<body><!-- --><div id="b-navbar"><a href="http://www.blogger.com/" id="b-logo" title="Go to Blogger.com"><img src="http://www.blogger.com/img/navbar/3/logobar.gif" alt="Blogger" width="80" height="24" /></a><form id="b-search" name="b-search" action="http://search.blogger.com/"><div id="b-more"><a href="http://www.blogger.com/" id="b-getorpost"><img src="http://www.blogger.com/img/navbar/3/btn_getblog.gif" alt="Get your own blog" width="112" height="15" /></a><a href="http://www.blogger.com/redirect/next_blog.pyra?navBar=true" id="b-next"><img src="http://www.blogger.com/img/navbar/3/btn_nextblog.gif" alt="Next blog" width="72" height="15" /></a></div><div id="b-this"><input type="text" id="b-query" name="as_q" /><input type="hidden" name="ie" value="UTF-8" /><input type="hidden" name="ui" value="blg" /><input type="hidden" name="bl_url" value="www.gayrightswatch.com" /><input type="image" src="http://www.blogger.com/img/navbar/3/btn_search_this.gif" alt="Search This Blog" id="b-searchbtn" title="Search this blog with Google Blog Search" onclick="document.forms['b-search'].bl_url.value='www.gayrightswatch.com'" /><input type="image" src="http://www.blogger.com/img/navbar/3/btn_search_all.gif" alt="Search All Blogs" value="Search" id="b-searchallbtn" title="Search all blogs with Google Blog Search" onclick="document.forms['b-search'].bl_url.value=''" /><a href="javascript:BlogThis();" id="b-blogthis">BlogThis!</a></div></form></div><script type="text/javascript"><!-- function BlogThis() {Q='';x=document;y=window;if(x.selection) {Q=x.selection.createRange().text;} else if (y.getSelection) { Q=y.getSelection();} else if (x.getSelection) { Q=x.getSelection();}popw = y.open('http://www.blogger.com/blog_this.pyra?t=' + escape(Q) + '&u=' + escape(location.href) + '&n=' + escape(document.title),'bloggerForm','scrollbars=no,width=475,height=300,top=175,left=75,status=yes,resizable=yes');void(0);} function blogspotInit() {} --></script><script type="text/javascript"> blogspotInit();</script><div id="space-for-ie"></div>

PENIS CLOSES ROAD - CAUSES TERROR ALERT!

Saturday, June 04, 2005
A large fake penis has caused a major terror alert in America. Ok so this post is totally off topic. TOTALLY. It's Saturday though - and sometimes you just need to talk about other things... My friend sent it to me and I felt that I had to post it.

A key highway though Florida was closed after a driver spotted what looked like a pipe bomb under an overpass.

Fearing terrorists were trying to blow up the structure, police closed Interstate 75 for an hour.

But on closer inspection police found that the 'device' was actually a foot-long plastic penis.

"Someone took construction-grade plastic, moulded it into a penis and wrapped it with duct tape," said Lee County Sheriff's Chief Deputy Charles Ferrante.

The bomb squad was brought in to handle the situation and a remote-controlled robot used to make the fake penis safe.

Who knew! The Baptists seem to know the "real motive behind gay marriage.

Friday, June 03, 2005
BP News (Baptist Press News) reports that they know "The real motive behind gay marriage."

Well - I am glad they have answered the eternal question! What a load off of my mind - and what a joke. My comments are in red.

Here we go with their 'holy insight':

If you can’t beat ‘em at the ballot box, then snooker ‘em in the courts or slip it past ‘em in the legislature. This has become the preferred strategy of homosexual activists from sea to shining sea.

In spite of the fact that voters across the United States continue to reject the concept of “gay marriage,” activists persist in pitching their appeals to sympathetic jurists and left-leaning legislators.
OK, so because a group of people is denied a basic human right they should stop fighting to achieve their goal? Persistence is key - look at them. They are VERY persistent in fighting gay marriage/civil unions. What's the difference? There is none. Two sides. One oppressed - the other is 'holier than thou' and seems to 'know better'.

Second - let's look at this 'left leaning legislators' issue that they bring up. Here in Oregon we have two Senators that are cosponsoring the current civil unions/anti-discrimination legislation. Both are Christian men. Both very republican. So where is the 'left leaning' aspect of this? In fact, Senator Frank Morse is led to this cause by his faith. A true Christian in my eyes.

There is only one answer to the strategy of the homosexual activists and those sympathetic to their cause –- a federal marriage amendment. Unless traditional marriage is defined constitutionally, activists are going to continue to seek out sympathetic judges and lobby left-leaning legislatures until they get their way.
Guess what. A Federal Marriage Amendment will not happen. They have already tried this session - twice I believe. Each time it failed miserably. And YES - we will continue to fight until we have equal benefits across the board. We will win some and we will lose some. Although even a loss is actually a step in the right direction most of the time. It's three steps forward and one step back. Civil unions will happen. Marriage - that will take a bit longer. People are afraid of gays and lesbians using that word. Ok - and sympathetic judges? Those would be called fair judges. Judges that remember there is a separation of church and state.

What homosexual activists are really pushing for is legal recognition of their lifestyle. In so doing, they believe they will gain -– or force -– societal acceptance.
False. Legal recognition of our 'lifestyle'? In some ways this is true. I despise the word 'lifestyle' when describing sexual orientation. Lifestyle would be a religion. Legal recognition of our committed and loving relationships is what we are striving for. Forcing social acceptance is not the goal in this movement. It is for true equal rights. We want to have the legal protections for our children - for our families. REAL families just like every other family.

In closing - I guess they didn't do a great job in finding 'the real motive behind gay marriage'.

For Fruit Flies, Gene Shift Tilts Sex Orientation

Gay fruit flies. Interesting.

When the genetically altered fruit fly was released into the observation chamber, it did what these breeders par excellence tend to do. It pursued a waiting virgin female. It gently tapped the girl with its leg, played her a song (using wings as instruments) and, only then, dared to lick her - all part of standard fruit fly seduction.

The observing scientist looked with disbelief at the show, for the suitor in this case was not a male, but a female that researchers had artificially endowed with a single male-type gene.

That one gene, the researchers are announcing today in the journal Cell, is apparently by itself enough to create patterns of sexual behavior - a kind of master sexual gene that normally exists in two distinct male and female variants.

In a series of experiments, the researchers found that females given the male variant of the gene acted exactly like males in courtship, madly pursuing other females. Males that were artificially given the female version of the gene became more passive and turned their sexual attention to other males.

"We have shown that a single gene in the fruit fly is sufficient to determine all aspects of the flies' sexual orientation and behavior," said the paper's lead author, Dr. Barry Dickson, senior scientist at the Institute of Molecular Biotechnology at the Austrian Academy of Sciences in Vienna. "It's very surprising.

"What it tells us is that instinctive behaviors can be specified by genetic programs, just like the morphologic development of an organ or a nose."

The results are certain to prove influential in debates about whether genes or environment determine who we are, how we act and, especially, our sexual orientation, although it is not clear now if there is a similar master sexual gene for humans.

Still, experts said they were both awed and shocked by the findings. "The results are so clean and compelling, the whole field of the genetic roots of behavior is moved forward tremendously by this work," said Dr. Michael Weiss, chairman of the department of biochemistry at Case Western Reserve University. "Hopefully this will take the discussion about sexual preferences out of the realm of morality and put it in the realm of science."

He added: "I never chose to be heterosexual; it just happened. But humans are complicated. With the flies we can see in a simple and elegant way how a gene can influence and determine behavior."

The finding supports scientific evidence accumulating over the past decade that sexual orientation may be innately programmed into the brains of men and women. Equally intriguing, the researchers say, is the possibility that a number of behaviors - hitting back when feeling threatened, fleeing when scared or laughing when amused - may also be programmed into human brains, a product of genetic heritage.

"This is a first - a superb demonstration that a single gene can serve as a switch for complex behaviors," said Dr. Gero Miesenboeck, a professor of cell biology at Yale.

Dr. Dickson, the lead author, said he ran into the laboratory when an assistant called him on a Sunday night with the results. "This really makes you think about how much of our behavior, perhaps especially sexual behaviors, has a strong genetic component," he said.

All the researchers cautioned that any of these wired behaviors set by master genes will probably be modified by experience. Though male fruit flies are programmed to pursue females, Dr. Dickson said, those that are frequently rejected over time become less aggressive in their mating behavior.

When a normal male fruit fly is introduced to a virgin female, they almost immediately begin foreplay and then copulate for 20 minutes. In fact, Dr. Dickson and his co-author, Dr. Ebru Demir of the Institute of Molecular Biotechnology, specifically chose to look for the genetic basis of fly sexual behavior precisely because it seemed so strong and instinctive and, therefore, predictable.

Scientists have known for several years that the master sexual gene, known as fru, was central to mating, coordinating a network of neurons that were involved in the male fly's courtship ritual. Last year, Dr. Bruce Baker of Stanford University discovered that the mating circuit controlled by the gene involved 60 nerve cells and that if any of these were damaged or destroyed by the scientists, the animal could not mate properly. Both male and female flies have the same genetic material as well as the neural circuitry required for the mating ritual, but different parts of the genes are turned on in the two sexes. But no one dreamed that simply activating the normally dormant male portion of the gene in a female fly could cause a genetic female to display the whole elaborate panoply of male fruit fly foreplay.

New York Times
By ELISABETH ROSENTHAL

California's AB 19 didn't pass - YET. Is there hope?

Thursday, June 02, 2005

Although it appeared destined for defeat Wednesday, state Assemblyman Mark Leno, D-San Francisco, isn't giving up on his gender-neutral marriage bill.

Assembly Bill 19, introduced by Leno, would redefine California marriage law to include same-sex couples.

The bill failed to pass the state Assembly Wednesday in a 35-37 vote against the proposal, with 10 Assembly members abstaining. Leno, using a parliamentary tactic, motioned for the bill to be reconsidered, thus putting its demise on hold for at least a day.

Leno is trying to convince some Democrats, who abstained, to reconsider and support the bill. He plans to bring the bill up for a vote again today, according to his press secretary Shannan Velayas.

Friday is the last day for the state Assembly to pass bills and send them to the state Senate.

If passed by the California Legislature, AB 19 would change the state family code, defining marriage as a civil contract between two persons instead of a civil contract between a man and a woman, according to Leno. The bill would also affirm the right of churches and other religious institutions to refuse to perform same-sex marriage ceremonies.

Opponents of the bill claim that AB 19 is unconstitutional because it violates Proposition 22, which California voters passed in 2000 and prevents the state from recognizing marriages of same-sex couples.

Leno claims that AB 19 does not violate Proposition 22 because the law did not change the criteria for issuing marriage licenses in California.

On April 14, San Francisco Superior Court Judge Richard Kramer ruled that Proposition 22 was unconstitutional because "no rational purpose exists for limiting marriage in this state to opposite-sex partners.''

Attorney General Bill Lockyer's office filed a notice of appeal in San Francisco Superior Court on Tuesday.

Almost one year is expected to pass before the appellate court issues a written opinion. Regardless of that ruling, all parties in the case agree the dispute seems sure to wind up in the state Supreme Court.

AB 19 passed the Assembly Judiciary Committee April 27 on a 6-3 vote and passed the Assembly Appropriations Committee May 25 on a 13-5 vote.

Sen. Frank Morse - A Good Christian and Great Leader

Wednesday, June 01, 2005
State Sen. Frank Morse said today that if the Legislature does not authorize civil unions (SB 1000), the courts very likely will.

In an interview from his office at the Capitol, the Albany Republican pointed to the so-called Tanner decision in 1998, in which the Court of Appeals ruled that under the Oregon Constitution same-sex domestic partners were entitled to the same employment benefits as married spouses.

"If this issue is not resolved in the Legislature, it will be resolved in the courts," Morse said.

As announced earlier, Morse will sponsor a public meeting at 7 tonight in the Student Center at South Albany High School to have a discussion about Senate Bill 1000, which he cosponsored.

The bill would authorize same-sex civil unions with the same rights and duties as marriages.

"My first objective is an open dialogue," Morse said of tonight's meeting. "I want to listen. There are quite a number of people taking issue with me on this."

Because it has been cast as a faith issue, especially by the Oregon Family Council, Morse plans to address that point.

He has invited Patty Evans, pastor at First Christian Church of Albany, as well as Anthony Terndrup, director of the Pastoral Counseling Center in Corvallis, to speak from their perspectives.

As introduced, SB 1000 would also outlaw discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation in employment, housing and public accommodations.

The committee expects to hold a second hearing on the civil-unions part of the bill. The hearing has not been scheduled but may be held next week, according to a committee spokeswoman.

Morse said opposition won't make him change his mind about civil unions.

"I have taken so many arrows on this," he said, "you get somewhat desensitized after a while. But the bill is the right thing to do."

Main story:

Oregon's Republican moderates are unfairly under attack because they support civil unions

Monday, May 30, 2005
The gyration our state went through last year on gay marriage -- now we have it, now we don't, now we've banned it -- has doubtless left some Oregonians a bit unsteady on their feet. Many will respond productively, though, by feeling their way to the political center.

But where, exactly, is that center? We suspect most Oregonians don't need a global positioning device to find it, since it's a familiar and quintessentially Oregon place. It's not hard to recognize because it's marked by good sense, compromise and fairness.

Sen. Ben Westlund, R-Tumalo, and Sen. Frank Morse, R-Albany, believe they're standing right on it. They are co-sponsoring legislation to create civil unions, which would offer parallel protections to gay and lesbian couples.

A civil union is not identical to marriage. It's lesser in name and in stature, and that's why some gay people don't like the idea. That's also why it's called a compromise. Vermont pioneered this compromise, and Connecticut has since adopted it, too, granting gay and lesbian couples hundreds of legal rights automatically enjoyed by married couples. In substance, a civil union comes close to marriage.

But some who campaigned against same-sex marriage abhor this compromise. Apparently, it wasn't enough to eliminate the possibility of gays marrying. They now hope to crush the possibility of civil unions as well. And to do so, they're attacking Westlund, Morse and other Oregon moderates.

The alternative those on the attack are pushing would offer a handful of legal protections to two people who live together, whether friends or aging relatives, who would be known as "reciprocal beneficiaries." This in no way parallels marriage. Nor does it need to be legally dissolved, as marriage and civil unions do.

"Reciprocal beneficiaries" isn't even a half knot. There's no real tie.

If Oregon went in this direction, our state would be treating gay and lesbian couples as if they weren't really couples, as if they were, as Westlund describes it, "Aunt Tilly moving in with Aunt Milly." That's not who they are, though. And treating them that way would be demeaning, but then again that's the whole point -- to keep gay and lesbian Oregonians in the shadows and deny they're raising families here.

Creating civil unions, on the other hand, would admit that: Yes, gay and lesbians live among us. There are 9,000 such couples in Oregon, according to the last Census.

Yes, they fall in love. They buy houses, raise children, pay taxes, mow their grass, sit on the porch, live and die just like the rest of us. Families headed by gay or lesbian parents need the same legal protections other families need.

It's clear that opponents of same-sex marriage are tugging on the political center, and it's not surprising that they would tug -- and test their political clout -- in light of their political victory last fall. But they don't get to say where the center rests, any more than they get to pick out a new spot in the sky for the North Star. They can point, but Oregonians get to decide for themselves where the center is.

Apparently, even Oregonians who supported Measure 36 last fall, banning same-sex marriage, still want to treat gay and lesbian couples fairly. A recent poll by Washington, D.C.-based Lake Snell Perry Mermin/Decision Research, for the gay-rights lobbying group Basic Rights Oregon, found that 57 percent of Oregonians who voted for Measure 36 last fall -- because they're against gay marriage -- support civil unions.

"This is the middle," Westlund says. "For me, this is simply and profoundly the right thing to do."

As Morse says, it amounts to treating all Oregonians -- our gay colleagues, neighbors and friends -- "with dignity, respect and love."

Civil unions can become a reality in this session if Oregonians join together in the center.

From OregonLive.com