
Thanks be to Bearman Cartoons (who has a great piece linked on the fetish art of Superman co-creator Jo Shuster, which is what caught my eye on my blogroll today.)
Doh -- Wolfie already posted this. LOL!
Cincinnati's most prolific LGBT-focused blog


In the next year, Mullen might have to ask troops to do something many will find even more uncomfortable: welcome openly gay men and women into their ranks. Such was the promise made by President-elect Obama in the 2008 campaign—gay-rights groups will hold him to it. To many civilians, the shift might seem natural. American attitudes toward homosexuality have evolved since 1993, the year Congress mandated that gays could serve so long as they hid their sexual orientation. The law, known as Don't Ask, Don't Tell, predates "Will & Grace," and for most Americans, even the Internet. A 2008 Washington Post–ABC News poll put public support for gays serving openly at 75 percent.It's additionally amusing, seeing as how the military is also lightening the physical requirements to join the military.
But the military has its own culture, more insular and more conservative than the broader population's. In a survey of active-duty service members released last week, 58 percent said they oppose any change in the military's policy toward gays. Up to 23 percent of troops might not re-enlist if the law is repealed, according to a Military Times poll. Mullen will have to act as kind of cultural mediator between his new boss and the old institution he has managed for more than a year. That will mean advising Obama on what changes the military can (and cannot) withstand and then obliging troops to accept them.
...While his predecessor, Marine Gen. Peter Pace, let out more than once his opinion that homosexuality is immoral, Mullen won't discuss his personal views. Democratic Congresswoman Ellen Tauscher has held long talks on gays and the military with Mullen and other members of the joint staff. She says they understand how times have changed. "They don't want to find themselves crosswise with the new commander in chief."
Democrats
Laketa Cole (inc.)
Jeff Berding (inc.)
Greg Harris (inc.)
Cecil Thomas (inc.)
Wendell Young
Laure Quinlivan
Nicholas Hollan
Tony Fischer
Bernadette Watson
Republicans
Chris Monzel (inc.)
Leslie Ghiz (inc.)
Amy Murray
Charlie Winburn
George Zamary
Charterites
Chris Bortz (inc.)
Roxanne Qualls (inc.)
Kevin Flynn