December 6, 2011
Why You Shouldn't Donate to the Salvation Army Bell Ringers | The Bilerico Project

greaterthanlapsed:

Since 1986 the Salvation Army has engaged in five major assaults on the LGBT community’s civil rights and attempted to carve out exemptions that would allow them to deny gays and lesbians needed services as well as employment.

  • When New Zealand considered passage of the Homosexual Law Reform Act in 1986, the Salvation Army collected signatures in an attempt to get the legislation killed. The act decriminalized consensual sex between gay men. The measure passed over the charity’s objections.
  • In the United Kingdom, the Salvation Army actively pushed passage of an amendment to the Local Government Act. The amendment stated that local authorities “shall not intentionally promote homosexuality or publish material with the intention of promoting homosexuality” or “promote the teaching in any maintained school of the acceptability of homosexuality as a pretended family relationship.” The law has since been repealed, but it led many schools and colleges to close LGBT student organizations out of fear they’d lose their government funding.
  • In 2001, the organization tried to extract a resolution from the White House that they could ignore local non-discrimination laws that protected LGBT people. While the commitment would have applied to all employees, the group claimed that it needed the resolution so it “did not have to ordain sexually active gay ministers and did not have to provide medical benefits to the same-sex partners of employees.” After lawmakers and civil rights activists revealed the Salvation Army’s active resistance to non-discrimination laws, the White House admitted the charity was seeking the exemptions.
  • Also in 2001, the evangelical charity actively lobbied to change how the Bush administration would distribute over $24 billion in grants and tax deductions by urging the White House deny funding to any cities or states that included LGBT non-discrimination laws. Ari Fleischer, White House press secretary, issued a statement saying the administration was denying a “regulation sought by the church to protect the right of taxpayer-funded religious organizations to discriminate against homosexuals.”
  • In 2004, the Salvation Army threatened to close all their soup kitchens in New York City to protest the city’s decision to require all vendors and charities doing business with the city to adhere to all civil rights laws. The organization balked at having to treat gay employees equal to straight employees.

(via robot-heart-politics)

August 19, 2011
For all the Americans on my list, LGBT issues by candidate…. who is this Fred Karger guy?

For all the Americans on my list, LGBT issues by candidate…. who is this Fred Karger guy?

December 13, 2010
Red Light Politics: Why I won't be "coming out" as a Feminist today

So, today, December 13th it seems it is “Feminist Coming Out” day. The day is, supposedly dedicated to feminists declaring that they identify with the political label, and in addition are invited to: ‘Join the Revolution’.

[…]

However, I cannot, I will not be complicit in the misappropriation of the “coming out” narrative that belongs to one of the most collectively oppressed people in society: LGBTQ folks. My life wasn’t threatened when I “came out” as a feminist at a young age. I wasn’t “correctively raped” for coming out as a feminist. I didn’t face the death penalty for being a feminist. I didn’t loose my job for coming out as a feminist, nor did my congregation set to isolate me on the basis of my feminism. “Coming out as a feminist” had no more consequences than a few heated arguments with misogynists and bigots.

So, I won’t be coming out today. And I will not, above all, contribute to the erasure and dilution of the stories of those who did face serious consequences for coming out. I am afraid the “coming out” label is too sacred for me to trivialize it with my personal politics.

(via lostgrrrls:malefeminist:redlightpolitics)

(via lostgrrrls)

5:53pm  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/Zv11Yy29O4ZZ
  
Filed under: feminism lgbt politics queer 
March 10, 2010

Oh my god, I totally lost it at the end.

Husbands and Husbands
This video is only a minute long. You won’t regret watching it.
Watch what happens when a little boy named Calen meets a pair of husbands for the first time. He talked things out, asked a few questions, and things just seemed to click in his head for him.
Let’s quit with the ignorance and fear and play ping pong. (rb)

(situationally:likeadoll:squintyoureyes:monkeyknifefight:seaponies:bookselves:imsvsims)

1:31am  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/Zv11YyQ8lIf
  
Filed under: LGBT love gay 
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