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04/18/2012

Hot Shirtless Bearded Firefighter, Kittens: VIDEO

Fireman

The folks at Sauza understand the key elements required to lubricate a web video.

Watch, AFTER THE JUMP...

Posted Apr. 18,2012 at 2:55 PM EST by in Advertising, Firefighters, News, Pets | Permalink | Comments (20)


The Facts About North Carolina's Amendment One: VIDEO

One

I fyou don't already understand the importance of defeating Amendment One in North Carolina, here's a helpful video about the horrible effects it will have should it pass.

Watch, AFTER THE JUMP...

According to the Protect All NC Families campaign, over 700 donors have given $66,000 since the matching campaign from Diana and Todd Stiefel began. In related news, the first television ads are coming soon, and Howard Dean and Democracy for America are now trying to help defeat it.

If you would like to help them reach that goal, do so HERE.

Posted Apr. 18,2012 at 2:33 PM EST by in Gay Marriage, News, North Carolina | Permalink | Comments (1)


OUT Magazine Lays Off Entire Editorial Staff; Editor Plans on Hiring Some Back Under His Own Employ

OUT magazine has laid off its entire editorial staff and its owner Here Media plans to contract the creation of the publication to a new company, Grand Editorial, that has been formed by its editor, Aaron Hicklin, Capital NY reports:

OutcoverHicklin told Capital there will be no reduction in the frequency of the magazine or other major changes to the content. "This was not a cost-cutting measure," he said.

He said he'd been hatching plans to launch Grand for awhile. Having spent six years running Out, he informed Here that he was forming a new venture, a custom-content shop that would work on projects like producing magazines for corporate clients, he said.

"Most" of the 12 editorial employees at OUT will receive contracts according to Hicklin, but Capital NY reports that many are skeptical:

Hicklin said he doesn't have any outside investors and that revenue at this point will be project-based, a prospect that has been met with gentle skepticism from some Out staffers: Here Media has had problems paying its freelancers and vendors over the past several years. There is an outstanding fraud lawsuit, meanwhile, against Regent.

Reached by phone, a company spokesman said the executive handling the Out arrangement was not immediately available for comment.

Posted Apr. 18,2012 at 2:00 PM EST by in Gay Media, News | Permalink | Comments (18)


The Political Science of President Obama's LGBT Employment Non-Discrimination Failure

BY ARI EZRA WALDMAN

President Obama missed an opportunity to simultaneously protect LGBT Americans and paint Mitt Romney into a corner when the President refused to sign an executive order banning LGBT workplace discrimination. Most Americans are baffled when you tell them that people can be fired simply for being gay; they think a ban on such discrimination already exists. More than 70 percent of Americans support the anti-discrimination law, including the version of Mr. Romney that ran for the Senate in 1994.

And, signing the executive order would fulfill yet another 2008 Obama campaign promise.

640px-Obama_signs_FDA_Food_Safety_Modernization_Act_croppedThe White House offered a few tepid and unbelievable explanations for the President's refusal to sign the nondiscrimination executive order. At one point, the Administration said it was concerned about a possible lawsuit from a conservative federal contractor who might feel that discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation is his religious right.

That argument should strike even the most green civil rights attorney as baffling: where civil rights executive orders have been challenged in the past, the challenger "loses 100 percent of the time," as Freedom to Work Founder Tico Almeida told Current TV. Later, Administration spokespersons implied that an executive order is not a priority because "the time is right for a comprehensive legislative approach" by passing the Employment Non-Discrimination Act (ENDA) through Congress. But, that position is even less tenable: Republicans control the House of Representatives and have shown less than zero interest in LGBT equality, let alone an inclusive ENDA.

We are disappointed. But, politics has to be more than tallying up your interest group's victories and losses and calling someone childish names. The political science of civil rights movements shows us that progress in war can emerge from loss in battle, and last week's fracas both proves how much progress we have made and can foster more progress by proving that pro-gay social positions are no longer the electrified third rail of American politics, but rather great boons to political success. 

Let's discuss how, AFTER THE JUMP...

There are two possible explanations for President Obama's decision: One is craven politics, and an incorrect one; the other is apolitical, but a little naive in the current polarized political climate.

The already well-organized Obama re-election campaign may have an interest in minimizing off-message disruptions, but any campaign that sees the nondiscrimination executive order as off-message or a disruption is living in 2004, not 2012. Pro-gay positions simply do not have the kind of negative traction with the broader conservative movement that they once did: anti-gay boycotts are failing; Republicans who vote for marriage recognition are winning primaries, elections, and raising enormous sums of money; majorities support marriage recognition even when survey takers are told that it would mean a "redefinition" of marriage; and schools are becoming more sensitive to identity expression and the needs of LGBT students, to name just a few examples. 

RomneyA nondiscrimination executive order is far less controversial than marriage, the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA), and "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" (DADT), and far more antiseptic than other gay issues like sodomy laws. Conservatives may think same-sex marriage means changing or redefining an ancient institution, but ending employment discrimination tends to appeal to a conservative's belief in hard work, merit, and autonomy. Signing this executive order could have also put Mitt Romney on the spot: his stated opposition to discrimination is already impossible to believe given his various anti-gay positions, but President Obama could have driven the point home with a stark contrast on an "80-20" issue.

The apolitical explanation for the executive order failure is an institutional distaste for executive orders. Traditionally, progressives, like President Obama, find broad unitary executive power dangerous and a recipe for government control by wealthy elite interests. That is, the more power the executive has, the less power Congress has. This is no Tea Party-esque populist attack on government: libertarians believe in as little federal power as possible, liberals (or, progressives) have faith in the federal government's power to address social wrongs, but generally oppose doing so by presidential fiat. After all, liberals should worry about an impossibly large executive in the hands of conservatives like Rick Santorum or Michelle Bachmann or even the immoderate Mitt Romney (who wants to reinstate DADT through executive order, for example).

While this legitimate and honorable approach to government merits consideration and reflects President Obama's natural political proclivities, it can no longer explain this Administration's behavior. Months ago, the President embarked on his brave and bold "We Can't Wait" campaign in which he took on Republican obstructionism in Congress and promised to help solve Americas problems through his executive powers. He has already dedicated hundreds of billions of dollars to job creation and issued executive orders in countless other areas where legislation has been blocked by Speaker John Boehner or Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell. Plus, even a future ENDA would require an executive order to interpret the law, create enforcement mechanisms, and ensure inclusion of gender expression.

WhitehouseMr. Obama's inaction in this instance is a disappointment, a failure of leadership. But, with respect to gay rights, this president has shown great leadership before and, I am confident, will show great leadership in the future. That may not be enough for the disgruntled -- the impossible-to-satisfy liberals and the conservative LGBT community who oppose Mr. Obama on a wide swath of issues. But, rather than using this incident as a pretext for liberals to find glee in needling our great White House ally or for conservatives to drive a wedge between the President and gay America, we should use it as a teachable moment in two ways: We should teach the White House about 2012 politics and teach ourselves about just how far we have come.

First, the Human Rights Campaign, Freedom to Work, and other gay rights organizations working on ENDA and the nondiscrimination executive order should keep the pressure on the Administration to sign the executive order, but also take a step back and see the broader picture. They should publish a white paper on the political benefits of signing this order as part of a series of political analyses on the political benefits of pro-gay positions. This is not Karl Rove's 2004, where anti-gay positions ensured President Bush's reelection. It is 2012, where even President Obama's evolution on marriage recognition is considered a little backward. Our advocates should also discuss this issue not in terms of a gay person's individual right to be free of discrimination, but as a necessary step to ensure that merit is the shibboleth of American employment. This executive order is a jobs program, not a grant of special rights.

Second, these groups, their members, their allies, and all of us should do everything possible to re-elect President Obama and elect Democratic allies to Congress. No matter how disappointed we are in the Administration's failure on this executive order, we cannot deny that President Obama has been the most gay-friendly president in history and that a Democratic-controlled Congress is undoubtedly more gay-friendly that one run by Speaker Boehner.

But, it's more than that, and herein lies the political lesson for us.

Unlike the fight against Amendment 1 in North Carolina, unlike the fight against the ban on same-sex marriage in Minnesota, and unlike the fight against Tennessee's "Don't Say Gay" bill, for example, the fight for an executive order is a pro-equality offense, not a rearguard defense. Progressive leaders like President Obama and Governors Andrew Cuomo of New York, Christine Gregoire of Washington, Martin O'Malley of Maryland, and Pat Quinn of Illinois allow us to put our quarterbacks on the field and play the kind of offense that scores civil rights victories. If we stew in our sneakers, embittered by failure to score on fourth and inches, we risk being on defense for the rest of the game, where the best we can hope for is not getting further behind.

If we stay home on election day or put the President's re-election at risk, we have to shift into defense against the inevitable conservative antigay onslaught like we have seen since 2010 at the state level. President Obama, like progressive governors, senators, and representatives, is not the lesser of two evils, he gives us our only chance to win.

***

Ari Ezra Waldman is a 2002 graduate of Harvard College and a 2005 graduate of Harvard Law School. After practicing in New York for five years and clerking at a federal appellate court in Washington, D.C., Ari is now on the faculty at California Western School of Law in San Diego, California. His research focuses on gay rights and the First Amendment. Ari will be writing weekly posts on law and various LGBT issues. 

Follow Ari on Twitter at @ariezrawaldman.

Posted Apr. 18,2012 at 1:00 PM EST by in 2012 Election, Ari Ezra Waldman, Barack Obama, Discrimination, ENDA, Law - Gay, LGBT, News | Permalink | Comments (36)


Hundreds Mourn Canadian Gay Activist Killed in Brutal Beating: VIDEO

Vigil_taavel

Hundreds of people turned out for a vigil in Halifax, Nova Scotia in honor of 49-year-old Raymond Taavel (pictured, below), a Canadian gay activist who was brutally beaten by a schizophrenic on unescorted one-hour leave from a psychiatric hospital this week.

TaavelAndre Noel Denny, 32, used anti-gay slurs during the attack, and authorities are determining the murder's status as a hate crime. Denny is scheduled to appear in court Wednesday on a charge of second-degree murder.

The National Post reports:

According to court documents, Mr. Denny was found not criminally responsible for a “variety of offences” on Sept. 1 and 2, 2009, including uttering threats, causing unnecessary injury to a dog, possession of stolen property (the dog) and breach of probation. Court documents also indicate he has “a long history of schizophrenia, paranoid subtype, coupled with a substance abuse problem.” Police could not confirm reports the suspect yelled gay slurs at Mr. Taavel, but say they are “considering all possibilities” with respect to a motive.

To the man who worked beside Mr. Taavel for 13 years, the activist was a passionate “activist without anger.”

“He had a lovely, joyous presence,” said Barry Boyce, a senior editor who worked with Mr. Taavel at Shambhala Sun magazine in Halifax. “You couldn’t stay mad at him for more than 35 seconds” he told the National Post, his voice shaking. “He was a real sweet guy.”

Denny570 News adds:

The lawyer for a man accused in the death of a prominent activist in Halifax's gay community says his client should not have been released from a local psychiatric facility. Pavel Boubnov said outside provincial court that Andre Noel Denny should not have been granted a one-hour pass Monday night from the East Coast Forensic Unit. Boubnov says Denny, who is scheduled to appear in court later today on a charge of second-degree murder, is afraid and wants to return to the psychiatric unit.

Watch CBC's report on the attack and vigil plus a few moments from the vigil including a speech from Boyce, AFTER THE JUMP...

Posted Apr. 18,2012 at 11:46 AM EST by in Canada, Crime, News, Nova Scotia | Permalink | Comments (5)


Madonna Gets Called on Her Cigarette Hypocrisy: VIDEO

Madge

In an interview set to air tonight on Rock Center, NBC's Harry Smith asks Madonna how she can scold her daughter Lourdes for smoking cigarettes when she smokes them in her videos.

Says Madonna, in a reply that won't likely be bought by the American Lung Association: "That's just an accessory, Harry. There's a difference."

Watch, AFTER THE JUMP...

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

 

Posted Apr. 18,2012 at 11:22 AM EST by in Madonna, News | Permalink | Comments (37)





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