August 21, 2011

Reports from ABC In Tripoli: Gadhafi Will be gone Tonight

 Muhammad Gadhafi, son of the Libyan leader, has surrendered to opposition forces, shortly after his brother, Seif al Islam, was captured in Tripoli, representatives of the rebel forces said today.
Rebel forces are surrounding the Gadhafi compound, Bab al Aziziya, a representative of the rebel government told ABC News.
Mohamad al Akari, a Transitional National Council advisor, said that if Libyan strongman Moammar Gadhafi is still in Tripoli, they believe he is in Bab al Aziziya.
"Tonight it's over," Akari said.
Reports have surfaced that Gadhafi's presidential guard has surrendered, according to Al Jazeera.

Top 10 Hottest Gay Celebs plus Dozens More



By Aviva LeeYahoo! Contributor Network

    •  
Story photo: Top 10 Hottest Gay CelebsCheyenne Jackson at a New York rally for same-sex marriage equality on May 17, 2009 Wikimedia Commons: MelissaYahoo! Contributor Network
Sorry ladies! These famous male stars are not only gorgeous but also out of the closet. But that's OK because we straight women can still dream about them, and our boyfriends and husbands won't get jealous. And gay men can start rejoicing about all the hot gay celebrities that are out and about. Let's start reading about these top 10 super-hot, gay celebs.
1) Cheyenne Jackson - 35 (pictured)
You might recognize the 6'4" super-hot, dark-haired and blue-eyed Cheyenne from "Glee" and "30 Rock." This gorgeous man is part Native-American and was raised in rural Washington State by an evangelical Christian family. His love of theater had him move to New York and soon he was in Broadway shows and landed several TV roles. He came out at 19; which was originally a hard thing for his conservative family to take, but now they accept him as he is. Cheyenne is taken though and has been with his partner for 10 years.
2) Zachary Quinto - 
Zach is of Irish and Italian decent that has made him prefect for the ambiguous roles he's played on "Heroes" and as Spock in the 2009 "Star Trek" film remake. Although he isn't officially out, Zach is a big gay activist and gay marriage supporter. His reasoning for not letting his sexuality out of the bag is that he doesn't want to fuel the tabloid rumor mill.
3) Adam Lambert - 
Adam is the beautiful and golden-voiced singer made famous from his 2009 "American Idol" appearance. He subsequently came out of the closet in a Rolling Stone interview that ran after he was named the runner-up on "American Idol" and was unapologetic as he strutted his sexuality on his sleeve. He got tongues wagging during his 2009 American Music Awards performance where he kissed his male keyboard player and showed other hyper-sexual acts. But Adam is one of the most successful and first openly-gay singers that "American Idol" has launched. He's also the hottest by far.
4) Neil Patrick Harris - 
A lot of gay actors stay in the closet because they think that if they come out then they won't be considered for straight roles; which are the majority of the roles out there. But Neil's sexuality hasn't prevented him from brilliantly playing straight womanizers on TV's "How I Met Your Mother" and in the "Harold & Kumar" films. Neil is probably the most-famous gay celebrity nowadays and he actually became more famous once he came out. What makes Neil hot is his ability to make fun of himself and the fact that he's a father with his longtime partner.
5) Ricky Martin - 
This super-cute Latino singer finally came out of the closet in March 2010. Rumors around Ricky's sexuality had swirled for years. But after Ricky became a new father to twin boys he was inspired by them to let the world know that he was a proud and fortunate gay man. Ricky will be taking his kids with him on his 2011 tour for his latest album "Musica + Alma + Sexo."
6) B.D. Wong - 
B.D. is probably the best-known gay male and Asian-American actor working in Hollywood. B.D. didn't come out until 2003 after the premature birth of his son via surrogate with his then partner. In the book B.D. wrote about his son's struggle for survival, B.D. subsequently also announced that he was gay. B.D. is hot because of his doggedness to stay entrenched in Hollywood as not only a racial minority but also now as an out-of-the-closet actor.
7) Bryan Batt - 
Suave gentleman Bryan is best known for his role of in-the-closet "Sal" on "Mad Men." The show is set in the 1960s so most gay men back then in the corporate world had to remain closeted in order to succeed. Bryan played the conflicted Sal brilliantly but unfortunately the character only survived through three seasons. Since his stint on the show ended, Bryan has been keeping busy at his and his partner's home design store in New Orleans. Bryan has been with his longtime partner for 22 years!
8) John Amaechi - 
This 6'10" British national is of Nigerian decent and is best known as a retired NBA star. In 2007, John was the first NBA player to come out of the closet. It's very admirable in a world of professional, macho athletes to openly admit that you are a gay man, so kudos to John for paving the way for others. Since retiring from the NBA, John has turned to sports broadcasting and political activism.
9) Tom Ford - 
Tom is simply the sexiest fashion designer and movie director there is. No wonder - before he turned to fashion design he was a model. What makes Tom hot is his absolute creative drive as well as hislongtime relationship. It doesn't hurt that Tom is always impeccably dressed in fitted suits, sometimes with a daring open collar, and is always impeccably groomed with a hint of stubble. Tom's also been with his longtime partner, fashion journalist Richard Buckley, for 24 years!
10) J.P. Calderon - 
This Latino hottie caught our eye on "Survivor: Cook Islands." J.P. is now a professional volleyball player and a model. J.P. came out in a 2007 Instinct Magazine interview.

For a 2011 New Years Edition adamfoxie* posted dozens of Gay stars and video clips. Also the ones that even though not being gay however have touched our lives. If you like you can click on
the provided link and move adamfoxie* back to the beginning of the year:



Hollywoods Most Famous with dozens of pictures and video clips





Fam. Research Council Affiliate In Iowa took $3 Million in Tax Funds

By RYAN J. FOLEY
Associated Press 



A conservative group that has brought a string of potential presidential candidates to Iowa to lecture about the need to reduce government spending owes some of its past success to generous federal grants, which it has since rejected amid charges of hypocrisy.

The Family Leader has organized multicity forums for Reps. Michele Bachmann and Ron Paul, former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty and former Sen. Rick Santorum. Each has called for reining in federal spending and talked about family values.

The same group received more than half of its funding from federal grants over a five-year period when it operated under a different structure as The Iowa Family Policy Center. The group was among those that benefited from former President George Bush's faith-based initiative, which made it easier for social and religious organizations involved in community work to win federal funding.

The organization defends taking the grants, the bulk of which helped provide marriage mentoring for couples, but decided last year to turn down the final $550,000 in grant money and operate free of government involvement. In all, the group had accepted more than $3 million in federal grants since 2004.

"We wanted to be consistent in calling for more efficient, smaller government and came to the conclusion that would best be served by not taking funding from the feds on this," said group spokesman Chris Nitzschke.Dexter: The Fifth Season

The group in November changed its name to the Family Leader under a reorganization that put former Iowa Republican gubernatorial candidate Bob Vander Plaats in charge. Its leaders played a key role in the successful campaign to oust three Iowa Supreme Court justices last year over a ruling that legalized gay marriage. The new group is now trying to flex its political muscle in the lead-up to the Iowa Caucuses in January.

Two more potential GOP nominees, former business executive Herman Cain and former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, are on the group's calendar.

"We begin our pro-family policy agenda by cutting spending, and then we cut taxes," Bachmann said at one event in April. In March, Paul told the group that society had grown too dependent on the federal government and "we're at a point now where we can no longer afford it." Pawlenty said in February that, to the extent government has to be involved in an issue, it must deliver good value for taxpayers.

Edward Failor Jr., the former president of Iowans for Tax Relief, criticized the group's credibility on tax and spending issues during last year's gubernatorial campaign because of the millions in federal aid. He praised its decision to reject the final year of the grant, saying that marriage mentoring is a service that churches and other groups can provide without government aid.

"I think they did it to be intellectually consistent and honest. Good for them for doing that," Failor said. "As soon as you start taking money out of taxpayers' pockets, you are beholden to the government in one way or another."

Records show the policy center was awarded a five-year grant worth $550,000 per year from the Health and Human Services Department in 2006 to promote healthy marriages. The money went to a program it operates called Marriage Matters, which claims to have saved hundreds of marriages through its mentoring and counseling programs.

The policy center on Sept. 30 received its last $12,600 installment from the grant, which came from $150 million Congress set aside in 2005 to promote healthy marriages and responsible fatherhood. But as criticism of the group for receiving tax funds was mounting among both liberals and conservatives, Center President Chuck Hurley notified the federal agency in August the group was relinquishing the money and would operate with private funding.

Watchdogs, including the American Civil Liberties Union of Iowa, had questioned whether federal tax dollars were being spent to further a conservative religious agenda. One liberal activist had encouraged same-sex couples to seek counseling through the group to find out whether they would be served. Some conservatives, including members of the tea party, were critical of the group's leaders for taking the federal money.

Nitzschke said the programming offered by Marriage Matters has been scaled back but some services are still being operated privately.

At the same time, he said the grant money was well spent, with more than 1,200 individuals receiving services every year. He said that none of the tax dollars went to fund anything religious or political in nature.

A 2008 audit by the Government Accountability Office faulted HHS for a lack of oversight in how the marriage and fatherhood grants that went to dozens of groups were awarded and managed.

The policy center's tax disclosure for the one-year period through Sept. 30, 2009, the most recent available, shows it received $549,443 in government grants out of revenue just over $1 million. Nitzschke said the Marriage Matters program was directed by former center vice president Mike Hartwig, who earned part of his salary through the grant even as he was a prominent opponent of gay marriage. Hartwig called the 2009 ruling that legalized the practice in Iowa sickening.

Nitzschke said the bulk of the money was spent on contracts with individuals across the state to deliver services. At first he promised to release to The Associated Press annual audits of the grant money that he said found no problems, but he later reversed course and said the group considered that information private.

Randall Wilson, legal director for the ACLU of Iowa in Des Moines, said he wanted a more detailed accounting of how the money was spent and how much went to its administration. He questioned just how much mentoring the grant helped pay for, saying his group's limited investigation of Marriage Matters found it gave out money to churches and to host some events for couples.

"The danger always is that federal taxpayer money gets diverted to advocacy causes. I think one could argue that not all taxpayers agree with Iowa Family Policy Center," Wilson said. "That, of course, is a big concern of ours. The center was instrumental in removing three Iowa justices."

In addition to the marriage grant, the policy center accepted $800,000 in 2005 to build its organizational capacity under the Compassion Capital Fund, a key part of Bush's faith-based initiative. The group received $50,000 the previous year from a related federal grant program to promote marriage.

Out Country Singer Chely Wright gets Married

http://www.accesshollywood.com/

Chely Wright and Lauren Blitzer 'An Evening With
Chely Wright is a married woman!
The country artist, who came out last year, has married her girlfriend, Lauren Blitzer, according to People.
The 40-year-old singer wed her now-wife at Lauren’s aunt’s Connecticut home in front of more than 200 guests, according to the mag.
While both brides donned white gowns for the nuptials, neither wanted to wear traditional veils.
“We like our hair too much!” Chely told the mag.
As Chely is Christian and Lauren is Jewish, the newlyweds’ ceremony was presided over by both a reverend and a rabbi.
As previously reported on AccessHollywood.com, Chely came out in 2010 after years of keeping silent.
“Historically, we’ve never had an out country music artist, ever,” Chely toldAccess Hollywood’s Shaun Robinson in a May 2010 interview.
“Early in my life, I went through what I think a lot of gay people go through, thinking that I could change and pray it away,” she explained at the time.
Chely told Shaun that she felt she was living a lie, especially when it came to her relationship with fellow country music star Brad Paisley, who was not aware that she was gay.
“When I realized he was wanting forever with me…I could see the damage I was doing to him, and I cut him off completely, cold turkey,” she added.
The country star also revealed that she even considered taking her life in 2006.
“I was looking at myself in a mirror…as I was about to do it,” she explained. “I just looked at myself and something snapped and I started to cry…and I realized I have too much to live for.”
Copyright 2011 by NBC Universal, Inc. All rights reserved.

Peterson Toscano spent 20 years and $30K trying to become straight.

Peterson Toscano spent two decades and $30,000 trying to become straight. 
    
He subjected himself to countless hours of learning to be what others described as more masculine and to be attracted to women. 
    
Toscano’s “gay rehab” quest took him across three continents. It included three exorcisms and a failed five-year marriage. 
    
In 1999, emotionally devastated, Toscano embraced his sexual orientation. 
    
“I never chose to be gay, but I chose every day for 17 years to not be gay, and that didn’t work,” said Toscano, 46, an actor and comedian who lives in Sunbury with his partner. “I really put all my heart and soul into it. This argument that it’s a choice — it’s not a choice. Even if it were a choice, it’s not a bad choice. The important thing is for someone to be authentic.” 
    
Reparative therapy or conversion therapy — the controversial process designed to change the sexual orientation of gay men and women — has garnered national attention with reports that psychotherapist Marcus Bachmann, the husband of GOP presidential hopeful Michele Bachmann, counsels gay men on becoming straight at his Christian counseling centers. 
    
Simply put, reparative therapy is based on the idea that being gay is wrong and that it can be reversed. 
    

Peterson ToscanoView full sizeAmid all the flap over Michelle Bachmann's husband's work to "cure the gay" in his clinic, Peterson Toscano, a gay man who spent the better part of 30 years in reparative therapy, now lives in Sunbury while traveling performing as a theatrical performance artist.
Every reputable medical authority, including the American Medical Association, has condemned the idea. 
    
In 1997, the American Psychological Association declared that “homosexuality is not a mental disorder and the APA opposes all portrayals of lesbian, gay and bisexual people as mentally ill and in need of treatment due to their sexual orientation.” 
    
In 1998, the American Psychiatric Association warned that “the potential risks of reparative therapy are great, including depression, anxiety and self-destructive behavior.” 
    
Toscano has become a national advocate speaking out against those risks. In 2006, he co-founded Beyond Ex-Gay, a resource for “ex-gay” survivors. 
    
Toscano said he has met more than 1,500 people who have been emotionally or psychologically devastated by these change therapies. 
    
In reparative therapy, blame is often parceled out to either an overbearing parent, a negative experience or simple misbehavior, he said. The worst of the therapies included violent exorcisms, Toscano said. 
    
“It brings a level of spiritual abuse,” he said. “It’s not just that you are sinful, but that you are potentially housing an evil spirit. For a young person to hear that — that’s a very scary thing.” 
    
One of his lowest points came after two years in the residential program for “ex-gays” run by Love in Action of Memphis, Tenn., which Toscano said drained him of joy and humanity. 
    
“When it didn’t work, I was told that it was my fault. That I didn’t try hard enough, didn’t want it enough,” he said. “It was constantly undermining my sense of self and the way that the world works. They try to unsettle you so you don’t trust your own ideas, your own opinions.” 
    
Toscano compared the change therapies to an abusive relationship. 
    
“It’s very controlling. It’s crazy,” he said. “It takes a huge amount of courage when someone can say, ‘Tough. I don’t care if I’m going to hell in a handbasket. This is driving me crazy. It’s destroying my life and I have to just stand up for what I think is right.’ ”

THE DANGERS OF COUNSELING

For all the voices warning about reparative therapy, there are those nationally and in central Pennsylvania who believe it can work for those who want it to work. 
    
Gene ChaseView full sizeGene Chase runs Free!, a Christian faith-based ministry that counsels men and teen boys with same-sex attractions and inclinations on becoming straight. Chase says it works. He is proof. He used to be gay; now has been married 37 years. JOHN C. WHITEHEAD/The Patriot-News
Gene Chase and his wife run Free!, a Christian counseling program out of the West Shore Evangelical Free Church now in its 25th year. Chase said his Monday night support group has helped countless people — mostly men — put aside same-sex desires and lead heterosexual lives. 
    
“Homosexual behavior is wrong,” said Chase, citing the Roman Catholic Church, which makes a distinction between homosexual behavior and orientation. The church labels the former a sin, the latter an intrinsic disorder. 
    
“The Catholic Church has traditionally taught the orientation is a disorder but not itself sinful,” Chase said. 
    
His program is an offshoot of Exodus International, a national group that advocates “freedom from homosexuality through the power of Jesus Christ.” 
    
Chase said his ministry is based on self-determination and addresses what the ministry believes causes same-sex inclinations, including childhood problems and sexual trauma. Free! suggests alternative methods to cope with same-sex desires and provides behavioral intervention. 
    
“We don’t actually ask people to wear rubber bands on their wrists and snap them,” Chase said. “A lot of people who diss us from the moral liberal side accuse us of still doing things that were done by secular psychologists who believed homosexuality was wrong and who used aversion psychology. That has never been done in a Christian context.” 
    
Chase said he brings a certain legitimacy to the program, having been gay in his youth but turning to his faith to become straight. 
    
“Sometimes following Jesus requires self-denial,” said Chase, who has been married 37 years. “Self-denial in the Christian sense. The ‘deny yourself, take up your cross, follow Jesus.’ It’s not the same thing as being in denial.” 
    
Arvel Beckstead, a psychologist who has researched reparative therapy and same-sex orientation in conservative religious communities, said he is opposed to reparative therapy but understands why people seek it out. 
    
Often, these programs make promises and provide theories that make sense to the conflicted individual, he said. They might validate and support the client’s wishes and help them talk openly about what is troubling them. 
    
But Beckstead emphasized the dangers of counseling that reinforces a negative sense of self and promises sexual orientation can be changed. Beckstead said no medically substantiated research supports the idea. 
    
A member of the American Psychological Association who works out of Salt Lake City, Beckstead said the mental health community must counter social repression and stigma while understanding a gay person’s desire to work within his or her framework of faith and family. 
    
“It’s a form of empowerment,” he said. “Leading them to feel authenticity wherever they are, helping them develop self-acceptance and identity.”

‘THE GREATEST JOYS’

The furor fueled by Marcus Bachmann over reparative therapy comes at a time when support for gay rights stands at a historic high. A May Gallup poll found that 64 percent of Americans think gay relationships should be legally protected — the highest since it first asked the question more than 30 years ago. 
    
Gallup also found that a majority of Americans — 53 percent — now believe same-sex marriage should be legal. When adults ages 18 to 34 were asked about gay marriage, support jumped to 70 percent. 
    
Six states have now legalized same-sex marriage: New York, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Iowa, New Hampshire and Vermont, plus Washington, D.C. 
    
New Jersey and Maryland recognize gay marriages performed in other states. Those states and Delaware also have civil unions. 
    
The Rev. Lori E. Rivera is senior pastor at the Metropolitan Community Church of the Spirit in Harrisburg, a Christian congregation that ministers to gay and transgendered people. She said groups opposed to gay rights have taken same-sex references in the Bible out of context to meet their political agenda, much like others have in the past. 
    
“Look how long it took the Southern Baptists to apologize for their role in slavery,” said Rivera, citing scriptural references to slaves and masters that the denomination used to support slavery. 
    
Exodus International Executive Vice President Jeff Buchanan said the group considers the overall tone of the Bible. 
    
“We believe God has defined sexual expression for us in the context of one man, one woman, and marriage is an expression of that,” Buchanan said. “Anything other than that is outside of what God has defined.” 
    
The 36-year-old ministry receives 400,000 calls each year from people seeking counseling, he said. The group lists 250 member ministry churches. 
    
Chase said a third of the people who go through Free! find no help. Another third report having no sexual orientation change. Another third, he said, are “eternally grateful” for the change they’ve found. 
    
But change isn’t absolute. Chase said he is still subject to same-sex attractions. 
    
“It’s perfectly appropriate for me to say I feel as though I would like to have sex with a man. I’m not in denial about that, and I don’t call it a suppression,” Chase said. “I choose not to give vent to that feeling, and I find great joy in that. Far from being a depressive thing, it has given me the greatest joys of my life.” 
    
Those joys include his wife, three children and four grandchildren. 
    
“A whole life I would not have experienced had I chosen to experience those other things that might’ve been pleasure but which the Bible teaches were for a short time,” Chase said. 
    
Chase said he declines to help people he deems unstable or young people coerced into joining the group.

‘DANGEROUS BUSINESS’

Toscano doesn’t dispute that a few, like Chase, may willingly reject their sexual orientation through reparative therapy. But he says they are overshadowed by the many who are deeply traumatized in the process. 
    
“I see all their failures,” Toscano said. “If you care about people, you will not do this. This is dangerous business. It’s really bad stuff. It ruins lives.” 
    
Toscano said most young people enter conversion counseling on their own, motivated largely by a desire to avoid the discrimination that can come with being gay. 
    
“There are lots of incentives and there are lot of rewards for being heterosexual,” Toscano said. “Growing up, I knew that as a straight person if I got married I’d have a huge wedding, huge celebration and the relationship would be fully affirmed. But as a gay man today, if I announced I want to get married, I have to wonder what relatives won’t show up.” 
    
The Very Rev. Churchill Pinder, dean of St. Stephen’s Episcopal Cathedral in Harrisburg, rejects the premise of reparative therapy. For Pinder, the quality of the relationship is what should matter to committed Christians. 
    
“When I’m dealing with the modern, lifelong, monogomous and committed sexual relationship between two people — whether they are heterosexual or homosexual — I’ve found they really do have a perspective of faith, of self-giving love and forgiveness and grace,” he said. “Then I really do need to be open to the possibility that it’s very much in sync with Christian values.” 
    
For Peterson Toscano, the real problem with reparative therapy is not one of theology but of simple health and safety. 
    
“I’m not trying to convince people that being gay is right or wrong,” Toscano said. “I just want to make sure you don’t hurt young people in your care.”


IVEY DEJESUS, The Patriot-News 

Comments by Strgt Sprts Writer on anti gay & now pro? Tim Hardaway


I don't often agree with Yahoo! Sports' Kelly Dwyer, but in regard to his latest entry on the Ball Don't Lie blog 

about former Golden State Warriors and Miami Heat guard Tim Hardaway, I have to say he and I are of one mind.
Before I begin to get into what I agree with him about, let me start this piece out with one statement. I'm a heterosexual male.

It's a shame that in our society it's even necessary to make that distinction, but the fact is some very intolerant people are likely to read this article and leave with the impression I'm a homosexual trying to "push their agenda."
In fact, even with my statement above, I'm sure many will still believe that.
However, I'm not trying to push any agenda other than the one for equality and justice. I'm not trying to champion anything other than the self-evident truths that all men (and women), as the United States Declaration of Independence states, "are created equal," and are "endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights," and "that among these are Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness."
Growing up in America those truths were instilled in me as I went to school. I learned of them, along with the rest of the history of this great nation of ours, including the forming of the Constitution of the United States, the actions of our Founding Fathers, and the sacrifices so many have made over the centuries to assure us all of our freedoms.
It's what made me proud to be an American, knowing the ideals that stand as the bedrock principles of my country are some of the greatest in the history of the world. These are ideals that surpass and are untroubled by momentary fashion and caprice; for they are solid, not ephemeral.
They aren't even America's alone. They're ideals for all mankind, and are what we as a nation have been tasked to try and spread across the globe. They're the ideals that stand up in the face of bigotry and hatred and say, "No, this should not be."
They're the ideals that stand up in the face of greed and avarice, and say, "No, we will not allow it."
They're the ideals that stand up in the face of injustice and intolerance and say, "No, we will be heard."
They're the ideals of George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, and all the rest of the great men and women who helped forge this country. They're the ideals of the many men and women since who've carried on that tradition of freedom, such as Rosa Parks and Martin Luther King Jr.
And apparently they're now the ideals of Tim Hardaway.
As a fan of the Miami Heat, there've been few days I was more disappointed in a man I'd loved to watch play for my team than the day Hardaway went on WAXY-AM radio and proudly declared himself a homophobe who "hates gays."
The interview with Miami Herald columnist Dan Le Batard came on the heels of former NBA center John Amaechi announcing he was gay, and understandably Le Batard asked Hardaway how he would deal with a gay teammate.
Now, knowing what I know about the sports world, and the very macho, homophobic attitude of many players, I certainly wasn't expecting Timmy to respond with something akin to saying he would run up and hug the guy at the news, but I also wasn't expecting the level of vitriol and hatred that began pouring out in his words over the course of the rest of the interview.
Like Heat president Pat Riley, I was a bit "shocked by some of the words that he used" and felt he'd lost a great deal of my respect in the exchange.
His rant didn't go unnoticed, either.
When NBA Commissioner David Stern learned Hardaway said stuff like, "You know, I hate gay people, so let it be known. I don't like gay people and I don't like to be around gay people. I am homophobic. I don't like it. It shouldn't be in the world or in the United States." he immediately banned the 6-0, 175 lbs. former member of the Texas-El Paso Miners known for his crossover dribble from taking part in the NBA All-Star Weekend events he'd been scheduled to be a part of.
The fallout from the hateful diatribe didn't end there, and Hardaway heard quite a bit of criticism from many around him about his hateful words; including friends, family members, and many around the NBA.
However, unlike many who hear such criticisms over their bigoted views, Hardaway seems to have worked hard to take heed of those criticisms, and is now championing the rights of gays.
Talk about a crossover.
For instance, as Marty Schladen of the El Paso Times details in his latest article—while attending a golf outing in the city—Hardaway is currently working hard to oppose recall efforts against El Paso Mayor John Cook and city Reps. Susie Byrd and Steve Ortega for their role in trying to restore health benefits to unmarried partners of gay city employees; rights stripped from them by a ballot initiative this past November.
"I opened my eyes and went to counseling," Hardaway said recently to describe his transformation.
We can only hope the fine folks in El Paso, as well as everyone else in the world open theirs as well, for ignorance, bigotry, and hatred have no place in a civilized society or on the hardwood.
I'm proud of Hardaway, and feel he's taken a remarkable journey to find himself "on the side of the angels" as my grandmother would say, and I can only hope all those who share his initial views on the subject are one day able to enlighten themselves.
For one thing, unburdening yourself of such bigotry and hatred only makes your own life better, and shouldn't that be what everyone's out to do? I know I am.
Now, if I could only find $12,500 laying around somewhere so I could fly out and take part in the First AnnualDwyane Wade(notes) Fantasy Camp.
Game On!
More from Yahoo! Contributor Network

All stats and information taken from personal notes and verified at Basketball-Reference.com, and Yahoo! Sports.
Read more by Daniel Barber aka Hotnuke at TFS Sports.
*Daniel Barber has been a fan of all Miami teams since he was a child or since their inception having been born right above Miami.
Source:
Basketball-Reference.com


Latest comments by Hardaway:

'I've got to make sure people know I don't hate gay people,' ex-star says

Former NBA star Tim Hardaway says he wants a "second chance" to revamp his reputation after his hate-filled remarks about gay ex-player John Amaechi, the Miami Herald reported.
"People have been trying to kick me when I'm down," he told The Miami Herald. The reaction was "very, very shocking. People saying my wife left me -- that's not true. My family is OK and my finances are OK.
"... I'm looking for a second chance and trying to clean up my image. I haven't been in trouble with drugs or guns. I'm an upstanding citizen. Like I told my children, life is not easy. This is a big bump I have to overcome. I'm going to deal with it like a champ. I've got to make sure people know I don't hate gay people."

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