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Last updated Fri Sep 28, 2007 Member since February 2006

In omnibus requiem quaesivi, et nusquam inveni nisi in angulo cum libro Thomas a Kempis Reply

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I won't be writing much but what you find here will be my own ideas. I am an autodidact and everything fascinates me.

Happy Halloween!
Happy Halloween! magnify

Jury awards father $2.9M in funeral case

By ALEX DOMINGUEZ, Associated Press Writer 59 minutes ago

BALTIMORE - A grieving father won a $2.9 million verdict Wednesday against a fundamentalist Kansas church that pickets military funerals out of a belief that the war in Iraq is a punishment for the nation's tolerance of homosexuality.

Albert Snyder of York, Pa., sued the Westboro Baptist Church for unspecified damages after members demonstrated at the March 2006 funeral of his son, Lance Cpl. Matthew Snyder, who was killed in Iraq.

U.S. District Judge Richard Bennett noted the size of the award for compensating damages "far exceeds the net worth of the defendants," according to financial statements filed with the court. The jury was to deliberate later on punitive damages.

Church members routinely picket funerals of military personnel killed in Iraq and Afghanistan, carrying signs such as "Thank God for dead soldiers" and "God hates fags."

A number of states have passed laws regarding funeral protests, and Congress has passed a law prohibiting such protests at federal cemeteries. But the Maryland lawsuit is believed to be the first filed by the family of a fallen serviceman.

The church and three of its leaders — the Rev. Fred Phelps and his two daughters, Shirley Phelps-Roper and Rebecca Phelps-Davis, 46 — were found liable for invasion of privacy and intent to inflict emotional distress.

Snyder claimed the protests intruded upon what should have been a private ceremony and sullied his memory of the event.

The church members testified they are following their religious beliefs by spreading the message that the deaths of soldiers are due to the nation's tolerance of homosexuality.

Their attorneys argued in closing statements Tuesday that the burial was a public event and that even abhorrent points of view are protected by the First Amendment, which guarantees freedom of speech and religion.

The judge said the church's financial statements, sealed earlier, could be released to the plaintiffs.

Earlier, church members staged a demonstration outside the federal courthouse. Church founder Fred Phelps held a sign reading "God is your enemy," while Shirley Phelps-Roper stood on an American flag and carried a sign that read "God hates fag enablers." Members of the group sang "God Hates America" to the tune of "God Bless America."

Snyder sobbed when he heard the verdict, while members of the church greeted the news with tightlipped smiles.

Follow Up on Fred
It was just on the news that the jury awarded punitive damages to the tune of $8 million for a total of $10 million. It'll be interested if the judgement stands up to the inevitable appeals.
Wednesday October 31, 2007 - 05:58pm (EDT) Permanent Link | 0 Comments
Entry for September 18, 2007
Action Alert
Maryland's Highest Court Says No to Marriage Equality.


Today the Maryland Court of Appeals issued a ruling against the right to marriage equality for same-sex couples. In a long fought battle, the lower court ruled that Maryland's marriage ban for same-sex couples violated the Maryland Equal Rights Amendment. Today's decision reverses that lower court ruling.

"This is a setback in the fight for equality....It's up to fair-minded legislators
in Annapolis to do the right thing by ending discrimination against same-sex couples,
so that these families can receive the important protections they deserve."
Joe Solmonese, President of the Human Rights Campaign

For lesbian and gay couples in Maryland, marriage can be the difference between losing a home after the death of a partner or keeping it. It is the denial of fundamental protections like these that cause great disappointment from the court's decision to prolong the fight for marriage equality.

"We will be pushing for full, legal equality in the Maryland General Assembly....This is a social justice struggle. Eventually, Maryland will have civil marriage equality for same-sex couples. It's inevitable." Dan Furmansky, Executive Director of Equality Maryland.

Join our allies tonight, as we urge the Maryland Legislature to pass a bill extending marriage to same-sex couples. Special thanks to Equality Maryland and the ACLU of Maryland for being at the front lines of this critical push for equality.

Tuesday September 18, 2007 - 09:55pm (EDT) Permanent Link | 0 Comments
"Music hath charms...."
"Music hath charms...." magnify

There is some music that has an incredible affect on me. Some has a sentimental attachment, (there are hymns from my childhood that still really move me). But other pieces are just so incredibly beautiful that when I hear them my heart soars (some of Bach's Brandenberg Concerti ). Doesn't matter if there are words it's that glorious sound.

This morning, as I do most mornings, I flipped on the TV to catch Good Morning America to listen to and watch before getting out of bed. The lead story was the death of the great tenor Luciano Pavarotti. As I lay there I felt the tears running down my face soaking my beard. Now I rarely cry at another's death and I don't have a particular attachment to Pavarotti. So why the tears? They were playing his signature aria Nessun Dorma (Puccini's masterpiece from Turandot).

Nessun Dorma

is one of those pieces of music that seems to reach into my heart and wring out the tears. I really don't know why. The story is a fantasy tale of a Chinese princess name Turandot. The hero, a Prince has kept his name secret from Turandot who is challenged to learn it by dawn or she will have to marry him. Turandot has decreed that no one can sleep that night, they must discover his name. The Prince's aria begins with Turandot's command "No one sleeps..." (nessun dorma). And ends "Vanish, o night! Set behind the mountains, stars! At daybreak, I shall conquer." In 1990 it was the theme for the World Cup which was hosted by Italy.

I hope you will celebrate the music that moves you. It doesn't matter if the music is classical, rap, R&B or country western. As you listen remember those who brought you that music... the composers, writers, and performers.

Thursday September 6, 2007 - 10:44am (EDT) Permanent Link | 0 Comments
My Name is Larry Craig!

It's not really easy having sympathy for Sen. Larry Craig, but strangely enough I do.

Back in the 1970s, when I first came out in Salt Lake City, I was rather well acquainted with all the most popular public rest rooms. I knew how to tap my foot and pass toilet paper notes with the best of them and I was reasonably good at "lewd conduct". Back then if you wanted to meet another man to have sex with you're options were limited. There were no gay community centers, gay student groups, no gay social groups. In Salt Lake there was a really seedy bar "The Radio City Lounge". In many places, like Utah and Idaho, "perverts and known homosexuals", by law, could not have a liquor license. Rumor had it that gay bars were "Mafia" owned and operated. Oh and we also had a municipal bath house, built over a natural hot springs, that was pretty disgusting.

If this was what it meant to be gay is it any wonder that a lot of men denied being gay? If this is all he knows about being gay is it any wonder Larry Craig denies being gay? If our places were reversed I might be the disgraced senator and Larry might very well be sitting here writing this.

As this story has unfolded I have been struck by something that hasn't been mentioned much. Why was Larry Craig arrested? Did he threaten anyone? No. Did he defraud anyone? No. Did he approach anyone underage? No. He was looking for another man he could have consensual sex with. We know that at least one young, attractive vice cop was working the Minneapolis Airport looking for someone to entrap. In some places "lewd conduct" would be considered a "nuisance crime" like littering. He'd be given a ticket and sent on his way. In Minneapolis in addition to the time he spent hanging out in the rest room the officer spent 45 minutes interrogating the senator. It seems to me that it was homophobia feeding on homophobia. It was homophobia that created the crime and it was homophobia that led to Larry Craig being arrested.

So Larry Craig's career as a good (?) Republican Senator has been destroyed. His fellow Republicans have broken speed records distancing themselves from him. One even said that he had committed "the unpardonable sin". This has to be hyperbole, cruising a rest room worse than lying to the American people to take us into war in Iraq?

So what do we, as gay men, do about this man who doesn't want to admit to being one of us? Do we "owe" him anything? No. Should we offer him our friendship and support? Well, perhaps, but I really doubt he'll accept it. But let us offer it anyway. After all do we want to be confused with the "friends" who abandoned him.

Saturday September 1, 2007 - 11:12pm (EDT) Permanent Link | 1 Comment
My other blogs to check out
Well I've started a new blog that I hope you'll check out:
Each of us have "legends" in our life. They are the stories and tall tales told in our families. Are they true? Well, maybe deep down at their heart. More important are the effects these stories have in our lives. We are who we are largely because of those stories. My goal here is to relate the Legends that shaped my life. They are in no particular order.
and there is still the old one going strong:
"More Crepitus" was the name of a column I wrote long ago (1978) for "The Open Door". "The Open Door" was Salt Lake City's first gay/lesbian newsletter. Back then I had something to say about everything... the times have changed and so have many of my opinions but I still have a lot to say.
Comments and reactions to both are always welcome.
Thursday August 30, 2007 - 09:28pm (EDT) Permanent Link | 0 Comments

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