Jill's profileQueer ParentingBlogLists Tools Help

Blog


    February 12

    Cardinal hits out at 'hedonists' in gay adoption row

     

    STEPHEN MCGINTY

    CARDINAL Keith O'Brien said the government's decision to compel Catholic adoption agencies to place children with same-sex couples was evidence of a "deeply hedonistic society", where ancient morals were being replaced by "issues of life-style and choice".

    The Archbishop of St Andrews and Edinburgh, the leader of Scotland's 800,000 catholics, makes his first comment on the issue in today's Scotsman in which he calls on Gordon Brown, the Chancellor, and David Cameron, the leader of the Conservative Party, to support the Church's position.

    He writes: "Political leaders ... have praised Catholic agencies for their work abroad. We ask now that they allow us to carry on our equally valuable work at home."

    The cardinal's comments follow the government's decision not to allow the Church to opt-out of anti-discrimination laws, which it insists will force the two Catholic adoption agencies in Scotland to close rather than be compelled to place children with homosexual couples.

    Meanwhile, Tony Blair, the Prime Minister, yesterday suggested Catholic agencies could team up with non-faith-based organisations to comply with the anti-discrimination laws.

    The Prime Minister said he understood "totally" the Church's objections to gay couples adopting, but added: "We don't want a situation where we are discriminating against people on the grounds of their sexuality."http://thescotsman.scotsman.com/index.cfm?id=200412007

     

    August 22

    "Family-values" candidate shuts out gay son

     

    SUMMARY: Promos for Operation Rescue founder Randall Terry's Florida legislative race leave out his gay son, Jamiel, and single-mom daughter, Tila.

    Randall Terry, a right-wing Christian leader, doesn't run away from "family-values issues" in his Florida state Senate race, but his gay son, Jamiel, says things are not what they seem.

    Among the senior Terry's pledges are preserving traditional marriage and opposing adoptions by gay men and lesbians. He has touted efforts to stop abortions. His campaign mailers sum up the value he puts on family: They show a picture of him with his wife, a daughter, and three grinning young sons -- taken before a fourth was born this summer.

    But Jamiel, Terry's adopted son, says the picture is missing two people -- him and his sister, Tila, also adopted. Both have been estranged from Terry since Jamiel came out as a gay man and Tila had a child out of wedlock.

    Jamiel Terry said the self-image that his father is crafting and the campaign message about strong families ignores part of his own family history. He said voters have a right to know about that.

    "He is very big on image," Jamiel Terry said. "In a large way, Tila and I mess up that image."

    Jamiel, 26, said in interviews last week and Monday that voters in the northeast Florida district where his father is trying to unseat Sen. Jim King in the Republican primary should know more about the candidate's family.

    Randall Terry said he's upfront about his whole family and has never tried to hide anything about his children, even those with whom he has deep disagreements.

    He said voters don't care anyway. "I don't think it would affect one vote, one way or another. Everybody has problems in their family," said Terry, who founded Operation Rescue, an anti-abortion protest group. He said voters care more about issues they deal with in their own lives, such as homeowners' insurance, medical malpractice problems, and property taxes.

    The fact that he has two adopted children isn't news. Jamiel and Randall Terry's relationship has been the subject of a long article in the Washington Post, and the Associated Press wrote a story when Jamiel went public with his homosexuality in Out magazine in 2004.

    "He was a good dad," Terry said, adding, however, that he wouldn't support his candidacy. Randall Terry said he strongly disapproves of his son's homosexuality.

    "But I'm absolutely not ashamed -- I love him," he said. He said Jamiel is smart but that by talking to a reporter, Jamiel was simply trying to get at his father as part of their ongoing disagreement. But he said, overall, "I'm very proud of him."

    Jamiel Terry also said his father left Tila to fend for herself when she was pregnant, a charge Randall Terry vehemently denies. He said he has tried to get his daughter into a program that helps unwed young mothers. She didn't return phone calls seeking comment.

    Terry said his father's policy ideas don't always fit his own behavior. "He has tried to say abortion should not exist because families and churches should step in," Terry said. "When his own daughter is pregnant, he refuses to help her."

    Randall Terry and his first wife adopted them when Jamiel was 8 and Tila was 3. Terry has said publicly that some problems stem from the way the children were treated before they were adopted.

    Terry persuaded a woman not to have an abortion in 1987. When the child, Tila, was born, Terry took care of her and then adopted her older brother, Jamiel. They grew up with Terry, who was famous as a leading religious conservative voice.

    A spokesperson for King, Terry's opponent, declined to comment on Terry's family.

    Randall Terry said he tells anyone who asks that he has seven children, including Jamiel and Tila. As for campaign literature that doesn't have them in the picture, he said it's not because he is embarrassed. "The reason we don't have a photo with Jamiel and Tila is that we haven't been in the same room with them in about three years," Terry said.

    That's the point, Jamiel said. If a candidate is going to talk about strong families, he ought to talk about why his own family isn't, he said.

    "Both Tila and I have tried to revive or rekindle our relationship with my father, and we've been shut out," he said. "So maybe if we had been invited for Christmas, Thanksgiving, birthdays, etc., we would be in a family photo."

    Randall Terry denied that his son has tried to fix the relationship, accusing Jamiel of only wanting to hurt him. Jamiel occasionally e-mails his father, but Randall said the e-mails simply are "vicious." Jamiel said he's only trying to reconnect. (AP)

    Makes me feel all warm and fuzzy thinking of the TRUE meaning of family!

     

    August 17

    North Carolina School Board votes to ban Gay/Straight Alliance club

    Serving historic Rowan County, North Carolina since 1905

    The Salisbury Post

    Tuesday, August 15, 2006

    School Board votes to ban Gay/Straight Alliance club
    Groups says policy is illegal, could challenge ruling


    By Jessie Burchette

    Salisbury Post

    Sex-based clubs — including the Gay/Straight Alliance at South Rowan High School — are now banned in the Rowan-Salisbury School System.

    Without comment, the Rowan-Salisbury Board of Education voted unanimously Monday night to approve an amendment to the school's extracurricular activities policy banning sex-based student clubs.

    Board member Jim Shuping read aloud the complete text of the amendment. The policy uses the system's existing abstinence-only sex education policy as the basis for the ban.

    In April, the board agreed to ban clubs such as the Gay/ Straight Alliance, voting to instruct the staff and attorneys to develop a policy.

    The club at South Rowan, which sparked the controversy, had continued to function through the end of the school year.

    The board waived its usual requirement of two readings for policy adoptions, allowing the policy to be in effect when school opens next week.

    The policy became effective upon adoption.

    Board Chairman Bryce Beard said later that the new policy has been thoroughly reviewed by attorneys. He expressed confidence it can withstand a legal challenge.

    That challenge might be coming soon.

    "We have concerns that the policy ... is illegal," said Jennifer Rudinger, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union's Raleigh office. "When a school allows extracurricular clubs, it's all or nothing. They can't discriminate ... They can't pick and choose." Rudinger cited the 1984 federal Equal Access law.

    Rudinger said she is not aware of any county or city school district that has a policy similar to the one adopted by the Rowan-Salisbury school board.

    "It's absolutely misnamed to call it a sex-based club. It's inappropriate," said Rudinger who has been in contact with students and parents of the South Rowan club. "These kids want to create a safe environment, to foster tolerance and acceptance. It's inappropriate and factually wrong to call them some kind of sex-based club. It's really a shame."

    Rudinger noted that the ACLU has successfully represented students who wanted to have a Bible club at schools and were initially banned. She said the same law protects the Gay/Straight Alliance.

    Mike Clawson, president of the Salisbury-Rowan Parents, Families and Friends of Lesbian and Gays, also cited the Equal Access Act in an e-mail to the Post. "Simply put, the school cannot ban a Gay/Straight Alliance based on issues of morality if the Gay/Straight Alliance does not interfere with the orderly conduct of educational activities."

    Unlike previous school board meetings where the issue was on the agenda, the issue drew no public comment on Monday night.

     

    ©2006, The Salisbury Post

     

    http://www.salisburypost.com/print/319175582186747.php