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Soon, HIV Will Not Be a Barrier to Immigration

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A sign that the US Customs and Immigration Service may finally end their long-standing practice of denying green cards to many HIV-positive applicants, the USCIS suspended decisions on all green card applications from positive applicants where their serostatus would have resulted in their rejection.

The Advocate quotes the head of Immigration Equality, an LGBT immigrant-rights advocacy group, as saying the suspension is a sign USCIS is moving forward on implementing a rule change made by Congress last June. The delay was due to a required comment period on the new policy, which ended August 19th.

Happy Bisexual Day!

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mikaMika, the fabulous, not-very-heteronormative pop star, finally admitted: he’s not straight.

But neither is he gay.

“I’ve never ever labeled myself, but having said that; I’ve never limited my life, I’ve never limited who I sleep with,” the 26-year-old American-Lebanese singer told Danish magazine Gay & Night. “Call me whatever you want. Call me bisexual, if you need a term for me.”

Queerty puts it best:

Actually, “post-emo cartoon character” was the term we had been using for you, so we don’t need one.

And all this, just in time for National Bisexuality Day. Hmm…Everybody’s gonna love today, gonna love today, gonna love today…

Photo: Wikipedia/Seraphim Whipp

Gov. Pawlenty slams gay marriage at religious right summit

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Gov. Tim Pawlenty’s whirlwind pre-presidential tour continued last weekend when the evangelical governor stumped at the Values Voters Summit in Washington, D.C. His rousing speech touched on his true feelings about same-sex couples.

A really important example of this is defending and protecting traditional marriage. All domestic relationships are not the same, and traditional marriage needs to remain elevated in our society and in our culture. Marriage should be defined as between a man and a woman, and I sponsored that legislation when I was in the Minnesota Legislature, and we should make sure that the people are heard on this, that the Constitution is heard on this, not courts who are making up the law in the backroom.

Now, this is not some radical notion or some extreme notion. My goodness, when it’s been put to the vote of the people even in left-of center places like Oregon and – California voted twice for traditional marriage. If they can support traditional marriage in California we should do it all over this country.

Does the Religious Right Still Care About Same-Sex Marriage?

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A straw poll of conservative leaders at the “Values Voters” summit revealed that the religious right is warming up to our posturing Gov. Tim Pawlenty, but they’re not really worked-up about same-gender marriage…or are they?

Yesterday, rockstar pollster Nate Silver of fivethirtyeight.com, highlighted an interesting tidbit from the wide-ranging poll of attendees at the gathering of leaders from the religious right (including Governor Tim Pawlenty and Representative Michelle Bachmann):

Abortion ranked first among issues of concern to straw-poll voters, getting 41 percent of the vote, with protection of religious liberty second with 18 percent.

Opposition to same-sex marriage was third at 7 percent.

Silver points out that this is a steep drop from the last poll, in 2007, where “Same-Sex Marriage” took second place in this angst index (at 20 percent), even though battles over same-gender marriage are smoldering from California to Maine. At the same time, he overlooks the 18 percent of attendees who were most concerned about the “protection of religious liberty,” a worry opponents of same-gender marriage trot out in each battle they fight. In Maine yesterday, supporters of the state’s same-gender marriage law are crying foul and throwing cold water on their opponents’ claims – made in a TV commercial – that religious groups will be persecuted for conscientious objection to “homosexuality” or LGBT rights.

While the potential is there, those fighting the veto effort said it has not been the case in other states, and in Maine, it’s being overstated.

“They have various theories about why there might be litigation, but the test is what has happened in other jurisdictions. Law professors have theories all the time,” University of Maine Law Professor David Cluchey said.

One in Five US Same-Gender Couples Call Themeselves “Married”

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Some say “partner,” some say “wife” or “husband,” but the data is in – a little over one in five same-gender, unmarried domestic partners call themselves “married.” According to data from the 2008 American Communities Survey, released yesterday by the US Census Bureau, of the estimated 564,743 same-gender couples living together and identifying themselves as “domestic partners,” 149,956 said they had a relationship akin to “husband and wife.”

In Minnesota, Census Bureau spokesman Robert Bernstein said there were 4,683 domestic partnerships between two women and 3,535 domestic partnerships between two men. Why the convoluted language? Because the Bureau does not actually ask people their sexual orientation, Bernstein said, despite pressure from LGBT activist groups that made this the first survey to seek out data on the LGBT community.

The AP reports that Census Bureau surveyors attributed the disparity to couples living in states without marriage equality, but it also raises the question of how accepted the term “marriage” is within the community, a critical component of some activists’ arguments against the Human Rights Campaign’s advocacy in support of same-gender marriage.

Poll: 92% of Iowans not effected by same-gender marriage

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Underscoring an argument marriage activists have used for years, a new poll by the Des Moines Register shows 92% of Iowans surveyed said same-gender marriage has not impacted their lives since Iowa’s Supreme Court legalized it earlier this year. But while 41% of Iowans said they would vote to ban same-gender marriage if a vote was held today, a surprising number of respondents were outright apathetic –40% said they would vote to continue same-gender marriage, but 17% said they wouldn’t vote at all; in response to another question, 30% said they “don’t care much” about the debate.

Pumps and Pearls Review

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On Thursday nights at The Townhouse Bar in Saint Paul, a very talented group of performers gathers to entertain the troops. Jamie Monroe is Miss Townhouse 2009.  Here is a short video featuring one of her recent performances.