Gay prince george
Sex, drugs and S&M: hit play depicts Prince George as grown up and gay
Prince George 'gay icon' article branded 'sick'
An article in PinkNews, speculating that Prince George has develop a gay star, has sparked a formal complaint from a Northern Ireland politician.
The online article was published after the four-year-old prince was photographed with his hands on his confront in a helicopter in Germany last month.
Jim Allister, commander of the Traditional Unionist Voice (TUV) party, described the article as "outrageous and sick".
He has written to PinkNews demanding it withdraw the article and apologise.
'Tongue-in-cheek'
However, the leader executive of PinkNews, Benjamin Cohen, told BBC News NI he had "no intention" of removing the article at the behest of a politician who opposed the rights of lesbian, queer , bisexual, and gender diverse (LGBT) people.
He defended the film, saying it was a "tongue-in-cheek" piece, based on the comments of "hundreds" of social media users.
Mr Cohen added that as a gay man, he was personally offended by some of the "repugnant" remarks contained in Mr Allister's letter of complaint.
The PinkNews
Why a photo of Prince George has ignited Jim Allister’s rage
The TUV’s leader, and only MLA, Jim Allister snagged himself the front page of the Newsletter today. It’s not that firm to do; find a story with a gay angle, be outraged, Bingo!
Left: Denis, age 3 St. Louis, Missouri (1974)
Middle: Mykel, age 4, Macon Georgia
Right: Alex, age 7, Glenrose, TX (1995)
Today’s outrage is caused by the reaction of some LGBT people, and particularly gay men, to a picture of Prince George. While on a recent visit to Germany with his parents, the prince was invited into the pilot’s seat of a helicopter and it’s safe to say that he looks pretty excited. The photo is a very adorable depiction of a child expressing pure excitement and joy, with both hands brought up to his wide-open mouth, without a thought as to how others are perceiving his behaviour, and it is this lack of concern that brings a grin to many gay men.
A shared experience for a lot of gay men, particularly during our childhood, is that how we expressed ourselves was regulated by other people. Many of us have memories of being corrected in how to ‘act love a boy.’ Whether its because of what we do with our hands, the
LGBTQ+ Pride
Wilkinson, Jemima (Nov. 29, 1752 - July 1, 1819), religious leader, was born in Cumberland, R. I., daughter of Jeremiah and Elizabeth Amey (Whipple) Wilkinson and sister of Jeremiah Wilkinson [q.v.]. Her father, a prosperous farmer and a member of the Colony's Council, was almost exclusively interested in profits and politics; her mother, who belonged to the Society of Friends and who might perhaps have exercised more modify on her daughter's maturation, died, worn out with child-bearing, when Jemima, the eighth of twelve children, was about ten years old. Owing to her prettiness and cleverness, the future prophetess managed to avoid the hard perform on the farm and grew up as a self-indulgent girl devoted to the reading of romances and other "frivolous literature," without further discipline than that afforded by irregular attendance in the familiar schools. Her religious interest was first aroused when she was about sixteen by the sermons of George Whitefield and by the meetings of the "New Light Baptists," an evangelizing sect which just then appeared in Rhode Island. Later, in 1774, the coming of Ann Lee [q.v.] aroused a spirit of emulation in her. Soon afterwar