What the World Needs Now is Love…


Uganda‘s president has signed a controversial law allowing those convicted of homosexuality to be imprisoned for life, defying international disapproval from western donor nations.

At a public ceremony in a packed room at the State House in Entebbe,Yoweri Museveni formally initialled the anti-homosexuality act, which also outlaws the promotion of homosexuality and requires citizens to denounce to the police anyone suspected of being gay. “No study has shown you can be homosexual by nature. That’s why I have agreed to sign the bill,” Museveni said in a speech at the presidential palace near the capital, Kampala.

“Outsiders cannot dictate to us. This is our country. I advise friends from the west not to make this an issue, because if they make it an issue the more they will lose. If the west does not want to work with us because of homosexuals, then we have enough space to ourselves here.”

Supporters clapped during the press conference. One MP sitting at a white table in the front row, said: “I hope the Obamas are receiving it live, Desmond Tutu, Cameron … [Museveni] has resisted them.” The ethics and integrity minister, Simon Lokodo, said: “I feel very fulfilled, very elated, because at last my head of state has pronounced it on behalf of the entire nation, Uganda, that this is a bill that was worth putting in place.”

David Bahati, the MP who introduced the bill, added: “This is a victory for the family of Uganda, a victory for the future of our children…”

The US announced on Monday night that it would begin an internal review of its relationship with Uganda’s government, including assistance programmes. Barack Obama had warned Museveni that ties between Kampala and Washington would be damaged if the bill was passed.

The British foreign secretary, William Hague, said: “I am deeply saddened and disappointed that the anti-homosexuality bill in Uganda has been signed into law. The UK strongly opposes all discrimination on any grounds. “We question the [law’s] compatibility with Uganda’s constitution and international treaty obligations. There can be no doubt that [it] will increase persecution and discrimination of Ugandans, as well as damage Uganda’s reputation internationally.We ask the government of Uganda to protect all its citizens and encourage tolerance, equality and respect.”

Museveni, a key African ally of the US and the EU, had already come under fire from western donors for alleged corruption and had been under increasing pressure to block the legislation.

The anti-homosexuality bill passed through parliament in December after its architects agreed to drop a death penalty clause. The legislation requires those found guilty of repeat homosexuality to be jailed for life.

The South African Nobel peace laureate Desmond Tutu said at the weekend that the law recalled attempts by the Nazi and apartheid regimes to “legislate against love”. Amnesty International called the bill a “horrific expansion of state-sanctioned homophobia”.

Homophobia, supported by many US-funded evangelical Christians, has become more virulent in many parts of sub-Saharan Africa. In 2011, a prominent Ugandan gay rights campaigner, David Kato, was bludgeoned to death at his home after a newspaper splashed photos, names and addresses of gay people in Uganda on its front page along with a yellow banner reading “Hang Them”.

This month Museveni, a devout evangelical Christian, also signed into law dress code legislation that outlaws “provocative” clothing, bans scantily-clad performers from appearing on Ugandan television and closely monitors what individuals view on the internet.

A coalition of UK gay rights groups and charities has written to the Foreign Office calling on Britain to withdraw its high commissioner in Kampala.

Jonathan Cooper, chief executive of the Human Dignity Trust and one of those who signed the letter, said: “[This] law promises to tyrannise the lives of the Ugandan lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender communities. This is a huge blow for anyone who values basic human rights. This bleak situation will have an immediate effect on countries like the UK, the rest of the EU, Canada and US, as people flee and seek sanctuary.”

The U.S. Ambassador to Uganda has in an interview with the BBC expressed a passionate condemnation of Uganda’s Anti-Homosexuality law.

Hear his interview below, where US ambassador to Uganda, Scott DeLisi, tells #BBCNewsday Uganda should repeal its new anti-gay law and notes  for the record, the United States will bar all haters from receiving visas to the United States, noting that those who promulgate hate and incite violence are not wanted in the United States.

He also speaks gravely of the Red Pepper article which suggests the lynching of LGBT people in Uganda through their names and pictures being outed in the widely read Tabloid. Read more http://oblogdeeoblogda.me/2014/02/25/ugandan-red-pepper-editors-and-staff-wanted-as-official-persecutors-of-gays/  

He also talks about U.S. AID and the now complex situation the Uganda American partnership finds itself in. This interview illustrates how insidious this legislation is and how it has complicated the partnership between Uganda and the USA.  Hon. DeLisi notes that the U.S. needs to understand the law and the way the Uganda will act on the law.

$720 million per year is at stake for Uganda.  He said that when he hears a Government say we don’t need “your AID” and “it is not of value to us,”  then the Ambassador noted, “I ask you to go ask the children we are saving if it matters to them and their families?”

–From the Guardian online site

Let us remain logical and rational

Let us remain logical and rational

I am a spiritual person, as most of you probably realize. There are many types of love in this world. We all love many people in many different ways. Love is nothing to fear. It is not a reason to hurt or treat human beings badly. Homosexuality is not learned. Straight parents give birth to homosexual children. Homosexual women give birth to straight kids. So I do not understand conservatives thinking it is worse to love someone of the same sex, than to be a pedophile, rapist or molester; those acts contain no love, and are formed in evil, rage, pain and hatred.  Loving someone of the same sex is still loving.

Who do you love

Who do you love?

Each of us has a soul. This is the foundation for my thinking. I have studied all the major religions and I have never seen a word about any human being having a gender specific soul. They don’t come in pink ruffles or blue sailor suits. Souls just love. Souls love other souls. There is no gender to a soul. The only part of us that is gender specific is our bodies. Souls aren’t part of our bodies, they are the part of us that Divinity resides in. The Soul is the part of us that can recognize a miracle. It is the part of us that goes back to the Beloved at the end of our lives on this plane of existence. It returns with the memories and the love we have found here.

The last point I want to make, is that there have been homosexuals since the beginning of time. Why? They were born that way. They have lived in every culture and time in human existence. They have been within every religion, every school of thought. Sometimes they have been accepted and sometimes they have been hated. If people in all the countries of the world would take the anger and hatred and violence they keep spewing out at the world and use it for good, the good they say they believe in, this world would lack the horrific problems that we face each day of our lives.

May the love of god/goddess fill all of us and may it heal the destructiveness that humans have brought into the world.

Make you life as full of love as possible, and share it with others.

Make you life as full of love as possible, and share it with others.

BJWordPressDivider

Celebrating Black History Month: The Black History Moment Series #1. Slavery.


Please read this

The SMILE


Very good poem

ashadeofpen's avatarA Shade Of Pen

Today, I am on a mad writing spree 😛 😛 I promise this will be the last post I put today.. I generally don’t post more than two a day because I love my blog baby and I know too much of me can be harmful for the little baby..

Somedays are good

Somedays are better

And then there are days

That make you wonder

Are you just lucky?

Why are you so happy?

Why do I smile

When I do not even know 

What makes the lips curve

And what twinkles the eye

beauty

But as I question

All the time

I finally realize

I AM MY SMILE

I don’t want to

Bring you the smiles

Because

All I want

IS TO BE YOUR SMILE

P.S. the next poem, which won’t be today, I swear is going to be S.P.E.C.I.A.L. for me.. lol.

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Hold her newt she’s a rear in


shechaimspeaks's avatarShechaim's News of the Day

A question was asked in the newspaper

Q. I recently read a mention in a magazine that Native American trade beads and ornaments, called wampum, were made from sea shells. Did Native Americans in our area make and use wampum?

News Editor Si Cantwell answered

A. Yes. It appears the Narragansett, a Native American Algonquin tribe, were the primary makers of wampum – highly polished pieces of shell made from quahog clams and whelks.

As my grandfather liked to say.

Hold her newt she’s a rear in

In other words hold on let’s check our facts before we start to write?

For far too many years our people have just grinned in disgust and walked away and look where that got us?

Stories like the following are another reason why non natives have no right to be writing about our people!

Even before the Narraganset tribe came down to take the…

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Reach for the Stars (reblogged from 2012)


reachforthe-stars

Stars came into my notice when I was a child. I think it is the same for many of us. I can shut my eyes and see myself in my childhood bedroom; sitting in front of my windows and looking out at the stars and the moon. I remember wishing on stars but not what I wished for. I can remember being at the beach listening to the roar of the ocean and loving how the stars lit up the sky. I also remember camping on mountain tops and feeling so close I could just reach up and pick one all for myself.

There does seem to be a deep cosmic connection between humans and the stars. They have fascinated us for millennia. Many of us do believe in star magic and Hollywood worked to keep the mystic tie to romance and love. We have stargazers and star shine.

Reaching for the stars helped Galileo to invent the telescope and determine that the sun did not rotate around us, but that Mother Earth rotated around the sun. In America, reaching for the stars has come to mean to reach for your full potential, to stretch yourself and accomplish the impossible. It stands for the ultimate effort, the ultimate goal. For many of us who are artists, it symbolizes reaching within and pulling out that masterpiece you never thought you were capable of. For those of us on a spiritual path, stars remind us of just who we are and what we are made from: Star dust. Star dust is what every sentient being is made of and that gives us a connection to each other. The human race, despite different skin colors, cultures, religions, passions have one huge thing in common. We are made of star dust. We are connected to all that exists in the Universe. It is all star dust and we can reach for the stars and we are stretching out our arms to touch God. I am stardust and within my soul is the Divinity of the Universe.

Poetry: I am calling for you


Exceptional! Patty you have a special blog here. Hugs, Barbara

Just Patty's avatarpetitemagique

I am calling for you

I am calling for you

I love you with an immortal love

Buried deep inside my darkened heart

Resonating through my soul until the end of days

Certain that nothing can ever drive us apart

 

I protect you with a undefeatable force

Giving everything without hesitation

Careless for any unknown consequences

Defending you with an infinite devotion

 

I am here for you with undying patience

Making you my everlasting priority

No matter the circumstances, I will be there

Because I thought you would do the same for me

 

I stand by you with unfaltering trust

Believing in you was an unquestionable choice

You promised to be there and now I’m calling for you

But all I hear are the echoes of my own broken voice…

– Just Patty –

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WHALES, DOLPHINS & MANATEES, ABACO: BMMRO NEWS


Good news for all mammals! I was in Bahamas last year. I swam with a dolphin and kissed her nose. It was a spiritual experience.

Rolling Harbour's avatarROLLING HARBOUR ABACO

blue1

WHALES, DOLPHINS & MANATEES, ABACO: BMMRO NEWS

BMMRO COLLABORATES WITH NEW PARTNER, ATLANTIS BLUE PROJECT

The ATLANTIS BLUE PROJECT is managed by the Atlantis Blue Project Foundation, a private non-profit organization dedicated to the preservation and enhancement of global marine ecosystems through scientific research, education, and community outreach. BMMRO is excited to now be a part of this project and in turn has received two grants from the Atlantis Blue Project for 2014 

blue2

Stranding Response to Support Conservation of Marine Mammals in the Bahamas 

Increasing capacity and available funds to respond rapidly to strandings in The Bahamas will increase our ability to determine cause of death and/or successful rehabilitation of marine mammals. At the first stranding workshop held in the Bahamas in 2008, the Honourable Lawrence Cartwright, Minister of Agriculture and Marine Resources officially opened the workshop stating “I believe the establishment of a Marine Mammal Stranding Network in…

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Islamist group named ‘Western Education is Forbidden’ slaughters 43 boys in Nigerian school


Please pray for these little boys and their grieving families. May this group be punished.