I truly believe that God made us the way we are, Gay, Lesbian or Bisexual. The Challenge is not for us, is for the rest of the world.

Friday, June 17, 2005

A Sad day for Christianity...

Anti-Gay Cleric Appointed Anglican Archbishop
by Peter Moore 365Gay.com London Bureau

Posted: June 17, 2005 5:00 pm ET


Gay Former Clinton Aide To Run For NY Attorney General

Baptists Told To Take Kids Out Of Public Schools With Gay Clubs

Will Rehnquist Deny Bush His Supreme Court Appointment?

Court Refuses To Rip Child From Lesbian Mom

Anti-Gay Cleric Appointed Anglican Archbishop

Canadian Gay Marriage Bill Faces Delay

Iowa Gay 'Divorce' Upheld

Gay Group Protests Amendment With Wedding Cake



» MORE NEWS»



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(London) One of Britain's most vocal opponents of gay priests and same-sex relationships has been named the number two man in the Church of England.

The Ugandan-born Right Rev. John Sentamu on Friday was appointed by the British government as Archbishop of York. He becomes the first black archbishop in the COE's history.

Currently Stemanu is Bishop of Birmingham. A former judge, Sentamu, has made clear he supports the Lambeth Resolution of 1998, which rejects homosexual practice as "incompatible with scripture" and rules out gay marriage in the church and opposes Britain's civil unions which come into effect in December.

Stemanu's appointment is seen as an olive branch to conservatives in the worldwide Anglican faith who have been at war with liberals since the election in the US branch of the church of Gene Robinson as bishop of New Hampshire.

Robinson is the first openly gay bishop in the Anglican Church and conservatives, mainly in Africa have threatened a schism.

"It is imperative that the church regains her vision and confidence in mission, developing ways that will enable the Church of England to reconnect imaginatively with England," Stemanu said in a statement.

The appointment has riled gays in the Church.

“I cannot pretend that we are anything other than disappointed that a person that has not shown himself to be a particular friend of the lesbian and gay community has been appointed,” said Richard Kirker, general secretary of the Church of England's Lesbian & Gay Christian Movement.

“We would have preferred someone willing to openly challenge homophobia and advocate justice for all whatever their sexual orientation.”

©365Gay.com 2005

Thursday, June 16, 2005

Web site of the day: John Boswell Page

PEOPLE WITH A HISTORY: John Boswell Page

The Link above takes you to a very comprehensive and very well organized page dedicated to the works of one of the most influential Historians in matters of LGBT History and Religion: John Boswell Ph.D.

Wednesday, June 15, 2005

On Pride Month remember Harry Hay

The Real (Radical) Harry Hay

by Michael Bronksi
Michael Bronski is a journalist, cultural critic, and political commentator. His writings have appered in the Boston Globe, Utne Reader, the Los Angeles Times, and the Advocate. He is the author and editor of many books and collections, including: The Pleasure Principle (St. Martin’s) and Taking Liberties: Gay Men’s Essays on Politcs, Culture and Sex.

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Even in the glow of its conservatism, America—which was formed via revolution, after all—has always taken a certain pride in its radicals. Even so, America prefers to remember its history-makers in sanitized versions with none of the messy, often embarrassing flaws that are usually inscribed on the souls who take it upon themselves to change the world. Thus, we prefer to think of Thomas Jefferson as a revolutionary genius, rather than as a slave owner who not only had sexual relations with his female slaves but consigned his own children to slavery.

The fiery stances taken by anarchist and feminist Emma Goldman in the early part of this century are softened—or forgotten—in her incarnations as a grandmotherly figure in the film Reds and an innocuous witty commentator in the musical Ragtime.

The popular image of Rosa Parks as a tired seamstress who just wanted a seat on the bus is far more comforting than the reality: she was a skilled political thinker and secretary of the NAACP chapter that planned the bus boycott long before she refused to sit down.

Even the most serious biographers of Martin Luther King Jr. portray him in rosy hues, as an American saint, not as a deeply religious man whose promiscuity and adulterous behavior tore him apart.

So it is with Harry Hay—founder of the gay movement in America—who died at the age of 90 on October 24. Obits in the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, and the Associated Press left the impression that Hay was a passionate activist and something of a romantic. The New York Times referred to him as “an ardent American Communist, a romantic homosexual,” who was a “restless middle-aged man” by the time he formed the Mattachine Society, the first gay-rights group in the United States. The Los Angeles Times described Hay’s penchant for wearing “the knit cap of a macho longshoreman, a pigtail, and a strand of pearls” and also noted that he and John Burnside, his lover of 40 years, lived most recently in San Francisco in a pink Victorian house.

The reality is that while Hay may have been a romantic, he was also notoriously promiscuous, and his communism was far more rabid than “ardent.” While he did wear pearls with his longshoreman’s cap, it wasn’t a form of charming “gender-bender” chic, as the Los Angeles Times put it, but a political statement Hay first donned back when it was still quite dangerous to do so. Hay, in fact, was fanatically resistant to the grandfatherly image the modern gay movement not only tried to attribute to him but expected him to play out.

The documentary Word Is Out, for instance, filmed in 1976, portrayed Hay and Burnside as paragons of gay domesticity. More recently, he was invited to address the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force’s Creating Change Conference, in 1998, and was billed as a major speaker. But he was given no context in which to talk about his politics and found himself treated more as an artifact of gay history than as an activist with ideas.

Hay had strong opinions and never pandered to popular opinion when he voiced them—whether he was attacking national gay organizations for what he saw as their increasingly conservative political positions (“The assimilationist movement is running us into the ground,” he told the San Francisco Chronicle in July 2000) or when he condemned the national gay press—in particular, the Advocate—for its emphasis on consumerism. Hay’s uneasy relationship with the gay movement—he reviled what he saw as the movement’s propensity for selling out its fringe members for easy, and often illusory, respectability—didn’t develop later in life. It was there from the start.

In 1950, when Hay formed the Mattachine Society—technically a “homophile group,” since the more aggressive idea of gay rights had yet to be conceived—his radical vision was captured in a manifesto he wrote stating boldly that gay people were not like heterosexuals. Indeed, Hay insisted, homosexuals formed a unique culture from which heterosexuals might learn a great deal. This notion was at decisive odds with the view put forth by many other Mattachine members: that homosexuals should not be discriminated against because gay people were just like straight people. By 1954, the group essentially ousted Hay.

It wasn’t the first time Hay had been booted out of a group he helped create. From the 1930s through the early 1950s, Hay had been an active member of the American Communist Party. In 1934, Hay and his lover Will Geer, who later played Grandpa on the long-running television series “The Waltons,” helped pull off an 83-day-long workers’ strike of the port of San Francisco. Though marred by violence, it was an organizing triumph, one that became a model for future union strikes—such as the one currently under way (but stymied by the Bush administration) at West Coast ports.

During the 1940s, Hay struggled unsuccessfully to be honest about his homosexuality—of which he’d been certain since adolescence—while maintaining his status as a member of the Communist Party, which banned homosexuals from joining. He married a follow Communist Party member and adopted two daughters—even as he worked to form the Mattachine Society. But homophobia eventually won out. After the Mattachine Society gained notoriety in the early 1950s, Hay was unceremoniously kicked out of the Communist Party.

The story of Harry Hay’s life was that he was always just little too radical—and since he was also a bit of an egotist, too disinclined to demure—for the groups with which he was involved. He was also too idealistic. Hay took the name Mattachine from a secret medieval French society of unmarried men who wore masks during their rituals as forms of social protest. They, in turn, took their names from the Italian mattaccino, a court jester who was able to tell the truth to the king while wearing a mask.

As an old-time socialist, he was drawn to communism because of its egalitarian vision and, in the late 1930s and early 1940s, its stand against fascism. But he was also an actor and a musician drawn to a brand of scholarship that romanticized popular culture as intrinsically progressive and revolutionary. Despite, or perhaps because of, Hay’s difficulty getting along with others, his vision of gay liberation was decades ahead of its time.

His monumentally important contribution to the gay movement was his ability to communicate the notion that homosexuals made up a cultural minority with its own history, political concerns, and organizational strengths. An often-told story about Hay (retold in the New York Times obituary) recounts how he came up with a political strategy in 1948 that no one had ever voiced before: giving votes in exchange for ideological support. To wit: identity politics for homosexuals—on the same model African-Americans had begun to use in organizations like the NAACP. Hay wondered—out loud, the most basic form of political organizing—if Vice-President Henry Wallace, who was the Progressive Party’s candidate for president, would back a sexual-privacy law if he could be assured that a majority of homosexuals would vote for him.

The politics of quid pro quo was revolutionary for its time. Remember, at that time it was dangerous to publicly identify as a “homosexual”—you could be arrested merely on the suspicion that you might be looking for sex; many states legally forbade serving drinks to homosexuals, much less allowing homosexuals to gather together in public. Indeed, the American Psychological Association’s lifting of the definition of homosexuality as a mental illness was a good 20 years away.

Political genius that he was, Hay never would have achieved what he did without his training as an organizer for the American Communist Party. He used the party’s own “cell” organization to build and propagate the ever-growing Mattachine. Even the group’s recruitment tactic—it was as dangerous to walk up to someone and say, “Hey, are you a homosexual? Want to join our club?” as it was for someone to drum up membership for a seditious political group—was modeled on the Communist Party’s strategy of getting names of potential members from current members.

The homophile movement of the 1950s and 1960s gave way after the 1969 Stonewall riots to the Gay Liberation movement. With its roots in feminism, the Black Power movement, street culture, and the antiwar movement, the Gay Liberation movement initially appealed to Hay. It was, essentially, the movement he had envisioned in 1950 but that never came to fruition. Soon, however, Hay became disenchanted as the radical Gay Liberation movement became corporat- ized with groups like Gay Activist Alliance and the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force, whose goals were to assimilate into the mainstream rather than change the basic structures of society. Hay, yet again, was a queen without a movement.

During these years, Hay spoke out against what he saw as the increasing conservatism of the gay-and-lesbian movement. As he saw it, the gay—and now, lesbian—movement was far more interested in electing homosexuals to government positions than in making the government responsible to the needs of its people. It was more interested in making sure that gay people were represented in commercial television and films than in critiquing the ways mass culture destroyed the human spirit. It was too interested in making strategic alliances with conservative politicians, rather than exposing how most politicians were working hand in glove with bloodless, destructive corporations.

Hay’s response was to reinvent gay politics all over again: in 1979, he founded the Radical Faeries. The spiritual core of the Radical Faeries was the same as the one Hay had envisioned for his original Mattachine Society: the conviction that gay men were spiritually different from other people. They were more in touch with nature, bodily pleasure, and the true essence of human nature, which embraced both male and female.

Hay’s spiritual radicalism had its roots in 17th-century British dissenting religious groups, such as the Diggers, Ranters, Quakers, and Levelers, who sought to refashion the world after their egalitarian, socialist, non-hierarchical, utopian views. Unlike his dissenting predecessors, however, it wasn’t millennial Christianity that drove Hay, but a belief that all sexuality was sacred. A belief that queer sexuality had an essential outsider quality that made the outcast homosexual the perfect prophet for a heterosexual world lost in strict gender roles, enforced reproductive sexuality, and numbingly straitjacketed social personae. The Radical Faeries were something of a cross between born-again queers and in-your-face frontline shock troops practicing gender-fuck drag.

By this time, the gay movement—which had devolved from a “liberation” movement into a quest for “gay rights”—treated Hay as a benign crackpot. He was frequently praised as an important historical figure, but no one was really interested in what he had to say, especially since the Christian right had already begun to launch vicious anti-gay attacks with Anita Bryant’s “Save Our Children” campaign of 1979 and California’s Briggs Initiative (which would have banned openly gay schoolteachers) a year later. Often the discomfort with Hay was coupled with an overriding discomfort with his long history of involvement with the American Communist Party.

Despite his 40-year relationship with John Burnside, the aging radical still proclaimed the joys of sexual promiscuity and denounced the increasingly popular mandate that monogamy was a preferable lifestyle. In his own determined, often irritating, manner, Harry Hay resisted becoming a model homosexual hero.

Even many of Hay’s more dedicated supporters could not side with him on this. From Hay’s point of view, silencing any part of the movement because it was disliked or hated by mainstream culture was both a moral failing and a seriously mistaken political strategy. In Harry’s eyes, such a stance failed to grapple seriously with the reality that there would always be some aspect of the gay movement to which mainstream culture would object.

By pretending the movement could be made presentable by eliminating a specific “objectionable” group—drag queens and leather people were the objects of similar purges in the 1970s and 1980s—gay leaders not only pandered to the idea of respectability but betrayed their own community.

Now Harry Hay’s critics are able to do what they couldn’t do when he was alive: make him presentable. The National Gay and Lesbian Task Force and the Human Rights Campaign have issued laudatory press releases. (The HRC’s Davis Smith says, for example, “When you were in a room with him, you had the sense you were in the company of a historic figure.” A sense I certainly didn’t get at a cocktail party 12 years ago, when he came across as nothing but a cantankerous old queen who was more interested in speculating about what some of the younger party guests would be like in bed than discussing the connections between 1950s communism and gay-community organizing.)

Even the Metropolitan Community Church issued a statement hailing Harry Hay’s support for its work (a dubious idea at best). Neither of the long and laudatory obits in the New York Times and the Los Angeles Times mentioned his deeply radical credentials and vision.

Harry, it turns out, was a grandfatherly figure who had an affair with Grandpa Walton. But it’s important to remember Hay —with all his contradictions, his sometimes crackpot notions, and his radiant, ecstatic, vision of the holiness of being queer—as he lived. For in his death, Harry Hay is becoming everything he would have raged against.


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Michael Bronski is a journalist, cultural critic, and political commentator. His writings have appered in the Boston Globe, Utne Reader, the Los Angeles Times, and the Advocate. He is the author and editor of many books and collections, including: The Pleasure Principle (St. Martin’s) and Taking Liberties: Gay Men’s Essays on Politcs, Culture and Sex.

Pandagon: Okay, I have a house to clean

Pandagon: Okay, I have a house to clean

and yet, another blog on the subject. God has given us the internet as a way to continue fighting for human rights... please follow the link above.

c u l t u r e k i t c h e n �: But I'm a Cheerleader

c u l t u r e k i t c h e n �: But I'm a Cheerleader

Please follow the link above

In this section, I posted reviews and comments of the very first movie I have seen trying to deal with the toxic effect of a cancer that spreads quickly... "ex gay ministries" (Please note the lower caps and the quotation marks...

Megan is an all-American girl. She's a cheerleader, she has a boyfriend, etc. But she doesn't like kissing her boyfriend very much. And she's pretty touchy with her cheerleader friends. And she only has pictures of girls up in her locker. Her parents and friends conclude that she must be gay and send her off to "sexual redirection" school, full of admittedly homosexual misfits, where she can learn to how to be straight. Will Megan be turned around to successful heterosexuality, or will she succumb to her love for the beautiful Graham?

Queer Action Coalition: A FORMER CLIENT OF "LOVE IN ACTION" TALKS

Queer Action Coalition: A FORMER CLIENT OF "LOVE IN ACTION" TALKS

Above, there is another blog that show on regular basis the horror of "Ex-gay ministries".

Ex-Gay Scandals and Defections

Ex-Gay Scandals and Defections

The link I just posted included (above) list why it is so important to educate ourselves about the dangers of these so called "ex-gay" ministries in which individuals can suffer severe damage as a consecuence of the mislead so called "reparatory therapy"

If anyone reading this know about a desperate father or mother that is confused and trying to go to these "services" please share with them the information and if possible, help them understand the dangers of these horrible places.

Ex-Gay Watch: Blog Of A 16 Year Old Sent To "Love In Action" Live-In Program Against His Will

Ex-Gay Watch: Blog Of A 16 Year Old Sent To "Love In Action" Live-In Program Against His Will


This is an example of what is on the blog listed above, please be informed and support the efforts to out the dangers of these horrible places

Blog Of A 16 Year Old Sent To "Love In Action" Live-In Program Against His Will
A 16 year old named Zach in Bartlett, Tennessee recently came out to his parents who reacted by announcing they are sending him to an ex-gay live-in program called Love In Action, the same cult like program Peterson Toscano survived. How do we know all this? Zach has been writing about it on his blog found here on MySpace.com. To view Zach's main profile click here.

On his blog Zach posts program rules given to parents that aren't supposed to be seen by patients. There are of course several comical rules forbidding any clothing from Abercrombie and Fitch and dining at places like TGI Fridays (because there is a bar attached to the restaurant). Program rules of genuine concern to me is a clear double standard when it came to encouraging honesty, self-examination and reflection in patients. Several selected rules read:

Be honest, authentic, and real.

Absolutely no journaling or keeping a diary outside of the MI* process unless directed or approved by staff.

No discussing therapeutic issues at home. Keep conversations positive.

*[Moral Inventories, where one must keep records of sexual struggles and temptations.]
This troubles me. A participant is to be honest, authentic and real but... family visits are to be glossed over and superficial? Many people use journaling as a method of self reflection and thought. However it appears journals can only to be used to keep a "moral inventory" of sexual temptations. For a program that pretends to stress honesty and authenticity they sure discourage independent thought and discussion both with one's self and family. Frankly don't see how this kind of suppression of genuinely productive thought can lead to positive healing no matter what your goal.

In conclusion, Zach was scheduled to be shipped off on June 6th. His MySpace profile indicates he last logged in on the 5th. I would appreciate it if XGW readers kept me updated on any developments as you all peruse the blogosphere. (Thanks to Royi for the initial tip)

Friday, June 10, 2005

The Official Site of James Dean

The Official Site of James Dean

Official Website of Sal Mineo, for the lovers of true art

www.salmineo.com Official Website of Sal Mineo

Thursday, June 09, 2005

I found this web page to be worth to take a look... click on "home" to see

Home

Reading Elaine Pagels.....

Do you know her? Elaine is one of the true great theologians of our time. I first knew about her through her book "The Gnostic Gospels" and -almost at the same time- saw an interview with her, talking about the Gospel of Mary Magdalene in a show made about the "Davinci code".

"Beyond Belief; The Secret Gospel of Thomas" is one of her many wonderful scholar -yet- spiritual books ever, in which she explores the historical comparison of the Gospel of Thomas with the Gospel of John, and explains -in plain English- the -again- historical consuecuences of the supression of the "Gnostic writings" (or apocripha)

Great book for those in Spiritual search and torn between western and eastern traditions.

Daniel