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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.
--"Joe"

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Rev. Irene Monroe: Remembering Two-Spirits this Thanksgiving

by: Pam Spaulding

Wed Nov 25, 2009 at 14:00:00 PM EST


As I prepare for the Thanksgiving holiday, I am reminded of the autumnal harvest time's spiritual significance. As a time of connectedness, I pause to acknowledge what I have to be thankful for. But I also reflect on the holiday as a time of remembrance - historical and familial.
Historically, I am reminded that for many Native Americans, Thanksgiving is not a cause of celebration, but rather a National Day of Mourning, remembering the real significance of the first Thanksgiving in 1621 as a symbol of persecution and genocide of Native Americans and the long history of bloodshed with European settlers.

I am also reminded of my Two-Spirit Native American brothers and sisters who struggle with their families and tribes not approving of their sexual identities and gender expressions as many of us do with our families and faith communities.

"Yes, there's internalized homophobia in every gay community, but as Native Americans we are taught not to like ourselves because we're not white. In our communities, people don't like us because we're gay," Gabriel Duncan, member of Bay Area American Indian Two Spirits (BAAITS), told the Pacific News Service.

And consequently, many Two-Spirit Native Americans leave their reservations and isolated communities hoping to connect with the larger LGBTQ community in urban cites. However, due to racism and cultural insensitivity, many Two-Spirits feel less understood and more isolated than they did back home.

But homophobia is not indigenous to Native American culture. Rather, it is one of the many devastating effects of colonization and Christian missionaries that today Two-Spirits may be respected within one tribe yet ostracized in another.

"Homophobia was taught to us as a component of Western education and religion," Navajo anthropologist Wesley Thomas has written. "We were presented with an entirely new set of taboos, which did not correspond to our own models and which focused on sexual behavior rather than the intricate roles Two-Spirit people played. As a result of this misrepresentation, our nations no longer accepted us as they once had."

Traditionally, Two-Spirits symbolized Native Americans' acceptance and celebration of diverse gender expressions and sexual identities. They were revered as inherently sacred because they possessed and manifested both feminine and masculine spiritual qualities that were believed to bestow upon them a "universal knowledge" and special spiritual connectedness with the "Great Spirit." Although the term was coined in the early 1990s, historically Two-Spirits depicted transgender Native Americans. Today, the term has come to also include lesbian, gay, bisexual, and intersex Native Americans.

More after the jump.
Pam Spaulding :: Rev. Irene Monroe: Remembering Two-Spirits this Thanksgiving
The Pilgrims, who sought refuge here in America from religious persecution in their homeland, were right in their dogged pursuit of religious liberty. But their actual practice of religious liberty came at the expense of the civil and sexual rights of Native Americans.

And the Pilgrims' animus toward homosexuals not only impacted Native American culture, but it also shaped Puritan law and theology.

Here in the New England states, the anti-sodomy rhetoric had punitive if not deadly consequences for a newly developing and sparsely populated area. The Massachusetts Bay Code of 1641 called for the death of not only heretics, witches and murderers, but also "sodomites," stating that death would come swiftly to any "man lying with a man as with a woman." And the renowned Puritan pastor and Harvard tutor, the Rev. Samuel Danforth in his 1674 "fire and brimstone" sermon preached to his congregation that the death sentence for sodomites had to be imposed because it was a biblical mandate.

Because the Pilgrims' fervor for religious liberty was devoid of an ethic of accountability, their actions did not set up the conditions requisite for moral liability and legal justice. Instead, the actions of the Pilgrims brought about the genocide of a people, a historical amnesia of the event, and an annual national celebration of Thanksgiving for their arrival.

In 1990, President George H.W. Bush ironically - if not ignorantly - designated November as "National American Indian Heritage Month" to celebrate the history, art, and traditions of Native American people.

As we get into the holiday spirit, let us remember the whole story of the arrival of the Pilgrims and other European settlers to the New World.

On a trip home to New York City in May 2004, I went to the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture to view the UNESCO Slave Route Project, "Lest We Forget: the Triumph Over Slavery," that marks the United Nations General Assembly's resolution proclaiming 2004 "The International Year to Commemorate the Struggle Against Slavery and Its Abolition."

In highlighting that African Americans should not be shamed by slavery, but instead defiantly proud of our memory of it, I read the opening billboard to the exhibit that stated, "By institutionalizing memory, resisting the onset of oblivion, recalling the memory of tragedy that for long years remained hidden or unrecognized and by assigning it its proper place in the human conscience, we respond to our duty to remember."

It is in the spirit of our connected struggles against discrimination that we can all stand on a solid rock that rests on a multicultural foundation for a true and honest Thanksgiving.

And in so doing, it helps us to remember, respect, mourn and give thanks to the struggles not only our LGBTQ foremothers and forefathers endured, but also the ongoing struggle our Native American Two-Spirit brothers and sisters face everyday - and particularly on Thanksgiving Day.

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Thanks Rev.Monroe
Last night I was flipping through some of the conservative sites, which link from Laura Ingram...(a gateway to some foul sites)and I saw several thread lines stating "Thanksgiving shouldn't be a discussion of DIVERSITY."
Making diversity a snide punchline in their world.

"race, taste. and History finally overcome....and you ain't there"
by Tony Kushner


World of moral reversal
It's as if we as a nation take pride in forgetting that we oppressed and slaughtered the Native Americans, and made a holiday with lying stories about our friendship with them. Wait...I take back the "as if" part.  That is what we are doing.  

It reminds me (though it is not the same) of how the Nazis deported Jews to concentration camps and then made museums of their holy places.


Dr. Jillian T. Weiss


Well, not to that great an extent anymore
I can't say I've ever felt terrible about Thanksgiving, since it was the indians who saved the pilgrims more than once in that period. The collective ignorance of that fact has waned and people are generally more amenable to the idea that Thanksgiving shouldn't really hinge on buckle hats and construction paper headdresses.

Now, Columbus Day, on the other hand...


[ Parent ]
I think about this sorta thing at Turkey Day
My great-grandmother had a vision when I was a young child, and I keep trying to keep myself from discussing it out of respect, but it's related to this article in that the vision pegged me as gay and in the middle of a happy celebration of that.

It's odd to see the generation of my great-grandmother accepting of gays, but her children's and her children's children's generations generally aren't. Thankfully, my generation is embracing it, so hopefully we'll find spiritual truth in all this somehow.

I think GLBT immigrants and indians are getting it the hardest right now in this country, but we're making some advances, thankfully.


Thankful for Every View and Truth....
Sister Irene,
Thank You for using your voice and heart once again to spread love through truth.
Thank You....

the praying activist, WTm-

by Faith I am part of His Family!

Gal 3:26


thanks to two of my favorite Native American artists
George Morrison who I was fortunate to have as my drawing professor a couple of years
  http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_SURK...

and Fritz Scholder

  http://newsdesk.si.edu/images_...

"race, taste. and History finally overcome....and you ain't there"
by Tony Kushner


deeper issues
Just to throw it out there, and since I did a project on this in grad school: "two-spirit" in this article seems to be broadly referring to LGBT, when in actuality it meant different things to different tribes, but often it had to do with a social/gender role, and thus would probably be closer to "trans" than "gay". Of course nowadays it has become an umbrella term for LGBT natives.

Just throwing that out there. It's worthwhile to study the anthropological issues surrounding two-spirit identity, and I learned much by doing so. Referring to "two-spirit" people of the past in this way is anachronistic. Sadly this is also a consequence of indigenous peoples being conquered and forced to Christianize. Large chunks of their history and culture have been erased, and we might never be able to understand what significance "two-spirit" people really had in their time and in their own context.


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