x in pattaya
July 7th, 2007, 15:43
Looked to see if any reference to this was posted. Didn't see anything, so:
After being castigated by Mr. Smiles I have reduced the reference to Novotel, but left the comment about the place in Australia and the reference to the old discussions on barring heteros from Boyztown establishments.I look forward with trepidation to the "Moved" preface as the Thai relevance becomes more shaky
Gays take on Novotel in club row
Global campaign planned as hotel is accused of barring transvestites
BANGKOK: -- Gay-rights advocates plan to launch a global boycott against a high-end Bangkok hotel after it barred a transvestite from its nightclub.
In the past we had "discussions" (i.e. name-calling, hissy fits and tantrums) about whether some gay places in Pattaya ought to be breeder-free zones. This item from Oz seemed interesting in that regard.
Bar wins right to ban heterosexuals
By Kathy Marks in Sydney
Published: 29 May 2007
A gay bar in Melbourne has won the right to turn away straight patrons,
so it can provide an environment in which gay men can express their
sexuality without feeling threatened.
The Peel Hotel applied for an exemption to equal opportunities
legislation, saying its gay male clientele felt uncomfortable about the
increasing numbers of straight people using the venue over the past
year.
Gay men were being "gawked at" as if they were exhibits in a zoo, the
Peel's management said, and subjected to occasional abuse and violence.
"If I can limit the number of heterosexuals entering the Peel, then
that helps me keep the safe balance effectively," the pub's owner, Tom
McFeely, said yesterday.
Although the Peel welcomed everyone, he added, he wanted to offer a
non-threatening environment for gay men. The atmosphere changed, Mr
McFeely said, when large parties of straight men and women came in,
often for stag or hen nights.
He said there were more than 2,000 venues in Melbourne catering to
heterosexuals, but his was the only one marketing itself predominantly
to gay men.
"Heterosexuals have other places to go to; my homosexuals do not," he
said. "The only place they can feel comfortable and safe is the Peel."
In what is believed to be the first case of its kind in Australia, the
state's Civil and Administrative Tribunal ruled that the pub could ban
people on the basis of their sexuality.
The decision was backed by the Victorian Human Rights and Equal
Opportunities Commission.
After being castigated by Mr. Smiles I have reduced the reference to Novotel, but left the comment about the place in Australia and the reference to the old discussions on barring heteros from Boyztown establishments.I look forward with trepidation to the "Moved" preface as the Thai relevance becomes more shaky
Gays take on Novotel in club row
Global campaign planned as hotel is accused of barring transvestites
BANGKOK: -- Gay-rights advocates plan to launch a global boycott against a high-end Bangkok hotel after it barred a transvestite from its nightclub.
In the past we had "discussions" (i.e. name-calling, hissy fits and tantrums) about whether some gay places in Pattaya ought to be breeder-free zones. This item from Oz seemed interesting in that regard.
Bar wins right to ban heterosexuals
By Kathy Marks in Sydney
Published: 29 May 2007
A gay bar in Melbourne has won the right to turn away straight patrons,
so it can provide an environment in which gay men can express their
sexuality without feeling threatened.
The Peel Hotel applied for an exemption to equal opportunities
legislation, saying its gay male clientele felt uncomfortable about the
increasing numbers of straight people using the venue over the past
year.
Gay men were being "gawked at" as if they were exhibits in a zoo, the
Peel's management said, and subjected to occasional abuse and violence.
"If I can limit the number of heterosexuals entering the Peel, then
that helps me keep the safe balance effectively," the pub's owner, Tom
McFeely, said yesterday.
Although the Peel welcomed everyone, he added, he wanted to offer a
non-threatening environment for gay men. The atmosphere changed, Mr
McFeely said, when large parties of straight men and women came in,
often for stag or hen nights.
He said there were more than 2,000 venues in Melbourne catering to
heterosexuals, but his was the only one marketing itself predominantly
to gay men.
"Heterosexuals have other places to go to; my homosexuals do not," he
said. "The only place they can feel comfortable and safe is the Peel."
In what is believed to be the first case of its kind in Australia, the
state's Civil and Administrative Tribunal ruled that the pub could ban
people on the basis of their sexuality.
The decision was backed by the Victorian Human Rights and Equal
Opportunities Commission.