How to Win Gay Rights
Shirt of Flame...Let's get it on!

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YPSILANTI, Michigan
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Last Login: 11/27/2008
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***NEW!*** Special gift for my MySpace Friends! Click below to get your copy FREE! You pay only $5 Shipping & Handling!

My accountant says I should get rid of the extra copies I have laying around the house, so I thought, "Why not give them to all my MySpace friends?" haha Click the PayPal link below and I'll send you a copy ASAP! MWAH!


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How to Win Gay Rights following the Equality Ride on http://gayspirituality.typepad.com
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Download the manual for the new LGBTQ activism for free! Click here:



Hi, everybody! My name is Clayton, and this is the MySpace page for my book I wrote under the name Ko Imani, Shirt of Flame: The Secret Gay Art of War!

If you believe the experts--like Arun Gandhi, Toby Johnson, and the Rev. Candace Chellew-Hodge, among others--Shirt of Flame is IMPORTANT FOR YOU TO READ if you are Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual or Transgender (or love someone who is) and wish the world was more fair, supportive and welcoming of LGBT people. This book gives you simple, convenient tools to create positive change right where you are--no shouting, no marching, no protesting required!

Check out the endorsements below and some reviews in my blog, then click on this banner to download the whole book for free!

ENDORSEMENTS OF SHIRT OF FLAME

"AN EXCELLENT BOOK that promotes better understanding."
~ Arun Gandhi, grandson of Mahatma Gandhi and Founder of the M.K. Gandhi Institute for Nonviolence

"With a fresh, youthful, contemporary voice and perspective, Ko Imani conveys the elusive, but crucial, wisdom that the basis of Gay community, Gay activism, and Gay politics is fundamentally spiritual and moral. WELL-WRITTEN, WELL-ARGUED."
~ Toby Johnson, author of Gay Spirituality and Gay Perspective

"AN EXCITING NEW STRATEGY for Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender liberation that will lead to not only a civil rights revolution, but also to a revolution of the human heart."
~ Rev. Candace Chellew-Hodge, Founder and Editor of "Whosover: An .. Magazine for LGBT Christians"

"Ko Imani has laid down a provocative challenge to LGBT activists. The community envisioned could lead a cultural shift far beyond the boundaries of the so-called 'Gay liberation movement.' A REMARKABLE AND REVOLUTIONARY DISCIPLINE."
~ Jeffrey Montgomery, Executive Director of the Triangle Foundation

"If you think Gay culture has passed its peak, consider that maybe we've barely scratched the surface. Ko Imani reveals how doing for others may be the best thing we can do for ourselves, to emerge from isolation and fear into loving connectedness. The author uses a global scope of myth, tradition and history to persuade us it's time to wake up and get involved, and to really begin sharing our special gifts as Gay people."
~ Bruce P. Grether, author of Mindful Masturbation: Transforming Male Self-Pleasuring into a Spiritual Practice

"Shirt of Flame SHOULD BE HANDED OUT WITH QUEER MEMBERSHIP CARDS!"
~ Ashe-Prem Journal

"Wow! Shirt of Flame is a battle cry for a new kind of battle -- REALLY POWERFUL for LGBT work or feminism or any civil rights issues. I want everyone to read it!"
~ Julia Mossbridge, author of Unfolding: The Perpetual Science of Your Soul's Work

Who I'd like to meet:
YOU!

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How to Win Gay Rights's Friends Comments
Displaying 25 of 27 comments  ( View All | Add Comment )
ARI Films





Dec 23 2008 12:05 AM

Click the Gun to View Youmankind - the Video

Youmankind - Connect
Joe Hollywood





Jun 4 2007 5:17 AM

Hey How to Win Gay Rights have a great summer



-Joe Hollywood
Jamesson





May 5 2007 9:56 PM

Hey hey hey! How are things going for ya?
<3dh





Apr 10 2007 5:03 AM

thank you for the comment :)

i think i might buy your book soon, it sounds interesting. Thank you for accepting my friend request!

-derek<3
Joe Hollywood





Mar 28 2007 5:45 AM

hey, just stoppin by to show ur page sum love. btw check out my new website JoeNewport.com


-Joe
The Secret: The Law of Attraction





Mar 14 2007 8:20 PM

How to Win Gay Rights
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Joe Hollywood





Mar 13 2007 4:25 PM

hey whats up?


-joe hollywood
Queer Republic Tees





Mar 9 2007 1:29 PM


Qr Magazine





Feb 14 2007 9:44 AM

Mark





Feb 8 2007 8:16 PM

i got it for christmas but as ive said before i'm better at the skin flute i was dressed as a ukrainian playing the ukrainian national anthem








Belvis





Jan 23 2007 4:36 PM

I'll always be here for support! Love ya too!
[[E]]





Sep 17 2006 8:23 AM

so how do i buy this book?
Jamesson





Sep 12 2006 3:09 PM

Great concept, rock on!! :)
we're all connected





Aug 3 2006 12:02 AM

Thanks :)~
Tom





Jul 16 2006 11:33 PM

Thank you for the comment. :)
AlexJ





Jun 25 2006 5:16 AM

Wishing you lots of sales Clayton!!! You deserve huge success!!!
R.I.P MICHAEL YOU ARE THE BEST!!!!!!!





Jun 14 2006 11:24 AM

THANX SO MUCH GORGEOUSS!!! DEFINATELY TIME FOR A CHANGE. PLEASE KEEP IN TOUCH


JONTE
Matt Fitz





Jun 3 2006 6:40 PM

ya i should be at the show too, which date are u going to.
Julian





Jun 1 2006 8:11 PM

I sure will. Thanks!
Julian





Jun 1 2006 4:10 PM

Hey. Thanks for the add!
Eco-mama





May 19 2006 1:24 PM

I've started the book and I love it! You are brilliant! I'll let you know when I've completed it.
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Death Ledger





May 2 2006 1:18 AM

also the review mentions the idea of LGBTs making their straight enemies into friends. the notion seems to be asking one to believe that there is no power difference between people who are straight and people who are not. i witnessed a bashing in the castro, where straight people pretended to be gay so they could hit someone in the face and make them all bloody. the person handed his cell phone to me soaked in blood and asked me and my friend to dial 911. we managed to get the scare the straight people away by yelling at them, actually. they stomped off with a lot of entitlement and it infuriated my friend. like they just sort of walked away, not fearing any sort of reprisal. if we weren't there, i'm not sure what would have happened to the person. we were in the castro, so bear in mind, despite what "power" mainstream gays can hold, things like this still happen. what was most troubling of all was how no mainstream gays who lived in the expensive homes on collingwood came out and said anything. whatever real power this review suggests this book is saying that gays have has it's obvious limits. the limit is at the battlelines of assimilation, of who gets to be safe and who doesn't. for me, forging any sort of loving relationship with someone who wields that kind of power, straight or gay, would necessitate ignoring the authority and violence that a straight identity depends on to exist. i kind of can't act like it isn't there. the early ACT UP slogan Silence Is Death kind of isn't hyperbole to me, it's very literal.

these are just some questions and ideas. let me know what you think.

love--
ralowe

(p.s.: sorry for the split postings, didn't know the character post limit. should be read in reverse order.)
Death Ledger





May 2 2006 1:17 AM

i have not read your book, as i don't like reading in general, nor do i like ordering books off the internet, as you urge in your About Me:. all i've read is the first review in the blog.
i'm wondering what would be your advice for LGBT (your term... i often use queer, although that too is problematic) immigrants trying to get their rights? should they just chill out and wait to be rounded up? i see a couple of limitations in the idea of abandoning direct action (which was a tactic that i believe gandhi, who the review i read references near the end, also employed; civil disobedience and direct action rely on creating a spectacle in public space to challenge authority), especially when we live in a world where most of the decisions that affect our lives go on outside our knowledge or consent. ha!: or even with our consent-- a recent headline said that the war in iraq was like a billion or something a month. sure the regularly scheduled permitted marches happen, but what stops the rest of people in the US from taking action to stop the war? it seems to me the big question is why more people aren't involved in activism, instead of asking the few people who do to chill out and pray.
Death Ledger





May 2 2006 1:15 AM

i read one of the reviews, but i have not read your book. based on
how the review was
framed, i totally agree that people involved with political activism need to take care of themselves mentally, emotionally and physically. one of the best ways to do this is through communication, and this often doesn't happen in most of the activism i've been a part of. activism is very intimate to me, like my deepest ideals being actualized, and when you're opening yourself and sharing that with others who appear to be doing the same, it can be really intense. it's very addicting, and i don't think i'll ever give it up.
that's why i have questions about alternatives to making these things abstract ideas and emotions tangible, especially on a tv shopping planet where those chances are sooooo rare. would you also suggest that those who make art that upsets people should instead pray?
P®in©e ©ha®ming





May 1 2006 11:51 PM

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