Tuesday, June 29, 2010

An interesting and thought-provoking take on lgbt pride



An interesting and thought-provoking video on lgbt pride from the folks at infomania. Watch, learn and feel free to comment.

Only one problem. The part about Eminem totally omitted his tendency to show his ass.

I mean come on now. I'm not saying anything about Eminem's sexual orientation but I've seen his ass more times than those of all five of my boyfriends combined.

Just saying . . .

Past infomania posts:

Elena Kagan 'plays softball like a lesbian'

Conversion Therapy - a video with George Rekers in mind

Advice to closeted politicans - How to keep from being exposed

Why the phrase 'No Homo' is highly needed

Reasons why the 'sanctity' of proms MUST be preserved from Constance McMillen

Why gay marriage is 'wrong'   


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Montana GOP wants to outlaw 'homosexual acts' and other Tuesday midday news briefs

Montana GOP seeks to ‘keep homosexual acts illegal.' - These folks think about sex more than me.

Kagan: A Fake John Roberts, A Radical Homosexualist, and a Sign of The End Times - The far right's version of the Elena Kagan hearing. Lawd, give us all strength!

Christian chaplain and crack team to investigate little girls’ room goings-on - and it gets worse. Imagine Mass Resistance, Peter LaBarbera, and several other religious right nuts teaming up to stop Kagan by "investigating her." Talk about your Legion of Doom without the sense of coolness.

FYI: They're watching - When religious right groups make errors or are shown to be hypocrites, there is no such thing as a public mea culpa for them. They make "changes" when they think no one is watching.

Credibility FAIL: FRC's Tony Perkins to testify during Kagan confirmation hearing - By the time some of you read this, he will have probably already testified. But the question remains what in the hell is this man who should have no credibility at all doing testifying in front of Congress?

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Cuccinelli: 14th amendment not designed to protect lgbts

Maybe Virginia's attorney general, Ken Cuccinelli, just plain don't like lgbts.

From ThinkProgress:

In March, Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli (R) told the state’s colleges and universities to rescind policies that ban discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation, arguing that schools have no legal authority to adopt such statements. On Friday, Cuccinelli appeared at Boys State, where a high school student asked him, “How is that not a violation of the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment?” Cuccinelli responded by suggesting that the amendment was not designed to protect gay men and women:

“State universities are not free to create any specially protected classes other than those dictated by the General Assembly,” Cuccinelli said. “Your question is, why is that not a violation of the 14th Amendment’s equal protection clause. Frankly, the category of sexual orientation would never have been contemplated by the people who wrote and voted for and passed the 14th Amendment,” he said.

“There are judges who think these things ‘evolve,’ is the word they like to use,” Cuccinelli said, but the correct approach to making such a change would be a constitutional amendment, he said.

I feel safe in saying that Cuccinelli's statement goes so far that I don't envision any religious right head or organization coming to his defense. But man, wouldn't it be fun if they tried!

Igor Volsky of ThinkProgess's Wonk Room disputes Cuccinelli's statement and does it very well:

It’s certainly true that the authors of the 14th amendment may not have “contemplated” protecting gay people from discrimination, but the Supreme Court has. Despite Cuccinelli’s rather arrogant attempts to dismiss legal precedent and impose his own vision of the Constitution on America, the Court has found that laws motivated solely by anti-gay animus are unconstitutional — and Cuccinelli is bound by that case whether “the people who wrote and voted for and passed the 14th Amendment” “contemplated” about gays or not.

In 1996’s Romer v. Evans the court ruled that a Colorado law called Amendment 2, which rescinded recently anti-discrimination measures, violated the 14th Amendment’s equal protection clause because animus towards a certain group of people does not constitute “a legitimate governmental purpose.”


“‘[I]f the constitutional conception of `equal protection of the laws’ means anything, it must at the very least mean that a bare . . . desire to harm a politically unpopular group cannot constitute a legitimate governmental interest.’ Department of Agriculture v. Moreno, 413 U.S. 528, 534 (1973),” the Court wrote. “Amendment 2, however, in making a general announcement that gays and lesbians shall not have any particular protections from the law, inflicts on them immediate, continuing, and real injuries that outrun and belie any legitimate justifications that may be claimed for it.”


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