Issue 52 Volume 39
Celebrating 38 Years!
FRIDAY December 30, 2011 FREE! 25¢ in bookstores & news stands
LAWRENCE V. TEXAS p. 4
same-sex divorce p. 6
NEW YEAR’S p. 25
Seattle Gay News SEATTLE’S LGBT NEWS & ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY
A monumental year for LGBT equality
Official White House Photo by Chuck Kennedy
President Barack Obama signs the Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell Repeal Act of 2010 during a ceremony in Washington, D.C., December 22, 2010.
courtesy 365Gay
Winning our A great year fight in 2011 for LGBT Seattle by Shaun Knittel SGN Associate Editor Any way you look at it, 2011 was a good year for LGBT Seattle. We saw equality advance in ways previously unimagined. We were victorious in our fight for visibility during Pride as the rainbow flag waved proudly atop the Space Needle. Although the news in our community wasn’t exclusively good, this was still a stellar year for LGBT people living in the Pacific Northwest’s largest city. Let’s take a look at some of the events that shaped our lives in 2011.
AN ALL-INCLUSIVE CITY The Seattle LGBT Commission by Shaun Knittel nity’s struggle for equality in the – which advises the mayor, counU.S. – and in many cases, around cil, and departments about sexual SGN Associate Editor the world. This was not a year of minority issues, recommends We are winning the fight. Slowly baby steps and begging; on the policies and legislation, and brings contrary, 2011 was a year for leaps but surely, we’ll get there. That is what we can take away from 2011 and the LGBT commusee 2011 national page 16 see 2011 seattle page 20
DADT repeal one year later SGN Exclusive Interview Nathaniel Frank on understanding the politics of paranoia Jim Cole / AP Photo
Nathaniel Frank
by Shaun Knittel SGN Associate Editor Last week marked a full year since Congress passed and President Obama signed the “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell Repeal Act of 2010.” It also marks three months since the new policy of open Gay service went into effect in the Army, Navy, Air Force, and Marine Corps. So far, so good – not one major incident has been reported. “For years, defenders of antiGay exclusion in the military have claimed that equal treatment was incompatible with a strong military,” wrote Nathaniel Frank, author of Unfriendly Fire: How the Gay Ban Undermines the Military and Weakens America, for the Huffington Post this week. “For nearly as many years, researchers pointed out that there was no evidence to support this claim that letting Gays serve openly would harm cohesion, recruitment, or readiness, and that all the data actually showed the opposite: discrimination and dishonesty were what undermined the military; equal treatment strengthened respect for military law, helped expand the pool of qualified recruits,
Freedom to Marry’s Thalia Zepatos
by Shaun Knittel SGN Associate Editor
There was talk – lots of talk, actually – about when marriage equality would come to Washington state and when, if ever, an organized campaign effort would begin. In November we got those see dadt page 17 answers: 2012.
proud to Be Different
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This year, Washington United for Marriage was formed, and Equal Rights Washington and a number of other coalition partners came forward to pledge that we are all going to “go for it” in 2012. Sen. Ed Murray and Rep. Jamie Pedersen said they would do their best to secure the votes in the House and Senate and asked LGBT Washingtonians and our allies to lobby legislatures about the importance of marriage equality in Washington state. Then, in early December, at the Equal Rights Washington “Toast Equality” fundraiser breakfast, panelist Thalia Zepatos of Freedom to Marry spoke about her experiences in the state-by-state fight see zepatos page 18
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