William seeds gay sex
Prince William: 'I'd support my child if they were gay'
Prince William has said he would "fully support" his children if they were gay, but admitted he would "worry" about the added pressures they would face.
It was something he had idea about since becoming a parent, he said.
"I want we lived in a world where it's really normal and cool, but particularly for my family, and the position that we are in, that's the bit I am nervous about," he said.
The duke was speaking to young people at a LGBT youth philanthropy in London.
The Albert Kennedy Trust (AKT) supports LGBT young people who are at risk of homelessness.
'Barriers'
The duke said he backed "whatever decisions" his children made, but added: "It does worry me from a parent point of view.
"How many barriers you know, hateful words, persecution, all that and discrimination that might come, that's the bit that really troubles me.
"But that's for all of us to try and support correct and make sure we can put that to the past and not come back to that sort of stuff."
Analysis
By Ben Hu Browse honourees by last name, letters M through O. Search for a name using 'Ctrl+F' to jump to a specific recipient. Bios reflect achievements at time of appointment. An asterisk (*) indicates that the recipient is deceased. Anne Macdonald contributed to a spacious range of community endeavours. Her career of general service epitomized the key role of the society volunteer and the difference a dedicated and determined individual can make. Mrs. Macdonald's accomplishments include the establishment of Presentation House Arts Centre in North Vancouver, one of the finest community arts centres in the Province. She was also responsible for the preservation of St. John's Church and giving it new life as a recital hall appropriately called Anne Macdonald Hall. Anne Macdonald was an innovator. She founded the North Vancouver Arts Council and the British Columbia Arts and Crafts Fair. As the first Executive Director of the Vancouver Community Arts Council she took a direction role in a number of significant initiatives including the establishment of the Assembly of British Columb In June 2017, TNI’s Lou Cornum brought together three writers to discuss what’s really going on in queer lamentations of a top shortage. The conversation has been edited for length. • • • LOU CORNUM. Is there actually a top shortage? If there isn’t a superior shortage, why do queers talk about it? KAY GABRIEL. I think on the one hand "top shortage" doesn't actually name a numerical situation so much as a general disidentification from "top" as an avowed sexual position; and that this tendency derives from a highly overdetermined disavowal of desire. Organism (or avowing oneself to be) a bottom allows one to assume an apparent passivity with respect to one's desires, at least according to the ideologeme whereby bottoming means "taking" and topping means "giving." I should clarify here that I'm using top and bottom in their robust sense of sexual roles, rather than the (I think equally illustrative and somewhat clearer, if also clearly curtailed) sense of who's the insertive and who's the receptive partner, who's fucking whom. BILLY-RAY BELCOURT. However tenuous its relation to statistical truth, a "top shortage" does take up gay attention. This bubbles up everywhere: a loc Polling also indicates that many people do not consider conversion therapy is effective; only 8% of respondents to a 2014 national poll said they mind conversion therapy could adjust a person’s sexual orientation from gay to straight. Current Laws Conversion Therapy by Licensed Health Care Professionals As of June 2019, 18 states and the District of Columbia had passed statutes limiting the use of conversion therapy: California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, D.C., Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Nevada, New Hampshire, Recent Jersey, New Mexico, Fresh York, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Washington. The laws protect youth under age 18 from receiving conversion therapy from licensed mental health care providers. California was the first state to pass a conversion therapy ban in 2012. Four states—Colorado, Maine, Massachusetts, and New York—passed bans in 2019. In addition, a number of cities and counties in states without statewide bans have passed bans at the local level. All of the state statutory bans allow licensing entities to discipline health care providers who use conversion therapy on youth under age 18. Under Con .Members of the Order of British Columbia: M–O
M
Anne E. Macdonald *
Conversion Therapy and LGBT Youth