Williams Forms G.S.A. Club for Students

February 6, 2012

Burlington Times News story on 2/6/2012
By Maddie Lee Times-News correspondent teens20@thetimesnews.com

Williams High School in Burlington is now officially home to the only Gay/Straight Alliance (G.S.A.) organization in the Alamance-Burlington school system.

The G.S.A. is a club that promotes tolerance and equality among the student population. Their goal is to educate students on LGBT (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender) issues and what it really means to be this way.

The group raises money for gay rights organizations, hold vigils and has days of silence for those brave enough to speak out. But the G.S.A’s main goal is to bring everyone together, gay and straight, to a safe haven where everyone is equal and there is no judgment or bullying of any kind.

“(Williams is) a high school, so there’s enough bullying going around. Our goal is to ‘pave the way’ for acceptance and equality,” said senior Miranda Teran, one of the founders of Williams’ G.S.A., along with fellow seniors Yerson Padilla and Tambra Parsons.

According to Padilla, there were more than 100 people at the first meeting and 60 at the next. But despite the amazing turnout, the founders also said that starting the new organization has been a challenge.

“Everyone calls it the ‘gay club’ or the ‘fruit club,’ ” Teran said.

“There were rumors of a petition to end the club, but that would’ve been illegal,” Parsons added.

The founders have been trying to start this organization for more than a year and have finally achieved their goal.

When asked if the G.S.A. has been achieving the sense of friendship and equality they hoped for, Parsons said “the environment (at the meetings) feels friendly and everyone feels like they can talk to each other.”

The founders wanted to send a message to youth in the community.

“To the bullied, it gets better,” Teran said.

“In ninth and tenth grade, I was bullied a lot. I always let it get to me, but, because of my support system, I got through it. The G.S.A. is everyone else’s support system,” Padilla said.

To those who want to start a G.S.A., Parsons added, “gather a supportive group of people for a foundation.”

Williams’ G.S.A. meets every Wednesday in the school’s annex building, Room 104, after school. Adviser is Justin Seifts.

“This is a gay/straight alliance. Anyone can join. This is a judgment-free zone. We will love you and accept you,” Padilla said.

Maddie Lee is a senior at Williams High School and a Teens & Twenties writer.


ONE GOOD ARGUMENT AGAINST AMENDMENT ONE:

January 24, 2012
 When we talk to people who insist strongly--

“I was taught and I will always believe that marriage

is between a man and a woman,

Try responding like Senator Haugen of the State of 
Washington did recently.
“For me personally, I have always believed in traditional marriage between a man and a woman. “That is what I believe, to this day. But this issue isn’t about just what I believe. It’s about respecting others, including people who may believe differently than I. It’s about whether everyone has the same opportunities for love and companionship and family and security that I have enjoyed.”
 
 
 
 
For your friends and relatives who are traditional—but reasonable, try responding this way.

HOW TO DEFEAT THE AMENDMENT

January 11, 2012

A Coalition of many Gay-Support groups, national as well as state, have pooled their resources in order to DEFEAT the Anti-Gay Amendment.  Go to http://www.ProtectNCfamilies.org.  The coordinated campaign will kick off in Mid-January with a launch event in Raleigh and with house parties throughout the state.  The website will tell you WHAT YOU CAN DO!

_____________________________________________________________

White House endorses ‘Respect for Marrriage Act

January 11, 2012

Federal Bill Would Repeal DOMA

On the eve of the first ever congressional hearing on proposals to repeal the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA), the White House on Tuesday announced President Barack Obama’s endorsement of the Respect For Marriage Act — the bill that would repeal DOMA.

White House spokesman Jay Carney told reporters at Tuesday’s briefing that the president “is proud” to support the Respect For Marriage Act, “which would take the Defense of Marriage Act off the books for once and for all.”

The Respect for Marriage Act, introduced by Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) would repeal DOMA and restore the rights of all lawfully married couples, including same-sex couples, to receive the benefits of marriage under federal law.

Advocates of the repeal hailed the White House announcement.

“It is rare that a White House endorses a bill that has yet to pass first in either the Senate or the House,” said Rick Jacobs, chairman of the gay rights advocacy group Courage Campaign, in a statement. “His support makes clear to all Americans that the Defense of Marriage Act has no place in our society.”

“By supporting this legislation, the President continues to demonstrate his commitment to ending federal discrimination against tens of thousands of lawfully married same-sex couples,” said HRC President Joe Solmonese, in a statement.

On January 11th, the Senate Judiciary Committee was scheduled to hear testimony about the marriage legislation.

The hearing, entitled “S.598, The Respect for Marriage Act: Assessing the Impact of DOMA on American Families,” marks the first ever hearing on the issue of repealing DOMA since its enactment nearly 15 years ago.

DOMA, enacted in 1996, prevents any of the over 1,100 federal rights, benefits and responsibilities of marriage from being afforded to legally married same-sex couples.

Those benefits include Social Security survivor benefits, federal employee health benefits for spouses, protections against spouses losing their homes in cases of severe medical emergencies, the right to sponsor a foreign born partner for immigration, the guarantee of family and medical leave and the ability to file joint tax returns, among many others.


MY GAY LIFESTYLE

January 3, 2012
from the HufFpost, January 3, by Dominick Scudera

I live the gay lifestyle, the gay lifestyle that is often mentioned by some Republican candidates for president.  For those who are unfamiliar with the lifestyle, this is a typical day:

7:00 a.m.  I wake up, and just as I have done every morning since puberty, I choose to be gay today.  This will come as a great relief to my gay, homosexual, male lover who lies beside me.  Because being gay is a choice, our relationship is a gamble day to day.  Even though we have both chosen to remain gay and to be together every day for the past 16 years, we never take anything for granted.  One of us just might throw in the towel one day and give up the lifestyle.

7:30 a.m.  I take a gay shower and let the gay water rinse off my gay body.

8:00 a.m.  I have a gay breakfast of cereal with milk, and a good, strong, gay cup of coffee.  I am fortified for another day of ruining the fabric of American society.

9:00 a.m.  I start my morning shift as a gay hospital volunteer.  The hospital is not gay, just me.  The patients are mostly normal people.  But it is OK.  The hospital has a rule that all volunteers must sanitize their hands before meeting with patients.  This is to avoid spreading germs, but I think that hand sanitizer is also effective in stopping the transfer of my gayness to other people.

12:00 p.m.  I return home, eat a gay lunch and take my gay dogs for a walk.  Well, I am not sure if the dogs are actually gay.  I have heard it said that homosexuality does not exist in the animal kingdom because it is not natural, so chances are that the dogs are not gay.  But because they live with me and my gay, homosexual, male lover, they are perceived by others to be gay.  I would feel bad about this, but the fact is that I need these dogs.  They are the closest that I will ever come to having actual children, because, as everyone knows, gays should not (and cannot) have children.  I push this out of my mind as I walk the dogs gaily through the neighborhood.

1:00 p.m.  I teach classes at a small, prestigious, liberal arts college.  I am a gay college professor.  The college is not gay, just me.  But some may view the college as way too liberal, because “sexual orientation” is listed within the college’s anti-discrimination policy.  This basically means that the college turns a blind eye as I infect the impressionable students with my gayness on a daily basis.  I do not teach anything particularly gay in my classes. I am a theater professor, which, for all intents and purposes, is gay to most people, anyway.

6:00 p.m.  My gay, homosexual, male lover returns home from his job.  Luckily, he has chosen to be gay today, too, so we can sit down and have a nice, relaxing gay dinner together.  We are aware that our relationship is ripping at the seams of our heterosexual neighbors’ marriages, but we choose to ignore this.  If we were normal people, the guilt might weigh on us heavily, but we are gay, after all, so we do not have consciences.  We eat in peace.

8:00 p.m.  We go gay bowling at our Suburban Gay Bowling League.  There are quite a lot of us homosexuals who gather each week to bowl at our local bowling alley.  This makes the normal suburban bowlers uncomfortable, but we do not care.  Some of them are openly hostile to us.  The more polite ones just stare at us.  It makes us feel like we are caged, exotic animals in a zoo.  But we count ourselves lucky because the alley owners have sold out.  They allow us to bowl here because they are desirous of our ample, disposable gay income.  Ah, the almighty dollar!  The owners show mercy on the normal suburbanites, though, by putting a buffer zone of two vacant lanes between our gay league and them.  We are respectful of this line, which we call the “edge of gayness,” and do not cross it.  We try to tone down our gaiety and frivolity by focusing intently on our bowling.  The normal suburbanites never venture past their side of the line, either, because it would be unimaginable to them to interact with us.

11:00 p.m.  My gay, homosexual, male lover and I collapse from the weariness of the gay lifestyle we have been living today.  All of this subversive loving, volunteering, working, eating, playing and socializing is exhausting.  Some say the gay lifestyle is self-enslavement, but we just cannot think about that now.  Before we fall asleep, we each take out our personal, leather-bound copies of The Gay AgendaThe Gay Agenda is our Bible.  We do not look at the real Bible because we are gay and therefore have no religion or morality.  We read and strategize how we can best destroy American society tomorrow.  Sharing a good, hardy, gay laugh, we each fall into a sound, gay sleep.


Is Marriage Equality a Religious Issue—-or an Equal Rights Issue?

December 6, 2011

A Libertarian Says It is a Matter of Equal Rights

He says:   For a very long time, society has viewed gay marriage as a moral and, yes, religious issue. Today, I believe we have arrived at a point in history where more and more Americans are viewing it as a question of liberty and freedom. That evolution is important, and the time has come for us to align our marriage laws with the notion that every individual should be treated equally.

Gary Johnson Comes Out in Favor of Gay Marriage   (from Faith in America website)

The former New Mexico Gov. and perennially frustrated GOP candidate for president, who is currently flirting with the notion of a libertarian run for president, officially declared his support for gay marriage at a online town hall meeting. Johnson was previously more wafflely, with the old support of “civil unions” standby. Now he’s going for broke and saying he really is for gay marriage.

Johnson’s statement:

“As a believer in individual freedom and keeping government out of personal lives, I simply cannot find a legitimate justification for federal laws, such as the Defense of Marriage Act, which‘define’ marriage. That definition should be left to religions and individuals – not government. Government’s role when it comes to marriage is one of granting benefits and rights to couples who choose to enter into a marriage ‘contract’. As I have examined this issue, consulted with folks on all sides, and viewed it through the lens of individual freedom and equal rights, it has become clear to me that denying those rights and benefits to gay couples is discrimination, plain and simple.

“Certainly, religions and people of various faiths have the right to view marriage as they wish, and sanction marriage according to those beliefs. Just as government shouldn’t interfere with individual rights, government should not interfere with how marriage is treated as a ceremony, a sacrament or a privilege within a set of religious beliefs. However, when it comes to the rights of individuals and couples under the law, government’s promise should be to insure equal access to those rights to all Americans, gay or straight.

“For a very long time, society has viewed gay marriage as a moral and, yes, religious issue. Today, I believe we have arrived at a point in history where more and more Americans are viewing it as a question of liberty and freedom. That evolution is important, and the time has come for us to align our marriage laws with the notion that every individual should be treated equally.”

______________________________________________________

Tips for Families During the Holidays

National PFLAG has adapted a piece by Mariana Caplan entitled When Holidays Are Hell…A Guide to Surviving Family Gatherings  to help parents and siblings make the up-coming holidays really welcoming for visiting LGBT family members.   It is reproduced below;

you are the friend or family member of someone gay…

  • Get support for yourself. It is important to realize you are not alone.
  • Take your time. Acceptance may not come instantly, but be honest about your feelings.
  • Don’t be nervous about using the “correct” language. Honesty and openness creates warmth, sincerity and a deeper bond in a relationship. If you are not sure what is appropriate, ask for help.
  • Realize that the situation may be as difficult and awkward for your GLBT loved one as it is for you.

Before the visit…

  • Practice in advance if you are going to be discussing your family member’s sexual orientation or gender identity with family and friends. If you are comfortable talking about it, your family and friends will probably be more comfortable too.
  • Anticipate potential problems, but do not assume the reactions will always be what you expected.
  • Consult with your GLBT loved one when coordinating sleeping arrangements if he or she is bringing home a partner.
  • If your family member is transgender, practice using the correct pronouns.

During the visit…

  • Treat a GLBT person like you would treat anyone else in your family.
  • Take interest in your family member’s life. He or she is still the same person.
  • Don’t ask your GLBT family member to act a certain way. Let them be their natural selves.
  • If your GLBT family member is bringing a partner, acknowledge him or her as you would any other family member’s partner.
  • If your GLBT family member is bringing a partner, include him or her in your family traditions.
  • Ask your GLBT family member about his or her partner if you know they have one

Two Lesbians Raised a Baby and This Is What They Got!

December 2, 2011
   
 [This was the most-watched political video of 2011, according to YOUTUBE]   

 Listen as Zach speaks to the Iowa

legislature about his family—-

Copy and paste the following:    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A3YSfNKSwFk

This has been distributed before but it’s a powerful message to hear again—-

“MY Marriage is NOT Threatened”…. tell Facebook….

October 7, 2011

   Straight Couples, Sign in Here!                   

 see also “personal stories” blog.

“…My Marriage is NOT Threatened……..

Go to http://www.facebook.com/#!/pages/My-Marriage-Is-Not-Threatened-By-Gay-Marriage-in-NC/210518079015149 where straight couples are signing that “My Marriage is not threatened by Gay Marriage.

Thousands have signed.  Let’s put that silly myth to rest.   Let’s work to defeat a constitutional amendment which Denies Rights.  That’s not what constitutions are for!


Mitchell Gold Interview on TV

October 5, 2011

MSNBC Interview on

Bullying

Video of Mitchell Gold’s TV interview  on October 4th , about the relationship of Bullying and Teen Suicide:   See  http://www.faithinamerica.org/stopping-teen-suicides.

He said “…I want to talk about bullying that kids get from their parents and bullying they
get from their religious institutions.”

And here is a personal story in response to that TV interview:

“I ‘knew’ I was gay by the time I was 10 years old; and
the anti-gay messages I heard at church (which, by
appearances, were supported by my family and my
culture) caused me a great deal of shame, fear, and
(by way of my own behavioral choices) alienation.
As an out adult I now consider those same messages
to have been a form of child abuse, and I commend
you and your organization for shedding light on this
in a way I’ve not seen before. Thank you!  -     Chris”

This is what PFLAG National said about NC’s Anti-Marriage Equality Amendment

October 1, 2011
 
NORTH CAROLINA PUTS MARRIAGE EQUALITY ON THE BALLOT FOR 2012, CONSTITUTIONALIZING THE RIGHT TO DISCRIMINATE

National Pflag has issued the following statement regard-

ing the legislature’s approval of a May 2012 ballot

measure that will allow North Carolina residents to vote

on amending the state constitution to bar legal recogni-

tion of any union besides marriage between one man and one

woman, including civil unions and domestic partnerships for

LGBT and straight couples.

Jody Huckaby, Executive Director of the National Office of Pflag, said the following:

“We at Pflag National are frustrated and furious that once again the legal rights of thousands of taxpaying citizens—this time in the beautiful state of North Carolina–will be put to a vote of the people. 

That the legislature’s vote on this ballot measure was fast-tracked at the emotional expense of couples around the state and the financial expense of all North Carolinians, is even worse.

The fact is this: Discrimination in marriage equality is already the law of the land in North Carolina. To attempt to constitutionalize it in North Carolina is to make it even more of an official act that will sanction and perpetuate the denial of basic human rights and dignity to fellow humans.

Who will this constitutional amendment protect? Certainly not the thousands of families who live and work in the state who will have further rights stripped away from them, leaving them unprotected in matters of healthcare, estate planning, tax benefits and more. Certainly not businesses headquartered in the state, like our partner at Bank of America, Replacements, Ltd., Mitchell Gold-Bob Williams and other corportations which came out in strong opposition to this proposed amendment because they understand that discrimination in any form is bad for business.

And certainly not the State of North Carolina itself which, in the current economy and the wake of the destruction by Hurricane Irene, needs revenue pouring in, not resources draining as these same corporations, which have a long-standing commitment to equality and oppose discrimination in all forms, are perhaps compelled to leave the state.”


Why A Heterosexual, Married, North Carolinian Father of Three Cares About LGBT Equality

September 20, 2011
 
by Brent Childers  (from an essay at www.FaithinAmerica.com

I am a heterosexual, married, father of three, who has lived in North Carolina for most of my life. There have been a few ugly North Carolina moments during the time I have lived here (mostly related to one particular senator who has been in our rear view mirror for quite some time). But the ugliness that took place in North Carolina General Assembly this week was a stark reminder that, while we have made great strides in this state, there are a lot of people who still wish to deny rights to other citizens based on religious beliefs and misconceptions about sexuality and gender.

Unless you were living under a rock the past few days, you know that the NC Senate voted 30-16 to approve a proposed constitutional amendment banning any legal relationship recognition for same-sex couples. The amendment will be on the ballot in May during the Republican presidential primary.

Same-sex marriage, it should be noted, is already illegal in North Carolina. The amendment is simply a push to put the nail in the coffin, making it extremely difficult for same-sex marriages to be legalized in the future.

The issue of same-sex marriage is complicated in North Carolina, as it is in any state. According to recent survey conducted by Public Policy Polling, while most North Carolinians strongly believe that same-sex marriage should be illegal, they also strongly believe that there should not be a constitutional amendment to write that into the constitution. As conflicted as that message may be, it is clear: people may disagree on an issue, but that doesn’t mean we should play political football with our constitution.

I’ve had people ask why I am so vocal about the issue of LGBT equality.   Why is a heterosexual, married father so concerned with what gay people can or can’t do? I don’t have a dog in this fight, do I?

I find those kinds of questions to be puzzling (and telling), as if we should value the rights of one group of humans over any other group, or only be concerned with the welfare of a group to which we belong. As Elie Wiesel said, “I swore never to be silent whenever and wherever human beings endure suffering and humiliation. We must always take sides. Neutrality helps the oppressor, never the victim. Silence encourages the tormentor, never the tormented.”

So, anyway, this is why I care (and why you should too):

LGBT people are citizens. I have friends (some of whom were married in other states years ago) who love each other as dearly as I love my own wife (and who have been committed to each other for just as long). It pains me to know that there are people who reject the validity of these relationships, and who wish to deny these couples the same benefits that other married couples are afforded. These committed, same-sex couples are North Carolinians. They contribute to the economy, they pay taxes, and they certainly do not deserve to be treated as second-class citizens by anyone. Just as it is hard to believe that we once denied marriage rights to interracial couples, or voting rights to women and African-Americans, we will look back upon this time with the same disbelief and shame.

Homosexuality is not a choice.

Although science has not zeroed in on any one single cause, the growing body of research suggests that sexual orientation is caused by a combination of genetic, hormonal, and environmental influences. The biological factors related to sexual orientation involve a constellation of genetic factors, as well as brain structure and early uterine environment.   Homosexuality is so natural, in fact, that it occurs in nature.

Still not sold? The following major medical and professional organizations have also concluded that sexual orientation (and gender identity) is not a choice American Psychological Association, American Psychiatric Association, National Association of Social Workers, Royal College of Psychiatrists, and American Academy of Pediatrics. If you think that all these scientists, doctors, and experts are all part of a conspiracy to advance the homosexual agenda, ask yourself this: at what point in your life did you make the choice to be heterosexual?

Kids do just fine in families with same-sex parents. “All of the major professional organizations with expertise in child welfare have issued reports and resolutions in support of gay and lesbian parental rights” (Professor Judith Stacey, New York University). These organizations include the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, the American Psychiatric Association, the American Psychological Association, the American Psychoanalytic Association, the National Association of Social Workers, the Child Welfare League of America, the North American Council on Adoptable Children, and Canadian Psychological Association.

A recent study indicates that kids with lesbian parents may actually do better than their peers. If you are convinced that kids absolutely need one mom and one dad, you’re  a) forgetting about the many single-parent families in existence,   b) equating ‘gut feelings’ with facts,    c) depriving a lot of children of  a wonderful life with a family, a stable, loving home, and the best opportunities possible.

Don’t we want less government intrusion in our lives?

It’s interesting that most of the people who support the ban on same-sex marriage also seem to be interested in less government intrusion. They want the government out of their health care. They want the TSA to keep their hands off their junk. They want less regulations on corporations. They worry the government is going to take away their rights: to bear arms, to speak freely, to practice their religion, to say ‘Merry Christmas,’ and to choose what kind of bulb they use in their houses. They are furious when the government tries to tell them what they shouldn’t eat, where they can or cannot smoke, or how much gas their car can guzzle. And these same people want the government to restrict the rights of someone else. They want the government to tell them what they can or can’t do with another consenting adult. How do you reconcile your belief in a small, less intrusive government with your approval of legislation intended to restrict the rights of taxpaying citizens and to control who they should and shouldn’t love? It’s absurd. You want deregulation?            Let’s deregulate marriage.

I am a father of three beautiful boys. They are all young enough that they have not shown any definitive signs of sexual orientation one way or the other. Chances are, they will be heterosexual. Of course, there are studies indicating that the more older brothers a boy has, the greater the probability is that he will have a homosexual orientation. This is related to the in-utero maternal immune response, which increases with subsequent sons. Of course this is only one of many studies dealing with the hormonal factors associated with
sexual orientation, but my point is, if any of my sons were gay, that’sperfectly okay. We would accept him for who he is, and love him just the same. I don’t worry about that.

What I do worry about is this: if I did have a gay son, how could I explain to him that people don’t want him to have the same rights as everyone else? How can I explain to him that if he wants to grow up, buy a home, and start a family, he might need to move to a state that doesn’t reject him? How can I explain that people believe he is an abomination whose perverted lifestyle will lead him to an eternity in hell? How would I feel if my son killed himself because he was bullied, maligned, ridiculed, and made to feel as if he had no place in society? The only way to avoid any of our children goingthrough this is to send a clear message that people are different and that’s okay. Some families just have one mom, or one dad.  Some have a mom and a dad. And some have two moms or two dads. And maybe if our state’s leaders stop sending the message to our children that they are unwanted, maybe we can save the life of a child. Isn’t that worth it?

At the end of the day, it just makes sense.

Ask yourself what you are worried about if same-sex marriage is legalized. Whatever your answer is, ask yourself if you really believe what you just came up with. Homosexuality is not going to spread. It is not communicable. Society is not going to turn into a Lady Gaga video.

Most gay couples I know are just as boring as you and I. They sit on the couch and watch television. They work at the post office, the hospital, the grocery store, and at real estate agencies, just like heterosexuals do. They eat out at restaurants and shop at Target. Many have pot bellies and don’t have much fashion sense, just like me. They own pets, and go to church. They volunteer, sing Christmas carols, and buy Girl Scout cookies. What are you afraid of? What is going to change by allowing these people to commit to one another and enjoy the benefits that you and I enjoy: tax breaks, insurance breaks, bereavement leave, medical leave to care for a sick partner, domestic violence protection, visitation of partner in the hospital, burial determination, medical decisions on behalf of partner. Really sexy stuff. You and I take these things for granted. Nobody wants to go through life not knowing how they will deal with some of these difficult moments in life. Imagine if you were denied any of the above right when the time came for you and your spouse to exercise that right? I’ll tell you what it would feel like. It would feel like you were a second-class citizen.

So, if you’re a North Carolina citizen, and you care about equality, please make yourself heard. Whether you’re straight, lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, or queer, speak up.

Educate yourself about the May amendment vote.

Donate,

Volunteer—– tweet, post Facebook statuses, blog, talk to your churches, your neighbors, your friends and relatives. Help them understand the science behind sexual orientation, and help them understand the importance of voting on May 8.     ’Like’ the organizations that are working to fight this amendment, and stay informed (EqualityNCHRC).    Repost articles and blog posts to keep friends aware.

There is a lot of work to be done.
There are many things each of us can do. But we can’t be indifferent.

“There may be times when we are powerless to
prevent injustice, but there must never be a time when we fail to protest.” -
Elie Wiesel

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