National Roundup Windy City Times
by Andrew Davis
December 03, 2008
San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom criticized
President-elect Barack Obama and Calif. Gov. Arnold
Schwarzenegger for not being more active in fighting
Proposition 8, according to the Washington Blade. In
an interview with the Blade, Newsom said that the
other two politicians did not do enough to fight the
measure, but added that they deserved credit for
speaking out against the initiative when they did (
this past spring ) .
National Log Cabin Republicans President Patrick
Sammon is leaving his post, The Washington Blade
reported. According to a statement Sammon released,
he will leave at the end of January 2009—after
slightly more than two years—”to tackle new
challenges. I'll be doing documentary filmmaking,
which is what I did before joining Log Cabin's
staff.”
On the TV show The View, Arkansas Gov. Mike
Huckabee implied that gays are not entitled to civil
rights because they have not suffered enough,
PageOneQ.com reported. In distinguishing the rights
of sexual versus racial minorities, Huckabee said,
“Bull Connor was hosing people down in the streets
of Alabama. John Lewis got his skull cracked on the
Selma Bridge,” to which The View co-host Joy Behar
said, “Gay bashing goes on, too.” Huckabee also said
he does not believe that Arkansas' Proposition
1—which bans unmarried couples from adopting or
fostering children—targets gays.
eHarmony will now offer a dating service to gay
people to settle a complaint filed against the
company, according to the Wall Street Journal. A man
originally sued eHarmony in 2005, stating the the
dating site violated New Jersey's
anti-discrimination statute by not offering options
for gay people. To partially settle the case, the
Pasadena, Calif.-based company will develop
Compatible Partners, a same-sex dating service, and
will let the site's first 10,000 users to register
free.
Police are looking into death threats that have
been made against Vermont State Sen. John Campbell
after the said he would introduce a pro-same-sex
marriage bill, according to 365Gay.com. An anonymous
woman threatened Campbell and his family, saying
that she would bomb his home.
In Syracuse, N.Y., Dwight DeLee, 20, has been
charged with second-degree murder regarding the
killing of Moses Cannon, 22, a man who lived his
life as a woman, according to WSYR. Police said that
DeLee did not like Cannon's sexual preference. In a
statement, Human Rights Campaign President Joe
Solmonese said that “ [ t ] he senseless killing of
Moses ‘Teish' Cannon is a clear example of why we
need to redouble our efforts on education and
awareness to ending hate violence against lesbian,
gay, bisexual and transgender people.”
LGBT individuals use statutes banning
sexual-orientation discrimination just as often as
women and people of color utilize laws related to,
respectively, gender and race, according to a
release from the Williams Institute at the UCLA
School of Law. The study revealed that five out of
10,000 LGBT people file sexual orientation
employment discrimination complaints each year—a
figure comparable to the number of sex- and
race-related complaints filed annually.
In the Life Media—producer of the long-running
LGBT TV show In the Life—will run an innovative
Web-based educational video that tells the story of
Josh, a young gay man in New York City, according to
InTheLifeTV.org. The video, which centers on HIV
awareness and prevention, shows Josh confronting
such issues as unprotected sex and online hook-ups.
Researchers at New York City-based Public Health
Solutions and New York University collaborated on
the project, and gay social networking site Manhunt
helped promote it.
On Dec. 10—International Human Rights Day—LGBT
individuals are being urged to call in “gay” to work
during what has been dubbed “Day Without a Gay.”
Interested persons should see http://daywithoutagay.org.
Out & Equal Workplace Advocates—a leading LGBT
workplace equality organization—has launched
www.LGBTCareerLink.com , according to a company
press release. CareerLink, which connects LGBT-friendly
businesses with job seekers, “is the fastest and
most effective way for LGBT candidates to find
quality employment,” said Out & Equal Executive
Director Selisse Berry.