Sunday, May 31, 2009

Where's the equal justice for gays?


By Joan Vennochi
Globe Columnist / May 28, 2009
Boston Globe

PRESIDENT OBAMA had much to say about the glass ceiling he is smashing on behalf of Hispanics and nothing to say about the glass ceiling the California Supreme Court is reimposing on gays.

Pastor: No Weddings Until Gay Marriage Ban Lifted


National Public Radio

All Things Considered, May 30, 2009 · The Rev. Art Cribbs, pastor of a church in San Marino, Calif., said with Proposition 8 "a boundary has been crossed" between religion and civil law. The state, he said, "failed to protect a vulnerable minority from the tyranny of a majority."...

Sunday, May 24, 2009

Gay U.S. diplomats to be given equal benefits


Statesman
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Sunday, May 24, 2009

WASHINGTON — Secretary of State Hillary Clinton will soon announce that gay American diplomats will be given benefits similar to those that their heterosexual counterparts enjoy, U.S. officials said Saturday.

In a notice to be sent to State Department employees, Clinton says regulations that denied same-sex couples and their families the benefits that straight diplomats received are "unfair and must end," as they harm U.S. diplomacy...

In Civil War, Woman Fought Like A Man For Freedom


by Linda Paul
National Public Radio

..."A private in the Union Army made $13 a month, which was easily double what a woman would make as a laundress or a seamstress or even a maid," says Deanne Blanton, co-author of They Fought Like Demons: Women Soldiers in the Civil War. Blanton has documented hundreds of cases of women who masqueraded as men during the war. She says many joined for both patriotic and economic reasons.

"But once they were in the pants and earning more money and spending their money," Blanton says, "they seemed to greatly enjoy the freedom that came with being perceived as a man."

At the time of the Civil War, women couldn't vote. They mostly depended on men to survive. In return, they were supposed to devote their time and talents entirely to husbands, children and their extended families. That was the Victorian ideal.

That ideal was mostly aimed at middle- and upper-class women. Blanton says they're not the ones who went off to war...

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