Rasmussen Poll: Onorato May Be Closing Gap on Corbett
Given the Rasmussen numbers of 11% undecided, Onorato could win today against Corbett, and none of the other candidates can say that
Given the Rasmussen numbers of 11% undecided, Onorato could win today against Corbett, and none of the other candidates can say that
A loyal reader sent to his to me a few days ago, and I should have put it up on the blog sooner: U. of Pennsylvania Adds Transgender Surgery to Student Insurance Plan The University of Pennsylvania will begin offering insurance coverage in the fall for sex-change surgeries, according to The Daily Pennsylvanian, joining a group of about 30 other colleges nationwide. Students’ insurance at the university, provided by Aetna, will cover up to $50,000[Read More…]
The article points out how the Catholic Church, isn’t any more guilty of sexual abuse than other institutions or places where children are in the control of adults, but the Church setting is one where this hierarchy of power is so well defined and celebrated. Part of the nature of the Catholic Church is based upon the power of the priesthood, and the subservience of the pubic.
if someone thinks they can really see me, and know me and they totally ignore or deny that I am gay, then they are not seeing me for the whole of who I am.
Marking the anniversary of the Oklahoma City bombing this year seems odd. In many regards, it seems as if the sentiments that led Timothy McVeigh to his act of domestic terrorism are similar to the rationalizations employed today by the tea baggers and other extremists.
The attack is equating being gay itself as a disease, not with AIDS specifically, and making an insinuation about how gays invade and take over. This positions the conservative/ family values types as the victims and the invasive infection homosexuals as the perpetrators.
DAY of SILENCE : April 16, 2010.
Do some straight men hate gays because gay men seem more free to fit whatever mold of masculine they choose? Some guys are more rugged and butch, others more flamboyant, and many somewhere in between.
On the one hand, there is little connection to Beaver Falls. Where everyone just knows that you can’t hold hands. And yet, on the other hand, it is the exact same hate at work in both places. There in the big city, someone decided to remind the queers that their visibility isn’t OK with everyone.
Joe Hoeffel’s postions are clearly very progressive and he is clearly a real friend the the LGBT community, but what has he actually done for LGBT rights? What can he list as his accomplishments? Where are the examples/accomplishments of his leadership on these issues?