Brown University Students Cancel Sex Power God, Saying It's Become 'Violent And Unwelcoming'

Brown University Students Cancel Sex Power God, Saying It's Become 'Violent And Unwelcoming'
The Brown University Queer Alliance (QA) announced this week that it is canceling the school’s annual “Sex Power God” party, which in the past has been both a flashpoint for controversy and a recognized component of the Providence, Rhode Island university’s free-spirited identity.

In a statement published Monday, members of the Queer Alliance Coordinating Committee explained that they canceled this year’s event because “over the past 10 years the event of SPG has continuously deviated from its goals of safe sexual expression.”

“The decision [to cancel] was made by students for the safety of students,” Lorin Smith, head chair of the QA, told The Huffington Post. “The QA recognized that SPG was no longer serving as [an] affirming space for queer students.”

Sex Power God was created 28 years ago as “just a dance,” according to an open letter that Rebecca Hensler, one of the original organizers of the event, posted to Facebook on Monday.

“Calling the dance Sex Power God was a liberationist act, a f*** you to those who thought sex, power or god belonged to them not us, and a good joke,” Hensler wrote.

Over the years, the event came to be seen as a source of pride and “celebration of the diversity of sexualities and bodies at Brown,” as the statement from the QA Coordinating Committee put it.

It also gained national notoriety in 2005 when Jesse Watters, a reporter for Fox News, crashed the event and filmed partygoers without their permission.

That year, 24 students required emergency medical attention. University authorities later conducted a major review of the school’s policies pertaining to social events and alcohol.

The cancellation of a popular campus event is invariably a disappointment for students. Last month, Columbia University administrators canceled a fall concert, citing “safety concerns associated with drinking and sexual harassment,” according to a statement from a coalition of Columbia student councils.

After riots at Iowa State University’s annual VEISHEA event in April, the school called an end to the nearly century-old tradition. Last year, Temple University canceled its annual Spring Fling after the death of a visiting student, and the University of Massachusetts-Amherst canceled an EDM party over concerns of students taking MDMA, commonly known as ecstasy or “molly.”

Students at these schools have been quick to acknowledge their part in abusing what are supposed to be fun events organized by classmates and administrators.

“We murdered a 92-year tradition,” the editorial board of the Iowa State Daily bluntly wrote following the cancellation of VEISHEA. The editors went on to criticize the tendency of some students to prioritize drinking above safety.

While Brown has had no riots over the cancellation of Sex Power God, Smith told HuffPost that efforts to address student safety concerns were not having the desired effect.

“In the case of SPG, planners worked with students and the administration to create a large scale safe space through party planner trainings, consent contracts, and similar means,” Smith wrote in an email to HuffPost. “Unfortunately students choose to disregard those boundaries, and SPG became a violent and unwelcoming space for some students … In the mean time [sic], we’re focusing on fundraising for other big events like the New England Queer people of Color Conference in the spring.”

The QA hopes to find a way to create a safe space for celebration without partygoers getting out of control, something Smith described as “a long-term project.” The group is welcoming suggestions and discussions on future plans.

www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/09/25/brown-sex-power-god-college-parties_n_5878364.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

Sister Roma Gives Behind-The-Scenes Details Of What Went Down At Facebook HQ

Sister Roma Gives Behind-The-Scenes Details Of What Went Down At Facebook HQ

Facebook Drag Queens-5On a recent webisode of Tim & Roma LIVE!, drag queen and Facebook #MyNameIs torch bearer Sister Roma offered a bit of insight from behind the scenes of her recent (disappointing) meeting with Facebook brass over the “real name” requirements.

Here’s what she said:

Let’s just say we actually had a meeting with Facebook and the thing that really gave me hope was afterwards we met with members of the LGBT employees, and they hinted that people on the inside of Facebook are definitely — there’s some people on our side. Facebook is aware of this problem and they’ve had internal discussions about it, and we’re going to force them to address it. So there you go.

It would seem, though, there aren’t enough people within Facebook who are “on our side.” Roma has a protest planned for Thursday, October 2nd outside San Francisco City Hall to pressure the social network to rethink its policy.

The #MyNameIs protest, it should be noted, is being promoted on Facebook.

“Facebook is picking a fight with the wrong crowd: we know REALNESS isn’t the name we were given at birth, it’s the name we kiki with online and off! We invite EVERYONE to join us in a massive protest of this tired policy — everyone has a right to control their identity online!” reads part of the event description.

Facebook would do well to satisfy the reasonable demands of its users. In light of the “real name” issue and other mounting concerns over things like privacy and advertising clutter, many are choosing to deactivate their accounts altogether.

The new site Ello has received plenty of attention as a potential alternative to Facebook, though it has a long way to go before it can be considered a powerful competitor. Still, momentum is building and Facebook would be foolish not to be paying attention.

Dan Tracer

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/tKtFKdEAK0o/sister-roma-gives-behind-the-scenes-details-of-what-went-down-at-facebook-hq-20140925

Gay Jesuit Leaves Catholic Church Over LGBT Firings – VIDEO

Gay Jesuit Leaves Catholic Church Over LGBT Firings – VIDEO

After ten years of pursuing priesthood in the Jesuit order, Benjamin Brenkert has left the Catholic Church because of recent firings of lesbian and gay people from Catholic institutions, reports the National Catholic Reporter.

Brenkert has written an open letter to Pope Francis which reads in part: Benjamin brenkert

“I ask you to instruct the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops to tell Catholic institutions not to fire any more LGBT Catholics. I ask you to speak out against laws that criminalize and oppress LGBTQ people around the globe. These actions would bring true life to your statement ‘Whom am I to judge?'”

Brenkert said:

“I can’t be a Jesuit priest because I can’t be a member of the Catholic Church right now. I can’t be an openly gay Jesuit discerning priesthood in the Catholic Church if LGBTQ employees are being fired from Catholic institutions.”

He explained that he finally decided to leave the church when a food pantry worker was fired from St. Francis Xavier Parish in Kansas City, Mo., after her same-wedding was mentioned in a local newspaper article.

He added:

“I’m asking the pope to really look at the fact that I as a gay man could become a Catholic priest, and reach the highest level of human relationship with God as a celibate priest, while LGBTQ employees that are seeking marriage and sacramental recognition of their love could no longer be employees because they were delighting in God’s love for them. Is that fair? That’s not for me to say. All I want to do is ask people to identify with my story and to ask the church to be clear about what she believes.”

In August, Colin Collette, music director at the Holy Family Catholic Community church in Inverness, Illinois, was fired by pastor Terry Keehan after Collette posted photos of his proposal to his long-time same-sex partner.

Last month, Olivia Reichert and Christina Gambaro, two gay teachers at Cor Jesu, an all-girls Catholic high school in the Affton, Missouri area, were fired after administrators discovered they had married in New York.

At least 17 Catholic Church employees have been fired, resigned, or discriminated against over LGBT-related employment disputes this year, according to The National Catholic Reporter.

Watch a report on the Cor Jesu case, AFTER THE JUMP


Jim Redmond

www.towleroad.com/2014/09/gay-jesuit-leaves-order-and-catholic-church-over-lgbt-firings-video.html

Only One Person Has Been Cured Of HIV, And Now A New Study Could Explain Why

Only One Person Has Been Cured Of HIV, And Now A New Study Could Explain Why
By Bahar Gholipour, Staff Writer
Published: 09/25/2014 02:03 PM EDT on LiveScience

To this date, only one person is thought to have been cured of HIV — the “Berlin patient” Timothy Ray Brown. But no one is exactly sure which aspect of Brown’s treatment may have cured him.

Now a new experiment on monkeys provides more evidence that a rare genetic mutation in the person who donated bone marrow to Brown may have had a central role in his cure.

Brown’s HIV was eradicated in 2007 after he underwent a treatment in Germany for his leukemia, a cancer of the white blood cells. In the leukemia treatment, Brown first underwent radiation to kill the cancer cells and stem cells in his bone marrow that were creating them, and then received a bone-marrow transplant from a healthy donor to generate new blood cells.

After the treatment, not only was Brown’s leukemia in remission, his HIV levels also plummeted to undetectable levels, and they have remained so ever since, even though he has not been taking the antiretroviral (ART) drugs typically used to keep HIV levels low in patients. [7 Devastating Infectious Diseases]

Three possibilities

The reason the virus remains undetectable in Brown could be that the bone-marrow transplant was from a donor who had a rare genetic mutation that renders a person’s CD4-T cells — the immune cells that are the main target of HIV infection — resistant to the virus.

Having this mutation, known as delta 32, results in having immune cells that have an altered form of a certain receptor called CCR5, which prevents the virus from entering the cells.

But it is also possible that radiation killed very nearly all of Brown’s cells that contained HIV at the outset of his treatment (and hence, the donor’s genetic mutation mattered very little).

Still another possibility is that the new immune cells (that were produced by transplanted bone-marrow cells) attacked Brown’s original cells, in what is called “graft-versus-host disease”. This could have killed any HIV reservoirs within Brown that had survived his radiation treatment.

So which is it?

Now in a small study, Dr. Guido Silvestri, a pathologist at Emory University in Atlanta, and colleaguesgave the same treatment that Brown was given to three monkeys, to find out which step in the cancer treatment might have been responsible for the eradication of the HIV.

The monkeys in the study were infected with Simian-Human Immunodeficiency Virus, or SHIV, which is a virus related to HIV that causes a disease similar to AIDS in animals. The monkeys received antiretroviral drugs for some time, to mimic the situation of HIV patients. Then, the animals underwent radiation and received a transplant of their own bone-marrow cells, which were harvested before they were infected with SHIV. [10 Deadly Diseases That Hopped Across Species]

The researchers found that radiation killed most of the animals’ blood and immune cells, including up to 99 percent of their CD4-T cells. This finding left open the possibility, at this point in the experiments, that radiation could have been a key step in curing Brown by killing almost all HIV reservoirs.

The scientists also found that the transplant resulted in the generation of HIV-free blood and immune cells within a few weeks, showing that the bone-marrow transplant experiment in monkeys was successful. If the monkeys were to be found cured of HIV, the researchers would be able to rule out graft-versus-host disease, because each monkey received its own cells in the transplant.

But after the treatment, once the researchers stopped giving the monkeys antiretroviral medications, the levels of the virus rapidly rebounded in two of the three animals.

The third monkey, who had to be euthanized after developing kidney failure, had some level of HIV in a number of tissues when it died, suggesting that none of the three monkeys had been “cured” by the treatment, according to the study published today (Sept. 25) in the journal PLOS Pathogens.

The findings support the idea that although radiation can reduce HIV levels, it’s not enough to eliminate all reservoirs of the virus, the researchers said. The results suggest that in the case of the Berlin patient, either the genetic mutation of the bone-marrow donor or the graft-versus-host disease “played a significant role,” the researchers said.

The Berlin patient’s treatment has been tried in at least two other HIV patients who also had lymphoma — cancer of the lymph nodes. However, the bone-marrow donors in those cases did not have the rare mutation in the CCR5 gene. The patients initially appeared to be free of HIV, but the virus returned after a couple of months and the patients had to start antiretroviral medication again.

Email Bahar Gholipour or follow her @alterwired. Follow Live Science @livescience, Facebook & Google+. Originally published on Live Science.

Copyright 2014 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/09/25/one-person-cured-of-hiv_n_5884506.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices