Welcome, Guest
You have to register before you can post on our site.

Username
  

Password
  





Search Forums

(Advanced Search)

Latest Threads
Religion not allowing int...
Last Post: Ivantill
11-16-2024, 06:40 AM
Paid Research Study on Ga...
Last Post: cs2025
11-13-2024, 11:03 PM
New Greek guy
Last Post: threshgr
11-10-2024, 12:52 PM
Hampshire bottom guy, loo...
Last Post: DameJudyXxx
11-10-2024, 01:48 AM
Never satisfied
Last Post: testsetset
11-07-2024, 09:32 PM
Welcome to BoyinThai—Your...
Last Post: boyinthai
11-05-2024, 01:48 PM
Play with nipples or not?
Last Post: SH500
11-04-2024, 04:00 AM
What are you? Morning, N...
Last Post: SH500
11-04-2024, 03:58 AM
First erection you had by...
Last Post: SH500
11-04-2024, 03:56 AM
circumcised vs uncircumci...
Last Post: allin4oral
10-20-2024, 06:28 PM
does size matter?
Last Post: allin4oral
10-20-2024, 06:26 PM
Golden Showers
Last Post: allin4oral
10-20-2024, 06:12 PM
Sexual Roles
Last Post: allin4oral
10-20-2024, 06:09 PM
Who did you tell first?
Last Post: allin4oral
10-20-2024, 06:05 PM
The Body
Last Post: allin4oral
10-20-2024, 06:04 PM
Do you look for one-night...
Last Post: allin4oral
10-20-2024, 05:59 PM
What do you think of the ...
Last Post: allin4oral
10-20-2024, 05:55 PM
Bareback
Last Post: allin4oral
10-20-2024, 05:44 PM
Whats more important to y...
Last Post: allin4oral
10-20-2024, 05:39 PM
Men Underwear and Bulges
Last Post: allin4oral
10-20-2024, 05:32 PM

Forum Statistics
» Members: 831,   » Latest member: tjpwheelie,   » Forum threads: 32,824,   » Forum posts: 704,753,  
Full Statistics

  Your home's decor
Posted by: CellarDweller - 02-27-2021, 05:30 AM - Forum: Everyday-Stories - Replies (13)

How about a thread where we can share some pics of how we've made our homes "our own"?

Do you have an unique or quirky decor items?  Something that expresses your humor or style?

Share the descriptions or pictures here.

Print this item

  US cities with highest rates of gay households
Posted by: andy - 02-26-2021, 11:05 PM - Forum: Gay-News - Replies (1)

[Image: 210226-orlando-skyline-al-0935_57217a39b...-1240w.jpg]
The downtown skyline is reflected in Lake Eola downtown, on Jan. 6, 2021, in Orlando, Fla.

“You often think of LGBTQ people in large cities like San Francisco, but we’re everywhere."

ORLANDO, Fla. — Once known for singer Anita Bryant’s anti-gay rights campaign and a ban on gay and lesbian adoptions, Florida is now home to two metro areas with among the highest concentrations of gay and lesbian coupled households in the U.S., according to a new report released by the U.S. Census Bureau.

Orlando and Miami had the fourth and sixth highest percentages respectively of same-sex coupled households in the U.S., according to the report released this week using data from the bureau’s 2019 American Community Survey.

San Francisco, Portland and Seattle topped the list. Austin was No. 5 and Boston came in at No. 7. But they were joined in the top 10 by some unexpected metro areas like Baltimore, Denver and Phoenix. Noticeably absent were three of the nation’s largest metros: New York, Los Angeles and Chicago. Though they have some of the nation’s most visible LGBTQ communities, the vastness of their metro areas dilutes the concentration.

The appearance of these metros on the list shows that tolerance isn’t limited to large coastal cities, gay rights advocates said.

“You often think of LGBTQ people in large cities like San Francisco, but we’re everywhere,” said Jeremy LaMaster, executive director of FreeState Justice, a Baltimore-based LGBTQ advocacy organization for Maryland.

The report focused on same-sex couples, both married and unmarried, and not gays and lesbians who are single. About 1.5 percent of all coupled households nationwide were same sex. The cities on the top 10 list ranged in concentration from San Francisco’s 2.8 percent to Baltimore’s 2 percent.

In the District of Columbia, which was categorized along with states in the report, 7.1 percent of coupled households were same sex.

In Florida, acceptance of LGBTQ communities has been driven at the local level, with passage of human rights ordinances, fast-growing populations from all over the world and gay-friendly companies from the hospitality and entertainment industries, said Nadine Smith, executive director of Equality Florida, an LGBTQ advocacy group.

While Orlando already had a visible gay community with out elected officials and workforces like Disney World with large numbers of gays and lesbians, the collective grief from the massacre at the gay Pulse nightclub in 2016 helped push that acceptance into more conservative corners of civic life such as local churches.

“Miami is a port city and Orlando is the epicenter of amusement parks and hospitality, so it makes perfect sense,” Smith said of the high concentrations of same sex households. “The cities have led the way for sure, rebuilding Florida’s image from a really hateful history.”

That history stretches back to the 1970s. That’s when Bryant, an early-1960s pop singer and brand ambassador for the Florida Citrus Commission, headed a campaign that led to the repeal of an ordinance in Miami-Dade County prohibiting discrimination based on sexual orientation in one of the earliest organized fights against gay rights. Florida also was the last state in the U.S. to end its ban on gay and lesbian adoption when a court ruled it violated equal protection rights in 2010.

Austin, Orlando and Phoenix have been among the metropolitan areas with the largest population growth in recent years.

Phoenix’s general meritocracy, which comes from being a relatively young community with a constant influx of new arrivals, has made it welcoming to gay and lesbians, said Angela Hughey, president of ONE Community, a business coalition that advocates for inclusion and equality.

“It’s a very broad city and we are in every neighborhood,” Hughey said Thursday.

In Baltimore, residents have had an appreciation for a camp aesthetic that now would overlap with queer culture. A favorite son, after all, is filmmaker John Waters, and the city celebrates the unconventional, as evidenced by the annual HONFest where celebrants sport beehive hairdos and cat-eye sunglasses. The city also has a vibrant vogue ball scene.

“Part of me feels like I need to give a shout-out to John Waters,” said LaMaster, referring to the filmmaker behind cult movies made in Baltimore, such as “Pink Flamingos” and “Hairspray.” “But it’s not just John Waters. There is a rich heritage and history that can be found here.”

LaMaster, who lived in New York City before moving to Baltimore, said the Maryland city lacked the visible gay scene found in a neighborhood like Chelsea in New York City. But Baltimore made sense for same sex couples wanting to set up households in a state that has been a leader in laws prohibiting discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity, as well as allowing second-parent adoptions, he said.

“The work isn’t done. That’s my takeaway,” La Master said. “Even though there has been tremendous progress, I think there’s always room for improvement.”

Print this item

  Two Elderly Gay Men Finding Love in Hong Kong
Posted by: andy - 02-25-2021, 01:32 AM - Forum: Gay-Movies - Replies (2)

[Image: 405611.jpeg]
Twilight’s Kiss, 2021

“To survive, they’ve had to ignore who they are,” says director Ray Yeung about the elderly gay men of Hong Kong, the subject of his latest film, Twilight’s Kiss.

For a long time, the future was inconceivable for gay men. Even before the Aids pandemic, social stigma led to the pathologisation and criminalisation of the global community. Gay men lived in the shadows of society, maintaining their veneer of heteronormative stability by marrying straight women at great cost to themselves and their families.

This idea of hiding one’s identity might seem like a distant memory to today’s self-actualised youth. Still, we purposefully leave behind our forebears to carry their trauma alone. “Their sadness and shame” are the story Yeung wants to tell. He says, “We wouldn’t be where we are today without what these men have gone through. They need to be seen.”

Twilight’s Kiss was first introduced as Suk Suk – Cantonese for “uncle”, both in the familial sense and as an honorific for older men – at the 24th Busan International Film Festival. It is Yeung’s best film yet, a meaningful and refreshing portrayal of the inconveniences of ageing and romance, starring two elderly, closeted gay men. Relationships between older people are a topic rarely examined in the youth-oriented genre of LGBTQ+ films. “Investors don’t see the marketability and commercial value of old bodies, especially in the context of gay films. It’s all about hot young men. There is a lot of ageism in the gay scene,” says Yeung.

Twilight’s Kiss, 2021
Twilight’s Kiss, 2021(Film still)
And he’s right. I can’t remember the last time I’ve seen any film, gay or straight, that focused on senior romance. When it’s portrayed, it’s usually about an older man lusting over a younger one. Or it’s about an elderly couple who met during their youth and are lifelong partners. Twilight’s Kiss instead imagines two men already in their formative years and getting another chance at love. “Two men, at peace with their age and bodies, hoping to find their soulmates,” says Yeung.

Inspired by Professor Travis Kong’s Oral Histories of Older Gay Men in Hong Kong, the story follows Pak (Tai Bo), a gruff grandfather who swam to Hong Kong during the Cultural Revolution and toiled for years as a taxi driver. After his kids grow up and move away, he starts cruising and eventually crosses paths with a soft-spoken romantic named Hoi (Ben Yuen). Hoi suggests the two “become friends first”, but Pak brusquely rejects the offer, saying, “another time, then”. After a second chance meeting, the two men start opening up, commiserating about being stifled by their families and swapping stories about their granddaughters. Pak’s wife Ching (long-time stage actress Patra Au), perpetually bothered by life, senses that Pak has been led astray. Hoi, on the other hand, is beholden to his strict, humourless, religious son, who has replaced him as the patriarch of the family.

Nevertheless, Pak and Hoi fall into a clandestine, risky love affair. Intimate moments of caring and kindness are thoughtfully directed as the two men go on dates, strolling through wet markets and seeking refuge in a gay sauna. “I wanted to show that two old bodies are still attractive,” says Yeung, talking about the first time the two men sleep together. Afterwards, they talk about their struggles growing up during Hong Kong’s rapid modernisation, and Hoi says, “who hasn’t had it tough in our generation?” as Pak drifts away on his lap, a new beginning in their twilight years.

Yeung affectionately details his characters’ warmth and beauty, showing respect and appreciation for their age. In a lesser film, the nakedness and vulnerability of older people would be a spectacle only to highlight the lack of meaningful portrayals. In Yeung’s film, however, it insists that the genre’s lack of such depictions misses a crucial aspect of gay life.

Yeung looks beyond his main characters to include the perspectives of other older gay men in the community. Dior (Chu Wai-Keung), a sharp-tongued fashionista, dabbles in drag and social justice in the film. Like his character, Wai-Keung is a real-life advocate for the creation of LGBTQ+ nursing homes. In the movie, he reenacts his appearance at Hong Kong’s legislative council, pleading to allow gay elders to “live out [their] twilight years with dignity and freedom”.

“I was so touched by [Wai-Keung’s] speech that I had to include it into the film,” says Yeung. “These men came out 30 to 40 years ago and were rejected by their families and have been living alone. So, there is a real concern about what happens to them. If they go to a traditional nursing home, will they be discriminated against? Will they have to give up their cherished possessions – love letters, or in Dior’s case, his gorgeous dresses? Will medical practitioners be sensitive to their needs? For many of these men, going to a nursing home means going back into the closet.”

The film has been a success on the festival circuit and bolstered the careers of its lead actors. (To the cast’s amusement, Au received a nomination for Best New Performer at the Hong Kong Film Awards – “new,” despite her big cinematic break coming at 66 years of age.) Beyond its success, Twilight’s Kiss is remarkable because it dares to examine some of the most underrepresented lives within a marginalised community. And, in the Chinese-speaking world, gay representation is still sorely lacking (LGBTQ+ content being suppressed in China and Malaysia), and stories about the love between two grandparents are virtually non-existent.

One of the men Yeung interviewed for the film cried when he saw it. “He said he was overwhelmed,” says Yeung. “All the issues and anguish he bottled up for so long hit him when he saw it reflected on screen. He was very touched and happy the story was finally being told.”

Print this item

  Facebook Blocks News in Austrailia
Posted by: InbetweenDreams - 02-18-2021, 04:59 PM - Forum: World-News-Forum - Replies (8)

The Australian government is considering legislation that would require platforms like Facebook and Google to pay news publishers a fee for the news content they distribute (and profit from) on their platform. Facebook has retaliated by blocking Australian users from seeing or sharing news on Facebook. Google has reached an agreement with the Australian government. Microsoft is applauding the proposal.



Print this item

  Gay Republicans savaged after thanking Trump
Posted by: andy - 02-18-2021, 11:40 AM - Forum: Gay-News - Replies (2)

[Image: 4bbf54c9bbbb453655f0d68a5d1c2e56]
The Log Cabin Republicans thanked Donald Trump for “standing up for family” in a bizarre Presidents’ Day video littered with falsehoods

The gay Republican group, which claims to represent “LGBT conservative and allies” but rarely challenges rampant homophobia within the GOP, put out an odd love letter to Donald Trump to mark Presidents’ Day.

In the clip, figures including disgraced former journalist Chadwick Moore and self-described transphobe Arielle Scarcella lavish praise on Trump – a man who vented about transgender soldiers getting “clipped”, stood silent as his administration gutted LGBT+ rights protections and argued in court that businesses should have the right to fire people for being gay.

Trump is praised for “standing up for our American ideals of family, freedom and liberty” by one participant, while others resort to gaslighting as they peddle a number of abject falsehoods.

The video claims that “one of the best things that he did was launch a global campaign to decriminalise homosexuality”, though there is no evidence to suggest any such campaign ever actually existed beyond a press release, while Trump left the position of international LGBT+ envoy sitting empty for his entire term.

The group suggests that Trump was the “the first pro-gay president when entering office”, a bizarre claim given he made no pledges on LGBT+ rights at all in 2016 or 2020 aside from his pledge to sign a proposed law to permit anti-LGBT+ discrimination on the grounds of religion.


Trump is also described as the “first Republican President in American history to enter office as a supporter of marriage equality”. In reality, ahead of the 2016 election Trump said he would “strongly consider” appointing Supreme Court justices to overturn equal marriage, before committing to picking justices from a list vetted by anti-LGBT+ groups.

Indeed, several of these points were made succinctly in 2016 by none other than the Log Cabin Republicans, when the group pointedly declined to endorse Trump’s presidential bid, citing his anti-LGBT+ policies.

[Image: f9144134ad50439be6cf0f92dc3f0a50]
The twice-impeached former president Donald Trump

Internet not impressed with the Log Cabin Republicans.
Suffice to say, the clip has not gone down well outside of the increasingly-small circle of gay Trump firebrands.

A Twitter user quipped: “Just when you think LCR can’t be any more ridiculous, they never let you down.”

Another pointed out: “Less than two hours after Trump and his virulently anti-LGBTQ activist vice president Mike Pence were sworn into office, all mentions of LGBTQ issues were removed from the official White House webpage.”

One respondent said: “To me, Log Cabin Republicans are like Women for Trump. They take pleasure in remaining second-class citizens as long as they think they’re slightly elevated above other groups who are being treated like second-class citizens.”

Print this item

  Gay pride inspired Claddagh ring saved Irish business
Posted by: andy - 02-18-2021, 11:38 AM - Forum: Gay-News - Replies (1)

[Image: claddagh-pride-ring.jpg]

A redesigned Claddagh ring targeting the gay community has proved a lifeline for a local jewellery business during lockdown.

The Pride Claddagh Ring is the brainchild of Niall McNelis, a Labour councillor who runs the Claddagh and Celtic Jewellery Shop on Quay Lane in the city.

The sterling silver piece features the traditional heart, crown and hands emblem of the Claddagh ring with six coloured stones inspired by the Gay Pride rainbow flag – red representing life, orange for healing, yellow for the sun, green for nature, blue for harmony and violet for spirit.

During the marriage equality referendum, Cllr McNelis spotted a mural with two women embracing and one of them was wearing a Claddagh ring.

He had his workshop in Enniscrone in County Sligo come up with a stylish Claddagh redesign that would appeal to the LGBT+ (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender) community while doing justice to the iconic Galway symbol.

Since it was launched in December, the €55 Pride ring has been embraced worldwide, with orders flying in from as far as Australia, America, France, Germany and England.

Print this item

  COVID-19 Vaccine
Posted by: InbetweenDreams - 02-17-2021, 08:23 PM - Forum: COVID-19 - Replies (39)

Curious about who all has received the vaccine (and which one)? So I have received the first dose of the Moderna vaccine and my sister has got both of the Pfizer. I didn't have any adverse reactions to the first dose. My shoulder was a bit sore for a couple days where they did the injection and was a bit tired the next day and a bit cranky but that could have been more to do with not having enough sleep. I do hear that the 2nd dose is the one that makes you feel more run down.

There's also a lot of commotion about deaths caused from the vaccine of course the report I heard about did not give enough details other than it was those who were very old or terminally ill but didn't say which vaccine or the specifics. I do want my parents to get the vaccine but they're skeptical at best right now.

Print this item

  British soldiers sacked for being gay can get their medals back
Posted by: andy - 02-16-2021, 01:31 PM - Forum: Gay-News - No Replies

Campaigners say veterans should also get compensation for injustice they suffered and pensions restored.

[Image: 2565.jpg?width=445&quality=45&auto=forma...4c27d76eae]
Falklands veteran Joe Ousalice, 68, being given his medal for long service and good conduct by the defence secretary, Ben Wallace, on 22 January 2020

Thousands of British military personnel who were dismissed because they were homosexual will be able to have their service medals restored if they had been taken away when they were kicked out of the armed forces.

Gay rights campaigners welcomed the move as the “first step on a journey” but said that issues such as enduring criminal records, lost pension rights and still blemished service records now needed to be dealt with by the Ministry of Defence.

Gay men and lesbian women were banned from serving in the British military until 2000. About 200 to 250 were thrown out each year because of their sexuality, and frequently had their service medals removed.

In some instances, medals were physically ripped from a service person’s uniform after a conviction at court martial. Those found guilty of being homosexual sometimes went on to a serve a prison term, typically several months long.

Johnny Mercer, the veterans minister, said the announcement “addresses a historic injustice”. He said that it was intended to demonstrate “the military is a positive place to work for all who chose to serve” and encouraged those who thought they were eligible to apply.

Last year, Joe Ousalice, 70, a Falklands veteran, was personally handed back his long service and good conduct medal by the defence secretary, Ben Wallace, which had been removed from him in 1993 after a court martial.

Ousalice, who is bisexual, had served 18 years as a communications officer in the Royal Navy before he was dismissed on charges that he maintains were fabricated. He won his medal back after he had launched a legal action, which led the MoD to apologise to him – and to promise to review the wider situation.

“This is nowhere near enough,” Ousalice said. “Basically, when they take your medal from you, the medal effectively decrees what you get for your pension. By taking my medal and three good conduct badges that I had, my rank was cut. I had to wait until 60 before drawing a pension, whereas I could have got it immediately.”

Craig Jones, the joint chief executive of Fighting with Pride, a charity supporting LGBT+ veterans, described the move as the “first step on a journey” and said that he believed that ministers such as Mercer would go further.

“People’s lives were shattered by the ban. We need to look at giving people their commissions and warrants back, royal pardons of convictions, help with resettlement – and, yes, there is an overwhelming case for compensation and the restoration of pensions,” Jones added.

The MoD said that the government was working “to examine and understand the wide ranging impact of pre-2000 practices in the armed forces”. That, the ministry said, would ensure that “beyond the return of medals, the impact of this historical wrong is acknowledged and appropriately addressed” although no further details were given.

Veterans who were kicked out before 2000 said they were victims of covert investigations, including secret filming, or repeated harassment by military police over several years in an attempt to prove they were gay.

[Image: 3167.jpg?width=445&quality=45&auto=forma...859b0f5f06]
Royal Air Force veteran David Bonney ® and human rights campaigner Peter Tatchell lay a wreath at the Cenotaph in Whitehall, London after the Remembrance Sunday service last November

The last serviceman to be sent to prison for being homosexual was David Bonney, who was found guilty at a court martial in Cornwall in 1993. Bonney had joined the RAF aged 17 in 1987 and said he had “learned and accepted I was gay” when he served during the first Gulf war.

Bonney said he was subject to a two-year investigation after a copy of Gay Times had been found in his room. That included, he said, “bugging my room, having people follow me, placing officers outside the local gay bars to spy on people going in, using the local police stations to take my friends to, to interview them and altogether create terror and fear among my friends and associates”.

The court martial sentenced him to six months in prison, of which he served four including one month of solitary confinement, and left him with a criminal record – although following an appeal his discharge was changed to honourable. He said he hoped the MoD would “amend and compensate for the injustice and effective bullying I experienced”.

Print this item

  Luke Pollard: MP's Valentine's tweet sparks homophobic abuse
Posted by: andy - 02-16-2021, 01:26 PM - Forum: Gay-News - Replies (2)

[Image: _116894183_lukepollard.jpg]
Luke Pollard says he and his partner Sydney have "an amazing relationship"

Labour MP Luke Pollard is facing homophobic trolling on social media after posting a photo of himself and his boyfriend to mark Valentine’s Day.

Luke Pollard, an openly gay MP for Plymouth Sutton and Devonport, took to social media on Sunday (14 February) to post a selfie with his partner.

He wrote: “Happy Valentine’s Day to my lovely boyfriend! X”

The post attracted dozens of homophobic responses from far-right trolls focussed on an apparent “age gap” between Pollard, 40, and his boyfriend, who appears to be in his mid-to-late 20s.

One comment branded Pollard a “dirty Labour nonce”, while another read: “He looks 12 years old, you should be locked up.”

Thankfully, plenty of people flooded the post with messages of support for Pollard, with many calling out the veiled homophobia and stressing that there’s absolutely nothing odd about a relationship between two consenting adults.

“Age gap” criticism is often targeted at gay men to perpetuate homophobic tropes, with many responses noting that prime minister Boris Johnson, 56, never faces similar abuse over his 32-year-old fiancée Carrie Symonds.


One Twitter user wrote: “The comments under this photo really suggest this country hasn’t progressed much since the ’80s. Gay men shouldn’t have to deal with this.”

Another response quipped: “Love all the straight people replying shocked that not everybody settles down with the first boring person they date”.

One joked: “Replies to this clearly showing that straight men have no idea about skincare”.


So far, Pollard has risen above responding publicly to any of the abuse.

It is not the first time the Labour MP has been targeted.

Ahead of the 2019 election, in which Luke Pollard faced a challenge from the notoriously anti-gay Ann Widdecombe, the candidate’s office was repeatedly vandalised with homophobic graffiti.

“It makes you feel exasperated, really. It’s horrible when you’re being targeted because of who you fall in love with rather than being scrutinised for what’s actually in your policies.”

He was defiant in refusing “to let any bigot make me into a victim”, instead focusing on the countless constituents who have stood against the hate, helping him to clean the graffiti off the windows and bringing cake to his office to show support.

The Labour MP also offered to “sit down with the person who vandalised my office to talk” about their concerns.

He added: “If you’re angry enough to vandalise an office, let’s see if you’re brave enough to sit down and have that conversation.”

Print this item

  London private school headmaster tells students he is gay at start of LGBT month
Posted by: andy - 02-07-2021, 04:55 PM - Forum: Gay-News - Replies (1)

He told his students: 'Have the courage to be yourself’



A London headteacher told his students he was gay during a virtual assembly on the first day part of LGBT History month.

Headmaster Nicholas Hewlett, headmaster of the £18,000-a-year St Dunstan’s College in Catford, south east London, announced that he was a happily married, gay man.

It is thought to be the first time a headteacher has come out in front of his pupils and staff.

Mr Hewlett said he was inspired to do so after being impressed with a student's courage in discussing their own sexuality which left him feeling determined to be honest about his marriage to husband Alberic Elsom.

Hewlett, 41, said he was nervous before this morning’s announcement but received many “wonderful messages of support”.

“15 years ago, I was told by a senior colleague in the independent school I was then working in that, as an openly gay man, it would be virtually impossible for me to become a headmaster," he said.

"The reality that role-models really do matter and can have a material impact on the mental wellbeing of young people. For children, being educated by a diversity of adults who represent differing race, gender, sexuality and background, helps identities to settle and grow.

“Furthermore, I believe we are duty-bound to stop the pervasive view that white, heterosexual men are in some way inherently advantaged in assuming positions of responsibility and leadership.”

In the assembly, he spoke about a former St Dunstan’s pupil and staff member, Martin Preston, who was publicly outed in 1981. “Pupils rallied around their teacher; they had letters published in his support, going against cultural norms, and showed great humanity, respect and dignity, and in apparent direct contradiction to the views of the Headmaster of that time, who apparently took a very different view,” he explained.

Parents said they were brought to tears after they saw the assembly posted online.

One wrote: “I watched your assembly video earlier and it brought tears to my eyes. I am so pleased and proud that my son is part of this wonderful St Dunstan’s community. What you are doing here is so important. Thank you!”

Speaking about his decision, Mr Hewlett said: “If by standing up and ‘coming out’ to my pupils, it helps one young person be more comfortable in their own skin, more empowered to be themselves, and further engenders a culture of respect, inclusion, and the championing of individuality, surely it is an act worth doing?”

The Department for Education said: "We trust teachers and school leaders to make decisions about what's appropriate to discuss with pupils.

“By the end of secondary education, all pupils should receive teaching on LGBT [lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender] relationships. Schools are free to determine how they do this.”

Print this item

© 2002-2024 GaySpeak.com