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Justice Scalia: Religious Schools Should Have A Special Right To Anti-Gay Discrimination

In a speech at the historically Catholic Duquesne University School of Law, conservative Justice Antonin Scalia urged the university not to stray from a religious identity hostile to gay and lesbian students:

“Our educational establishment these days, while so tolerant of and even insistent upon diversity in all other aspects of life seems bent on eliminating diversity of moral judgment — particularly moral judgment based on religious views,” Scalia said.

As examples, he cited attempts to sue a religious university in Washington, D.C., for offering only same-sex dorms and other attempts by a law school association to bar schools that discriminate against homosexuals.

I hope this place will not yield — as some Catholic institutions have — to this politically correct insistence upon suppression of moral judgment, to this distorted view of what diversity in America means,” Scalia said.

Scalia’s suggestion that there is something quintessentially Catholic about being anti-gay — a view that millions of American Catholics would no doubt find deeply offensive — is more than a little bizarre. The reality is that Catholics tend to be more supportive of gay rights than other Christian sects.

Moreover, his insistence that religious institutions enjoy a special right to discriminate against gay people is particularly troubling, and it has worked its way into his decisions on the Supreme Court. In Christian Legal Society v. Martinez, a conservative Christian student group claimed the special right to have a state university subsidize their organization even though it refused to comply with the university’s anti-discrimination policy. Scalia joined a four justice dissent that would have given anti-gay groups exactly this right.

Now, let’s be clear. All groups have a First Amendment protected right to build institutions and use those institutions to spread their viewpoint. Indeed, if an institution — whether religious or otherwise — wants to outright engage in hate speech, than that is their right under the First Amendment. But Scalia is advocating something entirely different here. He believes that anti-gay groups can demand that society as a whole support their alternative lifestyle, and he also seems to believe that religious schools have a special right to force their way into organizations that find anti-gay discrimination repugnant.

In other words, Scalia needs to understand that the First Amendment is fine with anti-gay speech — anti-gay groups just have no right to flamboyantly demand that the rest of us subsidize their behavior.

Politics

GOP Presidential Candidate Gary Johnson Slams GOP Audience Booing: ‘Very, Very Wrong’

Former New Mexico Gov. Gary Johnson (R) didn’t like what he heard when he was finally allowed to join a Republican presidential debate last week, saying audience members’ boos of a gay service member were “very wrong.” Speaking with MSNBC host Al Sharpton Friday, Johnson said he had a hard time resisting the urge to “pound” his fist in anger at the jeers, but held back because he was afraid he wouldn’t be asked back:

JOHNSON: I was champing at the bit to be able to respond to that [the boos]. And, you know, in retrospect, I regret maybe not putting my fist down and pounding it, but I’ve been excluded from these debates and I’m feeling a bit like I’m walking on eggshells.

I shouldn’t have done that. If I have one regret from last evening, it’s that I didn’t stand up and say, you know, you’re booing a U.S. serviceman who is denied being able to express his sexual preference? That’s not right. That’s not right, and there’s something very, very wrong with that.

Johnson added that Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell should have been repealed “a long time ago” and went on to condemn the other instances of morbid applause at the GOP debates. Johnson said he was taken back by cheering for Texas Gov. Rick Perry’s (R) oversight of more than 230 executions, saying, “I don’t think there’s any question that we put innocent people to death.” He added:

JOHNSON: And talking about health care and “Let him die!” no, that’s not this country. We’re a country of compassion. These are the people that we want to help. I’m in the camp that really believes that government perhaps is the only entity that`s available for those that are truly in need.

Watch it:

Fellow long-shot candidate Rick Santorum has also condemned the boos at last week’s debate, but claimed he couldn’t hear them from the stage. Johnson’s comments cast doubt on that, as he clearly did. So far, front-runners Mitt Romney and Perry have failed to speak out against the jeers.

NEWS FLASH

Obama Admin Releases $1.89 Billion In Grants For HIV/AIDS Funding | HHS announced today that it was releasing $1.89 billion in grants through the Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program “to ensure that people living with HIV/AIDS continue to have access to life-saving health care and medications.” Approximately $1.213 billion will be sent to states and territories under Part B of the Ryan White Program, with $813 million of that total designated for the AIDS Drug Assistance Program (ADAP). Thirty Part B States and Territories will also “receive $40 million in ADAP Emergency Relief Funding (ERF) for the purpose of eliminating or reducing ADAP waiting lists and/or supporting cost containment strategies to prevent implementation of a waiting list,” HHS said. As of Sept. 22, at least 8,785 people in 10 states were on a waiting list to receive life-saving medication.

House Democrats Demand Briefing On BLAG’s Defense of DOMA

Six House Democrats are calling on Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) to keep them apprised of efforts by the Bipartisan Legal Advisory Group (BLAG) to defend the Defense of Marriage Act. When President Obama announced in February that the Department of Justice would no longer defend DOMA in its many court challenges, Boehner convened the BLAG, and in a quite partisan vote, the Republican-controlled group voted to intervene on behalf of the law. Since the House’s first involvement, Boehner has refused to brief Democrats about how the $500,000 of taxpayer money is being spent in the cases. Those opposed to the defense have been asking to be looped in since April and are now reiterating their demand:

Members, and the American people, should be given the opportunity to understand why House Republican Leadership continues to advance arguments that have no valid basis and are demeaning to many of our fellow Americans. Insofar as BLAG purports to speak for the entire institution, all Members are clients and are entitled to such a briefing. We therefore reiterate our request for a briefing for interested Members, which could be conducted by outside counsel, regarding the continued defense of DOMA in the courts.

Boehner’s briefs have been full of homophobic language, such as claims that homosexuality is a choice and misrepresentations of experts’ studies. Lead attorney Paul Clement has cited such “experts” as ex-gay advocate George Rekers (who needed a rentboy to “lift his luggage”) and the National Organization for Marriage’s Maggie Gallagher, not allowing for either to actually be cross-examined under oath. And the House Democrats are not the only ones Boehner wants to keep in the dark — he violated his own commitment to transparency by objecting to having cameras in the courtroom.

There is nothing about Boehner’s surreptitiously unilateral defense of DOMA that reflects democracy or accountability. He is spending taxpayer money without discretion to spread defamatory lies in an attempt to maintain a discriminatory law. Every day that he refuses to accommodate his colleagues’ request for a briefing is another day that his motives appear anything but just.

Lady Gaga, Jamey Rodemeyer, And ‘Suicide Contagion’

It’s unsurprising that Lady Gaga took the death of Jamey Rodemeyer very personally. Rodemeyer, the young man who died by suicide earlier this month after enduring relentless anti-gay bullying, made it clear that Gaga was his role model. In his “It Gets Better” video, he talked about the power of her “Born This Way” lyrics, and most of his Tumblr was dedicated to the eclectic artist and her unique self-expression. Gaga, in turn, has made it clear that she intends to speak out against bullying, and she even paid to attend a fundraiser for President Obama last night, following through on her promise to speak with him directly about legislating more forcefully against bullying.

But some are accusing Gaga of contributing to suicide contagion. Suicide contagion is when increased visibility about suicide actually motivates others to see suicide as an option that will give their death more meaning. And while the specific attention that she has paid to to Rodemeyer may inappropriately suggest she’d do the same for others, her desire to stop bullying — as opposed to dwell on suicide — surely sets her apart from other coverage of his death. At a concert this weekend, Gaga dedicated her song “Hair” to Rodemeyer, encouraging her fans with the message, “I just want to be myself and I want you to love me for who I am.”

Hundreds attended Rodemeyer’s funeral in Buffalo on Saturday to show their support as his parents buried him in a t-shirt that said “Born This Way.” He should never have had to endure the harassment that he faced, and striving to end that stigmatization is an important response. But “bullying” is an issue not limited to Rodemeyer’s experience and not limited to young people in schools. Until we end the constant societal stigmatization of people based on their real or perceived gender or sexuality, LGBT people of all ages will be faced with undue harassment that can compound with other suicide risk factors such as depression, isolation, rejection, and anxiety. While utilizing education and intervention to interrupt the bullying young people face (and their apathy about it) is a good first step, only by ending all anti-gay and anti-trans rhetoric at all levels of society (including Republican presidential campaigns) can we truly prevent such tragedies in the future.

Watch Lady Gaga’s powerfully emotional tribute to Rodemeyer from this weekend:

ACLU Report Calls Rhode Island’s Civil Unions ‘A Bust’ And ‘A Fiasco’

A new report from the ACLU of Rhode Island declares that the state’s new civil unions law, which took effect over the summer, is a complete “bust.” Primary reasons for this diagnosis include broad religious exemptions that undermine the unions’ value, the availability of marriage equality in all the surrounding states, and twelve years of anticipation for full marriage equality:

Rhode Island’s civil union law, enacted over the strong protests of the community it was designed to benefit, has been a fiasco. In the first two months of its enactment, only fourteen gay and lesbian couples have taken advantage of the statute to obtain “civil union” status. No other state that has passed a law formally recognizing gay and lesbian couples has seen such a paltry and lackluster response to its passage… The lesson is clear: if Rhode Island is serious about recognizing the status of lesbian and gay couples, full marriage equality is the only appropriate response, and one that the General Assembly must take up.

The study compares Rhode Island’s new civil unions law to that of Illinois’, which also took effect this summer. Accounting for population differences, Illinois had fifteen times more civil unions in its first month than Rhode Island.

As ThinkProgress reported before it was enacted, the law takes such broad measures to allow religious institutions to disregard the unions that it essentially invites discrimination against same-sex couples. Conversely, Illinois’ law makes no such exceptions, and the state has ended contracts with Catholic Charities that are unwilling to provide adoption services to same-sex couples. Rhode Island’s law also dictates that marriages from out of state be reduced to civil union status, unions that are not only separate, but unequal. That anyone thought this “compromise” was an advance for same-sex couples in Rhode Island need only look at the couples who found the unions to be meaningful — all 14 of them.

NEWS FLASH

Schedule Shows How Cuomo Repeatedly Lobbied Undecided Republicans On Same-Sex Marriage | New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) has released his schedule from his first eight months in office, and it offers an interesting view of how he secured support for the state’s new same-sex marriage law. The measure, which passed the state legislature in June, attracted four Republicans, all of whom Cuomo lobbied furiously and repeatedly, showing that executives can play a key role in moving undecided lawmakers. For instance, in June, the governor met five times with the key Republican votes Sens. Mark Grisanti, James Alesi, and Stephen Saland and three times in his office with Sen. Roy McDonald. Cuomo also worked closely with Sens. Andrew Lanza and Kemp Hannon, who helped draft the religious exemptions that eventually became part of the law. To see the schedule for June, click here.

Health

Kathleen Sebelius Speaks Out Against Bullying Based On Size, Sexual Orientation, Religion

HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius appeared on MSNBC this morning to highlight the government’s anti-bullying and anti-obesity efforts, noting that kids get bullied “because of their size, of their shape, of their color, of their sexual orientation, their religion, how they look.” “I think what we have to be able to do is have parents and adults and community leaders teach kids about tolerance — celebrate the notion that we’re not all the same and that makes America a bigger and stronger country,” she said.

Sebelius also strongly condemned cyberbullying, which she described as “pretty invisible” and “even a scarier atmosphere for kids to be in.” “The problem is getting worse in that regard, there there are now ways can go after kids and never be seen by anybody,” she added. Watch it:

NEWS FLASH

New York Law To Improve Services For LGBT Seniors | Today, Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) has signed into law a bill requiring New York state to better assess the needs of elders from underserved communities, including the LGBT community. Specifically, the law (S01303) requires the New York State Office of the Aging (NYSOFA) to report annually on what services are working or need to be expanded for seniors whose access is impaired because of their sexual orientation or gender identity, among other dimensions of identity that are protected. The bill also authorizes the director of NYSOFA to fund training, outreach, and education to provide improved services for LGBT elders. A 2010 study shows that LGBT elders are particularly vulnerable to inequitable treatment and face greater obstacles to obtaining the care they deserve. This law hopefully will start to uncover solutions to these disparities as well as address the discrimination elders face in senior centers and care facilities.

NEWS FLASH

Indianapolis Has Three Openly Gay Candidates For City-County Council | Indianapolis’ race for City-County Council has, for the first time ever, three openly gay candidates: Zach Adamson, Jackie Leigh Butler, and Todd Woodmanse. Though LGBT issues are not expected to play into the local race, Indiana has been a contentious state for LGBT politics this year. The Indiana state legislature passed an amendment to ban same-sex marriage in the constitution; if they pass it again in the next session, it will head to the ballot. Though, as Adamson points out, “there aren’t a lot of gay potholes,” these candidates’ visibility could play an important role for LGBT rights in the near future.

Rep. Ros-Lehtinen’s Opposition To DOMA May Be Guided By Personal Experience, Transgender Son

Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-FL) has long advocated on behalf of LGBT equality, but on Friday the congresswoman made headlines as the first Republican to co-sponsor a bill repealing the 1996 Defense of Marriage Act.

Ros-Lehtinen’s commitment to gay and lesbian rights appears to be born out of personal experience. A 2007 article on her early support for lifting the ban against gay and lesbians serving openly in the military noted that “her husband, Dexter, was cared for by a lesbian nurse when he was injured during combat in Vietnam” and her latest evolution may have been guided by her child Amanda, who “publicly came out as a transgender man named Rodrigo” and is now a “field organizer for the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force.”

Currently, Ros-Lehtinen is the only Republican member of the LGBT caucus and has previously supported anti-hate crime legislation, anti-discrimination measures in employment and adoption, and tax equity for employer-sponsored health care. She has also voted against the Federal Marriage Amendment and opposed Florida’s constitutional ban against same-sex marriage. Earlier this year, Ros-Lehtinen “signed on to a letter to IRS Commissioner Schulman requesting that the IRS provide clear guidance for LGBT taxpayers. The letter asks the IRS to ensure that tax law is being applied fairly to all individuals.”

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Obama Slams GOP’s Booing Of Gay Soldier: ‘That’s Not Reflective Of Who We Are’

At a fundraiser in San Jose on Sunday, President Obama slammed Republicans for jeering Stephen Hill, a gay soldier who asked about the repeal of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell during the GOP presidential debate in Orlando, Florida:

“Some of you here may be folks who actually used to be Republicans but are puzzled by what’s happened to that party, are puzzled by what’s happening to that party. I mean, has anybody been watching the debates lately? You’ve got a governor whose state is on fire denying climate change,” he said, to applause. “It’s true. You’ve got audiences cheering at the prospect of somebody dying because they don’t have health care and booing a service member in Iraq because they’re gay.” “That’s not reflective of who we are,” he added. “This is a choice about the fundamental direction of our country. 2008 was an important direction. 2012 is a more important election.”

Former GOP Govs. Jon Huntsman (UT) and Gary Johnson (NM) condemned the audience’s response, and former Sen. Rick Santorum (R-PA), who claims to not have heard the boos, also apologized on Friday, saying, “I condemn the people who booed that gay soldier. That soldier is serving our country. I thank him for his service to our country. I’m sure he’s doing an excellent job. I hope he’s safe and I hope he returns safely and does his mission well.”

Meanwhile, Rep. Michele Bachmann’s (R-MN) spokeswoman Alice Stewart said in an email to ABC News, “There was booing and cheering throughout the debate – Michele didn’t comment on any of it.” Newt Gingrich, Ron Paul, Mitt Romney and Rick Perry all declined to comment on the incident.

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The Morning Pride: September 26, 2011

Welcome to The Morning Pride, ThinkProgress LGBT’s 8:45 AM round-up of the latest in LGBT policy, politics, and some culture too! Here’s what we’re reading this morning, but let us know what you’re checking out too. Follow us all day on Twitter at @TPEquality.

- The Pope has called for unity — against same-sex marriage.

- A Minneapolis mother who tried to intervene in bullying her son was experiencing has been banned from her son’s school and bus stop.

- The city of Lawrence, KS is considering non-discrimination protections for gender identity.

- So too is Maricopa County Community College in Arizona, and the bathroom meme is rearing its ugly head.

- The head of Concerned Women for America thinks that Google has “smeared” Santorum.

- Oklahoma Rep. Sally Kern think homosexuality is so dangerous, it will “destroy the future of America.”

- Scott Lively, who believes the Nazi party was part of the gay agenda, wrote last week that Christians are losing the gay culture war.

- The New Civil Rights movement reexamines the Dallas Principles, a baseline approach for LGBT advocacy.

- About 30 people protested the new Chick-fil-A in Hollywood this weekend over the company’s anti-gay policies.

- One of the Maryland delegates who opposed marriage equality in the legislature this year was stealing money from the state to pay for her own wedding.

- A British Christian street preacher who called gay men “evil” and told them they would “burn in hell” has been charged with verbal abuse.

- Controversial gay candidate David Norris is leading the polls in the Irish Presidential race.

- Check out Keith Mina Caputo’s new epic music video about transitioning gender.

- The NFL has added sexual orientation to the non-discrimination language in its collective bargaining agreement.

- AUDIO: In his new stand-up routine, Patton Oswalt takes on opponents of marriage equality and those who use the Bible to defend discrimination:

VIDEO: The University of Michigan ran a new PSA against using anti-gay rhetoric during its football game this weekend called “Huddle Up”:

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