Mr. O'Reilly couldn't get past the bedroom as he insisted that the only way to know for sure if gays were in committed relationships would be to go into their bedrooms since we can't show a marriage certificate like straight couples can. Ms. Tiven went head to head with Mr. O. trying to set the record straight (pun intended) that there's more to getting a green card for straight couples under current laws than just simply showing a marriage certificate and gay couples would also have to prove they are actually interdependent couples.
Currently 16 countries support same-sex immigration and allow their citizens to sponsor their same-sex partners that are not citizens including Brazil, South Africa, Australia, and Israel. In many cases queer Americans are leaving the US, their extended families and their homes and jobs to live in countries that don't force them to choose between love and country. This is a great loss for the US on many levels including, some argue a brain drain and loss of tax revenue.
So what do you thinks? Should US citizens be allowed to sponsor their same-sex partners for green cards? Should Americans be forced to choose between our partners and our countries? Take our Big Queer poll.
As Rudolph William Louis Giuliani pursues his candidacy for for the Republican nomination for president of the United States, the former mayor of New York City is almost invariably described by the mainstream media as "pro-gay rights." That reputation is largely based on a few high-level appointments to his administration and his signing a domestic partnership bill into law while mayor. But as Giuliani attempts to court the religious right in his drive for the Republican nomination, he seems to be retreating from his support even for such limited measures as domestic partnership. And there is nothing in his record as mayor to suggest that he was or is supportive of transgender rights, despite his now-famous (if not notorious) appearance in drag as 'La Rudia.' As members of the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) community evaluate Giuliani's candidacy they should carefully consider his opposition to Int. No. 24, the transgender rights bill ultimately enacted by the New York City Council as Local Law 3 of 2002 after he left office.
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