March 2010

From LGBTQ Nation:

Derrick Martin (left) and boyfriend/prom date Richard Goodman

A Georgia teen has been kicked-out of his family’s home after going public on his plans to attend his high school prom with his boyfriend.

In the town of Cochran, GA, 18 year-old Derrick Martin won the approval of his school to take his boyfriend to next month’s prom, and has since received an outpouring of support and some criticism, even at home, for going public.

Martin said his parents have kicked him out of the family home due to all the media attention.

“My parents did kick me out,” Martin told LGBTQ Nation on Wednesday night.

“They never supported my lifestyle, and with all of this attention they thought it best for us to separate, so they told me to leave. It’s OK though. It’s their house. It was mainly because I went public.”

In Derrick’s apology for his parent’s behavior we see the unconditional love of a child for his parents. In his parent’s rejection we see fear. The article doesn’t let us know if the parents are afraid for their son, or of their son— or both.

This is where things get complicated; homophobia is real. Being out carries with it a degree of danger. Parents are supposed to protect their kids from danger. And, while you might think that increasing public support for GLTBQ might result in less gay bashing, FBI statistics say the opposite.

From Huffington Post:

Crimes against gay, lesbian, and transgendered people are significantly underreported, but from FBI statistics we know them to be on the rise, at least 24% since 2005, and yet they are the only hate crimes excluded from federal and many state statues, making proper investigation and prosecution difficult, if not impossible.

We can see how the fear starts, as fear for our children, fear at what the world might do to them for being different; but we have only to look to the recent past, to the shuttered lives, the self-loathing, of the generations preceding Stonewall to see the price paid for cultural invisibility.

But when we project that fear, take it into our hearts, project it into our children, we do them, and the world a disservice.

And so sometimes, it is left to the kids themselves to be the courageous ones. Sometimes foolishly so, in the glow of adolescent immortality. And sometimes they will be struck down.

To the conservative, who thinks they are protecting their children by surpressing their children’s expression and identity, I can only say, freedom isn’t free. If your kids are willing to pay the price, you have to let them, as you would let your children enlist to fight a foreign enemy. And accept that you may one day mourn.

And to all those who come out, who put their bodies on the line, who risk the love of family, church, community, I say, I salute you. I celebrate you. I love you. You are now my people, even though I’m a dull as dishwater heteronormative.

Because the Q in GLBTQ can mean questioning. We question the wisdom of a status quo built on ancient fear, ignorance, and hate.

And we are all GBLTQ now.

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Let Constance Go to the Prom

by Bedford Hope on March 11, 2010

A Mississippi high-school’s decision to cancel its prom to prevent the attendance of a lesbian couple may have the additional effect of endangering the student in questions safety.

From Seattle’s The Stranger:

The school told Constance McMillen, an 18-year-old senior, that she couldn’t bring a female date, couldn’t arrive with another girl, couldn’t wear a tuxedo, and warned her that even if she and her girlfriend arrived separately and wore dressed, they would be asked to leave if their presence made other students “uncomfortable.” Now McMillen, the 18-year-old senior who wanted to bring her girlfriend to prom, doesn’t just have to worry about being the only out lesbian at her small town’s high school, she also has to worry about her classmates blaming her for the cancellation of their prom:

“Oh, my God. That’s really messed up because the message they are sending is that if they have to let gay people go to prom that they are not going to have one,” she said. “A bunch of kids at school are really going to hate me for this.”

Superintendent:
Teresa McNeece
605 S. Cummings St.
Fulton, MS 38843
(662)862-2159
tmcneece@itawamba.k12.ms.us

School Board Members

Eddie Hood
a082315@allstate.com

Jackie Nichols
jnichols@itawamba.k12.ms.us

Harold Martin
hmartin@itawamba.k12.ms.us

Clara Brown
cbrown@network-one.com

Tony Wallace
twallace@nexband.com

Principal Trae Wiygul

twiygul@itawamba.k12.ms.us

Dear School Board Member

Please do not cancel your prom.

Be accepting your students identities and preferences you will not be “creating a distraction,” you will be preparing your students for the adult world they are about to enter. It’s a world where everyone doesn’t agree on every issue, but where we are learning to accept each other’s differences and treat others as we would ourselves like to be treated.

The human race has been working on that last one for a long long time.

You are not living up to that standard at the present. I hope and pray that you will come around on this.

I spent the first 20 years of my life (i’m 46) as a homophobe. I didn’t associate with homosexuals (that I knew of) and I found the prospect of witnessing affection between a same sex couple, in any form, repellent. I’ve come a long way in the last 25 years, met a lot of wonderful people, and I no longer have the very strong feelings I once had.

Even if you feel homosexuality is a sin, even if you think of it as a lifestyle choice, you are doing even your straight students a disservice by shielding them from a reality which they are probably more comfortable with than you are.

Worst of all, you are endangering the life and safety Constance McMillen, who you are punishing by doing this, making her the villain for asking to be treated like any other student.

I pray that you will do the right thing, for Constance, for your students, and for the world at large, and accept that we can honor and respect each other even when we disagree strongly with each other’s choices in life.

Ask yourself, as a thought experiment, if Constance were to come to harm as a result of this decision, how would you feel?

Now ask yourself, how would you feel if she were your daughter.

Sincerely,

Bedford Hope

One way to show support for Constance would be to donate to ACLU, or to UnityMS, a GLBTQ organization in Mississippi which works on issues affecting students in the state.

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My Apology to Michael McGough: Ghandi and the Jews

March 11, 2010

Dear Mr. McGough, I’m sorry about my post on your recent article in the LA Times. I could have read your piece in a positive light, but I didn’t. Sometimes supportive parents see slights when they are not there. I had no right to be as testy as I was in my little rant; all [...]

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When the Girliest of Girls Turn Out To Be Men

March 4, 2010

I belong to several wonderful, but different, on-line communities. Transfamily and TYFA, and the CNMC parent group (see side bars). Parents seem to be self-selecting, with many of the parents of gender variant but not transgender children ending up in one group, and the parents of transgender kids ending up in the others. In many [...]

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