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Gay Marriage Queer Politics, Culture, and History

I Support Gay Marriage

“What was really keeping me from fighting for gay marriage?”

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Chicago Chronicles Queer Politics, Culture, and History Reporting

LGBT elders make themselves heard

The Chicago Department of Senior Services is required to conduct annual citywide public hearings on the Area Plan on Aging.  This public document is designed to describe how the Office of Senior Services will use funds from the Older Americans Act of 1965 and from the State of Illinois General Revenue Funds.  Howard Brown recently conducted an LGBT Elder Needs Assessment, and the results were presented at a public forum at the Center on Halsted, 3656 N.  Halsted, March 24.  The event was organized by the Chicago Task Force on LGBT Aging and the SAGE Advisory Council.

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Feminism Gay Marriage Queer Politics, Culture, and History Race, Sex, Gender, and Sexuality

The Kids Aren’t All Right: The Gay Marriage Movement and its Manipulation of Children and Youth

Is this what we want: young people whose self-worth is determined entirely by their romantic relationships?

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Chicago Chronicles Queer Politics, Culture, and History Reporting

Frat comes out against Kansas church

The Westboro Baptist Church, headed by the notoriously anti-gay and right-wing Fred Phelps, made its way to the University of Chicago campus on March 9.

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Chicago Chronicles Queer Politics, Culture, and History Reporting

UIC’s center hosts town hall

The Gender and Sexuality Center (GSC; formerly the Office of GLBT Concerns) at the University of Illinois-Chicago (UIC) hosted a town hall March 12 to discuss its future directions and the search for a new director.  The previous director, Patrick Finnessey, left in November and Liz Thomson was appointed interim director.  Thomson has been keen to engage the larger LGBTQ community with the mission of GSC.

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Chicago Chronicles Queer Politics, Culture, and History Reporting

Disability: A Queer Issue

A new support group for LGBTQ people living with disabilities has recently begun meeting at Access Living, and its founders are eager to spread the word about it in the community.

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Chicago Chronicles Gay Marriage Queer Politics, Culture, and History Reporting

Prop 8 donors

In the Chicago area, the number of donations to the No on 8 campaign (to defeat the Proposition) far outnumbered contributions to support.  As it turns out, this reflects the national trend.  According to Advocate.com, opponents of Proposition 8 raised about $43.3 million while the measure’s backers amassed $39.9 million.

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Chicago Chronicles Gay Marriage Queer Politics, Culture, and History Reporting

Group holds anti-Prop 8 vigil

On Thursday, March 5, the California Supreme Court began hearing arguments about Proposition 8.  Join the Impact Chicago organized a candlelight vigil on the evening of March 4 to draw attention to the issue.  This was part of a nationwide series of such events designed to draw attention to what organizers feel is a critical testing point for the validity of the legislation.  Similar vigils took place in cities like San Francisco; Santa Barbara, Calif.; and New York.

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Chicago Chronicles Queer Politics, Culture, and History Reporting

Group invites Huberman to speak

Gender JUST (Justice United for Societal Transformation) is a Chicago grassroots organization.  In recent months, the group has been working on what it describes as the problems of heterosexism and violence against LGBTQA students in Chicago’s public schools.  On March 4, Gender JUST hand-delivered a letter to Ron Huberman, the new Chicago Public Schools (CPS) chief, asking him to attend a public forum convened by the group.

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Film, Art, Television, and Media Queer Politics, Culture, and History Reporting

LGBTs hurt in public-access TV cutbacks

When AT&T unveiled its U-Verse television programming service, the company waxed about the new technology that allows subscribers to access 320 channels.  Recently, however, the company has come under fire for limiting access to public-access programming.  The Illinois chapter of the National Association of Telecommunications Officers (NATOA) and CAN TV (Community Access Television) have joined a nationwide coalition to file a petition with the Federal Communications Commission (FCC).  On its Web site, NATOA says that customers of “AT&T … can’t switch between commercial and PEG channels, set a DVR to record a PEG program, or depend on getting timely local emergency alerts.  AT&T’s system deprives PEG channels of basic capabilities such as closed captioning.”