Thursday, December 22, 2011

Kevin Cathcart: Lambda Legal's Year in Review 2011

Across the country, Lambda Legal fought and won many key victories for LGBT people, people living with HIV, and their families. We're very proud of our accomplishments this year, which are summarized below:

NATIONAL: Hospital Visitation Rights Become a Reality

In January federal guidelines requiring most hospitals to allow patients to choose their own visitors finally took effect. This groundbreaking change resulted from a 2008 lawsuit that Lambda Legal brought on behalf of Janice Langbehn, who, with her children, was kept from visiting her partner, Lisa Pond, when she collapsed on a family vacation and died in the hospital. Langbehn went to the White House in October to receive the 2011 Presidential Citizens Medal, one of the nation's highest civilian honors.

CALIFORNIA/NATIONAL: Challenging DOMA

Lambda Legal is challenging the constitutionality of the so-called Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) by representing Karen Golinski, a lesbian federal court employee denied spousal health coverage for her wife. A federal district court heard oral arguments in the case last Friday. In a historic development in February, the president and the U.S. attorney general concluded that DOMA cannot withstand heightened constitutional review, and the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) filed a powerful brief describing the government's role in a long, painful history of discrimination against gay people. The law is still being defended by legal counsel hired by the leadership of the House of Representatives.

GEORGIA: Victory for Transgender Government Employees

In a powerful decision, a federal appeals court in Georgia upheld a lower court ruling that the Georgia General Assembly violated the Constitution and discriminated against Lambda Legal's client Vandy Beth Glenn, a legislative editor fired from her job after she told her supervisor that she planned to transition from male to female. The decision in Glenn v. Brumby came in a unanimous ruling of a three-judge panel, stating, "An individual cannot be punished because of his or her perceived gender-nonconformity. Because these protections are afforded to everyone, they cannot be denied to a transgender individual."

WISCONSIN: A Historic Victory for Transgender Health Care Access

In 2005 Wisconsin passed the draconian and inhumane "Inmate Sex Change Prevention Act," which prohibited prison doctors from providing transgender inmates with medically necessary hormone treatment or sex reassignment surgery. Lambda Legal, along with the American Civil Liberties Union and the ACLU of Wisconsin, led a challenge to the law, and in August 2011 the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit upheld the right of transgender people to receive medical care while incarcerated. The court wrote that the law served "no valid penological purpose" and "amounts to torture."

ARIZONA: Fighting for Family Health Care Coverage

In summer 2009 the state of Arizona enacted a mean-spirited law to strip lesbian and gay state employees of domestic partner benefits, subjecting them to unequal treatment and denying their families urgently needed health care coverage. Lambda Legal sued on behalf of several lesbian and gay state employees, and this September the U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals upheld an injunction that temporarily maintains the provision of family health coverage until a court issues a final decision in the case.

ILLINOIS: Supporting Couples with Civil Unions

Earlier this year, Lambda Legal and Equality Illinois launched the online Civil Union Tracker, to offer information to Illinois couples and to assist them if they are not treated equally under the law. In January Governor Pat Quinn signed civil unions into law. Unmarried couples (whether LGBT or not) can now have the responsibilities, protections, and benefits available to married couples under state law, and out-of-state marriages of same-sex couples will be respected automatically as civil unions. The new law offers some protections to same-sex couples as we continue to seek marriage equality.

NEW JERSEY: Demanding Equal Rights and Respect

New Jersey law prohibits same-sex couples from marrying. But a civil union -- the highest legal status that the state's same-sex couples can enter -- falls far short of marriage, whether it comes to being respected by hospitals or car insurance providers. In June Lambda Legal sued to challenge New Jersey's civil union law on behalf of seven same-sex couples and their children, as well as Garden State Equality. We're arguing that excluding lesbians and gay men from marriage and shunting them to a separate status violates both the New Jersey Constitution and the Fourteenth Amendment of the federal Constitution and deprives families and children of equal rights, protections, and dignity.

TEXAS: Fighting Workplace Discrimination

In 2009, Tarrant County College hired Jackie Gill to teach on a one-year contract. She received high praise from colleagues, superiors, parents, and teachers. But of the contract teachers hired with her, she alone was not permitted even to interview for the positions when they were made permanent. A college official made disparaging comments to her about "homosexuality." Lambda Legal sued on Gill's behalf in September, arguing that Tarrant County College officials violated the U.S. Constitution by preventing a qualified candidate from interviewing for a teaching position because of their belief that she is a lesbian.

NEW YORK: Standing Up to Harassment

Lambda Legal is representing Liza Friedlander, who was violently attacked while trying to dine with friends at her favorite breakfast spot, a Sizzler Restaurant in Forest Hills, Queens. The manager shoved and kicked Friedlander while yelling at her to get out and calling her a "fucking dyke." Sizzler patrons spewed homophobic and hate-filled epithets, with one man threatening to sexually assault her. Lambda Legal filed a discrimination lawsuit in July in Queens County Supreme Court. This case is the first test of the bias crime law passed in August 2010 to hold individuals accountable for anti-LGBT violence and intimidation.

OREGON: Demanding Transgender Health Care

In 2001 Alec Esquivel, an Oregon state employee, was diagnosed with Gender Identity Disorder (GID). In 2010 his doctor recommended a hysterectomy as part of his GID treatment and
because he was at heightened risk for uterine and ovarian cancer. But Esquivel's insurance plan categorically excludes transition-related health care. This past June Lambda Legal filed a lawsuit on his behalf. Our case against the state of Oregon and the Public Employees' Benefit Board argues that Oregon's anti-discrimination law prohibits a public employer from denying insurance coverage on the basis of gender identity.

NATIONAL: Farewell, "Don't Ask, Don't Tell"

Lambda Legal's fight against discrimination in the military dates back to 1975, well before DADT was imposed. Our victories include a 1994 federal court ruling that the pre-DADT ban on gays in the military was unconstitutional, resulting in the reinstatement of Col. (Ret.) Margarethe Cammermeyer, a 27-year service member and Vietnam War veteran. After numerous legal and political challenges, DADT finally ended this summer, following its repeal by Congress. However, Lambda Legal is speaking out on behalf of the servicemembers whom DADT has harmed. Many received less than honorable discharges or have records noting that their discharge was based on DADT, outing them and adversely affecting their job opportunities.

WISCONSIN: Defending Couples

In Wisconsin a local anti-gay group called Wisconsin Family Action had sued to end the state's Domestic Partner Registry. The law creating the registry took effect in 2009, granting limited but important legal protections to same-sex couples, including hospital visitation and the ability to take family medical leave to care for a sick or injured partner. Lambda Legal successfully moved to intervene in the lawsuit on behalf of Fair Wisconsin and five same-sex couples. In June 2011 the circuit court upheld the Domestic Partner Registry as constitutional. The case is now being reviewed by the Wisconsin Court of Appeals.

NEW YORK: Victory for Marriage Equality

Lambda Legal has long played a central role in the fight for marriage equality in New York. We won legal battles to establish the recognition of out-of-state marriages and, in 2004, led a marriage equality lawsuit, Hernandez v. Robles, that was successful in the lower court but was later overturned. In June New York's state legislature voted in favor of marriage equality, and Lambda Legal was proud to witness the marriages of three of its original plaintiff couples. Two months later the office of Governor Andrew Cuomo recognized Lambda Legal for its longstanding work on behalf of marriage equality and presented the organization with a pen used to sign the bill.

To learn more about our work and to support it, visit www.lambdalegal.org.

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Follow Kevin Cathcart on Twitter: www.twitter.com/lambdalegal

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/kevin-cathcart/lambda-legal-victories-2011_b_1154448.html

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Saturday, December 17, 2011

Romney picks up SC gov's endorsement in GOP race (Star Tribune)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS and RSS Feed via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/175472633?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Murphy, police chief who urged restraint, dies (AP)

NEW YORK ? Patrick Murphy, a police reformer who urged officers to hold their fire as head of the New York, Detroit and Washington police during the turbulent 1960s and 1970s, has died at age 91.

Murphy died Friday of a heart attack at a hospital in Wilmington, N.C., his son, Gerard Murphy, said.

"Pat Murphy was the visionary embodiment of police reform," New York Police Commissioner Ray Kelly said in a written statement. "In the face of fierce opposition from entrenched police leadership nationally, he revolutionized policy to restrain the use of deadly force."

Murphy was born in Brooklyn and became a police patrolman after serving as a Navy pilot in World War II. He rose to become the top police official in Syracuse, N.Y., then Washington and Detroit.

In 1968, Murphy ordered police to use restraint in controlling the riots that wracked Washington following the killing of Martin Luther King Jr.

New York Mayor John Lindsay brought in Murphy in 1970 to lead the NYPD after corruption allegations rocked the police department.

In 1972, he instituted new rules restricting the use of deadly force to situations in which police needed to defend a life. He led the NYPD until the end of Lindsay's term in 1973.

Murphy later became a professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice and spent 12 years as president of the Police Foundation, an advocacy group. He also helped found the Police Executive Research Forum.

"Police chiefs across the nation recognize Patrick Murphy as an icon in the field of policing, and agree that he played a historic role in changing the landscape of policing for the better," the Police Executive Research Forum said Wednesday.

Murphy's survivors include his wife, Betty Murphy, and eight children.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obits/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111216/ap_on_re_us/us_obit_murphy

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Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Scientists find monster black holes, biggest yet (AP)

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. ? Scientists have found the biggest black holes known to exist ? each one 10 billion times the size of our sun.

A team led by an astronomer at the University of California at Berkeley discovered the two gigantic black holes in clusters of galaxies 300 million light years away. That's relatively close on the galactic scale.

The previous black hole record-holder is as large as 6 billion suns. A black hole is formed by the collapse of a super-size star. It's a region where nothing, not even light, can escape.

The scientists say their findings suggest differences in the way black holes grow, depending on the size of the galaxy.

The research was released Monday by the journal Nature.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/space/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111205/ap_on_sc/us_sci_black_holes

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Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Apple?s Grand Central store set to open December 9 (Yahoo! News)

Obama greets a crowd at Wilkes Barre/Scranton International Airport (Carolyn Kaster/AP)

Republicans on a private Republican National Committee conference call with allies warned Tuesday that party surrogates should refrain from personal attacks against President Barack Obama, because such a strategy is too hazardous for the GOP.

"We're hesitant to jump on board with heavy attacks" personally against President Obama, Nicholas Thompson, the vice president of polling firm the Tarrance Group, said on the call. "There's a lot of people who feel sorry for him."

Recent polling data indicates that while the president suffers from significantly low job approval ratings, voters still give "high approval" to Obama personally, Thompson said.

Voters "don't think he's an evil man who's out to change the United States" for the worse--even though many of the same survey respondents agree that his policies have harmed the country, Thompson said. The upshot, Thompson stressed, is that Republicans should "exercise some caution" when talking about the president personally.

On the call--which Yahoo News was invited to attend because of a mistake by someone on the staff of the Republican National Committee--Ari Fleischer, the former press secretary for George W. Bush, encouraged Republicans to turn around Democratic attacks lobbed at the GOP presidential candidates (Mitt Romney and Newt Gingrich, for starters) for "flip-flopping."

"I don't like playing defense," Fleischer said. He suggested the listeners to Tuesday's call label the president as a flip-flopper on the following issues: opposing tax increases for those making under $250,000, opposing the Bush tax cuts, opposing raising the debt limit, and opposing a health care mandate.

"When it comes to flip flopping, Barack Obama is the king of flip flopping," Fleischer said. "You can offer that to anybody," he suggested.

Thompson noted that Obama may be boxed in by similarly strong personal approval numbers for Republican lawmakers as he ponders attacking the GOP House majority during the 2012 campaign.

"Obama running against Congress is not going to work," Thompson said.

In a poll conducted in early November by the Tarrance Group and the Democratic group Lake Research for Politico and George Washington University, voters gave their personal member of Congress a 46 percent approval rating--even higher than the 44 percent personal approval numbers for Obama in the survey, Thompson said. (The poll has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.1 percent.)

Fifty-eight percent of the voters surveyed disapproved of how Obama is handling relations with Congress, according to Tarrance's November poll.

"It's a tough road for him when you look at those numbers," Thompson said of the president.

Thompson said that his group's research suggests that voters are giving Obama higher approval on foreign policy than on the issue of jobs and the economy.

Read More ?

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/techblog/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/yblog_technews/20111205/tc_yblog_technews/apples-grand-central-store-set-to-open-december-9

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Greetings!

Hey everyone! The name's Chloe1804, which is my real name, so you all can call me Chloe (Or Clo).

I randomly found this when looking for a RolePlaying website after the other one I was on mysteriously vanished overnight... (I had nothing to do with it, I swear!) So, here I now am!

I've been RolePlaying for awhile now (2 years), but I'm not very good as I don't have much time to RP these days, but I still like it so I'm always gonna RP. I was origionally on RPGuild (Can't find it now!) and I RPed in tons of Anime/Manga, Pok?mon RPs with my OC, Alicia.

I came here, to basically solve my boredom! These days, when I have nothing to do, I literly have nothing to do, so I want something to do, if y'all understand. When I'm not playing music, playing Hockey, Programming or reading, I'll be here, so... You all better get used to me! I also came here to improve my RPing skills, along with my short story writing skills.

I like Fantasy, Anime/Manga, Video Game RPs, especially ones with lots of action and adventure, and mysteriousness. I'm ok with ones involving romance, but they're not my fort? as such, so I prefer not to do them. But sometimes I will.

As I said before, I'm a very busy individual. I play the clarinet, I play Hockey in goals, I go to school and get good grades, I get along well with little children (I wonder if this is a reflection of my true self?), I like sleeping and I like hiding on people and scaring them. Scaring people is my current hobby, and I'm pretty good at it, and being creppy in general, cue evil laugh.

I'm very good at running away from things and hiding, and scaring things. I also like creeping people out, because it's funny to see the looks on their faces when I do it. I also like making random YouTube videos (I currently have one of a gummy bear planking!)

I have no friends here, and as such, am a very sad individual. Insert sad smiley...... Now. :(

And for reading this long, boring and creepy introduction, please enjoy these cakes, cookies, muffins and such.

Thank you, and good night!

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RolePlayGateway/~3/SFCS0K8qbxQ/viewtopic.php

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Monday, December 5, 2011

Suh's 2-game suspension upheld by NFL

FILE - In this Nov. 20, 2011 file photo, Detroit Lions defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh (90) sits on the bench during the fourth quarter of an NFL football game against the Carolina Panthers, in Detroit. Suh is suspended for two games by the NFL for stomping on the arm of Green Bay's Evan Dietrich-Smith during a Thanksgiving game. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio, File)

FILE - In this Nov. 20, 2011 file photo, Detroit Lions defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh (90) sits on the bench during the fourth quarter of an NFL football game against the Carolina Panthers, in Detroit. Suh is suspended for two games by the NFL for stomping on the arm of Green Bay's Evan Dietrich-Smith during a Thanksgiving game. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio, File)

(AP) ? The suspension stands, and that means Detroit Lions defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh will sit out the next two games for stomping an opponent during a loss to the Green Bay Packers.

Suh's appeal of the suspension handed out earlier this week was denied Friday by Art Shell, jointly appointed by the NFL and the players' association to hear such cases. Suh will miss Sunday's game at New Orleans and a Dec. 11 home game against Minnesota. He can return for practice on Dec. 12.

The 2010 Defensive Rookie of the Year was penalized and ejected from the Thanksgiving Day loss to the Packers for stomping on the arm of guard Evan Dietrich-Smith. On Tuesday, the league suspended Suh and the player appealed.

Shell, however, saw no merits to the appeal during a conference call with Suh on Thursday.

Lions president Tom Lewand issued a statement saying the club respects the disciplinary process and added "obviously, today's ruling does not impact our preparations for this week's game. We remain exclusively focused on the New Orleans Saints."

Usually, a hearing is held within 10 days of an appeal, but the league expedited Suh's high-profile case so a decision could be made before Sunday's game.

Suh is barred from practice and the team's facility while suspended.

Early last month, Suh requested and was granted a meeting with NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell to discuss his play after he drew several penalties and fines. Suh said he had a better understanding of the rules after that meeting.

On Sunday, with it becoming apparent he would be disciplined again, Suh called Goodell to apologize.

In the game against the Packers, Suh lifted up his right knee and forcibly stepped on Dietrich-Smith's right arm during the third quarter of the Lions' 27-15 loss. Before the stomp, Suh shoved Dietrich-Smith's helmet toward the turf while separating himself from the Packers player on the ground.

He was penalized and ejected.

Asked about the incident after the game, Suh sounded defiant, insisting he didn't intentionally step on Dietrich-Smith. A day later, following criticism from the Lions, Suh apologized to his teammates, organization and fans ? not to Dietrich-Smith.

His actions prompted more criticism around the league, with some calling Suh the NFL's dirtiest player.

Suh can afford any fines ? he is making $40 million guaranteed with a chance to get paid as much as $68 million in a five-year contract he signed after Detroit drafted him No. 2 overall in 2010.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2011-12-02-FBN-Suh-Appeal/id-567f290db0de4801bcbf6223afed1ce0

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