Recent Religious Headlines [T11R-4]
For weeks, Nathaniel Cunningham and his boyfriend secretly lived together in rural Jamaica. They showed no affection in public and rarely spoke to neighbors. Then one morning, Cunningham picked up a local newspaper with a front-page story under the headline, "Homosexual Prostitutes Move into Residential Neighborhood." His address was listed below.
WASHINGTON (BP)--The homosexual movement gained a barrier-breaking victory Oct. 28 when President Obama signed into law a measure extending hate-crimes protections to homosexuals and transgender people.
EDITOR'S NOTE: This updated story includes quotes from President Obama as well as additional information.
For the first time ever, Alaska's gay, lesbian, bi-sexual, and transgender community is now protected under a new hate crime bill that President Barack Obama signed into law Oct. 28th.
Sex, religion, politics are often topics avoided in public. But now, Kalamazoo voters are front-and-center in an anti-discrimination debate.
For an off-year election, Nov. 3 is shaping up to be pretty interesting day at the polls.
The Church of Scientology is responding to claims that the religion is anti-gay, an allegation made by âCrashâ director Paul Haggis, who is publicly denouncing the churchâs practices.
GREENVILLE â" Sexual orientation will become a protected class in federal hate crimes legislation when President Obama signs the measure into law today, but its significance may go largely unnoticed in the Delta.
Oscar-winning director Paul Haggis has had enough of Scientology, and he enumerated his reasons for abandoning the celebrity-riddled religion in a scathing letter to Church of Scientology's Celebrity Centre leader Tommy Davis.
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