• Queer folks are used to having to come to terms with workers who come late to the vineyard – Baptist News Global

    "Our final reward, the one we get in heaven, might be the same, but on this side of heaven we live in a society that heaps adulation on the people who arrive late to the party, the people who “change their minds,” the people who show up after the work has been done."

  • Connecting our fisher folks in the WPS

    Armed only with just mobile phones, internet connectivity can also empower our fisherfolks at the WPS.

  • Special hunts for special folks

    By Dan Armitage, outdoor writer Pike State Forest and Blue Rock State Forest were the settings for two recent special hunts organized for hunters with disabilities to enjoy the outdoors while hunting for wild turkey, as guests of the annual Ohio Department of Natural Resources (ODNR) Division of Forestry in Pike and Muskingum counties. “Year

  • NBC Animal Documentary Claims "This Is A Queer Planet"

    NBC Animal Documentary Claims "This Is A Queer Planet" Authored by Paul Joseph Watson via Modernity.news, A documentary set to be broadcast by NBC asserts that we live on a “queer planet,” in which homosexuality is widespread in the animal kingdom and there are more than two genders. Yes, really. The documentary, set to be aired on June 6, features one “expert” stating, “Everything you were taught as a kid is wrong.” “Gay penguins, bisexual lions, sex changing clown fish,” the...

  • Can you be both straight and queer? You can if you’re Dannii Minogue

    You assumed the entertainer was talking about her sexuality when she said she was ‘queer’? What an old-fashioned way of thinking!I have some inspiring news for heterosexuals who may be struggling with their lifestyle choices: Dannii Minogue has bravely come out as straight.Why did the 52-year-old, who has a long-term boyfriend, feel she needed to come out now? Well, it seems that Minogue may have misunderstood what the word queer means. Earlier this month, you see, the entertainer was doing a...

  • Rural folks resist having their land become a carbon sponge

    The Washington Post reported yesterday on a proposal to make land in eastern Montana a carbon sponge because it is home to"thousands of acres of porous rock where oil company executives say greenhouse gas could be piped in from afar and stored forever."  The headline is "Biden and oil companies like this climate tech. Many Americans do not."  Here's an excerpt from Evan Halper's story: In the ranching community of Carter County, Mont., the prospect of shipping in all that carbon pollution and...

  • Yuri on Ice’s Queer Representation Means Everything to Me

    The Escapist's Jordan Althoff talks about their experience with Yuri on Ice's queer representation and what it meant to them.

  • Lost art: Why there is a need to revive the Lambani Banjara folk embroidery

    An attempt to revive a fading craftBorn and brought up in Vijayapura in Karnataka, Asha Patil grew up with the Banjaras as an integral part of her ecosystem. She always

  • Billie Eilish’s ‘Lunch’ Is a Spicy Queer Anthem: Lyrics

    Hope you saved room for “Lunch.” Billie Eilish fed fans tonight, dropping

  • View from the Margins: A queer rights activist on why he prefers Modi and the BJP

    Ankit Bhuptani believes the controversial Citizenship Amendment Act was ‘a civilisational duty’. A possible third term for the BJP gives him hope.

  • Benjamin Millepied on queering Romeo and Juliet: ‘In France they called me woke’

    The Black Swan choreographer is bringing his unique take on Shakespeare to Sydney – involving cameras and dancers running outside the Opera HousePerhaps no single person has done more to buoy up classical ballet in contemporary culture than Benjamin Millepied, the choreographer for Darren Aronofsky’s 2010 thriller Black Swan. He was already a star among balletomanes thanks to his decade as a principal dancer for the New York City Ballet. But the French-born dancer’s on-screen role in the film,...

  • Descendants of Holocaust survivors celebrate hidden ‘queer love story’

    Lola Alexander and Ursula Finke both narrowly escaped deportation to Auschwitz – and after the war were inseparableUrsula Finke weighed less than 5st (31kg) and by her own description was only a “skeleton”, when Lola Alexander tracked her down in bombed-out Berlin in the last days of April 1945. Both had repeatedly, narrowly escaped deportation to Auschwitz, unlike many of their closest Jewish relatives.Lola and Ursula had become “friends”, as their survivors’ testimony from the 1950s put it,...