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Gay marriage plans set to proceed

The government reaches agreement with Labour which will allow its bill to legalise gay marriage in England and Wales to proceed in Parliament. Continue reading

Funny 4-Year-Old Refuses Kiss From Prince William

Prince William w as greeting Glasgow, Scotland residents with Kate Middleton Thursday when something happened to the royal that has probably never happened before he was denied a kiss!

Watch below as a four-year-old girl refuses the prince's affection: SEE ALSO: English actor Jeremy Irons compares ... Continue reading

The issue – Tories and marriage

The issue - Tories and marriage 4 February 2013 Last updated at 15:25 BBC Website http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-21319965 Two issues just this week - 1.

Osbourne did not allow for a MARRIAGE TAX BREAK in his budget plans 2.

GAY MARRIAGE vote to go through Parliament this week - 120 Conservati ... Continue reading

Australia: Archbishop backs anti-gay smoking comments of Christian leader

Archbishop of Sydney Peter Jensen The Anglican Archbishop of Sydney Dr Peter Jensen is supporting comments made by the head of the Australian Christian Lobby Jim Wallace, who last week suggested that a gay lifestyle is more hazardous to health than smoking. When asked to condemn Mr Wallace s comments on ABC TV s Q&A programme, Dr Jensen said I am generally supportive of ACL. He added that Mr Wallace had given us an opportunity to talk about something significant, namely the question of health risk.

Last week, Mr Wallace sparked fury after arguing that legalising equal marriage in Australia would be a bad move because he claims LGBT people generally have higher rates of health inequality compared to the average heterosexual smoker. Mr Wallace made the remarks during a same-sex marriage debate at the University of Tasmania. He also suggested that life expectancy for gay men is up to 20 years lower than for heterosexuals.

Mr Wallace was criticised for his views, with LGBT campaigners accusing him of using out of date research for his arguments. On Thursday it was announced that Australia s Prime Minister Julia Gillard had pulled out of attending next month s annual ACL conference in Canberra after hearing of Mr Wallace s remarks. She said in response: To compare the health effects of smoking cigarettes with the many struggles gay and lesbian Australians endure in contemporary society is heartless and wrong .

Ms Gillard, who remains opposed to equal marriage, added I believe my attendance at the conference would be inappropriate.

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Alan Turing Monopoly board unveiled

Never before seen pictures of the scientist, donated by the Turing family, have also been included in the game A special edition Monopoly board commemorating the life of gay codebreaker Alan Turing has been launched by the Bletchley Park Trust. Turing was infamously persecuted by the UK government because of his sexuality, despite his pioneering intelligence work, which helped Britain defeat the Nazis in World War II. He died at the age of 41 in 1954.

The new game is based on a hand-drawn board designed more than 60 years ago by the son of Turing s mentor and on which the mathematician himself played. William Newman, the son of Turing s mentor Max Newman, drew the original board around 1950 and played on it with his brother Edward and Turing who was beaten by the young boy. The board went missing around 1986 when Mr Newman moved from the family home in Cambridge, but resurfaced last year when the new owners of the property found a box of the original occupant s belongings.

Mr Newman donated the board to Bletchley Park Museum and has since worked with the trust and Winning Moves, which creates new editions of Monopoly, to design and develop the special game. Bletchley Park and Cambridge s Kings College replace the famous Monopoly squares of Mayfair and Park Lane respectively, and the Utilities squares is now home instead to the legendary Enigma Machine. Never before seen pictures of the scientist, donated by the Turing family, have also been included in the game.

The board is initially exclusively available from the Bletchley Park website, and from the museum s shop.

10 notes featuring Turing s face are used instead of the normal 10 Monopoly money; all of which chimes appropriately with the campaign to have Turing s legacy honored by having his image placed on the real thing.

In June, Google celebrated the 100th anniversary of the birth of Turing, by placing an interactive representation of the Turing machine on its homepage.

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Irish councillor and doctor facing growing pressure over stupid remarks against equal marriage

Councillor Bill Tormey is also a consultant at Beaumont and Connolly hospitals A Dublin politician, who claims to fight discrimination, has been roundly condemned after protesting against the city council s decision to vote in favour of opening up civil marriage to all citizens regardless of their sexuality. Gay rights campaigners welcomed last week s move with the Dublin-based Gay and Lesbian Equality Network (GLEN) saying it was another welcome demonstration of the transformation in attitudes to lesbian and gay people in Ireland . However, the Irish Herald reports that Dr Bill Tormey, a Fine Gael member of Dublin City Council, remarked by saying that homosexuality was once perceived as being a disease .

He added that marriage among LGBT people is philosophically incorrect due to their inability to produce children. The councillor, who is a consultant at Beaumont and Connolly hospitals, also believes heterosexual couples should come first when it comes to adoption. In response, Councillor Rebecca Moynihan described the comments as shocking and deeply insulting .

Meanwhile, TV presenter Brendan Courtney, host of RTE s Off The Rails, has blasted the councillor for being stupid and out of touch . Tiernan Brady from GLEN, said Mr Tormey was completely out of step with his council colleagues on the issue of marriage equality. According to his personal website, Mr Tormey is a liberal social democrat and fights discrimination head on In August, campaigners staged a parade in support of marriage equality in Dublin City Centre.

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David Cameron Says Gay Marriage Will Be Legal In Britain By 2015

On the eve of Mitt Romney's visit to London, UK Prime Minister David Cameron chose to reaffirm his support of gay marriage, and said he believed it would be legal within three years. Addressing a group of LGBT community members in a reception, Cameron vowed that he hoped to follow in Scotland's foot ... Continue reading

Film Review: Bel Ami

Bel Ami, no not that Bel Ami Bel Ami is a name perhaps more familiar to many of us for a certain brand of shall we say gay themed entertainment.

But it s also the name of a film staring heartthrob Robert Pattinson.

Instead of the Parisian newspapers of the 1880s, you could be forgiven for assuming director Declan Donnellan s debut feature is about 21st Century gossip magazines, except for the clothes of course. Clothing to one side, Bel Ami, the feature in question, is really as timeless as they come.

A tale of greed, desire, adultery, double crossings, good luck and good looks, closing your eyes and picking any point in humanity s timeline provides countless examples comparable to this story.

Thankfully, because of their intrinsic relationship to our nature, the basic narrative totems don t seem to grow old.The film centres on Georges Duroy (Robert Pattinson, The Twilight Saga), who returns home from the French Army after a spell fighting in Algeria.

At something of a crossroads in his life, and down to the last of his money, he moves to Paris with the hope of making good in the capital.

There he meets Charles Forestier, an older chap already acquainted in North Africa, who is also the political editor of La Vie Francaise, a paper with designs on bringing down the government. At a high society dinner, the young hopeful is introduced to the most wealthy, powerful, and hedonistic of Parisian bigwigs.

Forestier is hosting, and during the evening his wife Madeleine (Uma Thurman, Kill Bill) suggests Duroy s memoirs should be published and offers assistance in the writing process.

Instead, she ends up penning the diary herself, which goes on to become a great success with readers and earns Duroy a spot on the payroll at La Vie. From here we follow Duroy as he rises up through the ranks of influence, despite an apparent lack of any true talent.

His only real selling point is the ability to seduce, but that proves to be enough for him to succeed.

As Madeleine explains, the most important people in Paris are not men, but their women, and Duroy takes this advice wholeheartedly on board.

Bedding and wedding editors wives and their daughters, he manages to be exposed as a fraud, get fired, and wind up back in an even more powerful position.

It won t ruin too much for you to learn that there s little remorse and few repercussions for the womanising leading man.

In fact, it s probably more of a reason to watch the film, safe in the knowledge that, for all its costume drama posturing, this is wickedly appealing prospect for anyone who finds political correctness tiresome.

With the moral values of a soap opera villain, he cuts a way through hearts in an attempt to protect himself from poverty a plan that winds up securing him a hand in marriage, and a place alongside the finest of history s Casanovas. Continue reading