• Facebook and the tolerance of gaybashing

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    shdwrulrS
    Freedom of expression is a right for everyone. As long as they are sticking to their little page, they can spout whatever crap they want. If they start to harass someone on their page/wall, then I will have a problem.
  • Popular Russian TV actor: ‘Burn gay people alive’

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    M
    Thing is Uganda is burning gay people alive now… just make a Google search it's devastating
  • India ‘goes gay for a day’ to protest gay sex ban

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    I
    +1. It's great to see this occurring, despite other gigantic issues the country seems to be having, specifically the gender inequalities.
  • Gay adoption ban lifted in Northern Ireland

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  • New Jersey becomes the 14th US state to have marriage equality

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    B
    Great news.
  • Gay Man In Russia Apparently Raped By Vigilantes On Video

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    P
    I am shocked every time I read something like this. It's like my brain can't process this kind of behavior.
  • Researchers Find New Avenue to HIV Hope–Via Monkeys

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    rezurrectedR
    Thank you for posting such a positive story afflicting a myriad of humans :dick:
  • Leading Russian gay activist behind Moscow Pride dies

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    T
    Thanks for the answer raphjd. Yeah, I stumbled upon more detailed news after I posted.
  • Russia ‘gay propaganda’ law may fall after historic court ruling

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  • Italian pasta baron's anti-gay comment prompts boycott call

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    raphjdR
    He only apologized due to the severe backlash over his comments.  He still doesn't like us.
  • Judge orders New Jersey to allow gay marriage

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  • Out2Enroll campaign seeks to help LGBT Americans get health insurance

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  • Shocking Olympics announcement

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    leatherbearL
    Thank you for emailing the head of the International Olympics Committee and demanding that he go on the record about whether lebian, gay, bi and trans people are included in the Olympic Principle 6 of non-discrimination.  Bach needs to know the world is watching and waiting for his answer – the dignity and credibility of the Olympics as a force for good are on the line. Will you take one more step and phone the Olympics Committee to ask them the same question out loud? It will only take a minute, and it will reinforce the thousands of emails they're already receiving. Just dial: +41 21 621 61 11. You'll hear a long message in French and English and then a tone. You can then read the following script, or ask the question in your own words: "Hi, I'm calling to ask President Bach to publicly confirm that lesbian, gay, bi and trans people are included in the Olympic Principle 6 of nondiscrimination. I am concerned that the International Olympics Committee just said that it is satisfied that Russia will not violate the Olympic Charter, even though there is growing anti-gay violence, arrests, and discrimination in that country. Thank you." Thank you for going All Out, Andre, Jeremy and the rest of the All Out team. P.S. If you have Twitter, you can also tweet at the Olympics Committee by clicking the button here: TWEET
  • Bob Mizer's Revolutionary Homoerotic Photography Heads To MOCA (NSFW)

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  • Arron Keahey, Gay Texas Man,

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  • Transgender Teen Says Homecoming-Queen Dream is `Bigger Than Me`

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    leatherbearL
    Transgender Homecoming Queen Draws Backlash, But it's Progress By Shaya Tayefe Mohajer | Takepart.com 10 hours ago Takepart.com Southern California high school students elected a transgender girl as their homecoming queen this week, exciting equal rights backers everywhere, but Cassidy Lynn Campbell was still wearing her tiara and sash when she recorded a sobbing confessional decrying the hateful public backlash that came with the crown. As acceptance grows for gays and lesbians, transgender teens and adults struggle to earn the same respect and rights. Too often transgender people become targets of barbs and harsh responses, like those that 16-year-old Cassidy faced. But the controversy and becoming part of the national conversation is still a step forward in the slow march to acceptance for the transgender community, experts say. “Because of transgender people telling their stories in the media and people like Cassidy putting themselves out there by running for homecoming queen, there have been more policy changes on the state and national level,” Nick Adams, a spokesman for GLAAD, told TakePart. “However, there is still a lot of ignorance and misunderstanding about the lives that transgender people lead.” In the United States, something as seemingly small as the "M" or "F" that appears on most identification has a huge effect on the daily lives of the transgender community. Until the Social Security Administration changed its policy in June, transgender people risked being outed by the agency during the employment verification process. Before the policy shift, the agency would send letters to employers saying a female transgender applicant's gender didn't match the gender they had on file. Revised rules allow trans people to obtain federal documentation that reflects their accurate name and gender, without having to send proof of surgery. The landmark advance in policy is also true of passports and green cards, after changes at the State Department and federal immigration agency. Social Security numbers and employment, in particular, are a serious issue because 90 percent of transgender people report harassment mistreatment and discrimination in the workplace, and are four times more likely to live in poverty, according to GLAAD. Being outed as a transgender person to a new boss or colleagues can create a hostile work environment and uncomfortable situations. In other parts of the world the transgender community is making advances, but still struggles for recognition in some surprising places. Human Rights Watch researcher Graeme Reid told TakePart that Argentina leads the way with progressive policy on LGBT rights by allowing transgender people to self-identify and legalizing gay marriage a few years ago. That's not the case in The Netherlands and other European countries, where activists are working to change the laws. Typically progressive Dutch legislators were once frontrunners when it came to transgender rights, making the country among the first European countries to grant the community legal recognition of gender identity in 1985. But the legal recognition came at a cost: a sex change operation had to be completed before legal status was granted. “It’s an invasive, irreversible surgery and many people don’t want to do that,” said Reid. “(Laws that require sex changes were) based on some misconceptions around the transgender experience. Not everyone wants to transition fully. That was a very binary and rigid idea about gender.” Activists are urging the Dutch government to stop requiring medical intervention in recognizing gender. Although the United States has already halted the practice at the federal level "there continues to be a sensationalistic fixation on the medical aspect of a person’s transition when in fact the whole transition process is much more holistic than that – your pronoun, telling your friends and family, there are so many more aspects to consider," Adams said Broad acceptance comes, in part, with familiarity. A GLAAD study found that only 8 percent of Americans personally know someone who is transgender, while a Pew study found that 90 percent of Americans say they know someone who is gay, lesbian or bisexual. Media coverage of violence against transgender women has highlighted a deeply unfortunate and persistent problem: more than half of all anti-LGBT homicides are committed against transgender women.  Increased awareness and compassion would be key to curbing violence in such cases, Adams said. Where shows like “Glee” paved the way for gay and lesbian teens, transgender characters are making their way into the national cultural conversation, too. One of the many absorbing plotlines in the hit Netflix series “Orange is the New Black” explored one transgender woman’s downward spiral into credit debt because insurance doesn’t cover gender transition, allowing unique struggles to be depicted in the mainstream, Adams noted. In that sense, Cassidy’s tiara-wearing tirade does make her an important transgender trailblazer. And proof of her success can be found in the fact that Cassidy’s community voted for her win. As her high school principal told local reporters, the school’s administration is proud that students are spreading a message of “equity, acceptance, tolerance and respect. http://news.yahoo.com/transgender-homecoming-queen-draws-backlash-progress-024001748.html This article contains many live links within the text in the original post.
  • Cameroon rejects UN Human Rights Council’s gay rights recommendations

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    leatherbearL
    Andre and Jeremy, All Out [image: allout_image_5861_full.jpg] Eric Lembembe Dear Michael, Eric Lembembe worked to help gay people in Cameroon. But he was recently murdered – his neck broken, his feet smashed and his face burned with an iron. It’s not an isolated incident. Cameroon's gay people are living in terror as mob attacks, beatings and anti-gay arrests increase. And finally the government is starting to respond to international pressure. They've just said they will investigate police officers accused of attacking gay people. But they are still refusing to stop the anti-gay mobs and "kill the faggots" protests. Can you help build the pressure on Cameroon's President Biya to go further and help stop the attacks? If 100,000 of us sign the petition in the next 72 hours, we'll send it directly to the Presidential Palace: https://www.allout.org/cameroon-attacks President Biya is sensitive to the growing international scandal about Cameroon's treatment of gay people. That's because he likes to spend his millions travelling to luxury resorts, meeting influential people, and making even more money from international business deals. But it's much harder to mingle in international circles if the country you run is seen as a place where gay people are tortured, killed and imprisoned. President Biya may hope he has now defused the situation by saying Cameroon will investigate police violence. But we can show him the risk to his reputation and lifestyle hasn't gone away. Will you urge President Biya to help stop anti-gay attacks, end the law that makes it a crime to be gay, and free all people in jail because of who they love? Sign here to help get to 100,000 names: https://www.allout.org/cameroon-attacks Remember Roger from Cameroon? He was jailed for texting another man to say "I'm very much in love with you". Last year, more than 130,000 All Out members heard his plea and helped bring a global spotlight to his case, getting President Biya to break his silence and announce that "minds in the country are evolving" about this issue. Now's our chance to get him to act. All Out members also donated more than 5,000 dollars to help lawyer Alice N'Kom defend two women threatened with prison. Whether it's attacks and arrests in Cameroon, anti-gay laws in Russia or helping people escape anti-gay death squads in Iraq, we're so powerful when we work together. Stop the attacks and arrests in Cameroon. If we get 100,000 names in 72 hours we'll send it to the Presidential Palace, and Cameroon embassies in London, Washington DC and Paris: https://www.allout.org/cameroon-attacks Thanks for going All Out, Andre, Guillaume, Leandro, Marie, Hayley, Joe, Kate, Sara and the rest of the All Out team. PS: "Kill the faggots. They don’t deserve to live." – This was the message on posters and leaflets at a "Day Against Homosexuality" march, held 3 weeks ago in Cameroon. Sign the petition to President Biya now: https://www.allout.org/cameroon-attacks Please take the time to sign this petition!!!! ![](http://www.gaytor.rent/bitbucket/Gay rights.gif)     [image: injustice.gif]
  • Political party starts petition….......

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  • Bulgaria: Hundreds march for gay rights and against Russian anti-gay laws

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