Jake yours is one of the most interesting,enlightening groups on yahoo today, Your topics on health politics and the fight for equality around the world make your group unique and enlightening as well as entertaining. Thank you
Twink Wars; July 17, 2010Safe PICS For All Ages, Rated GConsider joining:
Members of Peckers Pics should join our President Barack Obama group . (Health Care & Gay Rights, Gay Marriage, Repeal DOMA &, Don't Ask Don't Tell)
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ObamaBiden2008/join Bearhug Submission - Roommates (Wrestling fiction)(Your Yahoo Profile must have Age, Gender, Location before you apply for membership!). NEW - Roommates: TJ & Jeremy Wrestle Again, & Some Hot Gym Action (Episode 114) http://groups.yahoo.com/group/BearhugSubmission_/joinTake Action:
Boycott advertisers of Glenn Beck on Fox News as well as all of FOX NEWS! Glenn has lied about Health-care, called our President a racist, and is anti-gay rights.- We demand immediate end of DADT. It is out-right discrimination.
Boycott Bill O'Reilly and FOX News and their advertisers. Bill discussed a French commerical by McDonalds that was meant to show that McDonalds is Gay Friendly. Bill said what is next? Is McDonalds going to get be Al-Qaida friendly as well? Further, Bill said that McDonalds would never show a gay friendly commercial in the USA. Imagine, Bill is comparing Gays to Al-Qaida. Boycott Arizona because of their uncivilized anti-Immigration Law that encourages racial profiling and increases hatred towards minorities. A remedy: Demand Republicans to support Immigration Reform.Diet & Fitness:
Did you complete your Diet Journal today? Get it done! Did you do any physical activity? If not, make a point of it by tomorrow! It is our hope that these photos shall inspire you!Today's Health/Excercise Tip:Nix the Nighttime Stress EatingHow often do you eat healthfully during the day, even finding time to hit the gym, only to fall victim to stress eating right before bedtime? Many of us pig out at night because we start to imagine all the stressful things that will happen in the course of the following workday. Some people also overindulge in fattening foods as a reward or compensation for surviving a tough day. In short, we often feel like we deserve treat upon treat because we work hard and deal with so many daily pressures.
However, with all these responsibilities and duties, the last thing you should do is stuff your body with fat-laden, sugar-filled binge foods. If you're concerned about the next day, take a minute to write down everything that is worrying you. It could be a big presentation, an important meeting with a client or the pressure of meeting new people. Once you've identified your worries on paper, it's time to get them out of your mind entirely. Don't look to potato chips, packaged cookies or other junk food for comfort.
Stress eating will fail to solve your problems, and your performance the next day may be hindered if you feel fat, sluggish and bloated from last night's binge. Instead, indulge in a guilty pleasure that's calorie-free. Pamper yourself by reading a gossip magazine or watching reruns of your favorite TV show. If an activity helps you relax and keeps your mind off fatty foods and stress eating, think of it as an essential part of your day!And Now, Twink Wars!This group is called "Peckers PICS." The English - slang definition of "pecker" is to pluck at the truth. Therefore, we peck at items such as Gay Men's Health and Male Fitness, Gay (LGBT) Politics & Issues. In this section you may peck at each photo in order to decide the winner of the "war of the fittest!" Whereas, you should select the guy that may inspire you to exercise and "get fit!" Warning: This may stoke you!56788a8b99a9b10Tomas Skoloudik10a11121314151617Boo Boo Stewart1819Paul Arroyo19a20Travis20a21Leandro22JustinMcCall, Idaho June 201023Kleionne23a242526272829303132You Decide!Toronto Gay Pride; July 4, 2010Stoked?Toronto Gay Pride; July 4, 2010Federal Panel Upholds DC Gay MarriageJuly 16, 2010 / RD Magazine / Post by Candace Chellew-HodgeIt's still legal for gay and lesbian people to be legally married in Washington, DC, thanks to a ruling by the DC Court of Appeals. By a 5-4 vote, the nine judges determined that "the DC Board of Elections and Ethics acted lawfully when it rejected an initiative by opponents of gay marriage to have the matter voted upon in a referendum."
That initiative, you'll remember, was pushed by Bishop Harry Jackson, pastor of Hope Christian Church in Beltsville, Maryland, a virulent anti-gay crusader, who we have reported on before.
The ruling is interesting on both sides. The majority ruled that the question of whether or not to grant gays and lesbians marriage equality cannot be voted on by the population at large because such a vote would violate the District's Human Rights Act. The majority wrote that the District Council:
"was not obliged to allow initiatives that would have the effect of authorizing discrimination prohibited by the Human Rights Act to be put to voters, and then to repeal them, or to wait for them to be challenged as having been improper subjects of initiative, should they be approved by voters."
What's interesting is that even the dissenting judges agreed that allowing the initiative could lead to discrimination. Instead, the minority "questioned whether the board was within its guidelines in rejecting Jackson's initiative and whether they correctly interpreted D.C. law in making their decision."
So, let's be clear--both the minority and the majority agreed that putting the marriage rights of one group of people up for a vote by another group of people would lead to discrimination. The only bone of contention was whether the council had correctly interpreted DC law when they made their decision to legalize gay marriage last December.
Reaction from the religious right was typical---they don't see a problem with the voting on other people's rights, and judges who prohibit such a thing are "activist" judges. Wendy Wright, president of Concerned Women for America opined to ONE NEWS NOW:
"We're extremely disappointed that the judges don't understand this fundamental principle of our republic form of democracy: that it's the people who ought to decide," she argues. "As our founding fathers so clearly stated, it is 'we the people' who make up this country."The problem here seems to be Wright's logic about "our republic form of democracy." We don't live in a "republic form of democracy," we live in a republic. Now, if we lived in a democracy, then we'd all have the right to majority rules, where people could just vote willy-nilly on everybody else's right to do this or that. But, we live in a republic, which is a representative form of government. The people elect representative bodies that are guided by laws and regulations--like the US Constitution. It seems Wright is confused in her definitions, as well as what right she and others should have to vote on the rights of another.
In this case, it appears that the District's pesky Human Rights Act was what foiled the anti-marriage equality faction in this battle, but it has finally produced a ruling that recognizes that the rights of a minority should not be put up for a vote because such a vote inevitably leads to discrimination. That kind of voting practice is antithetical to how a republic works.
It should also be noted that the make-up of this "activist" bench is five George W. Bush appointees and four Bill Clinton appointees. The mix in the final tally, however, shows three Bush appointees and two Clinton appointees voted to preserve the rights of the minority, while the dissent was evenly divided between Bush and Clinton appointees. (It can also be noted that US District Judge Joseph Tauro, who recently ruled parts of the Defense of Marriage Act unconstitutional, is a Nixon appointee.)
So, in our republican form of government, Wright and others opposed to marriage equality for gays and lesbians do have the right to vote on these matters. They are free to elect officials who will appoint "activist" judges who agree with them---but, as this ruling (and others) shows, that's not a foolproof plan.
"Every gay and lesbian person who has been lucky enough to survive the turmoil of growing up is a survivor. Survivors always have an obligation to those who will face the same challenges."
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