I have changed the way I blog and
have moved to Tumblr

Showing posts with label Equality. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Equality. Show all posts

Monday, December 31, 2012

2012 watershed kisses

With the repeal of Don't Ask, Don't Tell, these are important photos for LGBT visibility in the US military. I don't have anything similar for 2012 in Canada since our history is different. Gays have been able to serve openly since 1992 and the first gay service member to marry was in 2004. The first wedding between two gay military personnel took place at Nova Scotia's Canadian Forces Base Greenwood in 2005.

Dalan Wells (l.) welcomes home his partner Brandon Morgan

U.S. Marine Corps Captain Matthew Phelps (l.) proposes to his partner Ben Schock at the White House

USN 2nd Class Petty Officer Marissa Gaeta (l.) kissing her fiancée, Petty Officer 3rd Class Citlalic Snell

Jonathan Jewell (r.) is greeted with a homecoming kiss from his boyfriend Sean Sutton

Tuesday, December 04, 2012

Equality at last

The following is from the The News Tribune, Tacoma WA

54 YEARS LATER …
John McCluskey knows the exact date when he met his partner, Rudy Henry: Dec. 31, 1958.

Now, almost 54 years after that New Year’s Eve party in San Francisco, the pair soon will be able to get legally married.

It has been a long time coming for the Tacoma couple.

"I would have wanted to get married by the end of 1959," said McCluskey, 76, as he reflected on what life would have been like had same-sex marriage been legal in those days. But, “after we had been together 35 or 40 years we pretty much felt married."

McCluskey and Henry, 78, will get married Dec. 15, but they don’t know any of the details. The wedding for the couple, well-known and much respected in the gay, bisexual, lesbian, transgender community, is being put on by volunteers within that community.

Henry is recovering from a stroke and complications after a surgery and requires almost full-time care from McCluskey and others.

McCluskey is looking forward to no longer having to show his domestic partnership card to doctors and nurses and other health care providers when he takes Henry to a medical appointment.

"Almost without exception, we’ve had to explain what that means," he said