Ten things going on in the LGBT community you should know
An analysis of population trends suggests that the number of gays and lesbians adopting children has nearly tripled in the last decade. About 21,740 same-sex couples had adopted children in 2009, up from 6,477 in 2000, according to the Williams Institute at UCLA School of Law. About 32,571 adopted children were living with same-sex couples in 2009, up from 8,310 in 2000. The figures are an analysis of newly released Census Bureau estimates.
A majority of voters in Washington State would support gay marriage if it's approved by the legislature, according to a poll by the University of Washington Center for Survey Research. The survey found that 55 percent indicated they would uphold a legislature-approved same-sex marriage law if it were challenged by referendum. The poll found 38 percent would oppose the law and 7 percent were undecided.
Presidential candidate Rick Perry praised legislators working to overturn New Hampshire's same-sex marriage law during a campaign appearance in Manchester. "As conservatives we believe ... in the sanctity of traditional marriage," Perry said. "And I applaud those legislators in New Hampshire who are working to defend marriage as an institution between one man and one woman, realizing that children need to be raised in a loving home by a mother and a father."
Former National Football League Commissioner Paul J. Tagliabue and his wife, Chandler Tagliabue, have donated $1 million to Georgetown University for the creation of a new program to assist LGBT students. In a statement, the university said the gift will establish the Tagliabue Initiative for LGBT Life: Fostering Formation and Transformation, which will be overseen by Georgetown University's LGBTQ Resource Center. The LGBTQ Resource Center, the first such center at a Catholic university, opened on the Georgetown campus in 2008.
Three New Jersey Republicans have participated in an "It Gets Better" video, the newest video for relationship columnist Dan Savage's YouTube campaign to reach out to gay teens who may have been bullied. Democratic politicians and celebrities have participated in the videos, but this marks the first time congressional Republicans have participated, including New Jersey Republican Reps. Leonard Lance, Frank LoBiondo and Jon Runyan. All three of the Republicans had previously voted for legislation that opposes gay rights.
A man who identifies as a woman said she has been expelled from a nursing program at California Baptist University in Riverside, Calif., for appearing on a television program to discuss her gender identity. Domaine Javier, 24, told the Riverside Press-Enterprise she was expelled from the school after appearing on MTV's True Life and declaring that she is biologically male. Javier dresses as a woman and has identified as female since childhood. The show's episode was called "I'm Passing As Someone I'm Not," the newspaper reported.
Students at a San Diego high school have elected a lesbian couple as homecoming king and queen. Patrick Henry High School senior Rebeca Arellano was crowned king and her girlfriend, Haileigh Adams, was named queen. "I hope people understand that lesbians and gays do need the same rights," Adams told a San Diego television station. The couple said they were not planning to run and were shocked by the attention they've received.
Denmark is the latest European nation to announce plans to introduce gay marriage, with same-sex couples to be allowed to marry on Church of Denmark premises. The Danish coalition government's church minister, Manu Sareen, told local newspaper Jyllands-Posten that gay men and women will be able to marry when legislation is introduced early next year. Denmark was the first country in the world to allow gay civil partnerships with legislation in 1989.
Gays and lesbians are not entitled to the same heightened legal protection and scrutiny against discrimination as racial minorities and women, in part because they are far from politically powerless and have ample ability to influence lawmakers, lawyers for a U.S. House of Representatives group said in a federal court filing. The filing in San Francisco's U.S. District Court comes in a lesbian federal employee's lawsuit that claims the government wrongly denied health insurance coverage to her same-sex spouse.
A new book by Jacques Pepin, a researcher based in Quebec, traces the improbable voyage of the AIDS virus to a single bush hunter in central Africa in 1921. In The Origin of AIDS, Pepin collects evidence that the virus spread not only through sexual activity but, crucially, through well-meaning European doctors and nurses fighting tropical diseases in pre-independence Africa. Pepin believes they helped turn a virus infecting a lone ape hunter in Africa into a global epidemic with some 32 million victims. -E