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COMMENTARY: Here come the holidays

It’s that time of year when people will sleep in tents for days just to get a video game console, walk over a fallen shopper to get a television, or spend money they don’t have on things they don’t need, just because there’s a sale.

It’s the time of layaway, extended credit and no money down. It’s no finance charge and open 24 hours.

COMMENTARY: AP bans "homophobia," but SDGLN won't follow suit

The Associated Press (AP) has decided to ban the use of “phobia,” particularly the word “homophobia.”

Monday’s update to the AP Stylebook, considered the bible of copy editors across the English-speaking world, says that words ending in “phobia” indicate “an irrational, uncontrollable fear, often a form of mental illness” and should not be uses in “political or social contexts.”

Dave Minthorn, AP deputy standards editor, tells Politico:

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COMMENTARY: If we knew the truth, would we change?

When last I wrote on World AIDS Day last year, it was on behalf of "4 Friends." Four like-minded organizations that came together to do something on World AIDS Day, which is on Dec. 1. Each were asked to participate this year, and they all said no. They didn’t have the time.

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COMMENTARY: Sometimes it really doesn’t get better

I had to come back to my hometown to bury my mother. I’ve spent a week in the middle of conservative America, surrounded by some family members who insist on making my sexuality the basis of their desire to keep the family divided and keep the hate alive and living among us.

I had hoped that my mother’s funeral would have been an opportunity to put small-minded, petty ideas aside and come together to honor my mother. I discovered I was wrong to have even hoped for such things.

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COMMENTARY: Too many Twinkies and other befucklement

After the failure of a billion-dollar-plus wholesale bakery, a strident presidential election, a celebrated sex scandal (which would not be scandalous in countries less publicly vested in the whereabouts of folks’ dickles), and voter support for same-sex marriage in four states, thoughtful study and analysis of the outcomes is warranted. And what better place to find due consideration of lesson’s learned and key takeaways than in the media. Recent news stories and releases offered the following insights.

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COMMENTARY: What Americans can learn from Taipei Pride

Taipei Pride celebrated its 10th anniversary on Oct. 27. It is the oldest and biggest Pride event in Asia.

More than 50,000 marchers attended this year, according to the Taipei Times.

On the surface, Taipei Pride is not a celebration of extravagance or politics. It seems to be a celebration of the “normal” lives of “normal” people. Whereas D.C. Pride is filled with churches, NGOs and political groups, and New York Pride is filled with hot men on glitzy floats, the majority of participants in Taipei Pride walked with their friends, dressed in their regular clothes.

LETTER TO THE COMMUNITY: Tina Leight-Roades steps down as North County Pride director

Dear community members,

It is with a great deal of sadness and thought that I announce that effective Thursday, Nov. 15, 2012, I will no longer be Director of Pride @ the beach and a board member of North County LGBTQ Resource Center.

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COMMENTARY: Malawi’s LGBTQ’s short-lived freedom

I’d like to believe that Malawi's lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer (LGBTQ) citizens and tourists had a few days to breath easier.

On Nov. 5, the government issued a moratorium suspending all laws decriminalizing homosexuality. Three days later, on Nov. 8, homosexuality was illegal again.

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COMMENTARY: The fable of Brian Brown or the great marriage non sequitur

(Note, 11 Nov 2012: On November 7, the nation’s evolving attitude toward same-sex marriage was demonstrated at the polls in Maine, Maryland, Minnesota and Washington, where voters supported the right to marry. And the reaction from Brian Brown, Executive Director of the National Organization for Marriage?

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COMMENTARY: A new America, a madrassa education

Over 2 million American children are currently homeschooled, the majority of them for religious reasons. Hundreds of Christian colleges and universities prepare tomorrow’s Bible-based policy-makers to serve in the name of their Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ.

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