A Christian high school student in Kentucky was expelled after school administrators saw a photograph from her 15th birthday party in which she was wearing a rainbow sweater and smiling next to a rainbow birthday cake. Alford said that shortly after she posted the photo, she received a letter from the head of Whitefield Academy, where her daughter, Kayla, was a freshman. As a result, we regret to inform you that Kayla is being dismissed from the school immediately. In a statement shared with NBC News on Wednesday, Whitefield Academy said that the rainbow-filled photo was just the last straw following two years of student code violations. Unfortunately, she did not live up to the agreement, and therefore, has been expelled.


American Baptist Churches USA




Christian school expels teen after rainbow sweater and cake were deemed 'lifestyle violations'
The crosswalks, which sit at the intersection of Bakewell and West Seventh Streets, will remain as a permanent tribute to what Meyer described as a vibrant, inclusive community that outpaces the rest of Kentucky in ensuring lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer people are welcomed. In , Covington became one of the first cities in the state to pass a fairness ordinance mandating equal civil rights protections for LGBTQ residents. Similar legislation has stumbled on a larger scale this year both in the Kentucky legislature, where Senate Bill died in committee, and in the United States Congress, where the Republican-controlled Senate is expected to reject the Equality Act passed by the Democrat-majority House. She hopes Covingtonians will see NKY Pride as a welcoming event for people of all ages and orientations. Each subsequent year brought more people, however, and developments Goodin said he never anticipated during his lifetime. Seeing rainbow crosswalks in his small Kentucky city Friday drove home the progress he had witnessed over the course of his lifetime, he added.



Covington preps for Pride and transforms crosswalks into rainbows
What does a homophobic school that would expel a student simply for having a rainbow cake have to do with a plan to deprive public schools of much-needed funding in Kentucky? It appears the school's administrators fear the girl is gay, although her mother said at the time that she was not. Under the bills being considered in the state House and the state Senate, schools that discriminate like this would be able to benefit from what are essentially tax dollars. Related: This just in God expelled from Louisville Christian school for creating rainbow.





While large cities in blue states — like New York and San Francisco — are well known for their LGBTQ inclusivity, accepting environments can now be found across the country, even in some unexpected places. The Midwestern town is home to the University of Missouri and has a bustling nightlife scene with a multitude of gay-friendly spots. For six years, representatives in the mountain state of Montana fought to decriminalize consensual same-sex relations, which was formerly classified as a felony.

3 comment

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05.02.2021 7:37:40 creepiv:
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05.02.2021 13:52:39 didi179:
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