Mike Huckabee planning rally for jailed Kentucky county clerk

Mike Huckabee planning rally for jailed Kentucky county clerk

Republican presidential candidate Mike Huckabee is planing a rally in support of jailed Rowan County Clerk Kim Davis. The former Arkansas governor made the announcement on his campaign website.

According to Talking Points Memo the event, called the ‘#ImWithKim Liberty Rally,’ will be this Tuesday (8 September) in front of the Carter County Detention Center in Grayson, Kentucky.

This week Huckabee, a foe to all forms of marriage rights for LGBTI families,  offered a vigorous Facebook defense of the clerk, writing that ‘having Kim Davis in federal custody removes all doubt of the criminalization of Christianity in our country.’

The presidential candidate plans on meeting Davis before the rally. A petition on Huckabee’s website calls for the clerk’s immediate release.

‘This is a direct attack on our God-given, constitutional rights,’ the petition says.

The 49-year-old Democrat been the center of a firestorm since marriage equality became legal in all 50 US states. In August, District Judge David Bunning ordered her to issue certificates to LGBTI applicants. She appealed the ruling to the Supreme Court. The highest court in the country denied her emergency request to not issue marriage licenses to any couplesgay or straight – as she fought in the lower court.

Despite losing, Davis continued to defy Bunning’s order. She was held in contempt and placed in jail this past Thursday. Since her absence, deputy Rowan County clerks have signed certificates.

A number of anti-gay organizations will participate in next week’s rally, including the Family Research Council, National Organization for Marriage, and Concerned Women for America.

Mat Staver, the founder of Liberty Counsel and Davis’ lawyer, will also be in attendance.

The post Mike Huckabee planning rally for jailed Kentucky county clerk appeared first on Gay Star News.

James Withers

www.gaystarnews.com/article/mike-huckabee-planning-rally-for-jailed-kentucky-county-clerk/

Love Has a Dark Side in Tense Trailer for Dramatic Thriller ‘Queen of Carthage’ – WATCH

Love Has a Dark Side in Tense Trailer for Dramatic Thriller ‘Queen of Carthage’ – WATCH

queen of carthage

Director Shiloh Fernandez released a trailer for his experimental film Queen of Carthage, a tale about a pansexual traveler who recently fled to Auckland, New Zealand, after a traumatic relationship.

Amos, portrayed by Fernandez, falls for a local performer named Graham but encounters an obstacle in his affections: Graham’s girlfriend Simi, portrayed by Game of Thrones’ Keisha Castle-Hughes.

Watch the tense trailer below:

[h/t Out]

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The post Love Has a Dark Side in Tense Trailer for Dramatic Thriller ‘Queen of Carthage’ – WATCH appeared first on Towleroad.


Anthony Costello

Love Has a Dark Side in Tense Trailer for Dramatic Thriller ‘Queen of Carthage’ – WATCH

Fashionably Late: A Lifeline For Older Men Coming Out

Fashionably Late: A Lifeline For Older Men Coming Out
When my therapist, Adam asked me who I could talk to about coming out, I pointed at him. “Of course,” he said “But, what I meant, was a friend or a family member.” I looked up as if the answer might have been written on the ceiling. Not finding it there, I looked down at my shoes, shifted uncomfortably in my chair and then said “No one.” At forty-three years of age, nobody really knew who I was. I was alone.

I was a father, a husband, a son, a brother and an IT Director. I had friends, but none of them close. When you’re in the closet, you worry that every word, glance or gesture might give your secret away. How could I have developed an authentic relationship?

Adam introduced me to a man who was a former Jehovah’s Witness and father of three. He had come out a couple of years before and understood what it was like to feel as if there was no one to talk to, because he had been ex-communicated by his church. We began corresponding, sharing our stories, often firing e-mails back and forth five and six times a day. His stories, his words, were a lifeline that kept me tethered to Earth. It was the loving details about his daily life with his new partner that resonated deep in my marrow.

The closet seems like a vestige from a darker time. Many young LGBT people never experienced the repression, but there is an older generation of men who closed the door decades ago and now find themselves transported through time, tentatively stepping out into a terrifying, exciting and puzzling world. They often feel alone.

If you are coming out late, you are not alone.

Fashionably Late: Gay, Bi, and Trans Men Who Came Out Later in Life is a collection of stories that sheds light on a large and largely overlooked segment of the LGBT+ community. The anthology offers affirmation to older men coming out of the closet. I am honored to have an essay included.

I had the opportunity to speak with Vinnie Kinsella, the publisher and editor from Eldredge Books, who created this anthology.

Q: What prompted you to create this book?

KINSELLA: The biggest prompt for me was the surprising growth of the meetup group I started for men who came out later in life: PDX Late Bloomers Club (PDX is the airport code for Portland, OR). I expected maybe twelve men in my city would ever join. When we exceeded a hundred members in just a few months, I was floored. I had no idea there were that many men in my city who identified as coming out later in life. I live in a city that’s very open and affirming. We have the second highest LGBT population in the country (percentage wise). If I can find that many men in my open and affirming city that crave this kind of support, I can only imagine what it might be like for men in cities that aren’t so open.

Q: How do you think this book will help LGBT men?

KINSELLA: My hope is that the book will be a strong tool for combatting shame. What I hear from a lot of men coming out is a lot of shame for what they didn’t do. Shame for not being honest with friends and family about their sexuality of gender identity. Shame for letting fear keep them from living an authentic life. I think this book combats shame by sending the message of, “Don’t beat yourself up for coming out a bit later than the norm. Celebrate the fact that you came out at all!”

Q: Is there a void in the market for this type of book or these stories?

KINSELLA: Yes. When I looked for books that could help me early on in my coming out, I found that most of the resources for coming out are youth-focused. I think the belief is that coming out as an adult is rare, but that’s simply not true. The culture is so different today from what it was thirty or forty years ago. For Baby Boomers and older Gen Xers, the support system for youth coming out wasn’t like it is today, so many men from that era stayed in the closet. But now that the culture as a whole has changed, many of these men (and women, I should add) are looking around and realizing, “Hey. It’s safe for me to come out now.” When I had that realization myself, I looked everywhere for a guide to coming out that could address my needs. I never found that guide, but I did find help in simply hearing how others like me navigated the waters of coming out. That’s the void this book fills. It’s not a how-to guide. It’s more like an “It’s Gets Better” campaign for men.

Q: Do you expect this book to help the families of LGBT men?

KINSELLA: Indirectly, yes. It will offer insight into what goes on in the mind of a man coming out, which can helpful for spouses, kids, grandkids, and others who have lots of questions about what might have prompted their relative to come out. When you are in the midst of coming out, the hardest thing to do is explain what’s going on in your mind to someone else trying to understand. I could see family members reading these stories and getting a deeper appreciation of what their loved one is going through.

Along those lines, I got an encouraging message from one of the early backers, a straight woman. When she explained why she was drawn to the book, this is what she wrote: “I’ve come out of a number of closets, and though they weren’t gender or sexual identification closets, I know how hard it can be to reveal that you no longer are what you once were or believed yourself to be.” This tells me that just about anyone desiring an authentic life can be helped by this book.

Q: Is there a story, in the book, that sticks with you?

KINSELLA: All of them! For me, the stories that stick with me most are the ones I don’t personally relate to. Specifically, the stories about coming out as bi or trans. My own coming out taught me the value of empathy, of learning how to step back and listen to another person’s struggle and appreciate a moment of being in someone else’s shoes. As I start to better understand the realities of both bi erasure and transphobia, it’s teaching me how to become a better ally to others I share the LGBT+ acronym with.

***

The book will be available in March of 2016, but you can pre-order your copy through Kickstarter. For many men, these stories will be the lifeline that offers them hope and lets them know that they are not alone.

William Dameron’s personal blog is The Authentic Life

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Why you should have an LGBT physician if you’re LGBT

Why you should have an LGBT physician if you’re LGBT

There may be another important reason, beyond discussing your sex history, for telling your doctor you’re gay.

A new study from the University of Washington found distinct preferences for people of the same sexual orientation among physicians and nurses.

The study looked at 200,000 healthcare providers, and looked at the attitudes they had toward LGBT people.

It found straight nurses significantly showed a preference for their straight patients.

The trend reversed itself for gay healthcare providers: They had a preference for other LGBT people.

Janice Sabin, lead researcher in the study, said the results show there are areas of LGBT care which aren’t being addressed, according to McKnight’s Long Term Care News.

The study may indicate healthcare professionals are aware and biased to some degree toward the sexuality of their patients.

The post Why you should have an LGBT physician if you’re LGBT appeared first on Gay Star News.

Jack Flanagan

www.gaystarnews.com/article/why-you-should-have-an-lgbt-physician-if-youre-lgbt/

Hate Groups and Anti-gay Extremists to Rally in Support of Kim Davis on Tuesday

Hate Groups and Anti-gay Extremists to Rally in Support of Kim Davis on Tuesday

kim davis

An assorted group of anti-gay bigots from the “Worst People in the World” collection are joining forces in support of lawless, thrice-divorced Kentucky clerk Kim Davis.

A rally spearheaded by Mike Huckabee will take place next Tuesday outside the Carter County Detention Center where Davis is being held. Huckabee is also expected to visit Davis in jail that day.

Featured guests at the hate rally include:

  • Liberty Counsel’s Mat Staver: Kim Davis’s lawyer who once claimed that gay marriage would force Kindergarteners to experiment with gay sex and would literally bring about God’s divine wrath.
  • Family Research Council’s Tony Perkins: The hate group leader who has warned in the past that gay rights are part of a wider “anti-life” agenda to end humanity as we know it.
  • National Organization for Marriage: Headed by homophobe Brian Brown, whose efforts to export anti-gay bigotry abroad were exposed in the Human Rights Campaign’s The Export of Hate report last year.
  • Pastor Joshua Feuerstein:  a “former television and radio evangelist” who in July posted a video on Facebook urging Christians to use guns to fight gay marriage.

 

Huckabee has also snatched up the FreeKimDavisNow.com URL and redirected it to his campaign site (FreeKimDavis.com redirects to the Human Rights Campaign however)

The post Hate Groups and Anti-gay Extremists to Rally in Support of Kim Davis on Tuesday appeared first on Towleroad.


Kyler Geoffroy

Hate Groups and Anti-gay Extremists to Rally in Support of Kim Davis on Tuesday

"People Started Referring To Me As A Monster." A Gay Man's Struggle With Alcohol

"People Started Referring To Me As A Monster." A Gay Man's Struggle With Alcohol
2015-09-04-1441387515-1994503-AlexanderKacala.jpg

I’m From Driftwood is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit archive for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer stories. New stories are posted on the site every Wednesday.

Like many people, Alexander Kacala started drinking in early adulthood. He drank when he went to the bars and used it as a social lubricant. It wasn’t until people started commenting on his behavior while drinking that he realized he might have a problem. Alexander recalls:

And soon I really started getting in these ridiculous arguments and fights with people and people started referring to me as a monster, they would say to me, “Wow, I’ve never seen anyone do that and it was scary and the type of person you became was a monster.”

After a long night out of drinking, Alexander decided to drive himself home. After falling asleep while driving, he ended up crashing into parked cars. The accident resulted not only in a trip to the hospital, but to jail, where he met a cellmate who became an unexpected source of sage advice:

And in that moment he was so inspirational and he really cared for me. And I don’t even know who he was and I never will. But he was like, and it really makes me upset when I talk about it, but in that moment he said to me, “Oh, man, you are meant to be here. God cradled you in his arms last night and you are meant to be here for some reason. I don’t really know why, but if i were you I wouldn’t ever drink another drop of alcohol ever again.”

But even that didn’t convince Alexander to stop drinking. Finally growing tired of the endless cycle of drinking, making mistakes, resolving them, and repeating the process all over again, Alexander had a moment of clarity and wanted to stop once and for all. Realizing he might not be able to do it alone, he shared his decision on Facebook:

And once I put it out there like that, I can’t go back to the bar the next week and have a drink. I woke up the next day, I fell asleep that night on the couch, and I looked at my phone and there were all these “likes” and comments and people commenting who didn’t even know Adult Alex, who didn’t even know about my drinking problem, people from elementary school, congratulating me and wishing me “good luck”, and so that was really scary in that moment because I was really exposing myself to those people, but that day was October 15, 2013.

WATCH:

For more stories, visit I’m From Driftwood, the LGBTQ Story Archive.

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Kim Davis supporters hold rally at jail

Kim Davis supporters hold rally at jail

As Rowan County Clerk Kim Davis sits in a cell for ignoring a judge’s order, she can take comfort her supporters are rallying outside the jail.

According to Reuters, today (5 September) around 200 people congregated on a field across from the the Carter County Detention Center in Grayson, Kentucky. Davis has been there since Thursday after her she declined to follow a federal judge’s order to issue marriage certificates to same-sex couples.

‘God is going to continue to bless Kim Davis,’ Grayson Mayor George Steele said to the assembled, according to Reuters.

One of the banners held up said the following: ‘Kim Davis POW.’

The 49-year-old clerk been in the center of the national story since marriage equality became legal in all 50 US states. In August, District Judge David Bunning ordered her to issue certificates to LGBTI applicants. She appealed the ruling to the Supreme Court. The highest court in the country denied her emergency request to not issue marriage licenses to any couplesgay or straight – as she fought in the lower court.

Despite losing with the Supreme Court, Davis continued to defy Bunning’s order. She was held in contempt and placed in jail. Since her absence, deputy Rowan County clerks have signed certificates.

Davis lawyers promise she will continue to fight the judge’s order. They also insisted any marriage documents issued are not legal.

Davis, a Democrat who has been married four times, is a member of the Apostolic Christian Church. That denomination takes a literal reading of the Bible.

Her refusal to follow the law has been hailed by marriage equality opponents Senator Ted Cruz and former Governor Mike Huckabee. Both are running for the Republican presidential nomination.

The post Kim Davis supporters hold rally at jail appeared first on Gay Star News.

James Withers

www.gaystarnews.com/article/kim-davis-supporters-hold-rally-at-jail/

Vatican Says Transgender Individuals Can’t Be Godparents

Vatican Says Transgender Individuals Can’t Be Godparents

vaticanThe Vatican gave an official answer to a Spanish bishop seeking clarification on its transgender policy, stating that transgender individuals are unfit to be godparents reports The Journal.

Spanish Bishop Rafael Zornoza Boy stated that he asked for official clarification after his congregation expressed confusion on the official teaching of the matter. Zornoza Boy posted on his diocese’s website that Pope Francis has stated several times that transgender identity goes against Catholic dogma of what man’s nature is.

The Vatican states that its decision is not based on discrimination but is rather a classification requirement of the Church’s standards to becoming a godparent.

Pope Francis has shown progress with LGB people, but the Church still seems to hold the T part of the acronym in low regard.

The post Vatican Says Transgender Individuals Can’t Be Godparents appeared first on Towleroad.


Anthony Costello

Vatican Says Transgender Individuals Can’t Be Godparents

Kim Davis' Attorney Compares Her To Jews Living In Nazi Germany, Invokes Images Of Gas Chambers

Kim Davis' Attorney Compares Her To Jews Living In Nazi Germany, Invokes Images Of Gas Chambers

An attorney for Kim Davis, who was jailed Thursday after being found in contempt of court for refusing to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples in Rowan County, Kentucky, compared the clerk’s situation to the one Jews were faced with in Nazi Germany.

Mathew Staver, who is currently serving as head legal counsel for Davis, made the comparison on the “Crosstalk” radio show Wednesday, RightWingWatch.com reported. 

“[Davis is] there to do a duty, a job and the job duty was changed,” Staver argued. “Does that mean that if you’re Christian, don’t apply here? … What happened in Nazi Germany, what happened there first, they removed the Jews from government public employment, then they stopped patronizing them in their private businesses, then they continued to stigmatize them, then they were the ‘problems,’ then they killed them.”

Staver doubled down on his Nazi Germany comparison on Thursday on “Washington Watch,” a radio show hosted by Family Research Council President Tony Perkins, going so far as to invoke images of gas chambers while doing so, RightWingWatch.com noted.

“Back in the 1930s, it began with the Jews, where they were evicted from public employment, then boycotted in their private employment, then stigmatized and that led to the gas chambers,” Staver told Perkins. “This is the new persecution of Christians here in this country.”

“You cannot obey something that is contrary to God’s law,” Staver continued. “And we would easily say, well, what would happen if the government forced you to turn over a Jew in Nazi Germany? All of us would say we wouldn’t do that, we wouldn’t listen to that. Well, we’re about ready to walk into the moment.”

Davis, who was taken into custody on Thursday, is expected to remain in jail for at least a week while her lawyers appeal the ruling.

They’re not gonna let her out and she’s not gonna bow… I promise you that,” Davis’ husband, Joe, told the press Thursday. He also argued that his wife had been put in jail “illegally” and vowed to “ask [Kentucky Gov. Steve] Beshear to do his job or step down.”

Carter County jailer R.W. Boggs told WKYT that Davis wouldn’t be receiving any special treatment while incarcerated, Towleroad reported.“My job is to keep the door locked until the judge tells me to unlock it. As far as we’re concerned, it was just another day in the neighborhood,” he said.

Boggs added, “It’s a day in jail — breakfast, lunch, dinner and daily activities. It’s not glamorous, it’s not exciting. It’s jail.”

Meanwhile, the Rowan County clerk’s office began issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples, including James Yates and William Smith Jr., who, thanks to Davis’ refusal to serve them, had to apply six times before finally receiving their license. 

Also on HuffPost:

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