Both you and your parent's partner have rights to her.
gay partners in Alabama have no rights as a couple, but may have some rights as a parent if they legally adopted their children or if the children are biological to one partner.
Gay people in Malta have limited protections and few rights, but it is not against the law to be gay or to live with a same-sex partner. There are also a few gay clubs there.
As of 2014, gay people lack the following rights:The right to marry (32 states).The right to be a blood donor (men only).The right to not get fired from your job for being gay (36 States)The right to do a joint adoption or second parent adoption (7 states)The right for single gay people to adopt children (Utah)The right to inherit a partner's estate without paying taxes (30 states)The right to visit a partner in the hospital (30 states)The right to walk down the street without getting verbally or physically assaulted (all over the US)and hundreds of other rights
Gay people lack the following rights in most areas of the USA, though each state offers different rights: the right to marry the right to adopt children the right to not be fired from a job for being gay the right to inherit property from a partner the right to visit a partner in the hospital the right to not be discriminated against by businesses and organizations the right to walk downt he street and not be glared at or beaten up the right to donate blood (gay men lack this right)
gay rights are positive rights.
If the domestic partner is not the mother or father of the children, then they really wouldn't have rights to the children. It would be similar if a room mate lived in the same house as the kids. The fact that the partner has a sexual relationship with the child's parent is irrelevant. In short, if the relationship ends, don't count on getting any custody or visitation rights whatsoever.
As of 2014, gay people lack the following rights:The right to marry (32 states).The right to be a blood donor (men only).The right to not get fired from your job for being gay (36 States)The right to do a joint adoption or second parent adoption (7 states)The right for single gay people to adopt children (Utah)The right to inherit a partner's estate without paying taxes (30 states)The right to visit a partner in the hospital (30 states)The right to walk down the street without getting verbally or physically assaulted (all over the US)and hundreds of other rights
Yes he is gay.
You don't get rights for being gay. In fact, depending on where you live, you lose rights for being gay.
Yes. Anyone can find a partner. No matter if they're gay, disabled, or anything.
Women's rights and gay rights definitely have some overlap, but the differences are in what rights are lacking.
They do support gay rights :)