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The Rainbow Report broadcasts live every Thursday 7-8pm AEST in Melbourne Australia on 94.9 FM, streaming via the web at joy.org.au. PODCASTS are available via the Joy website and now also on iTunes.

A Gay Christmas List

November 23rd 2008 01:56
Kevin Rudd
Hey, look, I can do this 'blessing' thing, too!!


Santa Kev is on track to deliver my Christmas present: the Omnibus Bill removing the discrimination against same-sex couples identified by the Same Sex: Same Entitlements report. A big thank you to the Australian Human Rights Commission, to the government for keeping its promises, and to everyone working towards equality. But there’s lots of other things on my list for Santa Kev.


Last minute present for 2008: fix up benefits and entitlements. If we’re in a relationship, from July our entitlement will be calculated on our income as a couple. If I’m on benefit and partnered with a high earner, Centrelink will give me less money, or maybe none at all. If we’re both on benefit, we’ll drop to the couple rate. It’s going to be a struggle.

I’m not asking for a continuation of the special treatment we’ve had up to now. Instead, lift everybody’s benefits to a level we can actually live on. We’re with the old people and the disabled and everyone else on this.

The gift you left out this year: private same-sex superannuation. Your reforms only helped 10% of us – those in Commonwealth superannuation schemes. For the 90% of us with private super, you left it up to the funds to decide whether they could afford to treat us equally. We have to ask them if they do, and if they don’t, move our money to one that does – and hope they don’t change their minds later.


Next years BIG present: new anti-discrimination laws. State anti-discrimination laws cover sexuality, but they don’t work very well. I know from experience that under Victorian law it’s very difficult to prove discrimination. The process is slow, complex, expensive, and bureaucratic.

And there’s a huge loophole. You can discriminate against GLBTI people if 'the discrimination is necessary for the ... [offender] to comply with the ... [offender’s] genuine religious beliefs or principles'. Other state anti-discrimination laws contain similar loopholes, though none so obscenely wide.

This legalises discrimination in ‘religious’ schools, universities and hospitals, all paid work arrangements, the provision of goods and services and all other areas covered by the Act, in adoption, employment, medical services, education, training, and housing. All these ‘religious’ businesses – including the well-known food company Sanitarium – are also tax-exempt. It’s OK – and tax-free - to be a bigot, so long as you’re a religious bigot. That can’t be right.

Please fix up Commonwealth anti-discrimination law so that it includes discrimination on the grounds of sexuality, overrides all those confusing state laws, and cuts out the ‘religious’ exemptions.

A little something for the kids:
make sure the new national curriculum includes GBLTI issues, for example, in history, culture and sex and relationship classes. We’re sick of being the invisible Australians.

The “Daddy, Daddy, can I please have a pony NOW?” present:
marriage. Of which I’ve written more than enough already.

I know this looks pushy. I haven’t even got this year’s present and already I’m asking for 2009. But this way you’ll get my letter before anyone elses!!

Oh, and one more thing. Tell those whingers from the CMST (church, mosque, synagogue, temple) lobby they have to play nice next year or you’ll take away their lucrative tax exemptions and government contracts and give them to somebody who deserves them (hint)!!
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Tonight on the Rainbow Report 20/11

November 20th 2008 00:20
Fiona Patten
Fiona Patten, leader of the Australian Sex Party

We continue our roundup of candidates for the post of Mayor with Will Fowles, the non-Labour Labour-ish candidate, offering what he calls a “Fresh Vision” for the city.

Rodney Croome muses on Barack Obama and the wave of protest sweeping the US after gay marriage was stopped in California and started in Connecticut.

Closer to home John Wain, general manager of the Market, helps us understand the impact of the Brumby governments latest attempts to control violence and drunkenness in the city – will it be better or worse than the failed 2am lockout?

Plus we celebrate the launch of a new political party dedicated to countering the influence of the religious right and all other wowsers, fighting the proposed internet filter and supporting gay marriage. The Australian Sex Party is being launched at Sexpo, and we’ve an interview with it’s leader, Fiona Patten, who’s also CEO of Eros, the adult entertainment industry business association.

Meanwhile Kaye Sera looks Beneath the Bonnet at World AIDS Day and some of the AIDS movies from years gone by.

The Rainbow Report, Joy 94.9 Melbourne, streaming live www.joy.org.au, 7-8pm Thursday Australian Eastern Daylight Savings Time, podcasts available from Joy or iTunes.

To join in call (03) 9699 2949 during the show, SMS 0427 JOY 949 or email onair@joy.org.au.
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ChillOut

Same-sex equality seems to be going backwards even in friendly locations.

Bans on gay marriage, fostering and adoption have passed in several US states, including California. Barack Obama needed to mobilise black and hispanic voters, but most of them are religious and anti-gay. He downplayed his support for gay rights, so they voted against us while voting for him.

A large-scale survey in UK newspaper The Observer found 56% think we shouldn’t be allowed to adopt, 40% want a higher age of consent for us, and 25% think we should be recriminalized. The British Labor government has enacted a lot of pro-gay and anti-discrimination laws in recent years but that hasn’t made people like us.

And at the time of writing, the Victorian Assisted Reproductive Treatment Bill is on the brink of defeat. Upper house members say their constituents don’t want gays and lesbians to have parenting rights.

These failures are our own fault. Our small number of committed activists do a great job on politicians and big city elites, but we’ve yet to win over Joe The Plumber and his missus out in Cranbourne or Wodonga.

Californian gay rights campaigners didn’t involve themselves in black and hispanic communities, and we don’t engage with our neighbours in the outer suburbs and the bush. Yet doing so brings multiple benefits.

We need a majority of all voters on our side, and strange as it may seem, that starts with making friends with them. Especially outside major cities, where levels of violence and self-harm are high, and support services for our community are virtually non-existent.

But you don’t turn neighbours to friends by painting yourself as a victim. You do it by helping to solve their problems. As a boss of mine once told me, “If you want promotion, don’t bring me problems. Bring me solutions.”

Country towns, already struggling with drought, now face the strong possibility of a recession. People fear for their jobs, their businesses, their homes. What solutions can we offer?

One proven way is through local rainbow festivals, bringing in publicity and business - and local authorities know it. ChillOut’s economic importance has been acknowledged with a two-year grant of $45k from Rural Development Victoria, in addition to money from Tourism Victoria and Hepburn Shire Council to secure its future. The possibility that Yackandandah Spring Migration might fold has local authorities actually competing to secure the Migration for their town.

Now the gay community becomes a solution, not a problem. Working and socialising alongside gays and lesbians, people learn that we’re ordinary people just like them, trying to keep our heads above water and caring for the ones we love. Prejudice against local gay and lesbian residents is lessened. Young same-sex attracted people learn they are not alone, and can find role models to look up to. And we earn the right to ask people to support us when we seek to be treated equally.

We won’t win them all. But we will win enough to turn mainstream politics in our favour, erode the dam that blocks gay marriage and adoption, and head off any backlash like the one threatening in the UK. On top of which, we get to have a lot of fun.

Who said politics had to be boring?
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Turnbull the Pink Liberal

September 16th 2008 04:56
Turnbull Nelson
Pink In - Blue Out

Nelsons gone, Turnbulls in, and knives are already out for the new leader. But is this good or bad for the gay community?

[ Click here to read more ]
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Rainbow Report Tonight

August 28th 2008 05:31
Finally back from holidays and the usual mad scramble to put a show together - and so much to talk about with . . .
Rainbow Lorikeet

Senator Louise Pratt


[ Click here to read more ]
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Wong Way – Go Back

August 7th 2008 06:33
Penny Wong
Penny Wong
Penny Wong has come in for some flack over her remarks about gay marriage on the ABC last week. As the second most senior female, and most senior gay person in the government, she looked uncomfortable at being publicly reminded she was, in fact, gay, and ended up parroting the government line about gay marriage being opposed by the vast majority of the Australian public.

In fact, all available stats indicate that the issue is, at worst, finely balanced, with roughly equal numbers for and against, with some polls flagging a majority in favour. As a cabinet minister she is obliged to toe the party line, but with a bit of finessing she could have indicated that, although forced to do just that, her true sentiments were otherwise


[ Click here to read more ]
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Bronwyn Pike
Bronwyn didn't pike it


The numbers may have been down – only about 300 turned out for this year’s Melbourne Equal Love Rally, well down on previous years – but two facts made it a memorable occasion


[ Click here to read more ]
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The limits of activism

July 9th 2008 10:27
How is the GLBTI community ever to achieve fair treatment in Australia.

A look at where we are now, how we got here, and how to move forward


[ Click here to read more ]
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A Gay Marriage

July 7th 2008 03:10
As I’ve gotten older, I’ve tended to ignore my own birthday, but this year I decided I would have a little celebration. Nothing fancy, just a buffet lunch on Sunday afternoon with a few of the people who matter to me. I could have invited at least a dozen more, but it’s a while since we’ve entertained and I didn’t want to take too much on.

My partner was initially angry because I sent out the invites without telling him my plans, but he came round. It saved a lot of arguments! As I’ve learned from dealing with editors and program managers, it’s better to do it first and apologise after, if necessary, than to spend hours in fruitless argument


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US Gaybys Boom Down Under (LINK)

July 1st 2008 22:05
Teddy
Pic: Freeimages
Australian gay men are shelling out $A80,000 (around US$75k) a time to have babies with American surrogate mums.

Between six and eight couples are heading to LA each month to sign up for a baby with The Fertility Institutes, which specialises in making the parenting wishes of gay men come true


[ Click here to read more ]
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Gays & Muslims Marriage Alliance?

June 26th 2008 02:55
polygamy
Polygamy is suddenly all over the Australian media. Where did that suddenly come from?

Keysar Trad, president of the Islamic Friendship Association, backed calls by Sheik Khalil Chami of the Islamic Welfare Centre, for polygamous relationships to be recognized in Australia


[ Click here to read more ]
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