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Microsoft (GLEAM)
Friday, March 2nd, 2007
A followup to AFTAH’s exclusive special report on Out & Equal’s radical agenda…
From the Out & Equal website:
Out & Equal Workplace Advocates is proud to display our ever-increasing list of corporations who support LGBT workplace equality by encouraging and fostering their own employee resource groups (ERGs). With such valuable workplace groups in place, employees in one ERG can turn to leaders in other groups to share resources and establish good workplace practices for LGBT employees. LGBT employees trust their employers are keeping their interests in mind when making key business decisions that affect all employees…
True Out & Equal Workplace Leaders
The following companies have already joined the Out & Equal ERG Registry:
Aetna — Agilent Technologies — Air Products and Chemicals — Alcatel-Lucent — Alliant Energy
Ameriprise Financial — AMR/American Airlines — AOL — AstraZeneca — AT&T
Bain and Company — Bank of America — Barclays Capital — Best Buy — Boeing
Booz Allen Hamilton — BP — Bristol-Myers Squibb — Bryan Cave LLP — BT
Cargill — Caterpillar Inc. — CH2M Hill — Charles Schwab — Chase — Chevron — Chubb
Cingular Wireless — Cisco Systems — Citigroup — Clorox — Coca-Cola — Consolidated Edison
Convergys — Coors — Credit Suisse — CSAA — Cummins — CUNA Mutual Group
DaimlerChrysler — Deloitte — Deutsche Bank — Diamond — Disney — Dow — DuPont
Eastman Kodak Company — Equality Cincinnati — Ernst & Young, LLP
Faegre & Benson, LLP — Fairview Health Services — Finger Lakes LGBT Workplace Alliance
Ford — Freescale
Gap Inc. — GE — GM — Google
Hallmark — Harris — Hewitt — Honeywell — HP — HSBC
IBM — ING — Intel — ITT Space Systems Division
James Madison University — JCPenney — Johnson & Johnson — JPMorgan Chase
Kaiser Permanente — Kimberly-Clark — KPMG LLP — Kraft Foods
Lockheed Martin
McDermott Will & Emery LLP — McDonald’s — McGraw-Hill — Medtronic — Mellon Financial
Merck Merrill Lynch — Microsoft — Morgan Stanley — Motorola
National Nuclear Security Administration, DOE — Nationwide — NCR
New York Life Insurance Co. — Nike, Inc. — Novartis
Owens Corning
PepsiCo — Pershing — Pfizer — Portland General Electric — Pratt & Whitney
PricewaterhouseCoopers — Principal Financial Group — Procter & Gamble — PSEG
Raytheon Company — Reuters
Safeway Inc — Shaw’s Supermarkets — Shell — SODEXHO — Space Coast Advocates’ Network
Starbucks Coffee Company — State Farm Insurance — Sun Microsystems — SUPERVALU
Teamsters — Texas Instruments — Thomson West — Time Warner — Toyota — Tropicana
University of Michigan Health System — University of Rochester — University of Virginia
Verizon — Visa
Wachovia — Waggener Edstrom Worldwide — WalMart — Wells Fargo — Wyeth
Posted in Aetna, Agilent Technologies, Air Products & Chemicals, Alcatel-Lucent (EQUAL), Alliant Energy, American Airlines (GLEAM), Ameriprise, AOL, AstraZeneca, AT&T (League), Bain & Co (BGLAD), Bank of America, Barclays Capital, Best Buy, Boeing, Booz Allen Hamilton, BP America, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Cargill, Caterpillar, CH2M Hill, Charles Schwab, Chevron, Chubb, Cingular, Cisco Systems, Citigroup, Clorox, Coca Cola, Consolidated Edison, Convergys, Coors, Credit Suisse, CSAA, Cummins, CUNA Mutual Group, Daimler Chrysler, Deloitte & Touche, Deutsche Bank, Diamond, Disney (LEAGUE), Dow Chemical, DuPont (LEAGUE), Eastman Kodak, Ernst & Young (bEYond), Faegre & Benson, Fairview Health Services, Ford (GLOBE), Freescale, Gap, General Electric, General Motors, Google, Hallmark, Harris Bank, Hewitt Associates, Hewlett Packard, Honeywell, HSBC, IBM (EAGLE), ING, Intel (GLBTE), ITT Space Systems, JC Penney, Johnson & Johnson, JP Morgan Chase, Kaiser Permanente, Kimberly Clark, KPMG, Kraft, Lockheed Martin, McDonald's, McGraw-Hill, Medtronic, Mellon Financial, Merck, Merrill Lynch, Microsoft (GLEAM), Morgan Stanley, Motorola, National Nuclear Security Administration, Nationwide, NCR Corp (LEAGUE), New York Life, News, Nike, Novartis, Out & Equal, Owens Corning, Pepsi, Pershing, Pfizer, Portland General Electric, Pratt & Whitney, Price Waterhouse Coopers, Principal Financial Group, Procter & Gamble (GABLE), PSEG, Raytheon, Reuters, Safeway, Shaw's Supermarkets, Shell, SODEXHO, Starbucks, State Farm, Sun Microsystems, Supervalu, Teamsters, Texas Instruments, Thomson West, Time Warner, Toyota, Tropicana, Universities & Colleges, Verizon, Visa, Wachovia, Waggener Edstrom, Wal-Mart (PRIDE), Wells Fargo, Wyeth, Xerox |
Tuesday, December 5th, 2006
This article is a must-read for anyone working for an American corporation. From the automotive, airline, and petrochemical industries to banks, retail stores, and restaurants patronized primarily by traditional families, employers are capitulating to the demands of homosexual activists who are organizing homosexual employees.
The pro-family movement must re-engage in the corporate arena, or there is no hope of recovering moral sanity in the larger culture. To start with we can demand strict neutrality in corporate “diversity” and giving programs, and an end to one-sided tolerance seminars that are in reality training sessions in “gay” ideology. — Peter LaBarbera
Excerpted from Queer Inc, by Marc Gunther, published Nov 30, 2006, by Fortune:
…A platoon of Raytheon employees wearing identical blue-and-black bowling shirts, pins with the company’s logo and black pants proudly walked the halls of this fall’s convention of Out & Equal, an organization that brings together the networks of gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people – GLBT, in the argot of the moment – that have taken root at America’s big companies.
For three days in Chicago, with about 1,700 delegates from other companies, the 67 members of Raytheon’s GLBT network could attend workshops with such titles as The Cost of Transgender Health Benefits, Breaking Through the Lavender Ceiling and Male-on-Male Sexual Harassment: An Emerging Issue…
When Justin Nelson was trying to get the National Gay and Lesbian Chamber of Commerce off the ground in 2003, IBM offered its support. “If they hadn’t joined, there wouldn’t be a chamber,” Nelson says. Big Blue was followed by Wells Fargo, Motorola, Intel, American Express and recently, Wal-Mart…
Some companies are grappling with how to manage employees switching from one sex to another. American Airlines and its HR people helped a 58-year-old pilot – an ex-Marine and Vietnam combat veteran – go from being Robert to Bobbi. Energy giant Chevron published “Transgender@Chevron,” an eight-page guide to the issues that come up when a worker changes gender identity, ranging from the bureaucratic (don’t forget to get a new security badge) to the everyday (when it’s appropriate to move from the men’s room to the ladies’ room or vice versa)…
This is how workplace changes typically happen at big companies – from the inside out. Gay and lesbian employees come out of the closet. They find one another. They organize. They enlist straight allies. And they take their concerns to top managers.
These gay networks customarily meet in company facilities, use the company intranet, and receive financial support…
- Among corporations, IBM is the No. 1 financial supporter of gay rights groups in the U.S.
- To export its gay-friendly culture, IBM supports employee GLBT groups in 23 countries, including Singapore, Slovakia and Colombia. There’s plenty to do: In 80 countries homosexual acts are illegal, as they were in parts of the U.S. until a few years ago.
- Last year IBM convened a group of gay college students at the Human Rights Campaign to form a national organization of students in science and technology.
- IBM persuaded Dr. Marci Bowers, one of the world’s leading sex-reassignment surgeons and herself a transgendered person, to participate in the company’s health insurance program.
…the truth is that for the past 15 years, boycotts or no boycotts, corporate America has been moving in only one direction, and at a pretty rapid pace.
Do you recall that the restaurant chain Cracker Barrel fired gay workers back in 1991 for not having “normal heterosexual values”? Well, a few years ago, when a Kodak employee sent an e-mail to co-workers objecting to the company’s endorsement of National Coming Out day as “disgusting and offensive,” he was the one who was fired when he declined to apologize. He was entitled to his beliefs, the company explained, but his behavior was not aligned with Kodak’s values.
So it’s clear where big business is going. What’s interesting is to watch it pull the rest of the country along. It turns out that the most important factor shaping people’s feelings about gay issues is not their age or even their religion – although those do matter – but whether they have relatives, friends or co-workers who are gay.
Continue reading at CNN…
Posted in Accenture, American Airlines (GLEAM), American Express, AT&T (League), Chevron, Dell, Eastman Kodak, Ernst & Young (bEYond), Federated (Bloomingdale's, Macy's), General Electric, Goldman Sachs, Harris Bank, Hewlett Packard, HRC, IBM (EAGLE), JP Morgan Chase, Kraft, Kroger, Lehman Brothers, McKinsey, Merrill Lynch, Microsoft (GLEAM), Motorola, News, NGLCC, Out & Equal, Procter & Gamble (GABLE), Raytheon, Target, Toyota, Wal-Mart (PRIDE), Walgreens, Wells Fargo |
Tuesday, November 14th, 2006
A hat tip to our friends at American Family Association:
In a show of support to help homosexuals legalize same-sex “marriage,” Wal-Mart has agreed to automatically donate 5% of online sales directly to the Washington DC Community Center for Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender People. The cash donation will come from all online purchases made at Wal-Mart through the homosexual group’s web site. This move follows Wal-Mart’s joining the National Gay and Lesbian Chamber of Commerce and agreeing to give generous financial help to that group.
AFA says that Wal-Mart also gave a generous cash donation to the Northwest Arkansas GLBT Community Center.
AFA is calling for a boycott of Wal-Mart on the Friday following Thanksgiving, which is typically the biggest shopping day of the year.
To sign a pledge to participate in the one-day boycott,
click HERE.
Note from Americans for Truth – Wal-Mart is not the only company participating in this program. Other familiar retailers include:
- 1-800-Flowers (6%)
- Amazon (5%)
- Avon (8%)
- Barnes and Noble (5%)
- Disney Store (5%)
- FTD (6%)
- Gap (5%)
- Hallmark (12%)
- Office Max (4%)
- REI (5%)
- Staples (3%)
- Toys R Us (via Amazon, 5%)
- Verizon Online DSL ($40)
For a complete list of companies donating money from purchases to promote homosexuality, click HERE.
Posted in 1-800-Flowers, Amazon, American Express, Ashford, Avon, Babystyle!, Barnes & Noble, Bluefly, Buy.com, CD Gear, Chumbo, Continental, Dell, Delta, Disney (LEAGUE), Drugstore.com, eBags, Expedia, Florist.com, Fogdog Sports, FragranceNet, FTD, Gap, Hallmark, J Crew, J&R Computer & Music World, Jewelry Web, JP Morgan Chase, Microsoft (GLEAM), Microwarehouse, Netflix, News, Office Max, Orbitz, Priceline, Red Envelope, Register.com Domains, REI, Ritz Camera, Sephora, Sharper Image, Shoebuy.com, Shutterfly, SmarterKids, Stamps.com, Staples, Toys R Us, Travelocity, Universal Gear, Verizon, Wal-Mart (PRIDE), WatchZone |
Thursday, September 21st, 2006
From America’s pro-homosexual giants: 2006, published Sept 20, 2006, by WorldNet Daily:
Below is the list of companies scoring a perfect 100 percent on the Human Rights Campaign’s 2006 Corporate Equality Index, with policies beneficial toward homosexuals:
Read the rest of this article »
Posted in Aetna, Alcatel-Lucent (EQUAL), American Airlines (GLEAM), American Express, Anheuser-Busch, Apple Computer, AT&T (League), Bank of America, Bausch & Lomb, Bell South, Best Buy, Boeing, BP America, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Capital One Financial, Cargill, Charles Schwab, Chevron, CIGNA, Cisco Systems, Citigroup, Clorox, CNA, Coca Cola, Consolidated Edison, Coors, Corning, Corporate Promotion, Corporations, Credit Suisse, Cummins, Daimler Chrysler, Dell, Deloitte & Touche, Deutsche Bank, Dow Chemical, DuPont (LEAGUE), Eastman Kodak, Eli Lilly, Ernst & Young (bEYond), Estee Lauder, Fannie Mae, Ford (GLOBE), Gap, General Mills, General Motors, GlaxoSmithKline, Goldman Sachs, Google, Hewitt Associates, Hewlett Packard, Honeywell, HRC Corporate Equality Index, Hyatt, IBM (EAGLE), ING, Intel (GLBTE), Jenner & Block, Johnson & Johnson, JP Morgan Chase, Kaiser Permanente, KPMG, Kraft, Lehman Brothers, Levi Strauss, Lexmark International, Liz Claiborne, Mellon Financial, Merck, Merrill Lynch, MetLife, Microsoft (GLEAM), Mitchell Gold, Morgan Stanley, Motorola, Nationwide, New York Times, News, Nike, Nordstrom, Owens Corning, Pepsi, Pfizer, PG&E, Price Waterhouse Coopers, Prudential Financial, Raytheon, Replacements, SC Johnson, Schering-Plough, Sears, Sempra Energy, Sprint Nextel, Starwood Hotels, Sun Microsystems, SunTrust Banks, US Airways, Viacom, Visa, Volkswagen, Wachovia, Walgreens, Wells Fargo, Whirlpool, Xerox |
Wednesday, September 6th, 2006
By Peter LaBarbera
Fox News and Wal-mart are among the high-level ($10,000) sponsors of the National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association’s (NLGJA) 2006 Convention in Miami (Sept 7-10 at Loew’s Miami Beach Hotel). Every year, the NLGJA garners hundreds of thousands of dollars in Big Media sponsorships for its convention; this year it appears (based on the sponsorship list below) that the total is around half a milliion dollars in corporate support.
The NLGJA bills itself as merely a professional organization for journalists who “happen to be gay,” as the liberal cliche goes. But the organization advocates a pro-homosexual “spinning” of the news not unlike the activist group GLAAD, the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation. Note, for example, the NLGJA’s advice to the media regarding coverage of Lance Bass, the ‘N Sync band member who recently publicly revealed his homosexuality:
- The term “gay” is the preferred adjective that has largely replaced “homosexual” in referring to men who are sexually and affectionally attracted to other men. “Homosexual” should be used only if “heterosexual” would be used in parallel constructions, such as in medical contexts.
- Whether in headlines, teases, or body copy, try to avoid using forms of the word “admit,” which is typically used in the context of something shameful or illegal. Some examples of less potentially charged words are “announce,” “disclose” and “say.”
While it is true that the “mainstream” (read: dominant liberal) media is so pro-homosexuality these days that it is hard to discern between media activism and plain old homosexual-group activism, that does not make it right. The media should play it down the middle on homosexuality and other controversial issues, not serve as a cheerleader for the “gay rights” cause.
Yet over the years, NLGJA members have repeatedly suggested that covering “both sides” of homosexuality-related issues is like quoting the KKK on stories about African Americans–a preposterous analogy especially considering that Blacks and minorities poll stronger against “gay marriage” than whites. Thus, if you think the Lance Bass advice above is tendentious, try this from NLGJA National President Eric Hegedus (a page designer for the Philadelphia Inquirer), who repeats the spurious white supremacist comparison on the journalist group’s website (emphasis added):
How appropriate is it to quote interviewees whose ideas could be considered homophobic?… Certainly, news organizations have written extensively about white supremacists and other hate groups. For instance, in October we saw a flurry of stories about 13-year-old twins Lamb and Lynx Gaede, who use entertainment to promote the supremacist movement (“Young singers spread racist hate,” said a headline on the ABC News Web site). But I doubt that any journalist is adding them to a source contact list for bringing “balance” to future stories about reparations, interracial marriage, the Holocaust or immigration. That same ethic needs to extend to LGBT coverage, too.
Although not all NLGJA members may share Hegedus’ view on this, clearly the NLGJA is an activist organization with a strong institutional bias against those espousing traditionalist views on homosexuality.
Our question for Fox News executives is: if you are truly “fair and balanced,” will you now give an equal and corresponding grant to Americans for Truth or another pro-family organization, say, Accuracy in Media, that counters the ubiquitous pro-“gay” spin in the media? We’ll be awaiting your answer.
The following are corporate sponsors for this year’s NLGJA conference in Miami:
“Groundbreaker Level” – $35,000
• Miami Herald
• El Nuevo Herald
• McClatchy Co
“Headliner Level” – $25,000
• Planet Out
• Harrah’s
• Jet Blue
“Editorial Level” – $15,000
• MGM Mirage
• BELO
• CBS
• CNN
• Gannett Foundation
• Hearst Corp
• Coca Cola
• Orbitz
• US Newswire
• ESPN
• Verizon
• Microsoft
“Feature Level” – $10,000
• NBC Universal
• Key West
• Gilead
• Toyota
• IBM
• Passport
• (illegible)
• Bloomberg
• Wal-Mart – [That’s right, the same Wal-Mart that recently gave $25,000 to National Gay & Lesbian Chamber of Commerce is also sponsoring NLGJA–Ed.]
• Sam’s Club
• Fox News
“News Brief Level” – $5,000
• ABC News
• GM
• Greater Miami Convention & Visitors Bureau
• Hill & Knowlton
• Kimpton Hotels
• Nielson Media Research
• Q Syndicate
• UBS
• China Grill
“Source Level” – up to $5,000
• Los Angeles Times
• Page & Author
• South Florida Black Journalists Association
• South Florida Sun-Sentinel
• Washington Post
• Tribune Company
Posted in Coca Cola, Corporate Promotion, FOX News, Harrah's, IBM (EAGLE), Jet Blue, Media Promotion, Microsoft (GLEAM), News, NLGJA, Orbitz, Sam's Club, Toyota, Verizon, Wal-Mart (PRIDE) |
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