Tyler Clementi Foundation Takes On Faith-Based Anti-LGBTQ Bullying
LGBTQ youth are often bullied in the name of religion. Activists like Jane Clementi are working to end this.
September 07 2018 3:29 PM
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LGBTQ youth are often bullied in the name of religion. Activists like Jane Clementi are working to end this.
Clementi died by suicide in 2010 after experiencing homophobic bullying from his roommate and another college student.
Ravi's prosecution under a bias-crime law that has now changed tainted the rest of his trial, an appeals court says. The charge involved webcam spying on Clementi, his gay roommate, who killed himself shortly afterward.
The mother of a bullied gay youth who committed suicide in 2010 calls on society to 'celebrate and accept every life'
Two religions offer two views of sin.
Openly LGBTQ politicians Tammy Baldwin, Mark Pocan join Patty Murray to re-introduce new cyberbullying legislation in Congress named after Tyler Clementi.
Michael Jones, a new executive at the Tyler Clementi Foundation, wants to make it easier for queer people to walk into a church, synagogue, or mosque without fear.
Attorneys for Dharun Ravi, the former Rutgers student who set up a webcam to spy on gay freshman Tyler Clementi, have appealed Ravi's 2012 convictions for invasion of privacy.
What Tyler Clementi and those like him could have used are more Upstanders.