CHARLIE DANIALS GAY BAR SONG FULL
Southern Baptist leaders have responded to the exposure of sexual abuse allegation mishandling within their organizations in a big way–but it looks like the full story may be even bigger.Rather than continue the cover-up, the Executive Committee for SBC has released a list of abusers with the Baptist church system, and it is crushingly extensive.Even though it only covers abuses from February of 2007 onward, the list is 205 pages long with anywhere from two to five entries on every page, meaning there have been hundreds and hundreds (and hundreds) of sexual abuse allegations within the Baptist church system reported just within the past fifteen years.Related: Turns out the Southern Baptist Convention is even worse than we thoughtThe document contains partially and/or fully redacted entries throughout (presumably based on pending litigation for some), but the unredacted text and sheer scale of entries are enough to paint of picture of the enormity of the documented abuses.A report on many of the instances was published in the Houston Chronicle in 2019, while a number of the accused abusers were still in active ministry. The 47-year-old added that “at the end of the day there will be a huge amount of gay people in sports and why should they be any different from anyone else.” The upcoming World Cup has been marred with controversy since it was announced that it would take place Qatar, a country where homosexuality is illegal and the LGBTQ+ community is subjected to discriminatory laws. “I’ve always felt that way about when someone does come out… it shouldn’t be”. “It’s a shame that when someone does come out that it’s such a strange thing,” Beckham explained, referencing Daniels. He was the country’s first footballer to come out since Justin Fashanu in October 1990.
CHARLIE DANIALS GAY BAR SONG PROFESSIONAL
“But there’s still a lot of work to be done.” Blackpool FC forward Jake Daniels recently came out, becoming Britain’s first active openly gay male professional footballer. “I played for 22 years, I saw a lot of racism and homophobia and do think it has changed” he told The Londoner’s Diary. David Beckham said he believes that there is “still work to be done” in overcoming homophobia in football.