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  • No Date, No Prom, School Says

     Well, this is just plain mean.  An all-girls high school in Staten Island is making girls bring a date to their junior prom. Or else they can't go.

    Back when I was a senior at my all-girls high school, a quintillion years ago (seriously, it's amazing I can even type with my aged, gnarled fingers), the Hunt For The Prom Date was taken as seriously as getting into college

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  • LGBT Families Are Goin' to the Mega-Chapels

    Every Sunday between now and Father's Day, LGBT parents and their children are donning their Sunday best and climbing aboard a chartered bus headed right (very right, in most cases) for the nearest Megachurch.   

    What in God's name are they thinking?

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  • Most Objectionable Book for Kids?

    disney: makes good kindlin'

    The American Library Association says the book the public objects to the most was one written for children. (Objections were measured by written complaints filed with a library or school.) Was it the one explaining mommy's plastic surgery--"My Beautiful Mommy"? Nope. The one where Curious George gets high on ether? Nah-ah. So what book was so offensive to folks?

    The number one challenged book--for the second year in a row, no less...

     

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  • Rights for Unmarried and Gay Couples Controversial In Italy Too

    italy family dayWhen I read about European countries granting rights to gay couples, I start feeling like the U.S. stands out as a weirdly righteous nation of homophobes. But it looks like Italy has their share of gay rights controversy as well. Some people are all upset over proposed legislation that would grant rights to gay and unmarried couples. Demonstrators staged rallies in Rome to celebrate Family Day, by which they apparently mean "Hetero-Married-Mommy-Daddy" family. Protesters reportedly "listened to songs...whose words evoked the need for children to have both a mother and a father." Maybe something like this? "Kids need a mommy and a daddy to be happy/ Mommy should have a vagina, and daddy a penis/ they'd better be married/ otherwise God is really, really mad at us/ So don't be all liberal or we'll burn for eternity..."

    Thousands of folks who support the legislation mounted counter-rallies, which were attended by some politicians, including Alfonso Pecoraro Scanio of the Greens. Wow, the Greens are a real party there? One married woman with a family was interviewed, and "she says it is only fair that even if she did not have a husband she should be entitled to basic civil rights." Yeah, that is crazy talk. Here we like to keep our single parents down.

    The legislation doesn't actually legalize gay marriage (think civil union) but that hasn't stopped one very big religious leader from opposing it. Could it be... Benedict XVI who wants to defend the traditional family? Is the pope catholic? 


  • "Our Sub Showed Us 'Brokeback', and It Was So Traumatic!"

    yummy brokebackThe family of an eighth grader is suing the Chicago Board of Education, because a substitute teacher allegedly showed the film Brokeback Mountain in class. Dude, if I had known you could sue whenever a sub showed a movie, I'd be rolling in cash right now. I mean, they're asking for $500,000 in damages! What? Oh, it actually looks the family is going to court because the R-rated film supposedly caused the girl "psychological distress" and she had to undergo treatment and counseling.

    Now, before you think the girl and her family are just a bunch of drama queens, let's think about this. I mean, Brokeback is a film about two gay cowboys who have to hide and deny their love for each other for fear of social retaliation. Perhaps this young girl wasn't aware of the pain gays and lesbians have had to face when small-minded people practice hate. I'm sure when she saw the film, she was so disturbed by the truth about homophobia that she became traumatized. It's hard for kids to swallow how insanely prejudiced people can be. Now that she's undergone counseling and her eyes are open to the oppression that still persists, I'm sure she and her family will start marching in Pride parades and campaigning for gay rights, so that no one will have to experience that level of pain again.

    You don't think that was it?

    Anyway, I was also psychologically traumatized by this film- when it didn't get the "Best Picture" Oscar. (Crash? WTF?) But I'm not sure I want my child watching R-rated films in school. I'd much rather she saw them in the traditional way: by sneaking into the theater with her friends. The family suing says they felt they had no recourse other than litigation, since they already complained to administrators in the past when some of the school reading material contained curse words. How much you wanna bet it was Catcher in the [Goddamn] Rye?  


  • Woodlan High School Student In Trouble For Editorial Preaching Tolerance

    An open letter to Woodlan High School Principal Edwin Yoder:

    Dear Mr. Yoder - Do you like apples? Hold that thought. I read, with great interest, this article detailing your actions following the publication of a column by sophomore Megan Chase. Seems that you weren't happy with the piece, calling it inappropriate and reprimanding the school's journalism teacher for allowing the students to run it without your approval. (It's interesting that you chose to allow a piece on teen pregnancy to run in a previous issue, but a piece calling for straight students to be tolerate of GLBT students was "inappropriate.")

    This pissed me off, for a number of reasons. I was thinking of a snarky rant about close-minded conservative homophobes holding positions of authority in public schools, and how sad it is that such ass-backward moralists hold sway over impressionable kids who need to hear from their peers that hate is not OK. But then I thought, gee, what would really piss you off? And it hit me, the time-honored way of dealing with people like you, who gain such satisfaction over muzzling the voices of people whose opinions don't conform to your own.

    There are, according to this site, 728 students at Woodlan. Ms. Chase's article was presumably read by some of them. Strollerderby gets - best guess here - a few thousand hits a day. And a few hundred websites link to this one, meaning that there's the potential for several thousand additional readers to click on a particular piece.  Ms. Chase's column - very appropriate for kids of any age, in my opinion, and a nicely written one at that - is printed in full in the article. And we Godless gay-lovin' liberal parent bloggers, we do love linking to stories about bigots who try to impose their narrow-minded beliefs upon those who have little choice in the matter. So rather than quash her piece, as you intended, you've given Ms. Chase a very, very large audience. So I'll rephrase the question from paragraph one. How 'bout them apples?


  • No-Name Calling Week Draws Ire of Homophobic Parents

    Thirty miles south of the site of the third largest annual celebration of GLBT pride in the country, a few parents protested an anti-bullying event sponsored by the Gay, Lesbian, and Straight Education Network. It's not that these Farmington, Minnesota parents are in favor of bullies, no sirree ("We understand that's a problem," says parent Michael Keifer). What they're against is the association with homosexuality, however indirect and vague. Because even thirty miles south of one of the gay-friendliest cities in the nation, there are still people who think that good information is tainted if it comes from a source with different values.

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