Wednesday, August 31, 2016

Iraq's only openly gay activist on how he's fighting to make his country safer

Iraq's only openly gay activist on how he's fighting to make his country safer

Amir Ashour, founder of LGBT rights group IraQueer, was forced to flee his home country for Sweden in 2015 after threats were made on his life 
  
  
 
  
  
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“I don’t like being known as the ‘only gay Iraqi activist’”, Amir Ashour says, brow furrowing slightly.
But the label is hard to escape: Ashour, originally from Sulaimaniyah in Iraqi Kurdistan, has been beaten up and arrested because of his sexuality. In 2015, he was forced to flee his home and seek asylum in Sweden, fearing for his life.
Now 26, he’s already been through more than many people could ever imagine - but, Ashour says, he wouldn’t have changed a thing.
“It is not exactly a choice”, he says. “It is not easy… it’s draining. But there is nothing else I would or could do. Everything I’ve been through, everyone I’ve met who has inspired me, it’s all relevant.”
Ashour is the founder and leading voice of IraQueer, the only LGBT+ rights awareness organisation operating in Iraq, which is forced to carry out most of its work anonymously. The growing network of activists, most using synonyms rather than their real names, is a precious resource for Iraq’s gay community, which remains almost completely underground for fear of dying at the hands of armed vigilante gangs, rogue police officers, or family members unable to accept them.
As recently as 1995, Saddam Hussein created a paramilitary group with the sole purpose of identifying, torturing and executing LGBT+ individuals, as well as women accused of adultery, and the memory - as well as the taboo - is still fresh for many. Post-Saddam, the gay community began tentatively organising parties and meet-ups in gay-friendly spaces, but militia attacks have increased again in recent years, driving the community further underground.
While same-sex relationships were decriminalised after the US invasion, Iraqi law offers no constitutional protection for LGBT+ citizens, and the state often turns a blind eye to the horrors non-conforming Iraqis face if outed. Shiite militias who claim to be fighting Isis under the banner of the Iraqi army have been accused of multiple murders by the International Lesbian and Gay Human Rights Commission.
IraQueer’s role is vital in providing advice and safe houses for LGBT+ people - often teenagers - who have been disowned by their families, or fled for their own safety. Doctors and officials will often refuse to deal with people they think are gay, so IraQueer tries to connect vulnerable people to allies, too.
The group has about 40 regular contributors and has been growing steadily for two years, now reaching up to 11,000 readers a month via essays and safety warnings tirelessly translated from Kurdish or Arabic into English or vice versa. Yet its members have only just met face to face for the first time, at a workshop organised by Ashour in Lebanon last month. It was a fantastic experience, he says.
“Technology, and especially social media, have changed the face of activism, they’ve had so much impact for us”, Ashour says. “That me and my fellow activists can talk long-distance and hide our identities… that would never have been possible before the last few years.”
Ashour has lived in Malmo in Sweden since last year. He loves life in Europe, where he is free to be himself. “I have never hidden who I am. It was never a question of ‘coming out of the closet’, there was nothing to escape from,” he says. Ashour's family, and group of friends and activists at university, were all very accepting, he says. But even in a relatively liberal area such as Iraqi Kurdistan, witch-hunts are still mounted for people suspected of being gay, or partaking in ‘sinful’ behaviour.
This is what happened to Ashour. He was forced to leave the country to escape rumours which bought him to the attention of local vigilantes, started while he was working for a women's rights group in Baghdad. But he also has the strength to use his experiences to speak out, in the hope that others will not have to suffer the same discrimination.
Amir-Ashour
Ashour speaking at a One Young World event (Amir Ashour)
I met Ashour while he was in London this summer to meet with UKLGIG, a UK charity which works to support LGBT aslyum seekers and refugees, and One Young World (OYW) representatives. OYW was founded in 2009 with the aim of bringing together young leaders to effect lasting, positive change. Meeting others from across the world who face the same LGBT struggle as he does, or stand up for other worthy causes, has “shaped the way I look at the world... The core, the root of everything I try to do, is giving the voiceless a voice,” Ashour says.
The renewed scrutiny of Muslim attitudes towards homosexuality following the Orlando LGBT nightclub shooting by an closeted Muslim man has, for Ashour, driven home how important this is. “There is no room for the gay Muslim narrative, even now”, he says. “I never had to come out of the closet. But I still could never have functioned without my support network. And that’s what IraQueer is to many people now.”
But, as Ashour concedes, the opportunities opened up to IraQueer by the internet and secure smartphone messaging is both a blessing and a threat. While the net helps LGBT+ people in Iraq find each other, an uncleared browser cache or public comments or likes on a gay-friendly Facebook page can help vigilantes identify and track down people they suspect of homosexual behaviour.
One of the crucial aims of IraQueer’s first in-person workshop, which took place in secret in Lebanon last month, was to help teach members how to keep themselves safe online, whether by using fake names and accounts or switching to services much harder to hack such as encrypted messaging and Tor browsers.
It’s sad, Ashour notes, that the international community only focused on the lack of gay rights in the Middle East after Isis’s hatred placed the issue on the world stage. Horrific reports from Idlib and Kirkuk of public executions by  al-Nusra and Isis, as well as images of gay men forced to jump from buildings, reverberated in the world’s media.
And while Isis’ atrocities continue to grab international attention, gay people continue to suffer across the Arab world, Ashour says. “The problem is so much wider, and deeper rooted, than this recent flare of extremism”, he adds.
amir-ashour.jpg
(Amir Ashour)
Ashour is also sceptical of Kurdish efforts to portray the now autonomous regions across Iraq and Syria as gay-friendly. “It’s an attractive idea politically, gay rights, it is an encouraging sign to the West,” he says. “Talking is easier than action, though. And Rojava [Kurdish region] is still yet to be tested like that.”
I ask Ashour whether he thinks his battle is hopeless. He says he still has hope, and if it’s ever possible to be openly gay in Iraq, he’ll be the first to go back. One day he wants to run for office in his native country. But for now, he’s strengthening IraQueer, and enjoying being able to date in Sweden.
“I want to be the one who makes it possible to be gay in Iraq. Maybe I’ll be attacked for it, it’s possible. But winning is a mindset. And as long as IraQueer exists and grows, we are prepared, we are winning. All we need is time.”

Statute of limitations for rape could end under Cosby-case-inspired bill

Statute of limitations for rape could end under Cosby-case-inspired bill sent to Gov. Jerry Brown

Los Angeles Times | August 30, 2016 | 6:27 PM
California lawmakers on Tuesday sent Gov. Jerry Brown a bill to end the statute of limitations for prosecuting rape and other felony sex crimes in the state.
The bill was introduced by state Sen. Connie Leyva (D-Chino) in the wake of allegations from women who said they were raped by comedian Bill Cosby and were unable to see those crimes prosecuted because the statutes of limitations had expired.
Read More >>

Tuesday, August 30, 2016

Brian Brown: Obama Undermines Family With Gay Marriage, Goal Of 'Normalizing Pedophilia'

Brian Brown: Obama Undermines Family With Gay Marriage, Goal Of 'Normalizing Pedophilia'
In a fundraising letter this week, Brian Brown claimed that President Barack Obama is foisting a 'secular Left' agenda on the world that includes 'normalizing pedophilia'

Report reveals how the criminal justice system fails LGBTQ people

Report reveals how the criminal justice system fails LGBTQ people

thetaskforceblog.org - A new report on how lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBTQ) people interact with the criminal legal system, Unjust: How the Broken Criminal Justice System Fails LGBT People, by the Movement...

102 College Campuses Make LGBT Group's 'Shame List'

102 College Campuses Make LGBT Group's 'Shame List' - The New Civil Rights Movement

thenewcivilrightsmovement.com - Campus Pride has just announced its release of its first-ever "Shame List," a group of 102 college campuses that are the "absolute worst" for LGBTQ youth. These schools "have chosen to openly discr...

BYU, BYU-Idaho named to 'Shame List' over LGBT policies

BYU, BYU-Idaho named to 'Shame List' over LGBT policies

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sltrib.com - "If your values and religious belief system include bigotry or discrimination toward any group of people, put it on your admission brochure," Windmeyer said. "Otherwise, Campus Pride will do it for...

Monday, August 29, 2016

This Bakery Is Receiving Massive Hate For Creating A Transgender Ken Cake

This Bakery Is Receiving Massive Hate For Creating A Transgender Ken Cake

By Amanda Froelich on Aug 29, 2016 12:20 pm
At Freeport Bakery in California, the staff never question why customers want the cakes that they do. They just create them – masterfully, we might add – and often celebrate the endeavor...

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Sunday, August 28, 2016

Poor People Can’t Be Jailed For Not Being Able To Pay Bail, Justice Department Says

Poor People Can’t Be Jailed For Not Being Able To Pay Bail, Justice Department Says – ThinkProgress

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Áine
thinkprogress.org - Jailing people before they are tried in court because they can’t afford bail is unconstitutional, according to federal appeals court documents the Justice Department filed Thursday. The filings mar...

Should you charge your phone overnight?

Should you charge your phone overnight?

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nytimes.com - "Smartphones are, in fact, smart," Mr. Campos said. "They know when to stop charging." Android phones and iPhones are equipped with chips that protect them from absorbing excess electrical current ...

Saturday, August 27, 2016

Hate-preaching pastor having a hard time planning South African mission

 Hate-preaching pastor having a hard time planning South African mission 



South Africa tries to block Baptist Pastor Steven AndersonSouth Africans support LGBTI community – hate preacher not welcome

Christian school uses Bible quote to shut down parents who complained about gay teachers

 Christian school uses Bible quote to shut down parents who complained about gay teachers 



Kambala school, Rose Bay, Sydney'I think the school’s response was fantastic and it’s made me proud to be part of that community'

Donald Trump’s $100,000 “donation” to Louisiana flood victims went to a local anti-gay hate group [A MUST-READ for everyone interested in CORRUPTION]

Donald Trump’s $100,000 “donation” to Louisiana flood victims went to a local anti-gay hate group

play-doh-trum
It turns out Donald Trump’s attempt at using the Louisiana flooding as a campaign photo op is getting worse for him by the minute. The original optics were bad enough when he showed up and spent less than a minute unloading some Play-Doh from a truck before leaving. Then local authorities disputed his claim that the Play-Doh truck was even donated by him. And after he claimed that he had made a $100,000 donation but reporters couldn’t track it down, he’s now admitting the donation went to a local anti-gay hate group.
Trump’s six figure “donation” actually went to a group called the Greenwell Springs Baptist Church, which is a local front for ‘interim pastor” Tony Perkins, the head of the Family Research Council – a notorious anti LGBT entity disguised as a family values group and now disguised as a church. Perkins lost his home in the flood, a story which garnered significant headlines for its irony after so many anti-gay “pastors” had previously claimed that Hurricane Katrina had hit Louisiana as part of God’s wrath against gay people.
Now it appears Donald Trump may simply have been giving the $100,000 to the Tony Perkins-fronted group so that he could rebuild his own home. That’s all well and good, except that Perkins is a wealthy man in addition to being a hateful bigot, and could easily have his house rebuilt himself. In fact his Council is regularly on the receiving end of massive contributions from corrupt conservative billionaires.
So to recap: not only did Donald Trump hand out Play-Doh to working class people in desperate need of food and water and money to rebuild their own modest homes, it turns out he didn’t even donate the Play-Doh he was handing out, and then he gave a six figure donation to a wealthy local hate monger. It’s increasingly beginning to look like Trump would have fared better if he’d taken the Louisiana Governor’s advice and just stayed away.

30.08.2016 International Day of the Victims of Enforced Disappearances

30.08.2016 International Day of the Victims of Enforced Disappearances

Enforced disappearance is often used as a strategy to spread terror within communities. While once largely the product of military dictatorships, enforced disappearance has become a global problem. International Day of the Victims of Enforced Disappearances highlights the global insecurity generated by this practice and its effects on not only the relatives of the disappeared, but also their communities and society as a whole. This Day urges States to strengthen laws to prevent human rights violations and support the International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearances. The UN General Assembly proclaimed this Day in its 2012 resolution A/RES/65/209.

http://www.un.org/en/events/disappearancesday/

WHO reevaluating classification of transgender identity as a mental disorder

Posted: 26 Aug 2016 04:54 AM PDT
It took until 1990 for the World Health Organization (WHO) to declassify homosexuality as a mental disorder — following the lead of the American Psychiatric Association and the American Psychological Association, in 1973 and 1975 respectively.

Friday, August 26, 2016

GA Pastor Arrested for Child Molestation

GA Pastor Arrested for Child Molestation


Conservative pastor Ken Adkins was arrested on child molestation charges Friday morning. Adkins, a Georgia pastor who has drawn ire for his anti-gay tweets, turned himself into the Georgia Bureau of Investigation on charges of child molestation and aggravated child molestation. Adkins, who tweeted that the "homosexuals got what they deserved" at the Pulse nightclub shooting, has three Georgia churches.

Watch as a bomb explodes inside a Massachusetts LGBT newspaper's box

Top Story Watch as a bomb explodes inside a Massachusetts LGBT newspaper's box
Police believe the box was specifically targeted. It reportedly has been vandalized nearly 10 times in the past.

Strict new regime for Maynooth seminarians after gay dating app scandal


The national seminary in Maynooth Photo: Steve Humphreys   Strict new regime for Maynooth seminarians after gay dating app scandal Sarah MacDonald Closer eye will be kept on how Maynooth's seminarians spend their time in wake of scandal

Thursday, August 25, 2016

Wednesday, August 24, 2016

Surrogacy Bill Passed by Cabinet Bars Homosexual Couples, Single Parents From Having Kids Via Surrogacy

Surrogacy Bill Passed by Cabinet Bars Homosexual Couples, Single Parents From Having Kids Via Surrogacy

By Sukhdeep Singh on Aug 24, 2016 05:58 pm
The surrogacy bill bans foreigners, overseas Indians, single parents, homosexual couples and live-in couples from opting for altruistic surrogacy.

19 Year Old Male Student Gang-Raped by 5 Men In Benaras Hindu University

19 Year Old Male Student Gang-Raped by 5 Men In Benaras Hindu University

By Sukhdeep Singh on Aug 24, 2016 08:09 pm
A 19 year old male MA Hindi student of BHU was gang raped by five men inside a car in the Benaras Hindu University campus on August 13.

GA Republican: Party’s rigid stance on LGBT rights and racial issues will doom GOP to ‘extinction’

GA Republican: Party’s rigid stance on LGBT rights and racial issues will doom GOP to ‘extinction’

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rawstory.com - A Republican Georgia state representative warned that if the GOP doesn’t back off of its racial animus and rigid anti-LGBT views, the party will bring about its own “extinction.” The Georgia Voice ...

Radio host confronts Christian activist who said Tom Daley lost because he ‘turned gay’

Watch: Radio host confronts Christian activist who said Tom Daley lost because he ‘turned gay’ · PinkNews

pinknews.co.uk - Radio host Iain Dale has confronted the Christian campaigner who suggested that Tom Daley lost out on an Olympic medal because he “turned gay”. The notoriously anti-LGBT evangelical group Christian...

Heartbreaking Photo Shows Elderly Cat 'Holding Owner's Hand' Before He's Put Down

30.08.2016 International Day of the Victims of Enforced Disappearances

30.08.2016 International Day of the Victims of Enforced Disappearances

Enforced disappearance is often used as a strategy to spread terror within communities. While once largely the product of military dictatorships, enforced disappearance has become a global problem. International Day of the Victims of Enforced Disappearances highlights the global insecurity generated by this practice and its effects on not only the relatives of the disappeared, but also their communities and society as a whole. This Day urges States to strengthen laws to prevent human rights violations and support the International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearances. The UN General Assembly proclaimed this Day in its 2012 resolution A/RES/65/209.

http://www.un.org/en/events/disappearancesday/

Tuesday, August 23, 2016

Donald Trump’s $100,000 “donation” to Louisiana flood victims went to a local anti-gay hate group

Donald Trump’s $100,000 “donation” to Louisiana flood victims went to a local anti-gay hate group

thumbnail www­.dailynewsbin­.com - It turns out Donald Trump’s attempt at using the Louisiana flooding as a campaign photo op is getting worse for him by the minute. The original optics were bad enough when he showed up and spent le...

29.08.2016 International Day against Nuclear Tests

29.08.2016 International Day against Nuclear Tests

Since nuclear weapons testing began in the mid-twentieth century, history has shown us the terrifying and tragic effects of nuclear weapons testing and its continued threat to human health and global stability. International Day against Nuclear Tests urges States to observe their obligation to develop and sustain international peace through nuclear disarmament. Educational events, activities and messages raise awareness of the need for a unified attempt to prevent further nuclear weapons testing. The UN General Assembly proclaimed this Day in its 2009 resolution A/RES/64/35.

http://www.un.org/en/events/againstnucleartestsday/

23.08.2016 International Day for the Remembrance of the Slave Trade and Its Abolition

23.08.2016 International Day for the Remembrance of the Slave Trade and Its Abolition

Slavery in various manifestations is a social injustice practiced during various stages of human history. International Day for the Remembrance of the Slave Trade and Its Abolition is intended to inscribe the tragedy of the slave trade in the memory of all peoples. This Day invites States to organize events to honour the victims of slavery, promote intercultural dialogue, and offer an opportunity for collective consideration of the historic causes, methods and consequences of this tragedy. The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization proclaimed this Day in 1997.

http://www.unesco.org/new/en/culture/themes/dialogue/the-slave-route/right-box/r...

Christian gay pothead zombies sued for $104 million for hate speech stunt

Top Story Christian gay pothead zombies sued for $104 million for hate speech stunt
The group handed out literature filled with graphic photos of emaciated AIDS patients and fake medical claims about the dangers of gay sex.

False Martyrdom: Another Religious Right Horror Story Collapses

False Martyrdom: Another Religious Right Horror Story Collapses

Editor’s Note: Yesterday a federal appeals court that deals with military issues handed down a ruling rejecting a case of claimed “religious persecution” brought by Monifa Sterling, a former U.S. Marine. Sterling’s case had been heralded by Religious Right groups as an instance of religious discrimination, but there was more to it. We are pleased to present two views on the case today.
Bradley Girard, Stephen Gey Fellow, AU Legal Department:
Yesterday, in a case in which AU filed a friend-of-the-court brief, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces correctly concluded that while religious liberty in the military is, of course, fundamental, it does not give service-members carte blanche to do whatever they please.
The case, United States v. Sterling, was billed by some as presenting the question whether service-members are even allowed to practice their religion. But that simply isn’t what the case was about. Nor can there be any genuine dispute that members of the armed forces have the right to practice their faith.
Marine Lance Cpl. Monifa Sterling was court-martialed for a host of insubordinate acts. She refused to show up for duty. She refused to wear the required uniform. And she had a contentious relationship with her immediate supervisor that led to her, in what appears to have been aggressive nose-thumbing toward her commanding staff sergeant, posting signs around her shared workspace that read “no weapon formed against me shall prosper.”
When the staff sergeant told her to remove the signs, Sterling refused. When her superior took them down, Sterling put them back up. Again she was told to take them down; and again she refused. Six months later, after repeatedly refusing to appear for an assigned duty shift, Sterling was court-martialed. During her court-martial, she stated – for the first time – that the signs were of a religious nature, and during her appeal she argued that they were protected religious exercise under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA). The court didn’t buy it, and neither should you.
The Armed Forces are committed to allowing religious freedom, as they should be. But this was a simple case of repeated insubordination. Sterling didn’t seek any religious exemption – for which there was a clear process – and she didn’t even mention until trial that her posting of the signs was religious. (Indeed, many of the facts point to the signs not being a sincere exercise of her religion.) Instead of making clear her religious claim and seeking an exemption from the general rules regarding military discipline, she tried to muddy the waters by claiming, six months later, that these particular acts of insubordination were religious.
The court held that even if posting the signs was a sincere religious exercise, there was no substantial burden, as is required for protection under RFRA. The court’s reasoning included that she never told her superior that the signs were religious and she did not seek an exemption to post them.
Because Sterling did not take advantage of the military’s established process for accommodating religion, her exercise was not substantially burdened. Those conclusions were correct: When military members are given a process for seeking permission but don’t use it, they shouldn’t be able to say, six months later, that they were burdened by never getting the permission that they didn’t request.
At Americans United we believe that it is paramount to protect religious liberty in the military, and everywhere. Service-members give up a great deal to serve their country; they should not have to give up the right of religious exercise to do so. To that end, we support legitimate claims for religious exemptions. For example, we support religious exemptions to allow Sikhs to grow beards or wear turbans. We also actively oppose religious discrimination and bias in the military. But disingenuous claims of persecution harm both the people whose exercise is actually at risk and the institutions that work hard to protect genuine religious liberty.

An elite fighting force, Marines are subject to strict discipline.
Ed Beck, ex-Marine and church-state separation activist:
The martyr-mad Religious Right has long strained to find plaintiffs truly worthy of the title. Likewise, one of the delights of First Amendment activism is watching right-wing organizations faceplant over “martyrs” whose stories turn out to be just not so. But their latest lost cause, Monifa Sterling, stands above and beyond any grizzled church-state watchdog’s wildest dreams.
Yesterday’s decision striking down Sterling’s appeal is almost enough to make you feel bad for her attorneys. Sterling, you may recall, is the former U.S. Marine court-martialed and given a Bad Conduct Discharge from the Corps for – if you believe her backers’ yarn – merely refusing to remove a Bible verse she’d taped to the monitor of her office computer.
“The clearest case of a Religious Freedom Restoration Act violation you’ve ever seen!” they say. But if you’re reading this blog you’re well aware: there’s always more to a Religious Right tale.
Having spent four years in the Marines myself, I led Marines, was led by Marines, and served alongside Marines of all characteristics and quality, from some of the finest imaginable to a few of the worst. Contrary to lore, much like in civilian organizations, sometimes people squeak through who just don’t belong.
But in the military the stakes are higher, and behavior which corrodes “good order and discipline” on base at home can quickly lead to failure and death in combat zones overseas. Discipline must be maintained constantly and consistently, and “religious freedom” is no defense. If the system works as it should even those who squeak through boot camp but remain unfit for service will get washed out eventually.

Monifa Sterling was washed out, and not a moment too soon.
Sterling’s Bible-verse insubordination was the most minor incident in a string of misbehavior unlike anything I’ve ever seen or heard of, during my enlistment or since. To review:
 * After being counseled for minor infractions by her supervisor, in defiance Sterling posted a Bible verse on her computer: “No weapon formed against me shall prosper.” But not just a Bible verse, a modified Bible verse. And not just on her computer, but on a computer shared with a junior Marine. And not just on the monitor, but on the computer tower itself, and above her office mailbox. After Sterling refused an order to remove them, her supervisor took them down. Sterling replaced them the following day.
Later that year, Sterling:
* Refused to wear the proper uniform, lied to her superiors about having a medical waiver, then refused subsequent orders from multiple other superiors after her lie was discovered;
* Refused direct orders from multiple supervisors, including her commanding officer, to work at an event helping the families of Marines returning from overseas, stating she was “going to take [her] meds and sleep and go to church” instead. On the day of the event, in direct violation of her orders, she did not show up.
Showing an affinity for the victimhood-wallowing of the Religious Right that soon rushed to defend her, at trial Sterling characterized subsequent disciplinary actions by her leaders as “people…picking on [her].” However, when I first read the facts of her case, the phrase “failure to adapt” immediately crossed my mind. Sure enough, the court realized this quite clearly, citing a particularly ruthless bit of testimony:
“[Appellant] fails to provide a positive contribution to the unit or Corps. [Appellant] cannot be relied upon to perform the simplest of tasks without 24/7 supervision. [Appellant] has not shown the discipline, professional growth, bearing, maturity or leadership required to be a Marine. Ultimately [Appellant] takes up [the] majority of the Chain of Command’s time dealing with her issues that result from nothing more than her failure to adapt to military life.”
The Religious Right, being what it is, tried to hide that deluge of corrosive insubordination behind a piece of paper taped to a monitor (that turned out to be 3, alas). Yet, again, they could have hardly picked a worse plaintiff. Sterling’s supervisor had no idea the phrase was biblical, and Sterling never bothered to inform her.
And, most telling, Sterling both didn’t bother to utilize her RFRA-based right to appeal her supervisor’s order at the time, and never even raised a “religious freedom” defense until halfway through her trial. In the end, her supervisor’s orders were ruled lawful, and Sterling’s gross insubordination – in that instance and every other – were what sealed her appeal’s fate.
Simply put, any person who behaves as Monifa Sterling did does not belong in the United States Marine Corps. Her flagrant and repeated insubordination would, should, and by the nature of military life must result in the sort of early and hearteningly-swift discharge that this court was right to affirm.

One Year Has Passed Since The Marriage Equality Ruling. Let’s Find Out Just How Many Pastors Have Been Forced To Marry Same-Sex Couples

One Year Has Passed Since The Marriage Equality Ruling. Let’s Find Out Just How Many Pastors Have Been Forced To Marry Same-Sex Couples

We’re fast approaching the one-year anniversary of Obergefell v. Hodges, a ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court that had the effect of extending marriage equality nationwide.
Prior to that decision, which marks its first anniversary on Sunday, several right-wing pastors warned that they would go to prison rather than obey the ruling. These far-right clerics, joined by Religious Right leaders, insisted that America’s pastors would somehow be forced to preside at the weddings of same-sex couples. They boldly proclaimed their willingness to go behind bars rather than obey.
Pastor Robert Jeffress of the First Baptist Church of Dallas, who was recently named to Donald Trump’s evangelical advisory council, vowed to engage in civil disobedience.
“That may mean we experience jail time…but as the scripture says, we ought to obey God rather than man, and that’s our choice,” Jeffress told The Daily Caller website.
Appearing on a Texas radio station, Rick Scarborough, a Baptist pastor and Religious Right leader, urged members of the clergy to sign a petition pledging to “resist all government efforts to require them to accept gay marriage, and they will accept any fine and jail time to protect their religious freedom and the freedom of others.”
Richard Land, a former Southern Baptist Convention official, raised the specter of pastors in prison as well. Asked by Newsmax TV if the nation could come to the point where pastors end up behind bars for refusing to preside at marriage ceremonies for same-sex couples. Land replied, “It could.”
Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee really went around the bend. He said marriage equality could lead to “the criminalization of Christianity.”
Huckabee also said, “If the courts rule that people have a civil right – not only to be a homosexual but a civil right to have a homosexual marriage – then a homosexual couple coming to a pastor, who believes in Biblical marriage, who says, ‘I can’t perform that wedding,’ will now be breaking the law.”

According to the Religious Right, marriage equality was supposed to lead to this.
So here we are one year later. Has any of this come to pass? To answer that question, Americans United has created a new website to keep count of the number of pastors who have been forced under penalty of law to preside at a same-sex couple's wedding ceremony.
I believe you will find this site interesting and useful, so please visit it today – and help us spread the word by sharing it widely.

Wyo. Judge May Lose Her Job For Refusing To Marry Same-Sex Couples

Posted: 22 Aug 2016 10:17 AM PDT
Simon Brown
A Wyoming judge who believes she has a “religious freedom” right to refuse service to same-sex couples may soon be looking for work.
Ruth Neely is a magistrate judge in Pinedale, a town of about 2,000 in the northwest part of the state. When marriage equality became the law of the land thanks to the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2015 ruling in Obergefell v. Hodges, Neely apparently felt she could opt out of marrying same-sex couples because of her beliefs – even though that is her only real function as a magistrate.
“When law and religion conflict, choices have to be made,” she told the Pinedale Roundup.

A Wyoming court will decide whether or not Ruth Neely's religious beliefs are a valid excuse for not doing her job.
But Neely was never given the option of picking and choosing which marriage ceremonies she conducts, and she was investigated by Wyoming’s judicial ethics advisory commission. The commission has recommended she be removed from her position because her public comments revealed her bias against same-sex couples and could cause the public to question both the integrity and impartiality of the state judiciary should she remain on the bench.
“Judges do not enjoy the same freedom to proselytize their religious beliefs as ordinary citizens," the commission said, after concluding that she violated ethics rules.
It added that Neely’s attitude suggests she believes “adherence to the law is optional,” which is probably not the best outlook for a judge.
But Neely isn’t going down without a fight – albeit a poorly argued one.
She told the commission: “Homosexuality is a named sin in the Bible, as are drunkenness, thievery, lying, and the like. I can no more officiate at a same-sex wedding than I can buy beer for the alcoholic.”
But that comparison fails because Neely’s job isn’t to buy beer for anyone; her job does, however, require her to marry all qualified couples.
Still, Neely’s attorney contends that individual religious belief trumps job requirements. The commission, he said, “has adopted an extreme position. It claims that because Judge Neely’s religious beliefs prevent her from solemnizing same-sex marriage, she cannot be a judge in Wyoming, even in a position that does not have authority to perform marriages.”
Of course, that isn’t true. Neely can be a judge if she follows the rules. And she can believe whatever she wants about religion, too. She just can’t refuse to perform her job duties on the basis of her beliefs.
NBC News has reported that Neely is partly suspended while the Wyoming Supreme Court considers her case. She cannot act as a magistrate judge, but she is still Pinedale’s town judge.
Americans United has taken action concerning other judges who have similarly asserted religious justifications for refusing to perform their job duties. One judge, in Ohio, refused to marry same-sex couples because he thought he could ask someone else to perform the task in his place. Another, in Texas, took the same stance as Neely and said he “will only be conducting traditional marriages.”
As part of Americans United’s Protect Thy Neighbor project, we are responding to cases of government officials and owners of for-profit businesses who refuse service to same-sex couples or others based on religious beliefs. So if you believe you’ve been discriminated against in the name of “religious freedom,” please let us know.
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  2. One Year Has Passed Since The Marriage Equality Ruling. Let’s Find Out Just How Many Pastors Have Been Forced To Marry Same-Sex Couples

Olympian Ian Thorpe ‘really happy’ in relationship with model Ryan Channing

Olympian Ian Thorpe ‘really happy’ in relationship with model Ryan Channing

Ian Thorpe has said he is 'really happy'
Ian Thorpe has said he is 'really happy'
Ian Thorpe has opened up about his relationship with model Ryan Channing, saying “things are good”.
Thorpe came out in an interview with Michael Parkinson, publicly revealing his sexual orientation for the first time in 2014.
Thorpe Channing 2
He previously said he stayed in the closet because he feared it would effect his career.
The five-time Olympic gold medallist revealed earlier this year that he was dating Channing, in his first public relationship since coming out.
He told the Daily Mail: “Things are good… I’m really happy and have been for a while.”
Last year the swimming champion said dating had been “a nightmare” since he came out as gay. 
He said: “It’s an absolute mess out there! I’m like, ‘Where are all the normal people?’ I’ve never really dated, so I’ve come in being almost completely blindsided by this.”
Thorpe earlier this month said he hopes his decision to come out as gay has helped tackle homophobia in sport.
Earlier this year, the former Olympic swimmer spoke about the “responsibility” he now feels towards others struggling to come to terms with their sexuality.
“There’s an opportunity and a good responsibility I feel for young people who may be struggling with sexuality and to make it a more equitable place for us all,” he said.
Thorpe also spoke about the pressures of being a role model for the LGBT community, now that he has been honest about his sexuality.
“In some ways, there is an expectation that you will be the voice of this group, which none of us can do,” he said.
“It’s made up of many voices, and I’m very new to this. I don’t have the experience.”