El Protocolo LGBT de la SCJN #EnConteXto con Enrique Torre Molina en Servicio De Agencia
Enrique Torre Molina presenta el Protocolo de actuación para quienes imparten justicia en casos que involucren La orientación sexual o identidad de genero creado por la Suprema Corte de Justicia…
Monthly Archives: November 2014
Got Milk?

Alan Cumming, Billy Porter Rank Among Top Broadway Must-Sees
Alan Cumming, Billy Porter Rank Among Top Broadway Must-Sees
Loyal theatergoers also voted for Michael C. Hall’s performance in Hedwig and the Angry Inch star as one not to be missed.
Brandon Voss
Nicole Maines, History-Making Transgender Teen, Honored By Glamour Magazine
Nicole Maines, History-Making Transgender Teen, Honored By Glamour Magazine
Nicole Maines, a teenager who made history earlier this year in a landmark transgender rights case, has been named one of Glamour magazine’s 50 inspiring women of the year. Nicole, who is 17, was chosen to represent the state of Maine in the series “Hometown Heroes: 50 Phenomenal Women of the Year Who Are Making a Difference.”
The teen has received national attention for her fight to allow transgender students the right to use the bathroom of the gender they identify with. In February, Nicole won a discrimination lawsuit on this issue that she and her family had filed five years earlier. When Nicole was in fifth grade, her public school told her she was not allowed to use the girls’ bathroom and had to use the staff bathroom instead. Nicole, who was assigned male at birth but has identified as female since she was as young as 2, took legal action with her family and the Maine Human Rights Commission.
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In the February decision, Maine’s Supreme Court ruled that Nicole’s rights had been violated under the state’s Human Rights Act, marking a major victory for transgender rights in the U.S. It was the first time a state court ruled it unlawful to deny transgender students access to the bathroom of the gender with which they identify.
On Monday, Glamour posted its list of “50 Phenomenal Women of the Year,” which included Nicole in the Maine spot.
“It’s an honor to be recognized with this title,” Nicole wrote to The Huffington Post on Tuesday. “I’m so glad that all the work that my family and I are doing is yielding positive results and making actual change! I hope that this will lead other youth to speak up in their communities and advocate for themselves and what they believe in.”
Her parents, Wayne and Kelly, also released a statement.
“Nicole is honored to be recognized as one of the nation’s 50 Phenomenal Women in Glamour magazine. Representing the State of Maine in this way is a memory she will always treasure, and keeps her moving forward in her quest for equality,” the Maines’ statement reads. “She hopes that this recognition will convince other young women in Maine and across the nation to advocate for change. As her parents we are very proud of her strength, commitment and courage.”
Nicole told Glamour that she was proud her case could set a precedent for the rights of transgender students.
“They can look at what happened in Maine and see […] our state leaders validated that everyone gets to be whom they need to be,” she said.
The teen said in her interview with Glamour that advocacy “will always be a part of my life.”
In addition to Maines, Glamour has recognized another transgender pioneer this year, naming actress and activist Laverne Cox a 2014 Woman of the Year, a title the magazine gives annually to a handful of influential women.
Mykki Blanco’s Moscow Is A “Pre-AIDS New York,” “Packed With Muscle Men And Emo Twinks”
Mykki Blanco’s Moscow Is A “Pre-AIDS New York,” “Packed With Muscle Men And Emo Twinks”
Even after his performance was sabotaged by Moscow police, U.S. rapper Mykki Blanco has a soft spot for Russia, and his experience there spotlights the reverse side to the antigay authoritarian portrayal of the country that we’re so used to hearing about.
Mykki, an openly gay man who performs with a transgender stage persona, was set to perform at a club called Solyanka. Just hours before his appearance, police shut the club down. For good.
Solyanka has played regular host to acts that have ruffled the feathers of right wing groups, and the closure is just one more blow to Moscow’s young, diverse LGBT community.
But despite the constant pressure from officials and thugs, that same community finds room to thrive.
Mykki ended up finding another place to perform that night, and posted a response a few days later. He talks about this other side of Russia, reminding us that there is plenty to be inspired by there:
When I think of Russia I think of the secret gay house parties I have been too [sic] kissing boys drunk on vodka and caviar… I think of smoking weed in the Siberian forests and stumbling drunk in the Russian ghetto’s with my straight male friends. I think of going to the underground Russian gay clubs packed with muscle bound men in skin tight shirts and emo twinks softly gyrating to ear splitting trance.. seeing 6’3 Glam Queens perform in thigh high boots and polyester wrap dresses like a Pre-Aids New York I never experienced.
Russia is more to me than Moscow and I feel for Moscow because of how misunderstood that city is… really maybe I love Russia so much because I can relate to its ‘outsider status’…
I see in Russia pieces of myself and through self love I in turn love Russia.”
Mykki is no stranger to traveling to potentially hostile parts of the world.
Earlier this year he was arrested in Portugal following and claimed it was over a homophobic dispute with a police officer.
Dan Tracer
Texas Man Sentenced To 15 Years for Beating, Kidnapping Gay Man He Met Online
Texas Man Sentenced To 15 Years for Beating, Kidnapping Gay Man He Met Online
Brice Johnson thought he had beaten Arron Keahey to death before he bound him with electrical cord and placed him in the trunk of his Ford Fusion in Springtown, Texas, on Sept. 2, 2013.
But when Johnson arrived at a friend’s house and Keahey screamed for help from the trunk, people at the house told Johnson to take Keahey to the hospital or they would call police.
After Johnson put Keahey in the back seat and drove him to an EMS station, Keahey spent 10 days in a Fort Worth hospital recovering from skull and facial fractures and a brain injury.
Johnson, now 20, was sentenced Monday to more than 15 years in federal prison after being charged with an anti-gay hate crime for beating and kidnapping Keahey after they met on MeetMe.com. Johnson, who claims he isn’t gay, had lured Keahey to his home in Springtown, northwest of Fort Worth, with the promise of sex:
“Quite simply, hate crimes of any nature will not be tolerated,” U.S. Attorney Sarah R. Saldaña of the Northern District of Texas said in a statement Monday. “Prosecutions under this law are important to ensure all people in our community know they have the full protection of the law. I commend not only the victim for his continued cooperation throughout this investigation, but our law enforcement partners including the FBI, the Springtown Police Department and the Parker County Sheriff’s Office, who worked tirelessly in this case to ensure our hate crime laws are strictly enforced.”
After meeting on MeetMe.com, Johnson and Keahey exchanged explicit messages and discussed what sexual activity they would engage in. Meanwhile, Johnson saved Keahey’s number in his phone using the name, “Fag Bagg.”
In recorded jail phone calls, Johnson told family members: “I invited this guy over, right, at first it was basically like a joke that went too far and too wrong. I invited him over because he was a fag or whatever.”
The hate crime charge against Johnson was dropped in exchange for his guilty plea in June, and he was sentenced to 183 months in federal prison on a kidnapping charge.
Keahey, who was 24 at the time of the attack, launched a GoFundMe page which has raised $2,070. Keahey wrote on the page,
“I was recently lured and ambushed, beaten to almost an inch of my life, after meeting a man on a social app, simply because I am gay. I had to have facial reconstructive surgery, had brain trauma as well as memory loss, which is still affecting me pretty bad, and a lot of emotional backlash. I am constantly dealing with depression and other emotional problems still. In the midst of it all, I am trying to start my life over now. I am having a hard time doing so and am needing help with normal necessity bills and everyday expenses while I rebuild my life and get myself back to life and everything in order money wise. I am also hoping for some help with paying the large amount of medical bills. Any donation to me will be truly appreciated, and I cannot thank you enough for your support.
“Even if you do not have the resources to donate, please share this article and spread the word of what happened,” Keahey added. “I truly believe that the more problems like this in this country are talked about, the less it will happen and the closer we will be to a solution.”
John Wright
BRITAIN: LGBT Chorus Takes Over Transit After Violent Attack On Gay Men
BRITAIN: LGBT Chorus Takes Over Transit After Violent Attack On Gay Men
BRITAIN: LGBT Chorus Takes Over Transit After Violent Attack On Gay Men.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=WX2JnQNercs&feature=youtube_gdata
gay art homosexual queer

After a Gay Man Is Set Ablaze, a Community Comes Together (UPDATE)
After a Gay Man Is Set Ablaze, a Community Comes Together (UPDATE)
On Friday my last words regarding Stephen White, who friends refer to as Steve, was Godspeed. I, along with countless thousands across this nation and the world, hoped for a speedy recovery that would never come.
During a benefit being put on by The Q Lounge, an LGBT watering hole in the city of Greensboro, North Carolina, organizers learned that Steve had succumbed to complications from the brutal attack he endured a week before.
Found naked, beaten, robbed and set on fire, the gay Iraq War veteran spent the last week fighting for and ultimately losing his life.
The Associated Press reported:
An Army veteran beaten by a man he met at a bar died Saturday afternoon, nearly a week after being hospitalized with burns so bad that parts of both arms had to be amputated, police and his partner said.
The report continued:
Greensboro Police spokeswoman Susan Danielsen confirmed the death when contacted by The Associated Press. She said a 26-year-old man, Garry Joseph Gupton, has now been charged with first-degree murder in connection with the beating last Sunday. A Greensboro city employee, Gupton had initially been charged with aggravated assault with intent to kill, according to police.
White had been on a break with his long-term partner, with whom he lived, and on his last night of “freedom” before he resumed the monogamy they shared.
This past Tuesday reports regarding Steve seemed very grim. However, White’s long-time partner, Alex Teal reported, on his Facebook that Steve was recovering after medical professionals were able to take him off the ventilator. However, just as the silent auction was starting at Greensboro’s Q Lounge, news came that Steve had taken a turn for the worse.
The Greensboro Police Department has mentioned that from all the evidence they have, the brutal crime was not motivated by hate. I disagree. No matter the circumstance, it takes a lot of hate not only to beat a person within inches of his life, but to then set him on fire.
White, who served in the U.S. Army, along with the U.S. Customs Department and Federal Air Marshal Service, had sustained substantial injuries while guarding a U.S. Base for Blackwater Security in Iraq, according to Greensboro’s WFMY News 2.
Even if the Greensboro Police Department is not considering this a hate crime, I am still left feeling there must be a level of internal hatred that would propel such a brutal series of events, leaving one man dead and another with first-degree murder charges.
The LGBT communities are repeatedly told by protesters, bigots and churches that they are going to hell. I submit that this repeated message and “othering” creates the kind of division in that pushes people to the brink and creates this kind of episode.
In this case the victims are all over the place. For those whose lives are taken long before their time and the people who are left to pick up the pieces, a whole community is scarred. The neocon religious rightists who are hell bent on defining anyone who is different from them as “unclean,” lesser people under the eyes of their god and our nation’s laws keep the embers of violence glowing that hurt the lives of real living and breathing humans. From random LGBT bashing to the violent and often underreported murders of transgender people of color — how much violence will it take for the perpetrators to call it quits?
Most members of the LGBT community of the Piedmont Triad know one another, if not close, then in passing. There are only a few degrees of separation. Like any other community, when someone is bad news we are quick to notify the person with whom they are interacting.
None of the people who work at the Q Lounge ever remember seeing Steve’s alleged assailant, Garry Gupton, 26, of Greensboro, before the fateful night he would take Steve’s life. Still, the community would have likely accepted him as one of their own.
As Riki Dublin, a Greensboro restaurateur and friend of Steve’s said in a telephone interview, when a new, unfamiliar face shows up in the bar, regulars are at first skeptical, but since the patrons are among some of the most marginalized in our society, they tend to open up and are accepting.
“We tend to watch out for our own,” Dublin said. “However we are excited when someone new comes into our fold, we want to show them that they are accepted. Sometimes we do this to a fault.”
Dublin continued, “And when we accept people into the community we do not expect them to harm us.”
While the LGBT community of Greensboro tries to find some silver lining in such a tragedy, many are trying to hold onto the positives.
In less than a week Dublin and others who are regulars to Greensboro’s Q Lounge said they raised over $15,000, which will be used to offset the overwhelming medical and funeral costs associated with the attack. According to Dublin, another $5,000 was raised by Greensboro’s Club Chemistry and Limelight in Greenville, NC.
The outpouring support from the worldwide community warmed the hurting heart of Helee Matthews, a Veterinary Technician by day and security guard at the Q Lounge by night.
“All kinds of people showed up to show their support, mothers, fathers, people that did not know Steve came in to show support,” Matthews said in a telephone interview. “I was going to go knocking door to door to let the community know what happened, but I did not have to do that.”
While the close-knit LGBT community has been drawn together over such a senseless loss of life, many now wonder what comes next. Whatever it is, Dublin says, it needs to come quick.
“This is not about being gay, this is about the human condition,” she says. “How one human being could do this to another without some degree of hate is unimaginable. Our solution has to be one of love, forgiveness and forward thinking.”
PHOTO: This was Recently Found Scrawled on Sidewalk
PHOTO: This was Recently Found Scrawled on Sidewalk

When I think of Russia I think of the secret