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Crowds Gather In Heavy Rain At Atlanta City Hall To Protest Gay Bar Raid

atlantaralllyMore than 100 people braved the rains Saturday afternoon to gather at Atlanta City Hall at the second rally to protest the police raid of the Atlanta Eagle last week, outraged by the alleged harassment of the patrons in the bar as well as the eight men arrested. A first rally was held Sept. 13 in the parking lot of the Eagle. With a makeshift cover of a large tarp for speakers to stand under as the rain poured down for nearly an hour, citizens demanded answers from the police department, elected officials as well as Mayor Shirley Franklin, who has remained silent on the issue since the raid of the gay leather bar occurred Sept. 10. Speaking first was the APD’s LGBT liaison Officer Dani Lee Harris, who said while she can’t comment on the investigation, the allegations raised by those in the bar that night have her concerned as well. Harris did not find out about the raid until contacted by the media. Chief Richard Pennington said last week Harris should have been involved in the investigation from the beginning. Yes, it was the only gay bar targeted this time. However, in the past few years, Atlanta has helped shut down Backstreet, Metro and the Phoenix. Yes, there have been illegal activities at these clubs, but do you believe these activities don't occur at clubs where most of the patrons are heterosexual? This is the gentrification of Midtown Atlanta to be "safe" for affluent heterosexuals moving here now that it is one of the most appealing parts of town, due primarily to efforts of the gay community. Not to mention how it's already cleared some prime real estate for more profitable construction.
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Police have said the raid was prompted by two anonymous tips alleging sex and drug activity at the bar. During the raid, eight employees were arrested on business license violations. The 62 customers in the bar at the time were forced to lie on the floor for as long as an hour while they were searched and checks were run on their identification. No one in the bar was arrested on sex or drug charges. Police have promised a full investigation into formal complaints filed by several patrons and employees of the bar who allege they were mistreated and subjected to anti-gay slurs during the raid. Today's protest was the second since the raid. On Sept. 13, several hundred turned out for a rally in the Eagle's parking lot, then lined the street in front of the bar to cheers from passing motorists. READ THE COMPLETE STORY: SOUTHERN VOICE
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Million Gay March

bg_ww5yPlanning has begun for what could become the largest LGBTQIA event in history!  Grassroots Equality Network (GEN) has signed on over 20 locations to participate in a marches and rallies calling for an end to discrimination, as well as provide the tools for the community to use to continue to fight in their own backyard. This event will take place on June 28th 2009. GEN is working with a number of grassroots community organizations as well as a number of Gay Pride organizations to plan and fund each event. GEN expects there to be many more locations that will sign on, leading to there being one in every state and many around the world.
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This event is one of many events being planned by Grassroots Equality Network to commemorate the 40th anniversary of the Stonewall Riots, which marked the first major uprising against homosexual discrimination. If you are interested in volunteering please visit http://www.milliongaymarch.org If you would like to sponsor the event, please email sponsor@milliongaymarch.org
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2,000 Rally in Vancouver

rallymainMore than 2,000 gay men, lesbians and their allies took back Vancouver's West End on Sunday, shutting down Davie St and marching to demand an end to gaybashings and the violence that continues to target our community accord to Xtra.com. The march comes just weeks after Vancouver's latest high profile gaybashing that left a 62-year-old man in hospital with severe brain damage. Shawn Woodward, 35, is facing one count of aggravated assault. Ritchie Dowrey is "still lying voiceless and non-responsive," his friend Lindsay Wincherauk told the crowd assembled at English Bay. "Our dear friend will never be the same again. "If this crime is not punished accordingly, we all lose something," Wincherauk added to loud applause. "We must be the voice because at this time Ritchie cannot speak for himself. So each one of us must ensure that his voice never goes silent."
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  "Having rallies like this tells people our community is no longer going to suffer in silence," said Denise Norman, whose cousin Aaron Webster was brutally gaybashed and left to die in Stanley Park in 2001. Three people were eventually convicted of manslaughter in Webster's case. Crown counsel did not seek a hate crime designation for any of them. rally2Vancouver has seen five gaybashing trials in the last eight years. Only once has the Crown sought a hate crime designation, Herbert pointed out, asking the crowd to send Crown a message that gaybashings must be treated as hate crimes and stiffer sentences sought. "The Vancouver Police Department will continue to aggressively investigate all instances of hate-motivated violence," promised inspector John deHaas of the police department's diversity section. And if there is evidence of hate motivation, the police will ask the Crown to pursue the case accordingly, deHaas added. "Gaybashings must stop. The underlying homophobia must be eradicated. It is a cancer," deHaas told the crowd to much applause. BC's attorney general still fails to recognize gaybashings as hate crimes, noted lesbian MLA Jenn McGinn. "The attorney general needs to be pressed to recognize them as such."
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Be Careful In Seattle

seattleA string of attacks against gay people in Seattle's Capitol Hill neighborhood over the past two months has fueled a bubbling stew of emotions in the community. Residents demonstrated their strong sense of concern at a Saturday night march and rally against the targeted violence. A crowd of about 300 people gathered for a candlelight vigil and march against hate at the Plymouth Pillars Park at Boren and Pike overlooking downtown Seattle. The crowd rallied in occasional drizzle before marching up Capitol Hill, down Broadway and through the heart of Pike/Pine. As the march progressed, chants brought onlookers out of bars and restaurants and even managed to bring David Schmader's performance of Straight to a halt as the crowd marched up Pike in front of the Annex Theater. The latest attack came a week ago near 13th Avenue and Columbia Street, about a block from the Seattle University campus. Forty-one-year-old Jerry Knight was on his way home when two men confronted him. And now he says the horror of that weekend might always haunt him. "I remember being hit hard, where I fell and my hands were bruised falling directly on the ground," he said Saturday in an interview.
He acknowledges it could have been worse. "I am grateful," he says. "I am grateful I did not wake up in the hospital. I am grateful I am not in a coffin. I know that, and honor that." He says he was attacked by two men as he walked home alone in the early morning hours. The assault was first reported online by The Stranger newspaper. 090228_jerry_knightKnight says he had come from a party, and was wearing a sailor's outfit. That could have made him a target. He says he doesn't specifically remember what happened leading up the assault - but he does remember the expletives and anti-gay slurs being yelled at him. "As of now, there's feelings of shame, of guilt," he says. "What could I have done to not put myself in that position? Did I encourage this? And was I strong enough?" After he stumbled back to his apartment that night, Knight did something to remind himself to be angry later on. "I took a photo of myself before I washed myself up, because I knew that this will anger me," he says. Even in a relatively gay-friendly city such as Seattle, Knight wonders if gay men and women should ever let their guard down. "I live in a bubble. I forget that around the world ... this happens to people for a multitude of reasons. It was a surprise, absolutely." So many emotions after one violent moment - that's why the Saturday rally is so important to him. "Violence against anyone - gay, whatever it may be - we need to come together and stand up and say we're not going to tolerate this," Knight says. Police don't have much to go on, since there's no description of the suspects. But Knight, who tries to find strength in the wake of something so terrifying, says karma will eventually find his two attackers. "I don't understand homophobia - I don't. I'm puzzled over what is their mindset, and hopefully they realize that this is not OK."
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Across U.S., Big Rallies

In one of the nation’s largest displays of support for gay rights, tens of thousands of people in cities across the country turned out in support of same-sex marriage on Saturday, lending their voices to an issue that many gay men and lesbians consider a critical step to full equality.

The demonstrations — from a sun-splashed throng in San Francisco to a chilly crowd in Minneapolis — came 11 days after California voters narrowly passed a ballot measure, Proposition 8, that outlawed previously legal same-sex ceremonies in the state. The measure’s passage has spurred protests in California and across the country, including at several Mormon temples, a reflection of that church’s ardent backing of the proposition.

On Saturday, speakers painted the fight over Proposition 8 as another test of a movement that began with the riots at the Stonewall Inn in New York in 1969, survived the emergence of the AIDS crisis in the 1980s, and has since made enormous strides in societal acceptance, whether in television shows or in antidiscrimination laws.

“It’s not ‘Yes we can,’ ” said Tom Ammiano, a San Francisco city supervisor, referring to President-elect Barack Obama’s campaign mantra. “It’s ‘Yes we will.’ ”

Carrying handmade signs with slogans like “No More Mr. Nice Gay” and “Straights Against Hate,” big crowds filled civic centers and streets in many cities. In New York, some 4,000 people gathered at City Hall, where speakers repeatedly called same-sex marriage “the greatest civil rights battle of our generation.”

“We are not going to rest at night until every citizen in every state in this country can say, ‘This is the person I love,’ and take their hand in marriage,” said Representative Anthony D. Weiner of Brooklyn.

In Los Angeles, where wildfires had temporarily grabbed headlines from continuing protests over Proposition 8, Mayor Antonio R. Villaraigosa addressed a crowd of about 9,000 people in Spanish and English, and seemed to express confidence that the measure, which is being challenged in California courts, would be overturned.

“I’ve come here from the fires because I feel the wind at my back as well,” said the mayor, who arrived at a downtown rally from the fire zone on a helicopter. “It’s the wind of change that has swept the nation. It is the wind of optimism and hope.”

About 900 protesters braved a tornado watch and menacing rain clouds in Washington to rally in front of the Capitol and on to the White House. “Gay, straight, black, white; marriage is a civil right,” the marchers chanted.

In Las Vegas, the comedian Wanda Sykes surprised a crowd of more than 1,000 rallying outside a gay community center by announcing that she is gay and had wed her wife in California on Oct. 25. Ms. Sykes, who divorced her husband of seven years in 1998, had never publicly discussed her sexual orientation but said the passage of Proposition 8 had propelled her to be open about it.

“I felt like I was being attacked, personally attacked — our community was attacked,” she told the crowd.

And while some speakers were obviously eager to tap crowds’ current outrage, others took pains to cast the demonstrations as a peaceful, long-term, campaign over an issue that has proved remarkably and consistently divisive.

“We need to be our best selves,” said the Rev. G. Penny Nixon, a gay pastor from San Mateo, Calif., who warned the San Francisco crowd against blaming “certain communities” for the election loss. “This is a movement based on love.”

The protests were organized largely over the Internet, and featured few representatives of major gay rights groups that campaigned against Proposition 8, which passed with 52 percent of the vote after trailing for months in the polls. The online aspect seemed to draw a broad cross-section of people, like Nicole Toussaint, a kindergarten teacher who joined a crowd of more than 1,000 people in Minneapolis.

“I’m here to support my friends who are gay,” said Ms. Toussaint, 23. “I think my generation will play a big role.”

The big crowds notwithstanding, it has been a tough month for gay rights. Proposition 8 was just one of three measures on same-sex marriage passed on Nov. 4, with constitutional bans also being approved in Arizona and Florida. In Arkansas, voters passed a measure aimed at barring gay men and lesbians from adopting children.

That vote was on the minds of many of the 200 people who protested Saturday in front of the State Capitol in Little Rock. One of those, Barb L’Eplattenier, 39, a university professor, said some of her gay friends with adopted children were fearful of state action if they appeared in public. “They think their families are in danger,” said Ms. L’Eplattenier, who married her partner, Sarah Scanlon, in California in July.

The protests over Proposition 8 also come even as same-sex marriages began Wednesday in Connecticut, which joined Massachusetts as the only states allowing such ceremonies. By contrast, 30 states have constitutional bans on such unions.

At a Boston rally on Saturday, Kate Leslie, an organizer, said the loss in California had certainly caught the attention of local gay men and lesbians who have had the right to marry since 2004.

“You’re watching people who could be you and are part of your community being stripped of their rights,” Ms. Leslie said. “And in some ways that’s why so many people are infuriated in Massachusetts and willing to stand up for a rally.”

In California, a State Supreme Court decision legalized same-sex marriage in May. As many as 18,000 couples married, some traveling from other states to tie the knot. Such marriages may be challenged in court.

David McMullin, a garden designer from Atlanta, was one of those who made the trip, marrying his partner in Oakland, Calif., in September, in part to let their two adoptive children feel part of a married family.

“We just want our kids to know we’re O.K.,” said Mr. McMullin, who had come to a protest in front of the Georgia State Capitol. “We have rights as people even if we don’t have rights as citizens.”

Supporters of the proposition have repeatedly argued that Proposition 8 was not antigay, but merely pro-marriage.

“Marriage is between a man and a woman,” said Frank Schubert, the campaign manager for Protect Marriage, the leading group behind passing Proposition 8. “If they want to legalize same-sex marriage, they are gong to have to bring a proposal before the people of California. That’s how democracy works.”

Equality California, a major gay rights group here, indicated this week that it would work to repeal Proposition 8 if legal challenges fail.

Such dry approaches seemed a million miles away, however, from the boisterous scene in front of San Francisco City Hall on Saturday, where as many as 10,000 people gathered, carrying signs, American flags and even copies of their marriage licenses.

One of those was Lawrence Dean, 57, who had married his partner, Steven Lyle, in San Francisco in July. It was the fifth time that the couple of 19 years had held a ceremony to announce their commitment, and, of course, accept wedding gifts.

“If we keep this up, maybe I won’t have to again,” Mr. Dean said, looking out at the protest. “I have enough pots and pans.”

Reporting was contributed by Robbie Brown from Atlanta; Steve Barnes from Little Rock; Christina Capecchi from Minneapolis; Francesca Segrè from Los Angeles; Katie Zezima from Boston; Ashley Southall from Washington; Steve Friess from Las Vegas; and C. J. Hughes from New York.

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Tens of thousands of protest

Gay rights supporters in the first state to allow same-sex couples to exchange wedding vows gathered Saturday to protest the California vote that banned gay marriage there and to urge supporters not to quit the fight for the right to wed.

Crowds gathered near public buildings in small communities and major cities including New York, San Francisco and Chicago to vent their frustrations, celebrate gay relationships and renew calls for change.

"Civil marriages are a civil right, and we're going to keep fighting until we get the rights we deserve as American citizens," Karen Amico said in Philadelphia, holding up a sign reading "Don't Spread H8".

"We are the American family, we live next door to you, we teach your children, we take care of your elderly," said Heather Baker a special education teacher from Boston who addressed the crowd at Boston's City Hall Plaza. "We need equal rights across the country."

Massachusetts and Connecticut, which began same sex weddings this past week, are the only two states that allow gay marriage. All 30 states that have voted on gay marriage have enacted bans.

Protests following the vote on Proposition 8 in California, which defined marriage as between a man and a woman, have sometimes been angry and even violent, and demonstrators have targeted faiths that supported the ban, including the Mormon church.

However, representatives of Join the Impact, which organized Saturday's demonstrations, asked supporters to be respectful and refrain from attacking other groups during the rallies.

The mood in Boston was generally upbeat, with attendees dancing and signing to the song "Respect." Signs cast the fight for gay marriage as the new civil rights movement, including one that read "Gay is the new black."

But anger over the ban and its backers was evident at the protests.

One sign in Chicago read: "Catholic Fascists Stay Out of Politics."

"I just found out that my state doesn't really think I'm a person," said Rose Aplustill, 21, a Boston University student from Los Osos, Calif., who was one of thousands at the Boston rally.

Planning for the nationwide protests was started by a Seattle blogger, Amy Balliett, just days after the California vote, which took away gay marriage rights that had been granted by the state's high court.

The idea rapidly spread online and Join the Impact predicted that Saturday's protests would involve tens of thousands of people in hundreds of communities.

In North Dakota, where voters in 2004 overwhelmingly approved a constitutional ban on same-sex marriage, low-key protests were held Saturday in Grand Forks and Fargo, where people lined a bridge carrying signs and flags.

"It's been very peaceful," said Josh Boschee, who helped organize the Fargo protest. In Chicago, Keith Smith, 42, a postal worker, and his partner, Terry Romo, 34, a Wal-Mart store manager, had photos of their wedding ceremony which they held even though gay marriage is not legal in Illinois.

"We're not going to wait for no law," Smith said. "But time's going to be on our side and it's going to change."

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