Search

  • Home
    • Login
    • Register
  • News
    • Atlanta
    • Georgia
    • National
    • World
  • A&E
    • Books
    • Film
    • Food & Drink
    • Music
    • Nightlife
    • Theater
    • TV
  • Community
    • Features
    • Organizations
    • Sports
    • Pride
  • Opinion
    • Cartoon
    • Columnists
    • Editorial
    • Your Voice
    • Domestically Disturbed
    • That's What She Said
  • Blogs
    • Career & Finance
    • City
    • Culture
    • Faith
    • Health
    • Politics
    • Travel
    • TV
  • Print Edition
    • Distribution
  • Calendar
    • Best Bets
    • Weekly Events
  • About
    • Contact Us
    • Advertise in GA Voice
      • Destination: Gay Atlanta
      • Atlanta Gay Weddings
    • Staff Bios
    • RSS
    • Work for Us
    • Awards and Honors
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Service
  • Business Listings
    • Advertise Your Business
  • Best of ATL

Advertisement

Most Read Articles

>> Gay-owned bar in East Atlanta cited for serving booze after hours
>> Cheerios vs. haters — with a lesbian twist
>> Southern Baptists approve resolution against accepting gay Boy Scouts
>> Atlanta Silverbacks announce support for gay sports org, plan first LGBT fan night
>> Gay Duluth police officer alleging discrimination rejects city's $21,000 settlement offer

Advertisement

LGBT Blogroll

  • BRAZIL: Evangelicals Force Approval Of Bill Legalizing "Gay Cure" Therapy
    Joe. My. God. | 19 Jun 2013 | 6:45 am
  • HIV Awareness Billboard Accused Of Presenting Gay Black Men As “Acceptable”
    Queerty | 19 Jun 2013 | 6:24 am
  • Tucson becomes second Arizona city to allow same-sex civil unions
    LGBTQ Nation | 19 Jun 2013 | 2:00 am
  • Prince at TEDx: Mind the Gap
    The Bilerico Project | 18 Jun 2013 | 3:00 pm
  • Melissa Etheridge, Eric Holder, Tammy Baldwin Headline DOJ Gay Pride Event
    On Top Magazine Headlines | 18 Jun 2013 | 11:31 am

Advertisement

Latest Photos

2013 East Point Possums Performers_22
  • 2013 East Point Possums performers
2013 East Point Possums Crowd_4
  • 2013 East Point Possums crowd
BigPeach2013_36
  • 2013 Big Peach Softball Tournament
2013 IDAHO_13
  • 2013 International Day Against Homophobia
Click here for all our galleries...

Latest Video

You need Flash player 6+ and JavaScript enabled to view this video.

Playlist: 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4

Click here for all our videos...
Clay Aiken to Congress: Stop anti-gay bullying
by Lou Chibbaro Jr.   
November 24, 2010 00:00
Tweet

American Idol alum Clay Aiken calls on Congress to address anti-gay bullying

“American Idol” singer Clay Aiken and two mothers whose sons committed suicide because of anti-gay bullying at their schools appeared at a Capitol Hill briefing Nov. 18 to urge Congress to pass two bills that would require schools to address bullying and harassment targeting LGBT students.

The Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network organized the briefing as a means of drawing public attention to the two pending bills, the Safe Schools Improvement Act and the Student Non-Discrimination Act.

“Like many kids now in middle schools and high schools, I was bullied,” said Aiken, who came out as gay in 2008 after winning the runner up title of best singer on the widely viewed television show “American Idol.”

“I was picked on, I was called gay, I was called fag, I was called sissy, you name it,” he said. “Fortunately, I was able to overcome it and live through it because of a number of friends who were supportive of me.”

Aiken and Louis Van Amstel, host of the television show “Dancing with the Stars,” joined parents Sirdeaner Walker of Massachusetts and Tammy Aaberg of Minnesota in making an impassioned plea for lawmakers to pass the two bills. Sirdeaner and Aaberg’s sons took their own lives earlier this year due to anti-gay bullying.

“Over the past few months I have heard so many stories about other youth who were suffering,” said Walker, who lost her 11-year-old son Carl Joseph Walker, who hanged himself in his bedroom with an electrical cord.

“Too many of our children are being tormented in schools – and not enough of our adults are doing the right thing and teaching respect for all. Enough is enough,” she said.

Sen. Bob Casey (D-Pa.) and Rep. Linda Sanchez (D-Calif.), who introduced the Safe Schools Improvement Act, and Sen. Al Franken (D-Minn.) and Rep. Jared Polis (D-Colo.), who introduced the Student Non-Discrimination Act, also spoke at the briefing, calling on their colleagues to support the legislation.

“No student should have to dread going to school because they fear being bullied,” Franken told those gathered for the event, held in a committee hearing room at the Rayburn House Office Building. “We must address bullying and harassment in schools in the next Congress.”

Polis, who is gay, said school bullying affects students living in both Republican and Democratic leaning states, saying he would work with his colleagues on both sides of the political isle to push for passage of the legislation.

Franken and Casey cited recent cases of suicides due to anti-gay bullying in their home states. Casey introduced to the briefing Joey Kemmerling, a high school student in Bucks County, Pa., near Philadelphia, who helped form an anti-bullying group as well a Gay-Straight Alliance organization at his school.

“I came out in eighth grade and ever since then I have been bullied every day,” Kemmerling told the briefing. “There’s not been a day that has gone by where I have not heard the word faggot, queer or fairy or told that I was not human.”

GLSEN Executive Director Eliza Byard said she was hopeful that Congress would act on the two bills next year despite reports by Capitol Hill observers that the new Republican controlled House of Representatives would block all LGBT-supportive legislation.

“They currently have bipartisan support in this Congress,” Byard said. “And I think just as children’s safety, it’s not a gay or straight issue, it is not a Republican or Democratic issue.”

The Safe Schools Improvement Act requires schools receiving federal funds to develop policies to prohibit bullying based on race, sex, national origin, religion, sexual orientation and gender identity and expression. It has 130 co-sponsors in the House and 15 cosponsors in the Senate.

The Student Non-Discrimination Act calls for providing protections to students who are targeted for bullying, harassment and discrimination based on their “actual or perceived” sexual orientation or gender identity. It currently has 127 cosponsors in the House and 30 cosponsors in the Senate.

Franken said he has proposed that the Student Non-Discrimination Act be incorporated as an amendment to legislation reauthorizing the longstanding and highly popular Elementary and Secondary Education Act, which Congress is scheduled to vote on next year.

 

Top photo: Singer Clay Aiken, who gained fame on ‘American Idol’ and came out as gay after becoming a father, recounted being called anti-gay slurs as a child and urged Congress to pass a law to stop harassment of LGBT students. (Publicity photo)

Clay Aiken to Congress: Stop anti-gay bullying
Tweet
Share
Website Design Brisbane



Stay Connected:

Follow us on Facebook, Twitter or Google+ for all of the latest news, events and discussion.

Or sign-up for our weekly email newsletter by entering your email address below.

email:

Joomla Templates and Joomla Extensions by ZooTemplate.Com
 

Add comment


Security code
Refresh

Send
Cancel

Weather

Atlanta, GA, US

Now
28.png
Mostly Cloudy
69°F, Windchill: 69°F
Wind: 7 mph NW
Humidity: 90%
Visibility: 0 mi
pressure: 29.97 in rising
Sunrise: 6:25 am
Sunset: 8:49 pm
Wed
30.png
AM Clouds/PM Sun
Hi: 85°F, Low: 67°F
Thu
34.png
Mostly Sunny
Hi: 88°F, Low: 67°F
Fri
30.png
Partly Cloudy
Hi: 84°F, Low: 66°F
Sat
30.png
Partly Cloudy
Hi: 84°F, Low: 68°F
Sun
37d.png
Isolated Thunderstorms
Hi: 81°F, Low: 70°F

Latest Tweets

  • Loading...
follow us on Twitter

Login



  • Forgot your password?
  • Forgot your username?
  • Create an account
The GA Voice | LGBT News © 2013 All rights reserved.