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WOW!
I'm watching Ellen right now....and she's interviewed Constance....the Mississippi lesbian who was told she could not go to her prom with her girlfriend and has received just SO much flack from her peers and others......
Well......what a fine young woman (with a 3.86 gpa, I might add)....accompanied by her supportive Dad!........was just given a $30,000 scholarship and summer internship with Tonic.com ...... GOOD NEWS! |
Leave it to Ellen to do something that fantastic ~ she rawks hardcore *just sayin* :thumbsup:
My mouth is finally calming down, those antibiotics are working and the pain isnt as bad as it was even just the other day YAY :clap: |
This is such a lovely story.....this 94~year~old woman's last wish......
She is precious! http://news.yahoo.com/video/dallascb...waltz-19247565 |
I went to an intake appointment with a doctor last week who runs a trans clinic at a community health center here in My hometown that caters to everyone in the community (including the GLBTQ community). We had our very first session where he asked Me basic questions about Myself like who I am, who I've come out to as being FTM, where I am in My transition etc. We had a good hour long talk, and he has already scheduled Me for a second appointment to get a better idea of My past medical history as well as I'm also getting blood work done so he can check My liver functions, blood sugar, cholesterol, etc. He already told Me that by what we've talked about so far he can already see that I'm good for the Gender Identity diagnosis and by My 4th or 5th visit ~ I will officially be on T injections :cheer:
He also told Me that in the future he will help Me with all of the paperwork that helps to get My marker changed on My birth certificate, My named changed with Vital Statistics Canada, as well as get Me in touch with surgeons who can not only give Me the hysterectomy that I want but also My top surgery as well :clap: Talk about good news huh? :thumbsup: |
I leave my old job on friday and start a new one on Monday... hopefully will be a good switch!!! lol
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I am going to regret this later because I am NOT allowed these foods yet...but tonight I ate a smalll bag of combos ...and a small bag of almonds. OMG...they were so delicious! This was actually my dinner, not a snack. the combos had no nutritional value. But the almonds did.
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uhmmm..I have no idea how this post got in this thread.I was posting in the snacks thread!
ok...good news? I signed up to be a mentor and advisor for our pride centers youth group tonight. Not one more child.... Quote:
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Anonymous exposes pedophile ring - hacks Lolita City
http://www.examiner.com/anonymous-in...ks-lolita-city |
Good News For Pizza Lovers
Pizza now joins ketchup and relish as vegetables according to Congress.
How Pizza Became A Vegetable Through The Magic Of Influence-Peddling On Tuesday, Congress decided that pizza is a vegetable. I have to imagine that this news instilled confusion in many Americans, as many Americans are (a) familiar with pizza, (b) familiar with vegetables and (c) sane. But, to provide specifics that will in no way dispel your lingering thoughts that we are governed by morons but at least allow you some anthropological insight into how a group of morons who have been given permission to sit in a fancy room in Washington, D.C., and grunt at each other actually think, here is their thinking: Pizza is a vegetable for the purposes of determining what goes into public school lunches by virtue of the fact that pizza traditionally includes a schmear of tomato paste. (Botanically speaking, tomatoes are actually fruit, but we're going to have to just let that slide.) At any rate, you may still be wondering how it came to pass that Congress arrived at the conclusion that pizza could count as a serving of vegetables. Wonder no more! Congress was guided along this path by lobbyists. And lobbyists can do all sorts of things, by magic! (Except provide nutritious lunches for children.) http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/1...n_1098029.html |
Daniel Radcliffe set to portray gay poet Allen Ginsberg in new film
http://www.pinknews.co.uk/2011/12/01...g-in-new-film/ Daniel Radcliffe has reportedly been cast to portray Allen Ginsberg in a new play about the poet’s life. Kill Your Darlings will chart the gay poet’s relationships with Beat Generation writer Jack Kerouac and Lucien Carr, who was imprisoned for two years for murdering his stalker. Ginsberg, who died in 1997, was open about his sexuality in the 1940s, and listed his partner Peter Orlovsky as his spouse in a Who’s Who entry. He has been praised for discussing homosexuality publicly, rather than through metaphor. Earlier this year, Daniel Radcliffe received the Trevor Project’s ‘Hero’ award for raising awareness of the organisation’s work providing helplines for LGBT youth. The 22-year-old has also filmed public service announcements for the Trevor Project and given the charity sizable donations. Radcliffe played down rumours last year about his sexuality after it was suggested he had “a gay face”. Radcliffe, who has said he is “fortunate” to be able to do something about homophobia, reportedly told French press that he was set to play a gay character on screen next year. |
. . . she looked in the rearview mirror and inspected her lips, to see if she had imagined the whole encounter. “And sure enough, her lipstick was on my lipstick,” she recalled. “I said, ‘Whoa.’ ”
Fairytale Wedding! I just love it when everyone lives happily ever after. http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/27/fa....html?emc=eta1 |
The Good Food News of 2011
December 24 by Leland in Current News and Opinion by Twilight Greenaway/Grist 1. Urban farming is flourishing. While the renewed interest in growing food within city limits is nothing new, 2011 was the year urban farming went legit. Despite several low points involving criminal charges for gardeners inMichigan and Tennessee (charges were dropped in both cases after word spread around the internet and people from across the country petitioned lawmakers), the year was full of highlights. In San Francisco, Oakland, Chicago, San Diego, andBaltimore, city officials changed local laws to make it easier to farm. Meanwhile, New Yorkers celebrated the first year of legal beekeeping. And creative, scrappy projects like the Boston Tree Party and Detroit's Growing Joy Community Garden flourished. Meanwhile, corporate interests are also keying into the possibilities of urban agriculture. We heard from a vertical farming expert on the subject. 2. Young farmers make noise. More and more young Americans are taking to the farm, a trend that's continued to grow this year. They're getting creative -- returning to using draft horses, for example. And they're getting political -- the National Young Farmers' Coalition has put together an agenda for the upcoming 2012 farm bill, pushing for easier to access land and loans. LGBT farmers (young and otherwise) are also changing the face of farming. 3. Local food isn't just delicious and eco-friendly. 2011 presented us with even more evidence that local food systems don't just taste good and feel good; they also build local economies. More farmers markets mean more jobs, overall. 4. Food Day makes a comeback. Although the organizers called this year's national event the first annual Food Day, there had apparently been another attempt in the 1970s. Let's hope this versions sticks. Check out our slideshow. 5. We don't need industrial ag to feed the world. Feeding the world doesn't have to depend on genetically modified rice like this.Photo: BASFYes, the world's population is growing rapidly (see Grist's series "What to expect when you're expanding"), and the question of how to feed all 7 billion of us is an important one. Far too often, however, "feeding the world" has become code for farming with as many chemicals and GMO seeds as possible. This year brought mounting evidence to the contrary, including a study published in Nature and another published in Science that say otherwise. The results of a long-term study by the Rodale Institute also proved that organic farming is just as productive as conventional, and better at building soil (this is key, since "yield" is at the heart of the "feed the world" discussion). 6. Despite the influence of the ultra-consolidated meat industry, the "ag-gag" bills went nowhere. Early on in 2011, lawmakers in Florida, New York, Iowa, and Minnesota tried to pass so-called "ag-gag" bills that would have made it illegal to produce -- and in Minnesota to possess -- undercover videos of livestock factory farms. The bills were part of a coordinated effort by Big Ag, but the sustainable food movement organized to defeat them, and, in a rare win, succeeded. 7. Eaters are (a little) more aware of the people behind their food. The situation for workers in the food system isn't exactly good news, but I'm putting it in this category because 2011 saw a number of small but important strides. Food service provider Bon Appétit Management Company took two big steps: First, it released the first comprehensive report on documented farmworker rights and abuses in years. Then it hosted TEDx Fruitvale: Harvesting Change, an event entirely dedicated to the plight of farmworkers and other food system workers. Meanwhile, food worker advocates produced aguide to restaurants that treat their employees well. And the Department of Labor proposed new child labor rules for farms, expected to be officially enacted next year. 8. Food access got more attention. Too many people around the U.S. still lack easy access to good, healthy food. Fortunately, activists and farmers made a lot of creative progress this year in helping to raise awareness and tackle the root problems. A group of advocates from an Oakland-based organization called Live Realtook to the road for the Food and Freedom Rides. Tiny groceries made out of shipping containers: one way to increase food access.Fifty young people began working in schools, gardens, and advocacy organizations as part of the first class of Food Corps participants. We spoke with three of them. Subsidizing farmers markets was shown to be an effective strategy for getting more healthy food into food deserts. And farmers themselves looked for creative ways to address food access, such as this give-a-dozen-buy-a-dozen program modeled after Toms Shoes. Slow Food USA sought to show that supporting local farmers doesn't require going broke with its $5 Challenge. And a group of grad students tried out a model for small, portable grocery stores built out of shipping containers -- a potential solution for under-resourced areas without traditional grocery stores. 9. More information helps eaters make better choices. Although food safety continued to be a huge concern (see our "bad news" list in part 2) some food choices were made a little easier in 2011. For example, organic chicken was proven to carry significantly lower salmonella risk, there's more evidence that organic milk is better for you, As it turns out that most "use-by" dates are meaningless. 10. The Occupy movement adds fuel to the fire. Advocates and farmers jointed the Zuccotti Park gathering this fall, and we heard from a variety of folks who were occupying various aspects of the food system -- like one farmer who occupied the pasture. Just as important as any march or rally, however, the activism taking place over last few months has gotten more eaters to think critically about where their food dollars are going, and to consider investing in local and sustainable food enterprises rather than Wall Street. Here's the article:http://www.freespeech.org/blog/good-food-news-2011 |
We're having a shorter year next year....... :giggle:
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MTV's 'True Life' To Feature Gay Bears And 'Chubby Chasers'
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/0...ref=gay-voices |
A Teen’s Brave Response to “I’m Christian, Unless You’re Gay”
There is a link to the original article, please read if you haven't already http://www.danoah.com/2012/04/a-teen...youre-gay.html |
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Bilingual, benefits of being
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/18/op...R_AP_LO_MST_FB
damn the whole piece I just wrote about this just went poof. My fingers sometimes move a bit too fast for this ole keyboard.:fastdraq: |
Texas A&M Students Form Human Wall To Block Westboro Baptist Church Protestors From Soldier Roy Tisdale's Funeral
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/0...ide=more237102 |
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From Prop 8 Blog...cross posted
Democrats approve marriage equality in party platform
By Jacob Combs This Saturday, the Democratic Party’s full platform committee, a body of around 120 Democrats, approved draft platform language that includes a full-fledged endorsement of marriage equality. The marriage language was accepted without dissent and with little debate, a sign of just how established the position has become in the party since President Obama announced his personal support of marriage equality in May. Last Thursday, BuzzFeed’s Chris Geidner exclusively reported on the draft platform language established by the Democratic Platform Drafting Committee, which read: We support the right of all families to have equal respect, responsibilities, and protections under the law. We support marriage equality and support the movement to secure equal treatment under law for same-sex couples. We also support the freedom of churches and religious entities to decide how to administer marriage as a religious sacrament without government interference. We oppose discriminatory federal and state constitutional amendments and other attempts to deny equal protection of the laws to committed same-sex couples who seek the same respect and responsibilities as other married couples. We support the full repeal of the so-called Defense of Marriage Act and the passage of the Respect for Marriage Act. Also included in the draft language (and also reported by Geidner) is an endorsement of the Employment Non-Discrimination Act, which would prohibit hiring and firing based on sexual orientation and gender identity, and language regarding bullying and support for LGBT youth. The platform’s immigration reform section was amended as well to include new language which reads: “the administration has said that the word ‘family’ in immigration includes LGBT relationships in order to protect binational families threatened with deportation.” The approved platform will be sent to delegates for a final vote at the Democratic National Convention, which will take place in Charlotte, North Carolina from September 3-6 |
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Chris Kluwe and the Greatest Political Statement by Any Athlete Ever
Dave Zirin on September 8, 2012 - 11:51 AM ET Speaking out always holds the risk of a backlash: especially for pro athletes and especially when standing up for LGBT equality. The Baltimore Ravens’ Brendan Ayanbadejo experienced that reality this week. For years, the 36-year-old Ayanbadejo has been outspoken in support of Marriage Equality and LGBT rights. Now, Ayanbadejo is publicly supporting a November ballot initiative for Maryland to join the states that recognize same-sex marriage. This was too much for Baltimore County state delegate Emmett Burns. Burns, a Democrat, sent a formal letter to Ravens team owner Steve Biscotti writing, among other things, “I find it inconceivable that one of your players, Mr. Brendon Ayanbadejo would publicly endorse same-sex marriage, specifically as a Raven Football player…. I believe Mr. Ayanbadejo should concentrate on football and steer clear of dividing the fan base.” Then Burns went even farther and requested that Biscotti, “take the necessary action, as a National Football League Owner, to inhibit such expressions from your employees and that he be ordered to cease and desist such injurious actions. I know of no other NFL player who has done what Mr. Ayanbadejo is doing.” Yes, you read that correctly. Burns is calling on Ayanbadejo’s boss to coerce him to shut up. It’s worth noting that this last statement just isn’t true. Players such as Scott Fujita, NFL Hall of Famer Michael Irvin, the San Francisco 49ers team and even Sports Illustrated NFL preview coverboy Rob Gronkowski have all spoken out for LGBT rights. Ayanbadejo responded to Burns forcefully, defending his own freedom of expression and then saying to USA Today, “It’s an equality issue. I see the big picture. There was a time when women didn’t have rights. Black people didn’t have rights. Right now, gay rights is a big issue and it’s been for a long time. We’re slowly chopping down the barriers to equality.” But the greatest response to Burns and perhaps to anything in the history of everything was made by Minnesota Vikings punter Chris Kluwe. Kluwe also happens to believe in LGBT rights as well as the rights of athletes to be able to speak their minds. The punter sat down at his computer and produced the greatest political statement by any athlete ever… or at least since Muhammad Ali told the US government that “the real enemy of my people is here.” Perhaps that’s hyperbole. Certainly it’s arguable. But what’s undeniable is the greatness of Kluwe’s rant. I quote my favorite parts below, but I strongly encourage people to read it in its entirety here at deadspin. Warning that it’s brilliantly profane, or profanely brilliant, so you might not want to print it out at work and leave it lying around. Then again, if you work in a place with NFL fans prone to homophobic slurs, you might want to leave it everywhere. Kluwe begins by calling out Burns for his “vitriolic hatred and bigotry.” He then schools Burns on the constitution, the First Amendment and the history of racism and segregation in the NFL, But the coup de grâce was his defense of LGBT equality. Kluwe writes, I can assure you that gay people getting married will have zero effect on your life. They won’t come into your house and steal your children. They won’t magically turn you into a lustful c—kmonster. They won’t even overthrow the government in an orgy of hedonistic debauchery because all of a sudden they have the same legal rights as the other 90 percent of our population—rights like Social Security benefits, child care tax credits, Family and Medical Leave to take care of loved ones, and COBRA healthcare for spouses and children. You know what having these rights will make gays? Full-fledged American citizens just like everyone else, with the freedom to pursue happiness and all that entails. Do the civil-rights struggles of the past 200 years mean absolutely nothing to you? In closing, I would like to say that I hope this letter, in some small way, causes you to reflect upon the magnitude of the colossal foot in mouth clusterf-ck you so brazenly unleashed on a man whose only crime was speaking out for something he believed in. Best of luck in the next election; I’m fairly certain you might need it. Sincerely, Chris Kluwe Kluwe then ends by writing, “P.S. I’ve also been vocal as hell about the issue of gay marriage so you can take your ‘I know of no other NFL player who has done what Mr. Ayanbadejo is doing’ and shove it in your close-minded, totally lacking in empathy piehole and choke on it. A—hole.” For the first time in football history, a punter is truly leading the way. Thank you Chis Kluwe, for the greatest political statement made by any athlete in decades. The fact that it happens to be about LGBT rights only shows how far we’ve traveled, in the streets and in the locker rooms. |
Group seeks to clean up paperwork for outed troops
http://www.stripes.com/group-seeks-t...roops-1.193841 |
CNN ANCHOR CAROL COSTELLO IS HAPPY TO SUPPORT THE 'GAY GESTAPO'
http://www.gay.net/news/2012/10/23/c...rt-gay-gestapo |
A Factory on Bicycle Wheels, Carrying Hope of a Better Life
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/31/wo...bal-home&_r=1& |
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REALLY good news thou probably old new because I am always the last to know.....the rights to Twinkies has been purchased and will not be lost and gone forever!
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Boston Fraternity Raises Money for Trans Brother
2.25.2013 BY BENJAMIN LINDSAY Brothers of Phi Alpha Tau at Emerson College campaign to pay for FTM top surgery Traditionally, college Greeks are an archetypally masculine institution—about as butch as the Boy Scouts. Pledging a fraternity and being inducted as a brother is often an arduous process, one that is meant to separate the men from the boys. But where does the LGBTQ community fit into this macho niche? Much like the world of professional sports, the world of campus Greek life is not often heralded as the epitome of acceptance. Locker room antics are an insidious fact of the frat house. No doubt about it. Of course, there are always exceptions to the rule, which is what makes this story out of Emerson College particularly heartwarming: brothers in Emerson’s Alpha Chapter of Phi Alpha Tau have come together to raise funds for a new brother’s FTM top surgery (full disclosure: I'm a member of the PAT fraternity and currently a junior at Emerson). Earlier this year, Visual & Media Arts sophomore Donnie Collins pledged as a prospective brother to Phi Alpha Tau, the nation’s oldest professional communicative arts fraternity. An Alexandria, Virginia native, Collins didn’t come out as transgender until age 17 while attending a boarding school in Windsor, Conn. Of his time in an all-girls dorm, he says in a recent interview, “They were really nice, but it was all horrible." Thus far, Collins has been taking his gender transition one step at a time. Barred from using his mother’s insurance to cover any physical transitions, he has singlehandedly covered the bulk of his hormone therapy since December 2011. “I’d go to the endocrinologist and pay hundreds of dollars out of pocket, because, of course, I didn’t have insurance of my own,” he explains. Collins now has a college health insurance policy through Emerson, a policy, like so many others, that is trans-exclusionary. It is common practice for insurance companies to deem female-to-male breast augmentation—or top surgery—as a cosmetic plastic surgery rather than a necessity. So Collins has been raising money for the procedure for months, but it seemed that one door after another would close in his face. His petition for a trans-inclusive policy was recently denied by the college's insurance plan, and his personal Chipin fund will cease when the crowd-funding site shuts down next month. In a time when his options were running out, Collins’s brothers in Phi Alpha Tau have rallied together to cover some of the surgery’s cost. Find their indiegogo fund here: Brothers of A Boston Fraternity - FTM: Top Surgery. The brothers' fund has already surpassed the $2,000 they initially hoped to donate, but now they’re looking to cover even more of the procedure’s $8,100 cost. Collins has been completely overwhelmed by the wave of support, admitting to have cried out of gratitude when he heard what his brothers were doing. But the thought that this is a fraternity raising money for him never even crossed his mind. “I was just like, ‘Oh that’s such a Tau thing to do,’ and I didn’t even think it was that weird,” he says. “But then I started sending [the indiegogo link] out to people, and they were like, ‘Oh my god, that’s amazing! See, Greek Life isn’t bad; it’s amazing.’” The brothers’ site says that they hope less to raise money with their efforts and more to spread acceptance, brotherhood, and love. “We are here... to tell a story. The story of transformation, the story of self-discovery, and the story of brotherhood.” It seems that Donnie Collins and his brothers' story is certainly one worth telling. Please consider donating to their cause. http://www.out.com/entertainment/pop...-trans-brother |
Hong Kong gay couple shares "wedding video" with the world - See more at:
http://www.fridae.asia/newsfeatures/....IyD3mdpw.dpuf |
Amazon Kindle Backs Gay Marriage With New Commercial
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/0...n_2732827.html |
From Shamans to gay bars: Booming Mongolia’s LGBT people
http://www.gaystarnews.com/article/s...t-people050413 |
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I'm not sure you would call it good news exactly, but it's definitely falls on the positive side.
Burglars return stolen goods to group that helps sexual assault survivors The returned loot came with a note saying, "We hope you can continue to make a difference in people's lives" http://www.salon.com/2013/08/08/burg...ult_survivors/ |
This bodes well for the future.
One can hope. Regardless it's pretty cute and fun to watch. |
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Okay, what a day, what a day I've had today!!! *LOL*
In a world where I've been dealing with nothing but troubles, today was my day of days of the best news ever!!! I did the unspeakable thing, earlier this afternoon, after getting home from my amazing interview for a job that is very close to home. After the interview, I spilled part of my drink onto my well-loved Paisley Print jacket (it's a long dress coat) and not realising it, I left my new phone in the pocket of my dress coat. It was in the washeteria, the washer was locked, I was in tears, thinking: "What in the world is wrong with you, -XXXX-!?!?"So I go down to get my clothes out of the washer after it unlocks itself, pull out the long dress coat, it's not in the pocket, but after unloading the whole washer, there it was. I layed it down on top of the machine, put the clothes on to dry, picked up the phone and *Wha-laaaaa*, it worked!!!!!!!!!!!!! OMG, I can hardly believe it! It works!!!! In other news: I will hear back about my latest interview results on Thursday of this week, about whether I can be hired. During my interview, the woman said that I gave her all the right reasons to hire me and would be calling me back on Thursday. If I am hired, I will be so deliriously happy!!!! It's close to home, I can walk to work. That's my Good News, today! :) |
Red and I decided we are not watching American Idol this season. We are rather upset that we have supported a show and network that enjoys making fun of people.
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Story of the Week, Miracle of a Lifetime
Story of the Week, Miracle of a Lifetime
This was featured again on NBC last night. The story of Xena, the miracle dog from here in Atlanta, who helps to reach an autistic boy, and a boy who helps to heal a severely abused dog. What a little lovin' 'll do.:rrose: Jonny Hickey has a great mom! |
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