The anti-equality folks behind the Stop SB 48 campaign suffered a recent disappointment a few weeks ago. Their ballot referendum to repeal SB 48 — the FAIR (Fair, Accurate, Inclusive, and Respectful) Education Law — failed to qualify because they did not gather enough signatures. But on Thursday, Nov. 17, several homophobic organizations requested title and summary from California Attorney General Kamala Harris for a November 2012 ballot initiative to repeal the FAIR Education Act. It’s on — again. And really, what a shame. Think about all the money that will get wasted on something so inane. The new law simply mandates that public schools in California include the contributions of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people in age-appropriate social studies classes. It’s no different from how, over the years, we’ve come to include the contributions of Mexican Americans, women, African Americans, Native Americans, Asians, European Americans and members of other ethnic and cultural groups. The law goes into effect January 2012, and public schools in California are gearing up to become the first in the nation to do the right thing with regard to inclusivity of LGBT history in lesson plans. Thanks to this new law, students will now have the opportunity to learn a more accurate, inclusive version of history in an age-appropriate manner, one that might include the fact that, for example, the gay rights movement was sparked globally during the Stonewall Riots in New York City in 1969. This was when gay and lesbians decided to finally fight back against discriminatory, government-sponsored raids and unfair treatment that had spanned decades. Will learning this make kids gay? Not at all, but as you might suspect, a number of conservatives in our state are collectively wringing their hands, frantic with worry. Their worst fears are about to be realized. Homosexuality will now be taught in public schools, starting with little kindergartners as young as 5 years old. This sounds crazy, but the thing is they really believe this. They really believe this law is part of a larger gay conspiracy and that it’s designed to make kids gay and join our team. I know because I got to witness them talking about it firsthand the other night at Calvary Chapel in Chino Hills, Calif. I drove an hour and a half to hear Karen England, Stop SB 48′s main proponent, discuss their failed campaign and what their next steps are in stopping “the homosexual agenda.” England is the executive director of a “pro-family” organization called the Capitol Resource Institute. As England put it that night, it’s one thing to live with same-sex marriage. After all, even some hardcore conservatives might say with resignation, “Well, that’s in their home. Live and let live.” “But now you’re talking about bringing it into our schools; you’re messing with our kids,” England continued indignantly. “Kids need to learn their ABCs, not about transgendered people.” There were about 40 people at the meeting. The first question came from a gentleman who pointedly asked, “How do we get rid of Mark Leno?” The way he said it, I wasn’t sure if he meant that in the literal or legislative sense. Leno is the out Democratic Senator from San Francisco who introduced the bill. A mother expressed concern over what her two school-age children will be taught at school starting next year. That sparked a conversation over the merits of pulling kids out of school for days at a time in an effort to a) deny the school district the money they would have received for that child during those days, and b) prove a point and show school officials that parents who disagree with the law can’t be bullied. Another woman identified herself as a school employee. She works in her school’s print shop and said she had a conversation with the assistant principal about the new law in recent weeks. “I won’t print that stuff for the children,” she said she’d informed the administrator, referring to LGBT-related materials that might end up coming her way. “I will walk,” she’d told him. The administrator had tried to dismiss her concerns, but she made it pretty clear that she would rather quit her job than allow gay people to be humanized. “I leave it in the Lord’s hands,” she told us, shaking her head. An elderly man said his worse fears were medically motivated. “The gay community has a lot of health issues that straight people don’t have.” What he said made me think back to leper colonies: is that what he wants for gays, to quarantine us so that we can’t spread disease? Now, we’re about to embark on Round Two of this craziness. Last month, they fell short of the necessary 504,760 signatures needed for it to qualify. They claim that they received 497,404 signatures. What we should consider is that this time, they will be ever more determined to make this one stick. As England summed up for her supporters, “We got this many signatures in 70 days; 150 days will be easy.” For months, the Courage Campaign worked to defend the FAIR Education Act as part of a broad coalition that included people of faith, labor organizations, LGBT groups, disability rights advocates, racial justice organizations and many more who care about equality. We will continue to fight. After all, this is no time for the LGBT movement to rest. Our opponents raised $100,000 for this campaign, and their highest donation came from the National Organization for Marriage, in the form of a $4,000 check. That means that lots of people contributed a few dollars here and there to help them out. During England’s pep talk, she mentioned how the churches of California rose up in this effort. These are churches that had never before been active in a political campaign until now. Calvary Chapel alone added 12 new phone lines just for volunteers to reach out and rally other churches around the state to get involved. She spoke of the tireless passion people demonstrated in ways big and small, like one woman in downtown Sacramento, pushing a baby stroller, with three additional kids in tow, who went into their office and told them she was willing to “go out into the streets” to get signatures. All this, England said, “to protect her family.” Did we see that same kind of passion from the LGBT community in trying to stop this ballot initiative? Not really, but we need to, because contrary to what the other side is trying to do, we’re looking out for all students in California. For updates on what’s happening with the FAIR Education Act, check out our blog here . See the original post here: Ana Beatriz Cholo: Gearing Up for Another Fight: Keeping LGBT History in Public Schools
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Ana Beatriz Cholo: Gearing Up for Another Fight: Keeping LGBT History in Public Schools
Monday Morning Link: Huguette Clark
Buckle up butter beans because Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Bill Dedman filed his latest installment on MSNBC.com regarding the saga of wickedly rich and recently deceased copper heiress, doll collector and hardcore recluse Huguette Clark. And, children, it is a doozy. Mister Dedman combs through, chronicles and details court documents filed in relation to the legal battle brewing over the dispensation of Miz Clark’s approximately $400,000,000 fortune. The documents (and Mister Dedman’s report) shed a bit of light on just how Miz Clark’s closest advisers spent her money in the last years of her isolated life. With no children or close relatives, the aged heiress communicated with almost no one the last 20 or 25 years of
Week in Review: Mills Act Pilot Program, Subway Spending and School Board Election Results
The City Council allocated extra funding to fight a subway from going under Beverly Hills High School while the latest ballot tally in the school board election identified the three candidates with the most votes. Read about that and more in the top stories from Nov. 13-19. 1. The council has marked Dec. 19 as the date it will approve or reject the Jim Falk Lexus dealership’s bid to expand its Wilshire Boulevard facility . 2. A nonrefundable application fee of $1,500 has been established for those who want to participate in the city’s Mills Act Pilot Program. 3. In more council news, the panel has appointed an additional $650,000 to fund efforts to stop a subway from going under BHHS. 4. The latest tally of the Beverly Hills Unified School District Board of Education election indicates that Brian Goldberg, Noah Margo and Lewis Hall made the cut . 5. The city’s Bicycle Ad Hoc Committee met to discuss the development of bike routes in Beverly Hills . Also, shop local this holiday season at places like Tom’s Toys to support small businesses in Beverly Hills . Be sure to follow Beverly Hills Patch on Twitter and “Like” us on Facebook . Visit link: Week in Review: Mills Act Pilot Program, Subway Spending and School Board Election Results
Ernest Troost Live at McCabe’s
Ernest Troost is an award-winning Los Angeles singer-songwriter and guitarist, whose new folk style is at the forefront of an American roots music renaissance. The renowned folk star’s new album, Ernest Troost Live at McCabe’s , blends folk, ragtime and Piedmont blues styles into a sumptuous symphony of simplicity. Ernest Troost is an Emmy-winning composer of more than 100 orchestral scores for Hollywood films and television, so the cinematic backdrop in his story songs comes from a unique perspective not shared by other folk musicians. As a songwriter, Troost composes songs that resonate with the pure authenticity of traditional blues and folk, but with a great freshness and contemporary relevance for 21st century audiences. “I just like writing acoustic music and, in fact, my style is very spare,” says Troost.
Extra, Extra: Stolen Puppies Retrieved, Pigeon Slaughter Plus Ashton & Demi’s Open Marriage
In tonight’s Extra, Extra, two of the three stolen Buena Park puppies are recovered, scandal continues to surround Ashton Kutcher and Demi Moore’s recent split and Seal Beach residents watch as unidentified crazies behead a pigeon and coat themselves in its blood. Plus: Keep up with us on Facebook , and follow us on Twitter: @LAist @LAistFood @LAistSports . more › See the article here: Extra, Extra: Stolen Puppies Retrieved, Pigeon Slaughter Plus Ashton & Demi’s Open Marriage
Video Review: Amazon Kindle Fire
http://www.youtube.com/v/qCabXwBgZkU?version=3&f=user_uploads&app=youtube_gdata The Amazon Kindle Fire is expected to sell as many as 5 million copies by the end of the year. LA Times Tech blogger Nathan Olivarez-Giles gives his thoughts the device. See the original post: Video Review: Amazon Kindle Fire
Lorri L. Jean: Turning 40 Never Felt So Good… or Did So Much Good!
The L.A. Gay & Lesbian Center’s 40th Anniversary Gala & Auction, a star-studded celebration hosted by Leslie Jordan at the Westin Bonaventure on November 12, helped raise more than $680,000 for our many services to build the health, advocate for the rights and enrich the lives of LGBT people. Surrounded by more than 1,200 donors and supporters — and even one of the pioneers who helped found the center — I was awed by this incredible community and everything we have accomplished together. Our theme for this year’s gala was “40 Years of Family.” There are a lot of ways to define family, but one of my favorites is this: people with common goals and values who share a lifelong commitment to one another. That certainly describes the center, just as it does this year’s honorees and those who presented the awards to them: * Proud fathers of adorable twins Harper and Gideon, Neil Patrick Harris and David Burtka have put a new public face on families with same-sex parents. They have given generously to support our LifeWorks program, to which so many young LGBT people turn for support. We were proud to have Jane Lynch honor the handsome and talented couple with our Rand Schrader Distinguished Achievement Award. I was touched by Neil’s observation that the center is helping to create a world where, for same-sex couples, “being married and being a parent doesn’t have to be about making a statement, and it can be just about living our lives.” * Chaz Bono has been a dedicated activist in our community since his “first coming out” in the ’90s. Since his more recent coming out as a transgender man, he has become an even greater trailblazer. By bravely and publicly sharing the journey of his transition, and his family’s journey, he has set a courageous example that is helping transgender youth and their families around the world. David Arquette, who reflected upon the struggles his transgender sister, Alexis, faced in order to feel “comfortable in her own skin,” was proud to present Chaz with our Board of Directors Award. (Chaz visited the center for a tour he week before the event; I was proud to share with him how much the center has expanded our services for the transgender community since he last walked through the doors.) * We’re grateful to count Jane and her wife, Dr. Lara Embry, as part of the center family. Jane did the California AIDS Ride (a precursor to our present-day AIDS/LifeCycle) back in the ’90s, and Lara rode with us from San Francisco to Los Angeles for the first time this year. Though Jane’s star has risen stratospherically (and deservedly!), she hasn’t forgotten us; she continues to serve on our board of directors and to be there when we need her. The evening included many poignant moments: Surprising our longest-tenured woman board member, LuAnn Boylan with an award honoring her astounding 19 years of service to the center; board member Peter Paige’s heartfelt remembrances of turning to the center as a youth in need of support; Clinton Leupp recalling the early years of the AIDS epidemic and the anger that led him to create his alter ego, the drag star Miss Coco Peru, followed by a powerful rendition of “Those Were the Days”; and so many others. Plus, Leslie Jordan provided countless laughs as the emcee of the evening — perhaps most memorably in his Madonna-esque cone breasts. It was a night that made me exceptionally proud, not only of what the center is today but also that we are part of such an incredible tradition of activism. We’ve been calling it “40 Years of Family” because the center formally incorporated in 1971 — but in fact our roots reach all the way back to 1969. Our co-founders took action within months of the Stonewall riots; first was Morris Kight providing information and referrals and then Don Kilhefner creating a “Gay Survival Committee” for those in desperate need. Another co-founder, Jon Platania, opened several “Liberation Houses” to provide housing and employment services for homeless LGBT youth and adults — the first such residential programs in the world. And social worker June Herrle became the architect of the center’s focus on social services. And always, fighting for our rights as a key part of the center’s mission. Over the decades, we have held true to their vision of building a stronger and healthier LGBT community, taking care of our own and fighting for the equal place in society that we deserve. Now a resident of Berkeley, Jon recently came down to visit; he toured all of our facilities to see first-hand how the founders’ vision has been realized and built-upon. How very appropriate that on this special anniversary, Jon could reconnect with the center and even join us to celebrate our family at the gala. We stand proudly on his and all of our founders’ shoulders. Thanks to Jon and the other founders, the cnter has mattered to people who count on us. For more than 40 years, the center has been like family to countless members of our community. We have been there for people at their times of greatest sadness and happiness, in their times of greatest need and generosity — just like a family is supposed to be. I can’t even count the numbers of people who have told me that they found their “family of choice” through their involvement with the center. Moreover, the center has become a beacon of hope to LGBT people all over the world. We represent what any community of people can do when they set their minds to it. What was begun by a handful of volunteers with $35 in the bank has become a life-changing, life-saving institution that is making a difference to thousands of people every week and inspiring many more around the globe. I wish, after 40 years, we could say our work is done. But we know that isn’t true. We still don’t have equality under the law. All too often the rights we do have, and sometimes our very humanity, are under attack. So, as long as we are treated as second-class citizens, as long as HIV and AIDS continue to be on the rise in our community, as long as LGBT seniors needing outside care feel forced back into the closet, as long as misguided parents kick their LGBT kids out, as long as any LGBT person feels ashamed simply because of their gender identity or who they love, the center will be here. We must be here. And when you think about what we’ve accomplished in the first 40 years … just imagine the progress that the next 40 will bring. See more here: Lorri L. Jean: Turning 40 Never Felt So Good… or Did So Much Good!






