, Lance Bass, Frankie Grande, and many others including Hall himself take the parts of the townspeople in Beauty and the Beat Boots, one of Hall’s best parodies yet.
Watch, AFTER THE JUMP…
And don’t miss Hall’s mash-up of more than 70 Beyoncé songs in four minutes, or his other musical parodies like Cinderoncé, The Wizard of Aahs, and Mean Boyz.
Andy Towle
#TBT: The Best Kept Boy in the World
Arthur Vanderbilt’s book is a scandalous slice of upper-crust gay history. Here is a visual reference guide.
Christopher Harrity
www.advocate.com/arts-entertainment/books/2015/05/07/tbt-best-kept-boy-world
How The Global LGBT Movement Can Keep Up Its Stunning Momentum
In cooperation with our longstanding partner Crowdrise, The Huffington Post is celebrating its 10 year anniversary by focusing on the promise of the next 10 years. We’re highlighting causes that are near and dear to our ethos — causes where we believe meaningful progress can be made in the coming decade — and empowering readers to act and take part. Join us!
It’s still early days for the LGBT rights movement.
Over the course of the past decade, public opinion has changed in ways that might have seemed unimaginable a generation ago. New, more tolerant laws are on the books in many countries. But advocates who focus on the global picture of LGBT rights say the movement is still in its infancy.
Charles Radcliffe, a human rights adviser on sexual orientation and gender identity at the United Nations, notes that the women’s rights movement has been pushing for change for more than 120 years. Most of the advances for LGBT people have come in the past decade.
“That doesn’t mean it’s necessarily going to take another 100 years. But it does mean the battle isn’t over, and in some countries it’s barely begun,” Radcliffe told The Huffington Post this week. “A lot of work lies ahead to challenge oppressive laws, demand proper legal protections and to change people’s hearts and minds.”
A glance at a world map put together by the International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association shows how much work remains to be done around the world. As of May 2014, more countries criminalize LGBT people than protect them from discrimination. Seventy-eight countries still put people in jail for being LGBT, and five countries, plus parts of Nigeria and Somalia, have laws that put LGBT people to death. Only 70 countries have introduced or codified anti-discrimination laws.
Jessica Stern, the executive director for the International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission, says her organization’s strategy is to invest equally in LGBT trouble spots like Iraq (where the Islamic State is reportedly executing men for sodomy) and in nations where equality is gaining traction, like the Philippines (whose government is debating the specifics of an anti-discrimination bill).
“You have to work in the places that are most unsafe,” she said. “But you also have to push the bar higher, because pushing the bar higher benefits all of us.”
Looking ahead to the next few years, Stern said she hopes for the worldwide decriminalization of sodomy, and for more laws that ban discrimination and promote marriage equality. She also hopes to see an increase in support for transgender and intersex people, who have often been overlooked in the global LGBT rights movement.
“I think we have to take very seriously the inequalities within our movement,” she said. “People’s lived realities play out quite differently [depending on] whether you live in an urban or a rural area, whether you have a high level of education or you’re illiterate, whether you’re a member of the dominant religion or a minority. We won’t progress as far as we dream of as a movement unless we take equally seriously the safety, equality and liberation of everyone.”
Radcliffe and Stern both see many reasons to feel hopeful. Not only are LGBT people more visible than ever, Radcliffe said, but global momentum is behind them.
“When you see more than 80 countries coming together at the U.N., as we have, to denounce attacks on LGBT people, and when you see the U.N. secretary-general leading calls for change, then you’ve reached critical mass,” he said, referring to a 2011 joint statement by 85 countries that denounced violence based on sexual orientation and gender identity. “There’s no turning back from here.”
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