Mercredi 4 février
3
04
/02
/Fév
09:42
Vu l'évolution actuelle et le retard observé chez TOUTES les églises, il existe une fracture pour laquelle beaucoup, activement ou passivement
beaucoup luttent.
En surfant j'ai découvert cette histoire attachante et révélatrice des progrès nécessaires à toute l'humanité.
Félicitations à la douce maman de Garret
svp prévenez-moi si vous avez des difficultés de compréhension de ce texte en anglais
fromAdam Bouska, NOH8 Campaign
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Tuesday, April 29, 2014, 4:03 PM
Adam Bouska, NOH8 Campaign, courtesy Garrett
BryantGarrett Bryant was accidentally outed as gay, costing him a summer job with the Boy Scouts.
A longtime member of the Boy Scouts who was accidentally outed as gay on Facebook lost out on a coveted summer job with the organization because
of the social media mistake.
Garrett Bryant, 19, was looking forward to a leadership position in Arizona when he was told last month that he was being turned down because of
his sexuality.
"I did the best I could to follow BSAs 'Don't Ask, Don't Tell' policy for gay members," Bryant told the Daily News on Tuesday. "But I couldn't
control other people outing me, even if by accident. Following the rules as being an Eagle Scout apparently weren't enough for me to stay on camp staff."
One week before he received the bad news, Bryant had updated his status on Facebook to say he was in a relationship. He received many
congratulatory responses, and at least one friend inquired, "what's his name?"
Bryant realized the mistake nine to 12 hours later and removed the comments, but it was too late. He says he believes Boy Scouts officials saw the
post or were told of it.
When he called to require about why he was turned down, he was told "homosexuality" was the reason, he said.
Courtesy Garrett BryantGarrett Bryant came out to his mother, Kat, last year.
"I felt just extreme sadness," the Northern Arizona University freshman told The News. "I am not one to cry easily. It was pretty intense."
This year the Boy Scouts began allowing openly gay teens into their ranks, but still don't allow gay adults. Bryant is still considered a youth
for many programs in the organization, but not for all of them.
"The whole reason we went public with it is to bring it to light that halfway is nowhere near good enough," said mom Kat Bryant, who has known
since the fall that her son is gay.
And when Garrett turns 21, he may face more problems from the organization's antiquated rules — and all because of the social media miscue.
“How will they [BSA] even know these people are gay unless they start digging into people’s Facebook posts?" Scoutcamp.org webmaster Ed Henderson
told NBC News, which first reported the story. "It’s going to create a
witch hunt."
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