"If you're gay, lesbian, or bisexual, would you sacrifice for your trans neighbors and siblings? If you're trans, would you sacrifice for your gay, lesbian, or bisexual neighbors and siblings? It's something worth knowing about yourself and those around you." --Autumn Sandeen, 4/19/2010, the night before GetEQUAL's DADT repeal protest at the White House
Public Calendar
Press/media, organizations, and individuals send your time-based event info to: calendar@phblend.net
The Christian Civic League of Maine's Mike Hein calls Pam's House Blend: "a leading source of radical homosexual propaganda, anti-Christian bigotry, and radical transgender advocacy."
He is "praying that Pam Spaulding will "turn away from her wicked and sinful promotion of homosexual behavior."
(CCLM's web site, 10/15/07)
Ex-gay "Christian" activist James Hartline on Pam:
"I have been mocked over and over again by ungodly and unprincipled anti-christian lesbians."
(from "Six Years In Sodom: From The Journal Of James Hartline," 9/4/2006, written from the "homosexual stronghold" of Hillcrest in San Diego).
"Pam is a 'twisted lesbian sister' and an 'embittered lesbian' of the 'self-imposed gutteral experiences of the gay ghetto.'" -- 9/5/2008
Peter LaBarbera of Americans for Truth Against Homosexuality heartily endorses the Blend, calling Pam:
A "vicious anti-Christian lesbian activist." (Concerned Women for America's radio show [9:15], 1/25/07)
"A nutty lesbian blogger." (MassResistance radio show [16:25], 2/3/07)
Pam's House Blend always seems to find these sick f*cks. The area of the country she is in? The home state of her wife? I know, they are everywhere. Pam just does such a great job of bringing them out into the light.
--Impeach Bush
who monitors yours Bevis ?? Just thought I would drop you a line,so the rest of your life is not wasted.
If you've been following the saga of the gay marriage bill in the D.C. Council (which I realize is unlikely unless you're (like me) a politics junkie or (also like me) from D.C.), you may have heard that there was an effort (led, somewhat confusingly, by a pastor from Maryland) to take the question out of the hands of the council and to put it to a Maine-esque referendum. As we've seen, the lot of a civil rights bill in the hands of The People (tm) is not an 'appy one. Therefore, I was delighted to learn (from my mother, actually, who's still in D.C.) that the Board of Ethics and Elections (not sure of the actual name, but it's something like that) ruled today that it is against District law to put civil rights to a vote, so the referendum will NOT be going ahead.
This doesn't exactly affect me, as a transsexual lesbian to whom the prospect of marriage, and certainly marriage in D.C., seems remote, but I'm delighted to see that my semi-home has decided that marriage equality matters enough to fight for it. Now on to the next battle, whatever it may be.