PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD  |  WHERE TO FIND THE BLADE    |   WASHBLADE ON MYSPACE    |   RSS  
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 2008
 
Please login or create a new account
  ?
Holiday Gift Guide - Issue One
HOME
CLASSIFIEDS
AUTO GUIDE

THE LATEST
BLADEWIRE
BLADEBLOG
BLOGWATCH
NEWS
 LOCAL
 NATIONAL
 WORLD NEWS
 VIEWPOINT
 ENTERTAINMENT
 ECLIPSE
 OUT IN DC
 CALENDARS
 FITNESS BY GENRE
 BITCH SESSION














EMAIL UPDATES
New to email
updates? Then click here to find out more.
email address

subscribe
unsubscribe
I have read and agree to our terms
and conditions
.


ADVERTISING
GENERAL INFO
E-EDITION
MARKETING

ABOUT US
ABOUT THE BLADE
MASTHEAD
EMPLOYMENT

 

 

 


Performer Kevin Aviance was assaulted in New York City in 2006, a year that brought several other instances of high-profile anti-gay hate crimes. (Blade file photo)


MORE FROM THIS AUTHOR
JOEY DIGUGLIELMO





Printer-friendly Version

Letter to the Editor

Sound Off about this article







 

MORE NATIONAL

‘Never give up’
Protesters hit the streets as Prop 8 challenged in court

Gay couples married in Calif. speak out on Prop 8
‘We all deserve the rights and dignities that come with marriage’

Gay volunteers helped Obama in battlegrounds
Obama Pride groups mushroomed into army of workers

Will Obama name gay DNC head?
Hildebrand a possible successor to Dean; Nunn assisting with Pentagon transition

National news in brief
Foley breaks silence on scandal


NATIONAL

Midterm Democratic victories raise gay hopes
Elections, hate crimes and Mary Cheney’s pregnancy make headlines in 2006

JOEY DIGUGLIELMO
Friday, December 29, 2006

Mark Foley wasn’t the only gay story of 2006. The year will be remembered for the Democratic victories in the midterm elections, the somber 25th anniversary of AIDS and big changes in the way gays are treated by some of the world’s major religions.

In no particular order, here are the Blade’s picks for the biggest gay news stories of the year.

 

Democrats retake Congress

November’s midterm elections, in which Democrats won majorities in both houses of Congress after 12 years of Republican control, were viewed by many gays as a tremendous victory.

While it remains to be seen how much of a priority gay issues will be for the new Congress, members are expected to take up pro-gay legislation in 2007, including the Employment Non-Discrimination Act, which calls for banning private sector employment discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity; and the Local Law Enforcement Enhancement Act, which calls for giving the federal government authority to prosecute hate crimes based on a victim’s sexual orientation, gender identity or disability.

At least eight other gay- or HIV-related bills have been introduced in Congress in recent years but have died in committee after Republican leaders refused to bring them up for a vote.

 

25th anniversary of AIDS

June 5 marked a quarter-century since AIDS was first reported by the Center for Disease Control in 1981.

Since then, activists pointed to several key developments to celebrate in the ongoing fight against the epidemic. The Ryan White CARE Act, the federal government’s largest program for providing medical treatment and support to uninsured and low-income people with HIV and AIDS, was reauthorized by Congress this month after a lengthy delay. HIV-positive people who have access to drug cocktails developed in 1996 are also living longer without AIDS than was conceivable at the disease’s outset, raising the hope that eventually HIV may become a chronic but manageable disease with which the infected can expect normal life spans.

Despite some undeniable advances, HIV and AIDS continue to wreak havoc in the U.S. among gay men, especially black gay men.

Of the more than 1 million Americans living with HIV, 74 percent are men and between 67-72 percent of them contracted the disease through gay sex, according to government statistics. National estimates suggest that 25 percent of white gay men in the U.S. are living with HIV compared to 50 percent of black gay men.

Blacks are about 12 to 13 percent of the U.S. population but account for 47 percent of Americans living with HIV.

AIDS activists are concerned that there’s a false perception among young gay men, who were either not yet born or too young to experience the toll the early years of the disease took on the gay community, that AIDS has become a manageable disease.

 

States ban gay marriage

The midterm election news wasn’t all good for gays. Colorado, Idaho, South Carolina, South Dakota, Virginia, Tennessee and Wisconsin passed amendments to their state constitutions banning gay marriage.

The only such initiative to be rejected by voters was Arizona’s, which came close with anti-amendment votes exceeding pro amendment votes by about 32,000 out of about 1.1 million cast. That breaks down to about 51 percent who voted against the amendment compared to about 48 percent who supported it.

Three of the states that passed such amendments did so by considerable margins. Tennessee’s passed with 81 percent of the vote, South Carolina’s with 78 percent and Idaho’s with 63 percent. The votes were closer in the other states.

In Virginia, 43 percent of voters opposed the gay marriage ban as did 48 percent of South Dakota residents.

While these amendments — except for Arizona’s — passed with relative ease, some gay marriage advocates are optimistic and point to decreasing margins when these numbers are compared to similar laws passed just a decade ago.

While gay marriage advocates lauded the Arizona outcome, it was later revealed that most voted against the measure because they felt the government should stay out of the issue, not because they supported gay marriage, according to a poll released later in November. Among those surveyed, only 8 percent said they supported same-sex marriage.

 

Catholics call gays ‘disordered’

The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops overwhelmingly passed a document called “Ministry to Persons With a Homosexual Inclination: Guidelines for Pastoral Care” in Baltimore in November.

The document maintains the Catholic Church’s long-standing teaching that homosexual activity of any kind is sinful. Anyone ministering to homosexuals under the auspices of the church must strictly adhere to the document’s teachings, which claim that same-sex attractions are “disordered.” The vote passed 194 to 37.

Most who rejected the document said it wasn’t worded strongly enough, though a few rejected the language altogether.

Although the document stipulates that gays be treated with respect and compassion and that violence, scorn and hatred against gays is wrong, it says any form of gay sexual expression also wrong.

Gay Catholics who live celibate lives are free to take active roles in their faith communities but gay adoptions, civil unions and same-sex marriages are forbidden.

The one concession the bishops made was that children of gay couples are not to be refused baptism in the ...

continued on next page


1  |  2  |  3

 

email   password
The following comments were posted by our readers and were not edited by the Washington Blade.  We ask that you treat others with respect; any post deemed offensive will be removed.


 

national | local | world | arts | classifieds | real estate | about us

© 2008 | A Window Media LLC Publication | Privacy Policy