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Sunday, 6 October 2013 – 5:19 PM | Comments Off on A long-overdue Bent Alaska update — October 2013

Bent Alaska’s blog will continue in hiatus indefinitely; but the Bent Alaska Facebook Group on Facebook is thriving — join us! A long-overdue update from Bent Alaska’s editor.

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Bent Alaska is Alaska's LGBTQA blog founded by E. Ross in March 2008 and now edited (as of October 2011) by Melissa S. (Mel) Green.

Sara’s News Round-Up 10/11/09

Sunday, 11 October 2009 – 8:01 PM | Comments Off on Sara’s News Round-Up 10/11/09
Sara’s News Round-Up 10/11/09
This week’s national GLBT news chosen by Sara Boesser of Juneau.
Washington, St. Louis Post-Dispatch, October 11, 2009
Washington, HRC, October 10, 2009
Washington, Associated Press, October 11, 2009
Washington, Metro Weekly, October 8, 2009
Washington, Newsweek, October 8, 2009
Washington, Advocate, October 09, 2009
Washington, Christian Post, October 9, 2009
Bona Venture, October 2, 2009
Portland, Maine, 365Gay.com, October 9, 2009
Portland, Maine, 365Gay.com, October 2009

Sara’s News Round-Up 10/4/09

Sunday, 4 October 2009 – 6:43 PM | Comments Off on Sara’s News Round-Up 10/4/09
Sara’s News Round-Up 10/4/09
A selection of recent GLBT news chosen by Sara Boesser of Juneau.
Washington, 365Gay.com, September 30, 2009
Washington, 365Gay.com, September 30, 2009
New York Times, September 2, 2009
New York Times, September 23, 2009
Portland, Oregon, CBS News, October 1, 2009
Indianapolis, Indiana, Washington Blade, September 18, 2009
BBC, October 1, 2009
Augusta, Maine, Star Tribune, October 1, 2009
Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, Canada News, October 3, 2009
St. Petersburg, Florida, St. Petersburg Times, October 4, 2009
Los Angeles, Associated Press, September 20, 2009
Missouri, KSMU News, October 1, 2009
Washington, Boston Globe, October 3, 2009
Cleveland, Ohio, Time, October 1, 2009
Washington, National Catholic Reporter, October 1, 2009

Sara’s News Round-up 9/27/09

Sunday, 27 September 2009 – 2:42 PM | Comments Off on Sara’s News Round-up 9/27/09
Sara’s News Round-up 9/27/09
A selection of current GLBT news chosen by Sara Boesser, author of Silent Lives: How High a Price?
Bangkok, Thailand, 365Gay.com, September 24, 2009
Washington, Servicemembers United, September 10, 2009
St. Louis, Joplin Globe, September 21, 2009
Windy City Times, September 23, 2009
Vientiane, Laos, BBC News, June 18, 2009
London, London Evening Standard, September 9, 2009
365Gay.com, September 25, 2009
Washington, Washington Blade, September 23, 2009
San Francisco, Washington Blade, September 24 2009
Olympia Washington, Newsday.com, September 26, 2009
Flashnet, Reconciling Ministries

Sara’s News Round-up 9/20/09

Sunday, 20 September 2009 – 10:02 PM | Comments Off on Sara’s News Round-up 9/20/09
Sara’s News Round-up 9/20/09
Another batch of interesting news from Sara in Juneau. Follow the linked titles to the articles and web sites.
October 9-11, 2009, at Alaska Pacific University – Atwood Center
Anchorage, Alaska, Identity Inc.
Uruguay, ABC, September 10, 2009
Amazon.com
San Francisco, 365Gay.com, September 14, 2009
Straight Spouse Network
New Jersey, Advocate, September 15, 2009
Atlanta, Southern Voice, September 11, 2009
UKPA, September 12, 2009
Washington, Advocate, September 14, 2009
Brandon, Florida, ABC Action News, September 11, 2009
Maine, 365Gay.com, September 18, 2009
New York, Reuters, September 18, 2009
TowleRoad, September 15, 2009
Serbia, BBC, September 19, 2009
Glasgow, Scotland, BBC, August 3, 2009
Advocate, September 18, 2009

Sara’s News Round-up 9/13/09

Sunday, 13 September 2009 – 10:23 PM | Comments Off on Sara’s News Round-up 9/13/09
Sara’s News Round-up 9/13/09
Follow the linked titles to the article or podcast.
School Library Journal, September 9, 2009
New York, Reuters, September 11, 2009
September 11, 2009
New York, Washington Blade, September 4, 2009
Khartoum, Sudan, Reuters, September 7, 2009
Atlanta, Ga., Southern Voice, September 9, 2009
South Africa, Miami Herald, September 11, 2009
Washington, Southern Voice, August 28, 2009
Johannesburg, South Africa, August 17, 2009
London, CNN.com/Europe, September 11, 2009
London, Mail Online, September 12, 2009
Manhattan, Advocate, September 11, 2009
Ottawa, Canada, AFP, September 9, 2009
Tennessee, Advocate, August 13, 2009
Los Angeles, September 10, 2009

Sara’s News Round-up, 8/31/09

Monday, 31 August 2009 – 7:26 PM | Comments Off on Sara’s News Round-up, 8/31/09
Sara’s News Round-up, 8/31/09
For as long as I can remember, Sara Boesser has sent her NEWS round-up from Juneau every week, sharing an interesting mix of local, national and international items with a list of friends, allies and LGBT community members. Sara is also the author of Silent Lives: How High a Price? I’m pleased to welcome Sara and her NEWS to Bent Alaska!
———
1) Join Alaskan contingent marching in DC on October 11
If you are or were an Alaskan resident (or friend of one) and want to march with other Alaskans at the National March on Washington on October 11, 2009, email Mo to join up.
Manzini, Swaziland, Times of Swaziland, August 30,2009
National Black Justice Coalition, August 9, 2009
4) Are You a Transgender Individual Who Was Born in Alaska?
Please contact Tiffany McClain at the ACLU of Alaska
Alaska, AkCLU, August 25, 2009
Madison, Wisconsin, Advocate, August 24, 2009
Iceland, Advocate, August 26, 2009
Washington, CNN, August 27, 2009
Des Moines, Iowa, Associated Press, August 26, 2009
Brisbane Times, August 27, 2009
Switzerland, SwissInfo, August 26, 2009 .
Washington, 365Gay.com, August 27, 2009
Advocate, August 28, 2009
Santa Ana, Calif., Washington Blade, August 28, 2009
Advocate, August 28, 2009
Utah, Salt Lake Tribune, August 21, 2009
U.K., The Independent, August 30, 2009

Tim’s testimony: The research is clear

Wednesday, 5 August 2009 – 5:44 AM | Comments Off on Tim’s testimony: The research is clear
Tim’s testimony: The research is clear

Good evening. I live in Anchorage, I’m 52 years old and I’m gay, and I make no apologies for that. EVER. But what’s wrong with being gay anyway? Absolutely nothing.

The research on homosexuality is very clear:

Homosexuality is neither mental illness nor moral depravity. It is simply the way a minority of our population expresses human love and sexuality. Study after study documents the mental health of gay men and lesbians. Studies of judgment, stability, reliability, and social and vocational adaptiveness all show that gay men and lesbians function every bit as well as heterosexuals.

This is from The American Psychological Association’s “Statement on Homosexuality” from way back in July 1994.

The Church also teaches understanding and compassion toward gay and lesbian people. In their 1976 statement, To Live in Christ Jesus, the American bishops wrote, “Some persons find themselves through no fault of their own to have a homosexual orientation. Homosexuals, like everyone else, should not suffer from prejudice against their basic human rights. They have a right to respect, friendship, and justice. They should have an active role in the Christian community.… The Christian community should provide them a special degree of pastoral understanding and care.” In 1990, the U.S. National Conference of Catholic Bishops repeated this teaching in their instruction, Human Sexuality.

When I discussed this ordinance with my family who lives in the Deep South, I was surprised at a comment I received from my sister-in-law, a woman who lives in rural North Carolina. She wrote “this is about fundamental decency towards each other and if one doesn’t have that type of basic respect for another human being, all of the religion and political views in the world are meaningless.”

Before I run out of time I would like to state that I enthusiastically support Ordinance 64. Please vote YES…. all 11 of you!

Obviously some disagree with me and I’d like to address a few of their objections:

Including sexual orientation as a protected class, grants “special rights” or privileges to gays, lesbians, and bisexuals. This is factually incorrect because the legislation protects every person without exception, whether they are heterosexual, homosexual, bisexual or, sometimes, asexual.

Including sexual orientation will criminalize any religious speech that presents homosexuality as a sin. This is factually incorrect because in the U.S., speech attacking a minority group is protected by the First Amendment of the Constitution. Hate-crime legislation does not inhibit speech, it only is applicable if a violent crime has first been committed such as attempted murder, assault, aggravated assault, etc.

Including sexual orientation as a protected class is invalid because such classes must be reserved for innate, unchangeable, unchosen factors in a person’s life, like race, skin color, sex, degree of permanent disability, etc. This is not a defensible argument because religion has traditionally been included in hate-crime and human rights legislation. One’s faith identification is certainly changeable and chosen. Also, according to the vast majority of mental health therapists, human sexuality researchers, the Roman Catholic Church, liberal faith groups and some mainline faith groups, sexual orientation is neither changeable nor chosen.

Sexual orientation and gender identity may be words that cause unease or fear for individuals who have not studied the issues, and this is exactly why major civil rights changes usually come from legislatures, judges, or executive decree rather than by popular vote.

Take slavery for example. Late in the 17th century, Leander, a Roman Catholic theologian wrote:

It is certainly a matter of faith that this sort of slavery in which a man serves his master as his slave, is altogether lawful. This is proved from Holy Scripture…It is also proved from reason for it is not unreasonable that just as things which are captured in a just war pass into the power and ownership of the victors, so persons captured in war pass into the ownership of the captors… All theologians are unanimous on this.

Is it difficult to guess what a “vote of the people” would have decided about abolishing slavery in those times?

On women’s right to vote: In March 1884, Rev. Professor H. M. Goodwin wrote in the New Englander and Yale Review, Volume 43, Issue 179:

Before committing ourselves to one more radical and irremediable error, and plunging blindly into this gulf of women’s suffrage, it will be well to pause and see whither we are going, and what this new movement, or ‘reform’ really signifies; whether it rests on a true principle or a shallow and pleasing fallacy, and whether its results are likely to be beneficial or disastrous. This whole movement for female suffrage, is, at least in its motive and beginning, a rebellion against the divinely ordained position and duties of woman, and an ambition for independence and the honors of a more public life; as if any greater and diviner honor could be given to woman than those which God has assigned her; as if the sanctities of home and the sacred duties of wife and mother, with all their sacrifices, were not a higher sphere and a truer glory—a glory she shares with the world’s Redeemer—than the vulgar publicity of the polls and speech making, or the campaigning, or even the Senate and the bar.

Were women allowed to vote in 1884? In some places yes, but in many places not until the Nineteenth Amendment was passed by Congress and ratified by the states in 1920.

It was only 42 years ago — on June 12, 1967 — that the U.S. Supreme Court knocked down a Virginia statute barring whites from marrying non-whites. The decision also overturned similar bans in 15 other states. Since that landmark Loving v. Virginia ruling, the number of interracial marriages has soared; for example, black-white marriages increased from 65,000 in 1970 to 422,000 in 2005, according to Census Bureau figures. Factoring in all racial combinations, Stanford University sociologist Michael Rosenfeld calculates that more than 7 percent of America’s 59 million married couples in 2005 were interracial, compared to less than 2 percent in 1970.

Opinion polls show overwhelming popular support, especially among younger people, for interracial marriage, but that’s not to say acceptance has been universal. Bob Jones University in South Carolina only dropped its ban on interracial dating in 2000; a year later 40 percent of the voters objected when Alabama became the last state to remove a no-longer-enforceable ban on interracial marriages from its constitution. The US Supreme Court, not a vote by the majority of citizens, is what has allowed several of my friends to be married today.

So in summary, your YES vote on Ordinance 64 will help ensure that ALL citizens of Anchorage are treated fairly, equally, and without discrimination. Thank you.

Mike’s testimony: I will fight for liberty

Tuesday, 4 August 2009 – 5:40 AM | 2 Comments
Mike’s testimony: I will fight for liberty

Like Kat, author of yesterday’s testimony, Mike is a young adult who spoke in favor of the ordinance. Bent Alaska is happy to report that many Anchorage youth support LGBT equal rights. — Editor

* * *

As a fantastic orator, Mark Hamilton, once said, “Responsibility means that if you have the ability to respond, then you have the responsibility to speak.” I will take a moment to remind all present of the words in our great Constitution, “That all persons have the natural right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness,” and are equal and entitled to equal rights, opportunities, and “protection under the law.”

The essence of this matter is not what one religion or what one advocacy group feels, but whether We, as Alaskans, can allow inequality to persevere. Denial of the rights of an entire minority is beyond morally reprehensible. It is something I cannot, in good conscience, sit idly by and watch happen in my city.

I want to make it clear: I do not seek to force or push my opinion on others, merely to be free from their persecution against myself, against my brothers and sisters, against our children, and yours.

The protection of a minority from the tyranny of a majority is one issue each and every Alaskan ought to be proud of. I won’t ask you for Liberty; I will scream for it, from the mountaintops, from city hall, from the steps of your courtrooms.

I will fight for Liberty because I know better than most that Freedom is not Free, and because it is the American thing to do. I urge you to vote “yes.”

I would like to end with a quote from one of my first letters to the Editor of the ADN, as it is still pertinent today:

The religious right would like to resort to ad-hominem attacks on us and other illogical counters to our arguments. Well, frankly all this religious hoopla has no place in a secular argument; it doesn’t matter what your Bible says in a debate over how the laws of our country (or city) ought to be. What matters is right and wrong, and that their oppressive policies and limitations on our God-given freedoms are wrong.

Anchorage ex-marine faces work discrimination for being transgender

Monday, 8 June 2009 – 9:34 AM | 3 Comments
Anchorage ex-marine faces work discrimination for being transgender

Laura O’Lacy wrote the following letter to the Anchorage Assembly in support of a trans-inclusive ordinance, describing the harassment and discrimination she has faced as a transgender woman trying to get a job in her field of training.

Revised ordinance weakens the law and endangers transgender people

Sunday, 7 June 2009 – 9:27 PM | Comments Off on Revised ordinance weakens the law and endangers transgender people
Revised ordinance weakens the law and endangers transgender people

Mayor Matt Claman and members of the Municipal Assembly presented a revised version on Friday of the ordinance to amend Anchorage’s nondiscrimination law to include Anchorage’s LGBT citizens. Equality Works analyzes the changes.