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If You’re Really Anti Marriage Equality, You Might Be Gay

Monday, April 30th, 2012

If You're Really Anti Marriage Equality, You Might Be GayOver the weekend, I was lucky enough to catch an NPR interview with Chris Colfer, the young (only 21!) actor who plays Kurt Hummel on the TV show Glee. He’s disgustingly talented and engaging; besides his TV role, he’s written and is starring in a new movie, Struck by Lightning, has a deal to write two books for young adults, and was one of Time magazine’s “100 Most Influential People” in 2011.

In the interview, he talked about the gay character he plays on the show and about being gay himself, including how he suffered so much at the hands of bullies in junior high that his parents home-schooled him for a year and a half. As I listened to him, I thought about a new study I’d just read about–one that found that virulent homophobes are themselves often gay.

In the study, published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology and involving nearly 800 college students in the U.S. and Germany, researchers asked participants to rate themselves from one to 10 on a scale of gay to straight, then showed them a series of images (pictures of gay and straight couples) and words (like “gay” and “straight”) and told them to sort the images into either of two categories–gay or straight. Unbeknownst to participants, researchers flashed subliminal messages between the images: the word “me” or the word “other.”

Full Story from PhillyMag.com

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CA: Assemblywoman Sponsors Measure to Remove “Cure the Gays” Law From the Books

Wednesday, April 7th, 2010

California lawmakers narrowly advanced a bill Tuesday that would repeal a state law designed to find the causes and cures of homosexuality. The law, written in 1950, classifies homosexuals as “sexual deviants” and requires the state Department of Mental Health to conduct research on “deviations conducive to sex crimes against children.” The research would be used to help identify potential sex offenders.

The bill moved out of the Assembly Committee on Public Safety on a 4-0 vote, with one Democrat and two Republican members abstaining from voting. They said the law’s reference to homosexuality should be removed but that they want the state to continue researching sex crimes.

California put the law on the books as a response to public outcry after a series of sex crimes in Los Angeles, which included the rape and murder of a 6-year-old girl. The murderer, who openly confessed his crime, was not gay.

Full Story from ABC News

Click here for gay marriage resources in California.

To subscribe to this blog, use the rss feed on the right, or use the form at right to join our email list. You can also email us at info@purpleunions.com. Or find us on Facebook – just search for Gay Marriage Watch (you’ll see our b/w wedding pic overlooking the Ferry Building and Bay Bridge in SF). We’re also tweeting daily at http://www.twitter.com/gaymarriagewatc.

Equality California Releases Report on “Moving Marriage Forward”

Sunday, March 28th, 2010

Our nation is engaged in a crucial conversation about why marriage matters. More than 100 million Americans now live in jurisdictions that provide the freedom to marry or some other measure of recognition for same-sex couples and their loved ones. That’s up from virtually zero just a decade ago. Public support for the freedom to marry continues to grow, with polls now consistently showing majority support among parts of the public and in several states, and near majority support nationwide.

Even though momentum is on the side of the freedom to marry, we know there is still much work to do. Only five states and the District of Columbia have ended exclusion from marriage. Losses at the ballot in California and Maine, however temporary, as well as the ongoing national debate, make it clear that many people are still wrestling with the idea of fairness for all families.

About 20 to 40 percent of people nationwide continue to waver in their position on marriage. These friends and neighbors – even family members – are good and fair people. They have deeply held beliefs, as well as some internal conflicts and real uncertainties, about gay people and marriage. Answering the sincere questions of this group of people – helping them push past discomfort and resolve their conflicts – is the key to meeting Freedom to Marry’s goal of securing majority support for marriage. How can we each personally and most effectively have the conversations that help more people rise to fairness?

Full Report from EQCA (PDF)

Click here for gay marriage resources.

To subscribe to this blog, use the rss feed on the right, or use the form at right to join our email list. You can also email us at info@purpleunions.com. Or find us on Facebook – just search for Gay Marriage Watch (you’ll see our b/w wedding pic overlooking the Ferry Building and Bay Bridge in SF). We’re also tweeting daily at http://www.twitter.com/gaymarriagewatc.

Research on Gay Marriage Coming to Fruition

Thursday, March 11th, 2010

Six years ago today (Thursday, March 11) the California Supreme Court halted the marrying of same-sex couples at San Francisco City Hall. The weddings during what became known as the city’s “Winter of Love” stunned the nation and built momentum for the fight for marriage equality.

It also turns out that Mayor Gavin Newsom’s decision to buck state law and order city officials to wed gays and lesbians was also a boon to academics. Researchers have interviewed and surveyed the couples that raced to marry before the court’s decision came down and are just now publishing their findings.

Nor is it only those LGBT partners who married in the Bay Area over the course of those four weeks in 2004 who have gained the attention of academia. Sociologists looking to examine the reasons for their entering into matrimony have also approached couples in Massachusetts; Portland, Oregon; Iowa; and will likely soon be calling those who married this week in Washington, D.C.

Full Story from the Bay Area Reporter

Click here for gay marriage resources.

To subscribe to this blog, use the rss feed on the right, or use the form at right to join our email list. You can also email us at info@purpleunions.com. Or find us on Facebook – just search for Gay Marriage Watch (you’ll see our b/w wedding pic overlooking the Ferry Building and Bay Bridge in SF). We’re also tweeting daily at http://www.twitter.com/gaymarriagewatc.