Category Archives: NEWS

Nine Ways To Avoid Sex For The Next Year So You Can Donate A Pint Of Blood

Nine Ways To Avoid Sex For The Next Year So You Can Donate A Pint Of Blood

US_Navy_080814-N-0486G-006_Bags_and_vials_of_blood_await_processing_during_the_Armed_Services_Blood_Program_(ASBP)_Blood_drive_at_Naval_Station_MayportThe FDA has decided that the blood coursing through your veins isn’t a lifetime threat to the American public — just a year-long threat. So sometime next year, you can start donating blood.

Or more accurately, you can start the clock running on when you can donate blood in 2016. Because to do so, you have to avoid “sexual contact” with another man for at least a year. For your ordinary homo, never lacking in opportunity or desire, that’s an extreme challenge.

And don’t forget that sexual contact means everything because the FDA thinks everything you do is equally risky, even though it’s not.

So to donate blood, you need to get ready now, which means giving up sex for a year.

To help you meet this noble goal, here are ten tips guaranteed to strangle your libido…

1. Watch a Pat Robertson marathon.

Every night, you can spend time among the wreckage of the televangelist’s psyche by watching the hundreds of hours he’s spent on CBN. Let Pat remind you that gay sex isn’t very pretty, that you can catch AIDS from towels, and that being gay is like demonic possession. You’ll be so turned off sex or laugh so hard that the effect will be the same.

2. Take a walking tour of the deep, deep South.

You know, places like Tupelo, MS, the headquarters of the American Family Association and Bryan Fischer. Or Alabama, where you can count the number of antigay license plates you see. Or Louisiana, which refuses to remove an unconstitutional sodomy law from its books.  Just be sure to stay clear of New Orleans, or you won’t be able to donate blood until 2017.

3. Visit Russia.

Yes, the land of Vladimir Putin, which has been proven to cure homosexuality (at least in the case of Gerard Depardieu). Alternately, Putin’s fellow homophobes can beat you to a pulp if they suspect you’re gay, in which case you may need blood before you can ever donate it.

4. Join the Catholic celibacy movement.

Yes, it’s officially a trend, because the mainstream media has reported on it. You can be a perfectly good Catholic by denying one of God’s greatest gifts and at the same time satisfy neither your puzzled LGBT siblings or the conservatives who would just assume purge you from the Church. But you will be able to give blood. (Obviously, celibacy doesn’t apply to priests.)

5. Become a Salvation Army officer.

Catholicism isn’t military enough for you? There’s always the Salvation Army. It’s every bit as repressive, but it comes with a uniform.

6. Borrow an Ebola quarantine tent from Chris Christie.

Want to cut yourself off from any human contact? Chris Christie has a bunch of tents left over from his disastrous (and unscientific) decision to throw a nurse who helped Ebola patients into quarantine. The downside? No cable.

7. Start swilling soy sauce.

Soy reduces testosterone levels and with it sex drive. Put soy sauce on your corn flakes in the morning, have an edamame shake for lunch, have a soy burger for dinner. After a while, you’ll probably feel nauseated as well, which will help you reach your overall goal.

8. Take up a really boring hobby.

How about collecting old phone books? Or sculpting butter? Or photographing roundabouts? (It helps if you’re British for that last one.)  Plus as a bonus, you can shop at Hobby Lobby and contribute to the erosion of LGBT rights at the same time!

 9. Become a Republican. 

Never mind. No one’s that desperate to donate blood.

JohnGallagher

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/9p_CAQoUoRQ/nine-ways-to-avoid-sex-for-the-next-year-so-you-can-donate-a-pint-of-blood-20141231

It's Official: Obama Won't Renominate Michael Boggs

It's Official: Obama Won't Renominate Michael Boggs
WASHINGTON — It’s over for Michael Boggs. Like, really over.

Georgia Sens. Johnny Isakson (R) and Saxby Chambliss (R) said late Tuesday night that President Barack Obama won’t renominate Boggs next year for a lifetime post on the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia. The news is a major victory for progressives who have fought Boggs’ nomination all year.

“It is with regret that we announce that the President will not re-nominate Judge Michael Boggs to the United States District Court for a third time. We were informed of the President’s decision by Denis McDonough, the President’s chief of staff, prior to Thanksgiving. We regret the President’s decision, as we have supported Judge Boggs throughout this process and remain steadfast in our support,” the senators said in a statement.

They continued, “Throughout the process, Judge Boggs has exhibited enormous restraint and the temperament expected of a jurist. These traits will serve him well for the opportunities we are confident the future holds for Judge Boggs. We wish him the best and thank him for his service to the people of Georgia.”

A White House spokesman confirmed that Obama won’t renominate Boggs, but offered no additional comment.

Progressive groups and Senate Democrats threw everything they had at Boggs this year, determined to sink his nomination over his socially conservative track record. Abortion rights groups objected to votes he took as a Georgia state legislator to create “Choose Life” license plates and to post online the names of abortion providers at a time of high clinic violence. Civil rights leaders opposed him because of his vote to keep the Confederate insignia on the Georgia state flag. Gay rights groups opposed him for sponsoring a constitutional amendment to ban same-sex marriage.

It became clear earlier this fall that Boggs wasn’t going anywhere this year, when Senate Judiciary Committee chairman Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) announced the Democratic votes weren’t there to confirm him, and suggested that Obama withdraw the nomination. The lingering question has been whether the president would renominate Boggs in the new year, when Republicans control the Senate and would likely back him.

The White House calculation appears to be that it’s not worth picking another fight with Democrats over the nomination.

Obama had initially nominated Boggs as part of an all-or-nothing package of seven Georgia judicial nominees agreed upon by the president, Chambliss and Isakson. Some, like Boggs, were GOP picks and others were Democratic picks. The other six in the package were confirmed this year, but Boggs was held back.

www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/12/31/obama-michael-boggs_n_6398986.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

Discovering My Man Musk

Discovering My Man Musk
WARNING: This post contains sexually explicit language. Please read on at your own discretion.

Recently I read Perfume by Patrick Suskind, and it made me a lot more interested in my olfactory environment. Relative to other animals, humans’ sense of smell is underdeveloped; we just never needed it as much, because our other senses were more vital to everyday survival. Suskind taught me to pause and consider the smells around me. By simply giving more mental energy to my sense of smell, I have been able to understand my scent environment better. It’s gotten to the point where I can detect even minor odors like my own man musk.

My own smell is a gestalt created by different scent-producing parts of my body. Certainly my sweat, and in particular the sweat produced by my armpits, has its own odor. The smell of ass and piss are both represented. Then there is the smell of that pre-ejaculate fluid that lubricates my urethra and perfumes my groin. These scents are a map of my body’s excretions, and they are scents that very sensual men like to savor during sex. These smells of sweat, piss, shit, and cum coalesce into something greater. This is my true smell and (hopefully) is what attracts partners to me.

When I sweat, I smell salty and greasy. My armpits smell like french fries. When I told this to my drag-queen friend Jaye Lish, she immediately stuck her contoured nose under my arm. She agreed that I smelled like french fries, but not just any kind — “McDonald’s fries” in particular. Hot grease is not a normal part of my diet, but my own stench evokes the illicit pleasure of deep-fried junk food.

My ass smells of hot ground beef. When I eat lasagna, my farts smell like tacos, and when I eat tacos, my farts smell like lasagna. The common thread is that they smell like cooked meat. Even when I eat tofu for dinner, there is a lingering aroma of braised barnyard animal in my stool.

What surprises me most about my own stench is the smell of my urine. It reeks of coffee, which is strange, because I never touch the stuff. (It gives me hours of explosive, cramping diarrhea.) The green, enzymatic smell of coffee beans comes out in my urine, which must result from the vitamin-rich greens I consume being processed by my body. When I scrape off the urine scaling under my toilet seat, the scent of plant-distilled minerals fills my nose.

The last and final scent that makes up my aromatic profile is my ejaculate fluid. Like that of many men, mine smells like Bradford Pear trees in bloom. Sometimes a bit of it gets caught behind my foreskin and festers there for hours or days. In this instance the fishy redolence of my ejaculate is amplified several times over; my smegma smells like Vietnamese fish sauce (that pungent condiment I can only stand drops of). Both men and women can emit a fishy sexual odor!

Altogether I smell like a well-balanced meal. Certainly all the meats, herbs, and sweets I consume get processed and expelled as various waste products with their own particular olfactory profile. These excretions get caught in my pelt-like body hair and can ferment into an even more pungent aroma. We all have this natural aroma, and it can often be a pleasing one for sexual partners.

I try not to cover up my scent with powdery deodorants, harshly perfumed soaps, or chemical cologne. I shower almost daily, and I always use unscented body products. When I am in bed with a partner, I know that whatever part of my body he kisses will simply smell like me — not overwhelmingly of man musk, and never of artificial aroma, but just a subtle scent that will make him hungry for more of me.

www.huffingtonpost.com/matthew-terrell/discovering-my-man-musk_b_6393902.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

Same-Sex Marriage Begins in Scotland: VIDEO

Same-Sex Marriage Begins in Scotland: VIDEO

SCOTLAND

Same-sex marriage is officially underway in Scotland. The nation’s first same-sex wedding happened just moments ago, uniting Joe Schofield and Malcolm Brown at a humanist ceremony at the Trades Hall in Glasgow. Susan and Gerrie Douglas-Scott are also to be among the nation’s first same-sex couples to tie the knot. Scotland’s new marriage law went into effect earlier this month but couples had to wait the 15 days required by Scottish law before saying “I do.” The BBC reports:

[First minister] Nicola Sturgeon and Scottish Green Party co-convener Patrick Harvie MSP will act as witnesses at the marriage of Susan and Gerrie, while Scotland’s national poet Liz Lochhead and Scottish government minister Marco Biagi MSP are expected to attend the ceremony for Mr Schofield and Mr Brown.

A total of 250 couples have converted their civil partnerships to marriage since the new law – the Marriage and Civil Partnership (Scotland) Bill – came into effect on 16 December.

Scotland’s first minister said: “This a momentous day for equality in Scotland, one where same sex couples have the right to marry the person that they love.

“I am personally proud that as Health Secretary, I led the consultation which started this journey. I said then that it was the right thing to do, and I believe that today.

“This will send a powerful message to people about the kind of country we are.”

According to the Scottish government, 17 same-sex couples are expected to marry on Hogmanay.

UK BuzzFeed reporter Jamie Ross has been live tweeting the wedding of Schofield and Brown. Check out video and photo highlights of the couple’s happy day, AFTER THE JUMP…

The two men sign their vows. #equalmarriage t.co/DoG88hUTTK

— Jamie Ross (@JamieRoss7) December 31, 2014

A small hiccup as the official documents say “bride and groom” instead of “groom and groom”. It’s quickly scribbled out by the celebrant.

— Jamie Ross (@JamieRoss7) December 31, 2014

History is made. Joe and Malx share their first kiss as husband and husband. t.co/XcHhi10PPT

— Jamie Ross (@JamieRoss7) December 31, 2014

Here’s the happy couple. #equalmarriage pic.twitter.com/X6huqrMBV3

— Jamie Ross (@JamieRoss7) December 30, 2014

The pair have matching tattoos. One is on their hands and”we’re not going to disclose where the other one is”. #equalmarriage

— Jamie Ross (@JamieRoss7) December 30, 2014

We’re told the couple met on a punk rock forum and “warm and fuzzy feelings” developed between them. #equalmarriage

— Jamie Ross (@JamieRoss7) December 30, 2014

Ross Wright: “Joe has never come out, because quite simply he was never in.” #equalmarriage

— Jamie Ross (@JamieRoss7) December 30, 2014

Celebrant Ross Wright: “Tonight we will witness the culmination of Scotland’s journey to accept all its citizens as equal.”

— Jamie Ross (@JamieRoss7) December 30, 2014

The groom and groom are led in by a piper. #equalmarriage t.co/y3X84kuFzq

— Jamie Ross (@JamieRoss7) December 30, 2014

So this Spirit of Freedom whisky to toast the vows is a blend of 45 whiskies and is 45% alcohol. #The45 pic.twitter.com/oOysh4EWj0

— Jamie Ross (@JamieRoss7) December 30, 2014

Here is the sensational #equalmarriage cake. pic.twitter.com/vv8NCZicJc

— Jamie Ross (@JamieRoss7) December 30, 2014

They’ve got a selfie stick. It’s all gone too far. pic.twitter.com/r4buHmkOcm

— Jamie Ross (@JamieRoss7) December 31, 2014

 

#equalmarriageselfie pic.twitter.com/nDNL0t2IPi

— Jamie Ross (@JamieRoss7) December 31, 2014

Liz Lochhead and @MarcoBiagiMSP sign the documents as witnesses. #equalmarriage pic.twitter.com/Lk9TPfgovD

— Jamie Ross (@JamieRoss7) December 31, 2014


Sean Mandell

www.towleroad.com/2014/12/same-sex-marriage-has-begun-in-scotland-video.html

A New Priority: Looking Ahead to College with My Transgender Daughter

A New Priority: Looking Ahead to College with My Transgender Daughter
The tree was up, packed full with presents. Granny was sleeping on the couch and at that moment life is good and the future is bright. It is a perfect night; the end to a great year. A year that has shown my children that good things happen if you work hard and you have a community and talented people that support you.

I turned off the lights, leaving only the Christmas tree to provide one last glimpse of a special moment in time. I was at peace, something that has seldom been present during the past ten years. There have been some wonderful moments that will always be cherished, but in the background loomed uncertainty. Uncertainty because I had and still have few points of reference to guide me. Few families and fewer men have been on this journey. My father, my uncles, my coaches and male mentors can only provide moral support. I can see in their eyes, the worry and the fear that they might say something wrong. I tell them there are no wrong responses or questions, I just need your ear.

It would have been of great value to hear from others that have been down the same path. Maybe I would have not made some of the early mistakes. Maybe I would have not been so afraid. The transgender child fathers’ club is pretty small and seldom do I have the opportunity to talk to Petri, Greg, David or Chuck. All who live many miles away.

I was at peace when my head hit my pillow, thinking what a great Christmas present it would be to have a fathers’ golf weekend, filled with evening poker games, great food and sharing. Sharing conversations that few dads have ever had. Then the sense of peacefulness started to fade. Raising my children has brought about many unique needs and challenging decisions that creep to the top of my to-do list. It is a list that most men could never imagine, and last tonight as I tried to sleep my focus was on priority number two: college.

Priority number one is always safety. Priority number two changes often, but it is always related to priority number one. Soon the kids will send out their college applications. I am hopeful that the kids will attend an excellent school near home — schools that will provide opportunities for a great education, diverse experiences in a safe environment that will instill values and that will help them grow. It sounds simple enough, but for transgender families the challenges are often daunting. Challenges that campuses might not really understand and struggle with finding successful solutions. Solutions that demonstrates that our children will be safe and supported in the same manner as their classmates.

In January of this year we won an amazing victory for transgender rights. We are so thankful for all of the support we have received from GLAD and our friends and supporters from across the nation. We are thankful for our state leaders that had the courage to make the right decisions to protect all Mainers. We are proud that the Department of Education is stepping forward to enforce Title IX. All are great steps forward, but there is still a great deal of work to do.

Not long ago I read When Women Become Men at Wellesley, one quote jumped out at me, “I just wish the administration would at least acknowledge our existence.” That student’s statement reminded me that transgender students are still “separate but equal” at colleges and universities across the nation.

Tossing in bed, I thought about Nicole’s recent visits to Mt. Holyoke and Smith College. Both campuses provide different approaches to supporting transgender students. Like Wellesley, they are trying to do the right things but seem to be struggling with how to balance tradition and procedure. I often worry about the decisions their leadership teams will make and how they will impact Nicole and her friends.

Nicole toured their campuses in stealth mode, to not raise her head too high, to just have a chance to visit without fanfare. She had a great time, both are campuses of interest. I still wonder if they are really ready for her. I wonder what campuses across the nation are ready to support her in every way.

Colleges and universities are changing. I am hopeful that highly regarded institutions like Wellesley and Smith will continue the trend and lead the way for others. I know the change does not come easy. I learned that saying the right words is not enough to implement change. It requires adjusting your core values. Core values that have been instilled since birth by family, coaches, teachers and commanders.

Core values are not that different from institutional values. Both are designed to help keep us on the right path. Institutional values provide campus presidents with a map to develop mission statements, policies and procedures. Campus leaders must go beyond written policy and rhetoric. They must demonstrate that equality is core on a daily basis.

Nicole’s college visits reminded me that real change requires more than courage, it requires strong leadership and commitment.

While we have welcomed trans students in the past and for several years have been in conversation with campus constituencies about how best to foster a respectful environment for all students, we needed a formal policy: one that would articulate our commitment to core values of individual freedom, social justice, and diversity and inclusion.

The Mt. Holyoke president read that statement not long ago. I wish we could have been there to share the moment, so I might have had an opportunity to shake her hand for her courage and commitment.

We have ruled out remarkable schools because they still struggle with policy and procedure. We ruled out others because we cannot afford them. We are not alone; families with transgender children are living in hiding, they are constantly on the move, struggling to stay safe, unable to provide the medical care required to help their children. All of these challenges are emotionally and financially draining. Seldom is there much left to prepare for college.

How can we send Nicole to an institution where equality is not practiced in everyway. How will we know? Some of the campuses we are considering still struggle with housing, bathrooms, medical coverage and much more. Only 153 colleges and universities have gender-inclusive housing policies in the United States. Suggesting that transgender students are only welcome to live on campus as their true selves at five percent of our nation’s colleges and universities. Our children are welcome, but in an extremely limited way.

It is the responsibility of each campus president to provide a safe and supportive community for the entire campus community. I hopeful that Wellesley, Smith and others will soon join Mt. Holyoke, Simmons, Mill’s and Scripps to demonstrate that they want to be on the right side of history, leading the way to total equality.

I remind Nicole and Jonas how proud I am of them everyday. I remind anyone that will listen that transgender children and adults are not people to be feared, to be debated or categorized. They are the bravest people I know, revealing truths that will provide opportunities for institutions of higher education to learn in new ways. They are heroes to be embraced and introduced to every aspect of each institutions family and traditions.

My family gave up a number of traditions during our fight for equality. Every step of the way we reminded the kids that fighting for what you believe in, working hard and trusting that others will help you are the right path to success. We are hopeful that the institutions our children attend will continue to instill these same values. That is all we can ask for, it is up to them to take it from there.

www.huffingtonpost.com/wayne-maines/christmas-eve-looking-ahe_b_6395906.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

NEWS: #StandUp4Leelah, Play-Doh, Tom Hardy, Gay Panic

NEWS: #StandUp4Leelah, Play-Doh, Tom Hardy, Gay Panic

Hsotddildohplaydoh1 RoadHashtag #StandUp4Leelah trends in the wake of transgender teen Leelah Alcorn’s suicide.

RoadJeremy Renner is getting divorced.

RoadApparently, Play-Doh gave some kids a little more than they bargained for this Christmas. Outrage ensues.

RoadChanning Tatum’s behind makes an appearance in Foxcatcher (work unfriendly).

RoadMeanwhile, Gaspard Ulliel goes full frontal in Yves Saint Laurent bio-pic (also work unfriendly).

RoadDavid Burtka and Neil Patrick Harris continue to look adorable.

Hardy RoadTom Hardy looks mad (but sexy) as Mad Max.

RoadLuise Rainer, first actress to ever win back-to-back Oscars, has died

RoadGOP House Majority Whip admits to speaking at a White Supremacist event.

RoadStudent at Bowie State in Maryland sues fraternity on allegations of hazing.

RoadThe Underwear Expert wants to curate your underwear drawer. Join the project on Kickstarter.

RoadFirst look at Kathy Griffin and Brad Goreski on E!’s Fashion Police.

RoadFlorida grocery retailer Publix will start offering health benefits to spouses of gay and lesbian employees starting Thursday.

RoadJoe Manganiello and Sofia Vergara are engaged.

RoadVin Diesel may be one of the Inhumans.

RoadWas the Sony hack an inside job?

NJ RoadOut New Jersey Assemblyman Tim Eustace introduces bill to prohibit gay panic defense: “New Jersey Law states that a charge of murder can be reduced to manslaughter if the crime “is committed in the heat of passion resulting from a reasonable provocation.” Assemblyman Eustace’s bill states “reasonable provocation” could not include “discovery of, knowledge about, or potential disclosure of the homicide victim’s actual or perceived gender identity or expression.” This ban would include the claim a defendant was frightened by “unwanted, non-forcible romantic or sexual advances.” 

RoadGay, Asian, and Christian: actor and vlogger Hank Chen shares his struggles with family and the holidays.

Road2014: a year in review as told with graphics.

RoadFlorida State University welcomes gay student athletes.


Sean Mandell

www.towleroad.com/2014/12/news-15.html

Gayer Times With the In-Laws… Next Year!

Gayer Times With the In-Laws… Next Year!
How did the holidays work out for you and your gay/lesbian lover, partner, spouse? How stressful was the time spent with the in-laws or with your own family? If you are among those who right now are busily trying to bury their holiday grudges, I have a question for you: WHY?

Why is it so tricky to be with your lover and her family? Why is it so hard to bring her home to yours? And why does this happen every single year sans fail?

Here are the main reasons:

1. In with the old, out with the new?
When we go home, we return to an old way– our family-way — of being. We slip back into the habits of communicating with our folks that we have known from childhood onward. Family awakens early memories and childhood patterns of talking, acting and feeling. We slip into the familiar glove of being a child in our family, automatically taking on its demands, entitlements, language and rules. Think of it as comfort food, making you feel warm and nostalgic– but it’s not really you.

2. Who is this stranger?
Our lover looks at us in this frame, this family setting, and doesn’t quite recognize us. Who is this person who suddenly behaves like an infant? Has tantrums? Suddenly can’t peep a word or utter an opinion? Who watches my every move with the suspicion that her mother won’t approve? Who suddenly forgets that I am there while she is the center of attention and the great entertainer for everyone? Who looks up to her dad who is a woman-hater and agrees with everything he says? Who is this person who allows my parenting skills to be called into question- aren’t we a team?
2014-12-29-loveletters
3. It really IS a two-way street.
This often goes both ways: both lovers don’t recognize the particular stress they are under – holiday performance stress – and resent that their performance isn’t up to snuff. We don’t easily acknowledge that most families don’t allow us to be “normal” the way we are in our private couples life. So we suddenly feel like strangers who stare at each other in dismay, wondering: Why can’t she be normal? Shouldn’t she have outgrown this by now? The truth of the matter is: we may never outgrow our family patterns and family stress. But we can help ourselves and each other to avoid the alienation, the grudges and fights that are so often the outcome of holiday visits.

4. Implement the 5 P’s: Proper Preparation Prevents Poor Performance
Here’s a trick that helped my with my lovers that you’re welcome to put into practice:
Before a family visit, we would agree to play out a “worst case scenario,” a fantasy game that would call up all the monsters we dreaded. One of us or both would narrate how the visit would go down as a nightmare. “They’ll once again serve the turkey I can’t eat even though they know damn well I am a vegetarian. I’ll be mad at you for not stepping up for me and just sitting there, looking sheepish. Your grandmother will insist I take at least 3 servings of her horrid Christmas pudding and I’ll be sick the rest of the day. Your sister, the high and mighty lawyer, will again needle me about the thesis I never manage to finish and you won’t defend me because you agree with her, in fact. Worst of all, they’ll have us sleep in the kid bedrooms, two separate rooms for God’s sake. Everyone will drink and I’ll have to pretend this is fun! But you’ll find it fun, no matter what, and that’ll get to me, so I won’t be able to stop myself from starting an argument because that’s at least honest.”
2014-12-29-Heartinhands

5. Strategize: Two heads are better than one.
There’s a good chance that the reality will seem less monstrous than the fantasy yarn we had spun beforehand. Everything may seem more bearable, even funny when our predictions came true by the letter. We’ve already established that we were together in this, confessing some of our true fears. We’ve worked out some understanding and next, some strategies to prevent the worst. Strategizing in a playful manner makes it much easier to maintain our sense of humor in the situation and provide support for each other.

In short, it’s a strategy game. With all the resolutions you’ll add to the list–how about placing a priority on easing holiday grudges and looking forward to more family cheer in the new year?

To learn more about being emotionally well-equipped for family visits year-round, check out Lesbian Marriage: A Love & Sex Forever Kit

www.huffingtonpost.com/renate-stendhal-phd/gayer-times-with-the-inla_b_6391948.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

Defense Secretary Includes Gay Sailor’s Proposal In Holiday Video For The Troops

Defense Secretary Includes Gay Sailor’s Proposal In Holiday Video For The Troops

bildeDefense Secretary Chuck Hagel and his wife Lilibet released a fairly ordinary holiday video message last week, except that amid the expected conventional nationalism was an image of MM2 2nd Class Jerrel Revels’ proposal to his boyfriend Dylan Kirchner.

This is the first time a gay couple has been included in the Defense Secretary’s holiday message for the troops.

Revels proposed back in August of 2013 in front of some 200 people, two years after the repeal of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.

“It kind of tickled my mind every now and then that (he would propose) but I never expected this,” Kirchner said at the time. “I didn’t really care everybody was around. It felt just like the two of us.”

Here’s the video:

h/t Towleroad

Dan Tracer

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/cBs0_BzCAwg/defense-secretary-includes-gay-sailors-proposal-in-holiday-video-for-the-troops-20141230