Posted by aerosynth on December 4, 2008
Via Press Room at GLAAD:
December 04, 2008
A new poll indicates that the religious beliefs and economic status of voters played a greater role than age and race in determining support for Proposition 8, the ballot initiative that took away marriage for same-sex couples in California. According to the poll, conducted by the Public Policy Institute of California, people who identified as practicing Christians were very likely to support Prop 8, as were voters who did not attend college and voters who earned less than $40,000 a year. The poll also determined that age and race, among others, were less important factors.
Related Media Coverage:
The Associated Press- December 4, 2008
“Poll: Calif. gay marriage ban driven by religion”
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5g3Yrv2lixhDpA_1XiY2rZUm9Ol4wD94RPF600
Media Contact:
Adam Bass, Media Field Strategist – West
Phone: (323) 634-2018
Email: bass@glaad.org
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Posted in Anastasius I, California Constitution, California Superior Court, Equality Center, John McCain, Justinian, Kathoey, LGBT Families, Newt Gingrich, Theodosius I, XM, ancient greece, ancient rome, antinous, claudius, coming out, coming out project, effeminacy, empowerment, florence, hadrian, ladyboys, male body, opposite-sex marriage, policy analysis, transvestism, venice, wrath of god | Tagged: 365gay, activism, adult, advocate, age and race, Associated Press, bisexual, California, Christianity, dirty, economic status, gay marriage, gay men, gay pride, gay pride parade, gay rights, gay sex, gay singles, gay television, glbt, hbo, humor, joke, lgbt, LGBT discrimination, logo, politics, polls, Proposition 8, Public Policy Institute of California, qaf, queer, queer as folk, rainbow flag, raunchy, religious beliefs, same-sex couples, sex, sexual, showtime, transgender | Leave a Comment »
Posted by aerosynth on December 4, 2008
FROM THE WINDY CITY TIMES:
By Yasmin Nair
2008-12-03
The gay dollar has never been stronger. The passage of the anti-same-sex-marriage initiative Proposition 8 brought protests across the country. Subsequently, gay activists have released the names of prominent businesspeople who donated to the ballot measure, and called for economic boycotts of their corporations.
Such initiatives, while part of gay history, also prompt new questions. What role do boycotts play when many corporations now woo well-off gay consumers, boast of “gay-friendly” policies and sometimes have gays and lesbians at the helm? What do boycotts say about the connection between gays and labor unions, traditionally among the organizations that call for such boycotts?
The city of Evanston saw the first of recent boycotts in Illinois Nov. 22 when picketers gathered outside the Century Theater. They urged theatergoers not to patronize the business because Alan Stock, CEO of Cinemark, the corporation that owns Century, gave a personal contribution of $9,999 to support Proposition 8.
Gay groups in California have been calling for economic boycotts since the summer. Among the most prominent of these calls is the one about the Manchester Hyatt in San Diego. The hotel is owned by Doug Manchester, but operated by Global Hyatt Corporation. It was revealed that Manchester donated $125,000 to Proposition 8.
In response, Local 30, the San Diego chapter of UNITE HERE, joined a gay group, Californians Against Hate, to demand that Global Hyatt sever its connection with the Manchester Hyatt. UNITE HERE is a union born of the 2004 merger between the Union of Needletrades, Industrial and Textile Employees and HERE ( Hotel Employees and Restaurant Employees International Union ) . According to Cleve Jones, a gay organizer with the union, UNITE HERE has had its eyes on this particular hotel since 2006, when the hotel’s non-unionized workers protested unfair work practices.
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Posted in Alfred Kinsey, Wardell Pomeroy, alternative lifestyle, asexual, bisexual, gay bars, gay counterculture, gender identity, homosexual, kinsey scale, lesbianism, pansexual, queer, same-sex, sexual orientation, social identity, third sex, two-spirit, yester-gays, yestergays | Tagged: 365gay, activism, adult fiction, Alan Stock, anti-gay advertising, anti-same-sex-marriage, Californians Against Hate, Century Theater, Chicago, Cinemark, decency laws, Duke of Buckingham, erotic freedom, erotica, expendable income, Fanny Hill, Ganymede, gay activists, gay asians, gay blogs, gay fiction, gay history, gay marriage, gay rights, gay spending, Girolamo Savonarola, HERE, homophobia, homophobic boycott, Hyatt, John Cleland, King James I, LGBT niche, Local 30, Manchester, Mundus Foppensis, Officers of the Night, Proposition 8, Rape of Ganymede, Rembrandt, San Diego, second-class citizens, sex sting, Textile Employees, Union, UNITE HERE, Windy City Times | Leave a Comment »