12.09.06

Author explores dogs as gay men’s best friends

Posted in Advocate Articles, Dogs at 6:39 am by pikapp44

A dog may fetch you a boyfriend, drive one away, or test the commitment of your significant other.

Those are some of the lessons of “Paws and Reflect: Exploring the Bond Between Gay Men and Their Dogs.” The book of 25 short stories, including some contributed by gay celebrities, looks at these complex inter-species relationships, exploring everything from dogs as “guy magnets” to jealous rivals for affection.

Co-editor Neil Plakcy, a mystery writer and English professor who lives in Hollywood, Fla., says he tried to make the book a mixed breed of “the heart-warming and the funny.”

Plakcy, 49, says he decided to do the book after realizing that in so many households a dog is truly a gay man’s best friend.

“First of all, it’s hard for gay men to become fathers,” Plakcy says. “For many gay men, our dogs are our children. Secondly, dogs give unconditional love. Many gay men never got that kind of love, either from their parents or from their peers.”

Plakcy says he and his friend, Sharon Sakson, the book’s co-editor, were looking for a project to work on together. Plakcy was writing gay detective novels at the time. Sakson, a producer for NBC Nightly News, was involved in judging dog shows. She also breeds Brussels Griffons, the breed of dog that is featured in the Jack Nicholson film “As Good as It Gets.” They decided to split the project. Plakcy sniffed out the gay writers and persuaded them to contribute to the book. Sakson conducted many of the celebrity interviews.
The dog as “guy magnet” theme is played out in Jeffrey Ricker’s humorous contribution “Dakota,” about a Newfoundland-Border Collie mix. Ricker writes:

“When I got Dakota, I was single. All my friends said he would be a total guy-magnet…. What he lacks in intelligence, he makes up for in geniality. He’s kind of a blonde like that.”

But Ricker soon discovers that using Dakota as “screening device for men” doesn’t work:

“Dakota rolled over on his back to have his belly rubbed by every man who walked through the front door,” Ricker writes. “My dog, it seemed, was a tramp.”

Another particularly funny story in the book is titled “My Ph.D. in Dachshunds,” by Stephen Kwielchek. The Dachshund, which belonged to Kwielchek’s boyfriend, is apparently jealous of him. The rival takes out his frustrations by repeatedly peeing on Kwielchek’s pillow. Kwielchek gets back at the dog in a particularly hilarious way.

 “Puppy Whipped,” by Donald Hardy, tells the story of a gay man who goes to great lengths to care for two sick dogs. One dog is so sick it can’t walk much, so he ends up carrying it around in a little red wagon:

“There I was. A forty-seven-year old, six-foot-two, 200-pound man, pulling a small, fluffy golden dog down the dock in a cute, little red wagon. Gay.”

The story “The Dog Who Outed Me,” by Kevin Anderson, tells about how a rescue by a dog during a mountain-climbing trip leads a man to come out to his brother.

Former Express features editor Andy Zeffer contributed “Discovering the Dog Lover Within,” a wagging tale about how his roommate’s dog won his heart after years of being a cat lover. There is a particularly funny passage describing the debate between cat lovers and dog lovers.

Plakcy, who is a professor of English at Broward Community College, says one recurring theme of the book is that dogs are family. They often fill the gaps in gay men’s lives, many of whom lacked formal family structures.

“We’re the only minority group that doesn’t have family members in our group,” Plakcy says. “Many of us have look for new families that can relate to us. Sometimes dogs can help in that quest.”

 

 

 

 
 

12.07.06

Poll: New Jersey voters support civil unions over marriage

Posted in Advocate Articles, Gay Rights at 4:46 pm by pikapp44

A new poll out Thursday shows that a majority of New Jersey voters support civil unions for gay couples with rights equal to marriage over marriage itself. The Quinnipiac University poll found that 60 percent of voters support civil unions, with 35 percent opposed, while 50 percent oppose letting gay couples marry, with only 44 percent in support. The poll also found that 58 percent of voters oppose a state constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriage.

“New Jersey voters are sending a clear message to the legislature in Trenton that they do not want gay marriage in the state, but at the same time they oppose a state constitutional amendment that would ban gay marriage,” Clay F. Richards of the Quinnipiac University Polling Institute said in a statement. “Voters approve the legalization of civil unions for gays, but say 51-42 percent that if gays can be guaranteed equal rights under the law without legalizing civil unions, that’s okay too,” he added.

The New Jersey legislature is currently considering legislation to extend marriage rights to gay couples, following a state supreme court order earlier this fall.
 

12.04.06

Same-sex marriage bill to be reintroduced in California

Posted in Advocate Articles, Gay Rights at 3:42 pm by pikapp44

A bill to legalize same-sex marriage in California, which was vetoed by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger last year, will be reintroduced on Monday by openly gay assemblyman Mark Leno. The Religious Freedom and Civil Marriage Protection Act, sponsored by the gay rights group Equality California, would allow same-sex couples to obtain a marriage license from their county clerk.

“All loving, committed couples deserve not only the legal protections that marriage provides but also the dignity that marriage affords,” EQCA executive director Geoff Kors, said in a statement. “The time has come to end the exclusion of same-sex couples from marriage. This legislation validates loving relationships and strengthens California families by honoring the commitments of every couple under law.”

“Each branch of government must rise up out of the shadows of inequality and be counted on this important civil rights issue by using their powers to put an end to discrimination against all people,” Leno said in the statement. “It is more important than ever that our legislative branch here in California reaffirms the belief that marriage is an institution only strengthened by inclusiveness. Our society is strengthened by stable and committed relationships, and our governmental bodies should be doing all they can to help these relationships flourish.”

A broad coalition of civil rights organizations and leaders support the measure, including the California State Conference of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, the United Farm Workers, the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Chinese for Affirmative Action, the Anti-Defamation League, the California National Organization for Women, and the California Council of Churches, among many others. 

Leno’s bill, which has been staunchly opposed by several Christian groups in the state, will be heard in policy and fiscal committees in the assembly and senate beginning early 2007. There was no word from the governor’s office on whether he will support the bill this time around.

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