glee : coming out

August 7, 2012 at 9:42 am (Media)

a long story short of how hard coming out can be in high school. This is also a great way of seeing how t.v. and media  focus on the stereotypes of LGBT to get their best story line.

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IN & OUT Movie

August 6, 2012 at 5:40 pm (General Information)

A great Light hearted movie that deals with most of the questioning, homosexual, homophobia and sterotype issues that most people do when coming out.

Film Trailer to Frank Oz’ ‘In & Out’ (1997) with Kevin Kline, Joan Cusack,
Tom Selleck, Matt Dillon, Selma Blair, Dan Hedaya etc.
Based on the novel by Paul Rudnick.

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Stand Up! – Don’t Stand for Homophobic Bullying

August 6, 2012 at 5:26 pm (Campaigns, Documentaries)

This is a great wee t.v advert i stumbled upon.  it’s great when your researching something so horrible and find something like this.

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Transgender Equality Network Ireland (TENI)

August 6, 2012 at 5:10 pm (Campaigns, General Information)

Our Work

Transgender Equality Network Ireland (TENI) seeks to improve conditions and advance the rights and equality of trans* people and their families.

Despite significant progress in the past years, Ireland remains a place where it is difficult for trans people to lead safe, healthy and integrated lives. TENI is dedicated to ending transphobia, including stigma, discrimination and inequality.

Our vision is an Ireland where trans people are understood, accepted and respected, and can participate fully in all aspects of Irish society.

TENI engages in activities that promote the equality and well-being of trans people in Ireland. We work in four main areas:

  • Support:  We offer a range of support services that aim to increase the well-being of trans people and their families by providing support that mitigates common experiences of isolation, misunderstanding and exclusion.
  • Advocacy:  We advocate across legal, medical, societal and political structures to ensure that policy development and legislative reform reflects the positive recognition of trans inclusion, rights and equality.
  • Education:  We provide workshops and trainings that increase awareness, understanding and inclusion of trans issues across key sectors of Irish society.
  • Capacity Building:  We work directly with voluntary and statutory organisations (including those within the LGBT sector) to enhance their capacity to provide support and services that are both effective and inclusive to the needs of trans people. We also strive to strengthen the trans community through skills building, participation and empowerment.

Our Vision and Mission

• TENI seeks to improve conditions and advance the rights, equality and well-being of transgender people and their families.

• TENI’s vision is an Ireland where trans people are understood, accepted and respected, and can participate fully in all aspects of Irish society.

• TENI is an inclusive organisation and we recognise and represent diverse trans and intersex identities and experiences.

• TENI represents and works with all trans and intersex people in Ireland, regardless of how they self-identify.

• TENI provides support and education, advocates for equality and rights, and helps other organisations and institutions to become trans-inclusive.

• TENI works within a human rights framework

• TENI collaborates with other LGBT organisations in Ireland and Europe.

Our Organisation

• TENI is a non-profit member-driven organisation, founded in 2005 and registered as a company limited by guarantee in February 2010.

• governance is provided by a volunteer Board.

• operations are led by a full-time Director assisted by a part-time development worker, communications officer and bookkeeper and a number of volunteers.

• community engagement is an essential part of TENI’s identity and our mandate is based on a substantial membership, which elects the Board and is involved in long-term strategic planning.

Our Focus

• Under the current strategic plan the primary focus of TENI’s work is the transgender strand of the Building Sustainable LGBT Communities Programme, for which funding from Atlantic Philanthropies has been secured.

• We collaborate with a broad working group of Irish lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) organisations, operating as LGBT Diversity, to promote self esteem, confidence, visibility, health and safety through the development of strong LGBT communities locally, regionally and nationally.

• In the next 16 months, much of the Board’s attention will be devoted to securing the sustainability of operations after December 2012.

Partnership Working

TENI is a member of LGBT Diversity and participates in the Your Rights, Right Now campaign, the Equality Rights Alliance and the HSE LGBT Health Advisory Committee.

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*Transgender or Trans is an umbrella term for people whose gender identity or gender expression differs from the sex assigned to them at birth.

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TENI is proud to be one of the 47 charities resident at the Carmichael Centre. For further information see: www.carmichaelcentre.ie

REF: http://teni.ie/page.aspx?contentid=6

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The Kremlin Bar Staff Get Ready for Belfast PRIDE!!!

August 3, 2012 at 1:33 pm (General Information, Media)

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1st Draft : Information Book

August 3, 2012 at 11:52 am (Development)

PDF : 1st draft LGBT Booklet

So this is a first draft of my booklet so far. it still has a lot of work to be done to it but it is coming together rather well.  At the start of the project i was talking about have 5-6 different little books that would be for each sexual orientation but through all my research i realised that it would just be too much and unnecessary. So I have put all the curtail information together in one book that suits everyone, along with some interesting information like myths and facts.  I am very happy with the book so far and I feel as though it is coming together very well.

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Comment: Why are there so few openly gay athletes at London 2012?

August 3, 2012 at 11:44 am (Media, Politics)

Why are there so few openly gay athletes at the Olympics? (Photo: Fang Guo)Why are there so few openly gay athletes at the Olympics? (Photo: Fang Guo)

Sleeping accommodation in the Olympic village is segregated by gender. Given that several nations agreed only reluctantly and with very bad grace to send women athletes to the games at all, you would not expect otherwise. The rule of segregation is enforced with no exceptions.

So spare a crocodile tear for Russell and Lauryn Mark, members of Australia’s shooting team, who are not allowed to share a room, despite being husband and wife. Reacting to this hardly unpredictable news on arrival in London, Russell Mark complained, ‘There are tons of gay couples on the Olympic team who will be rooming together. So we are being discriminated against because we are heterosexual.’

Of course, while gender segregation does not wipe out opportunities for heterosexual adventures, it might well improve the opportunities for same-sex ones. There is no reason to suppose that such a huge gathering of physically active, healthy, young people will be some kind of Festival of Chastity.

The gay dating website Grindr crashed within minutes of the first wave of athletes arriving at Heathrow. The site was down for twenty-four hours. One theory is that arriving gay athletes had gone online as soon as they stepped off their planes; another is that every gay man in London was getting into the Olympic spirit by trying to link up with an overseas athlete.

That there are ‘tons of gay couples’ on the Australian team is good news for those of us of a progressive frame of mind. But what is sad is the low numbers of out-gay athletes, not only in this team but at the games as a whole. According to the website http://www.outsports.com, of the 12,000 athletes at London 2012, only twenty are openly gay. There are said to be only two openly gay paralympians.

Of the twenty in the main games, only three are men: the Dutch equestrian Edward Gal, the British equestrian Carl Hester and the Australian diver Matthew Mitcham. The lesbian women come from a range of sports: field hockey, basketball, beach volleyball, soccer, cycling, fencing, equestrianism, triathlon, handball and tennis. But, with the exception of the one woman in the triathlon, none of them is a participant in the blue riband track and field events. The pressures on athletes to remain in the closet are still extreme.

Think of the types—or stereotypes—of the masculine girl (‘tomboy’) and feminine boy (‘sissie’). They may experience school sports in very different ways. For the girl, sports may represent a welcome opportunity for self-expression, whereas to the boy the sports field and locker room may seem little more than officially sanctioned arenas for yet further bullying and humiliation. A route to success for one; for the other a route to failure.

This may go part of the way—but only part—to explaining the gender imbalance in lists of lesbian and gay sports people. In tennis, to take an obvious example, it is far easier to name great lesbian players of the game—with Martina Navratilova at the top of the list—than (any?) gay men. It could be that male numbers are proportionately no lower than female, but it appears that sportsmen are under greater pressure to maintain their watertight performances of machismo, involving at least a tacit implication of heterosexuality. Female strength and agility do not carry the same associations. This is a massive area for discussion and further research; I don’t pretend to be addressing it in any depth.

At school, the British diver Tom Daley was continually bullied with the unimaginative taunt ‘Diving Boy’—as if to be exceptionally good at something were a matter for embarrassment or shame (what a comment on the values instilled by the UK educational system!). Perhaps this experience helped build his confidence, both in the pool and beyond it.

It was a sign of Daley’s maturity at the Beijing games, when he was only fourteen, that he was completely relaxed in the company of the openly gay Matthew Mitcham. They became friends. On the other hand, it was a sign of the immaturity of corporate institutions that, even after winning gold in Beijing, Mitcham struggled to secure the levels of sponsorship that his straight counterparts attracted. He was eventually taken up by the telecoms group Telstra, and then by Funky Trunks, for whom he is a ‘swimwear ambassador.’

Gregory Woods is Professor of Gay & Lesbian Studies, School of Arts and Humanities, Nottingham Trent University. Further information about his work can be found atwww.gregorywoods.co.uk.

REF: http://www.pinknews.co.uk/2012/07/31/comment-why-are-there-so-few-openly-gay-athletes-at-london-2012/

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Chick-fil-A Anti-Gay Controversy: Gay Employees Speak Out

August 1, 2012 at 11:01 pm (Uncategorized)

Chickfila

Customers stand in line for a Chick-fil-a meal at the chain’s restaurant in Wichita, Kan., on Wednesday. Aug. 1, 2012.

Elected officials have urged Chick-fil-A to stay out of their cities, the Jim Henson Company has severed ties, and gay rights groups are organizing national protests against the fried chicken chain. But at the Chick-fil-A where Andrew works in northern Alabama, business has been booming over the past few weeks.

On Wednesday — dubbed “Chick-fil-A Appreciation Day” by former presidential candidate Mike Huckabee — lines are stretching out the front door and the parking lot is packed with customers coming out to support company chief executive Dan Cathy, who recently came out against same-sex marriage with statements that have polarized lovers of the fast-food chain.

Andrew, a gay 24-year-old who has been working at the northern Alabama Chick-fil-A since January, sat in his car smoking a cigarette and watching the crowd during a break earlier Wednesday.

“I call it hater appreciation day,” said Andrew, who asked that his last name be withheld out of fear he’d be fired. “It’s very, very depressing.”

Chick-fil-A has long come under fire from activists for giving millions to groups that advocate against gay rights and even support ex-gay therapy, but the fire has ratcheted up in recent weeks, following interviews in which Cathy said he was “guilty as charged” of supporting “the biblical definition of the family unit” and that gay marriage invites “God’s judgment on our nation.”

Now, Chick-fil-A sits at the center of furious debate over same-sex marriage, gay rights and free speech, with politicians, activists, and newspaper editorial boards weighing in from all sides.

The company has remained mostly silent on the issue. On the company’s Facebook page, a post declares, “The Chick-fil-A culture and service tradition in our restaurants is to treat every person with honor, dignity and respect – regardless of their belief, race, creed, sexual orientation or gender.” (On the page, the company also maintains that it severed ties with the Jim Henson Company, first). The company did not respond to multiple requests for comment from The Huffington Post, and Dan Cathy has not given any subsequent interviews since the controversy began.

Another group staying mostly silent on the issue are the gay, lesbian and bisexual employees who staff the restaurants. They say that, like most employees of the company, they aren’t allowed to speak to the press.

For these employees, the last couple of weeks have been very difficult.

One gay employee who works at Chick-fil-A headquarters in Atlanta, Ga., and asked to remain anonymous for fear of losing his job, says he is getting it from both sides. On the one hand, there is the customer who came in and said he supported Dan Cathy and then “continues to say something truly homophobic, e.g. ‘I’m so glad you don’t support the queers, I can eat in peace,'” the employee, who is 23 and has worked for Chick-fil-A since he was 16, wrote in an email. On the other hand, he continued, “I was yelled at for being a god loving, conservative, homophobic Christian while walking some food out to a guest in a mall dining room.”

He disagrees with Cathy’s views, but the reaction from the public has been just as hard to swallow.

“It seems like very few people have stopped to think about who actually works for Chick-fil-A and what those people’s opinions are,” he wrote. “They are putting us in a pot and coming to support us or hate us based on something they heard and assume we agree with.”

Gabriel Aguiniga, a gay employee at a Chick-fil-A in Colorado, also said the hardest part hasn’t been hearing Cathy’s comments. Instead, “[it’s] constantly having people come up to you and say, ‘I support your company, because your company hates the gays,'” Aguiniga, 18, wrote in an email. “It really takes a toll on me.”

Management is encouraging employees at the stores to remain neutral, no matter what customers say, according to multiple workers interviewed by The Huffington Post.

“Our managers have recommended just saying ‘Thank you for your business’ if a customer says they agree with Cathy’s comments, rather than agreeing or disagreeing with them,” Katie, an openly gay Chick-fil-A employee in the greater New Orleans area, told HuffPost in an email.

But staying neutral can be difficult when it feels like the world is passing judgment on everyone associated with the company.

“Now, anyone that works there is stuck with a stigma of being homophobic, even when many of us are far from it,” Katie said. One of her coworkers, who supports same-sex marriage, has had people say things like, “Don’t give me that hate sh*t,” and “I hope you choke on that chicken,” while she was handing out samples.

But for Katie, the hardest part hasn’t been the actions of customers and protesters, it’s the money the company gives to anti-gay groups.

“At the end of the day part of our profits still go towards Dan Cathy, and subsequently, all the organizations he supports,” she said. Katie is now actively searching for work elsewhere. Many of her coworkers, she said, are looking for new jobs, too.

The groups Chick-fil-A gives to include the Family Research Council and Exodus International, according to Equality Matters, an initiative associated with the progressive Watchdog group, Media Matters. The Family Research Council is designated as a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center, while Exodus International is a Christian Ministry that has long endorsed ex-gay therapy, a controversial practice of “curing” gay people that mainstream mental health organizations have disavowed. (In recent months, the president of Exodus has tried to distance his group from the idea that gay people can be “cured.”)

Several of the gay and lesbian employees interviewed by The Huffington Post said that they liked their work, and had never witnessed incidents of homophobia or discrimination on the job. But Chick-fil-A restaurants are operated by independent owners, and employee experience can vary widely depending on the person running a particular chain.

Kellie, a 23-year-old gay woman from Georgia who also requested her last name be withheld for fear of being outed in the press, worked at two different Chick-fil-A locations in Georgia. She loved working at the first location, she said, where nobody ever said anything homophobic or discriminatory. But at the second location, in Atlanta, “there was a lot of general homophobia.” Managers would frequently make homophobic jokes, she said, and she felt that if she were to tell her colleagues she was gay, she would be fired. Eventually, she quit.

Another former employee, who worked at the Chick-fil-A in Chicago, said he thought the culture of the company encouraged homophobia.

“It’s a very monochromatic, white, male driven company,” said Andrew Mullen, a gay 26-year-old who quit his job last winter after less than a year with the company. Once, Andrew recalled, a company operator leading an employee training session, saw two men kissing on the patio outside the restaurant and proclaimed to the group he was leading that he thought it was “disgusting.” Mullen later told the person in charge of corporate training about the incident, and the man was fired. “[This person] was very apologetic for it, and there are a few people here like that, but from what I saw, it’s a predominantly pro-ignorant culture.”

But the gay employee who works at headquarters in Atlanta disagreed with this assessment. Aside from the occasional homophobic joke or comment outside of working hours, he said, his experience with the company has been “extremely positive.”

Asked in June, Andrew, the employee in Alabama, would have said his experience was positive, too. He had never explicitly told any of his colleagues he was gay, but he felt comfortable at work and liked the operator of his store. But recently, Andrew says the atmosphere at work has grown nearly intolerable. Although plenty of his coworkers have said they don’t agree with Cathy’s views, on “Chick-fil-A Appreciation Day,” one colleague told him proudly that his friends would be eating the fried chicken sandwiches for breakfast, lunch and dinner. Last week, when he went out to the parking lot to help a trucker (not directly employed by Chick-fil-A) unload a shipment of goods, the trucker turned to Andrew confidentially and said, “If I see one more faggot at a Chick-fil-A protesting, I’m going to be sick.”

“I just looked at him and said, ‘I don’t want to hear that,'” Andrew recalled. “I thought, Chick-fil-A doesn’t promote hatred, we don’t cuss and we don’t hate,” he continued. But experiences over the last couple of weeks have shifted his views: “Honestly, I really wish they would just go out of business, I do.”

Ref: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/08/01/chick-fil-a-anti-gay-controversy-employees-speak-out_n_1729968.html

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Website Design

May 15, 2012 at 3:20 am (graphics)

1st Design

2nd Design

Final Design

Your Sexuality Page

Social Network Page

Your Stories Page

Online Directory Page 1

Online Directory Final Page

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LGBTQ Symbols

May 15, 2012 at 3:00 am (graphics)

 

 

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