Saturday, February 21, 2009

Combined Gay News Headlines (T5T-1)

"A gay security guard has been awarded £62,525 by a [British] tribunal after he was sexually harassed by a woman colleague. Allwyn Rondeau, 47, claimed that his life was “ruined” by colleague Lucy Chilton. The tribunal, at Reading, Berkshire, heard how she wobbled her breasts while touching him. She told Mr Rondeau, who worked for [...]or [...]
Integration–much like the sun, a neuclear reactor, and Jake Gyllenhaal–is hot. Check it out.
  Come out and join Queer Fresno at Samba for the HOTTEST Fat Tuesday party in the Tower! Enjoy free beads and awesome beats with DJ Binx playing all the best of top40, hiphop, house and 80’s.
Dear Diary, Wow, did I have a blast last night!  At first, I had no plans to go out. But then a received a phone call from my old college roommate Jaime who currently lives in D.C. telling me he was in Denver en route to Fresno. He was like, “Dude, I’m coming to town last minute.  [...]
It's good to have such optimism; passing ENDA, the repeal of DADT and partner benefits for fed employees all seem possible until you realize that getting Dems to have a spine on our issues -- even with a majority -- is going to be a hell of a lot of work. Good luck, Jared; you'll need to make a LOT of friends up there on the Hill. (Dallas Voice):
"I'm certainly hopeful that we can get that done, and we need to set that as a goal," Polis told Dallas Voice on Thursday, Feb. 19. "We should absolutely be holding our elected officials, including President Obama, to their commitments to support those three pieces of legislation - and our elected members of the House and Senate to deliver on those - and I hope that residents of Texas contact their House members and senators to urge them to support those efforts."

Polis, a 33-year-old Democrat from Colorado who became the first openly gay man elected as a non-incumbent to Congress in November, will deliver the keynote address at the Texas Stonewall Democrats convention scheduled for Feb. 27 through March 1 in Austin.

Speaking in a telephone interview, Polis didn't offer a specific timeframe for addressing other LGBT-related federal issues, including a repeal of the Defense of Marriage Act and the addition of hate crimes protections. But he said that as a member of the House Rules Committee and co-chair of the Congressional LGBT Equality Caucus, he's in a position to push the community's agenda forward.

"Having that human face on the issue for other members of Congress, I think, is critical in helping to get some of these changes made," he said.


The wisdom of Birmingham, Alabama Mayor Larry Langford, who insists he's not a bigot:
"I don't think I'm intolerant, I just don't condone the lifestyle. Your personal lifestyle should be nobody's issue but yours. It's not a civil rights issue, it's a personal choice issue."
Of course when Langford, in his capacity as mayor, refused to issue a permit for Birmingham Pride based on his personal issues with the LGBT community in his city, he should have expected to get slapped with a lawsuit. (SoVo):
According to Lambda, which is now representing CAP along with Birmingham attorney David Gespass, Langford also refused to let city workers hang banners for the Pride festival from city light posts, which was allowed for other events.

"Mayor Larry Langford denied government benefits to Central Alabama Pride solely on the basis of his personal beliefs," Lambda staff attorney Beth Littrell said in a press release. "A government official cannot pick and choose which groups get government benefits or free speech rights."

What's ridiculous about Langford's behavior is that he's bucking the city's own history with the parade...
Central Alabama Pride (CAP) has held a gay pride parade in Birmingham every year since 1989, and its Pride banners have been displayed in accordance with city policy - the same policy that allows the display of banners for a variety of events and organizations, including religious events and organizations.
Extra bonus points for the fact that the city is being represented in federal court by Liberty Counsel (home of Bam Bam Barber, where he serves as "Director for Cultural Affairs").

The case is Central Alabama Pride, Inc. v. Larry Langford.

***

Some great news from The Magic City, courtesy of Kathy over at Birmingham Blues -- Howard Bayless, the first out gay man elected to public office in Alabama, is running for Birmingham City Council. Kathy:

I'd love to see him go toe to toe in Council meetings with Larry Langford and  Joel Montgomery, but with any luck they won't be around after October 2009.

Who let him escape from the asylum again?

Alan Keyes, a three-time presidential candidate, called President Obama a "radical communist" and a "usurper" and said with him in charge, America "is going to cease to exist" at a pro-life fundraiser Thursday.

"Obama is a radical communist and I think it is becoming clear. That is what I told people in Illinois and now everybody realizes it is coming true," said Keyes who ran unsuccessfully against Obama for the Senate in 2004. "He is going to destroy this country and we are either going to stop him or the United States of America is going to cease to exist," said Keyes.

In an interview in Hastings, Neb. with a KHAS reporter at the fundraiser, Keyes called Obama an "abomination" for some of his pro-choice views.

"The man is an abomination," Keyes said, going on to accuse Obama of being supportive of infanticide. "That is a man with such a seared conscience, I can't even understand why anyone in their right mind would consider him worthy of political support."

And btw, Keyes is a proponent of the "Obama isn't a U.S. citizen" conspiracy movement.

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