Pelosi Should Speak Up for Gay KidsThe photograph of newly elected House Speaker Nancy Pelosi was political gold: Surrounded by a sea of lawmakers' shiny-faced girls and boys, a few of them her own grandkids, the first woman to lead "the people's House" waved the gavel, signaling a new era, particularly for America's youngest citizens. Odds are that at least one of those 19 children, who looked to average about 8 years old, will start becoming aware of being gay by age 10. If Pelosi's picture-perfect snapshot is to mean something beyond just being a politically useful prop, she should direct the new Congress to take its first serious look at what it's like to grow up gay in America. That picture isn't quite so pretty. And those of us who're gay adults have the psychic scars to prove it. Painfully aware that much of the world considers them worthless, many gay kids struggle with a cycle of self hatred that they carry into adulthood, if they are lucky enough to survive that long. Why should Pelosi put "Protect our gay kids" atop the House's to-do list? Heartbreaking research provides plenty of reasons: — Compared with their classmates, gay kids are more likely to use alcohol and drugs, engage in risky sex, have more sex partners, have sex very young, skip school for fear of being attacked, think of suicide or even attempt suicide, according to a 2001 article in the American Journal of Public Health. Gay kids whose schools provided gay-sensitive instruction about HIV reported fewer problems. — Nearly half of gay kids told the Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network (GLSEN) in 2005 they attend schools that teach a federally funded "abstinence-only" until heterosexual marriage curriculum. That sort of sex-ed makes gay kids feel invisible — or worse.
— Seventy-five percent of gay youth report hearing anti-gay name-calling, like "faggot" or "dyke," often at school. And more than one-third (38 percent) said they'd experienced anti-gay physical harassment at school, GLSEN's National School Climate survey found. — Young males, ages 15 to 22, who have sex with other males are at high risk for HIV — that's particularly true among African Americans and Hispanics. But 55 percent keep their orientation secret, according to the Centers for Disease Control. Those secretive boys and young men, the CDC says, are less likely than ones open about being gay or bisexual to get tested for HIV, so they are less likely to know if they are infected. And they're also likely to have female sex partners, whom they put at risk for HIV. — The most vulnerable gay kids — throwaways, runaways and lockaways — report appalling levels of anti-gay abuse in foster care, homeless shelters and juvenile detention centers, the Child Welfare League of America reports. Pelosi ought to use her forceful "mother of five" voice to speak out against these outrages and insist that our nation live up to its obligation to gay kids. Now, that would be a pretty picture. Deb Price of The Detroit News writes the first nationally syndicated column on gay issues. To find out more about Deb Price and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com. COPYRIGHT 2007 CREATORS SYNDICATE INC.
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