Original Members Of ACT UP Educate Narrow-Minded Audience During Rarely-Seen Episode Of The Phil Donahue Show

Original Members Of ACT UP Educate Narrow-Minded Audience During Rarely-Seen Episode Of The Phil Donahue Show

A rarely-seen episode of the Phil Donahue Show that features appearances by several of the the original members of AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power (ACT UP), one of the leading AIDS awareness and advocacy groups founded in the late 1980s, has been uploaded to YouTube.

The landmark episode, which first aired on February 13, 1990, during the height of the AIDS pandemic, features fascinating archival news footage as well as interviews with now legendary HIV/AIDS activists Larry Kramer, Mark Harrington, Peter Staley, Ann Northrop, and Robert Garcia. It gives a rare look at just how dire and politicized the issue of HIV/AIDS was at that time, and serves as an important reminder of how far we’ve come, but also how far we’ve yet to go.

Check out the full episode below.

 

H/t: Dave Evans

Related stories:

Donna Summer Sent Never-Before-Seen Apology Letter To ACT UP

Rare 1983 Larry Kramer Interview Offers A Glimpse At His Role As An Outspoken Activist

Commemorate ACT UP’s 25th Anniversary By Hearing Story Of Game-Changing AIDS Activists

Graham Gremore

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/xIzrmrjAg9M/original-members-of-act-up-educate-narrow-minded-audience-during-rarely-seen-episode-of-the-phil-donahue-show-20150113

On Gay Rights, Vietnam is Now More Progressive Than Much of the U.S.

On Gay Rights, Vietnam is Now More Progressive Than Much of the U.S.

BY PATRICK WINN / GlobalPost

The communist government just reversed its ban on same-sex marriage.

Map_vietnamBANGKOK — US politicians of all stripes are fond of condemning Vietnam’s poor human rights record. As one US Senator from Arkansas puts it, America has a “moral obligation” to stand up to oppression” in the communist nation.

But when it comes to gay rights, conservative US states like Arkansas are actually lagging behind Hanoi.

Vietnam’s communist party abolished a ban on same-sex marriage last week. Unlike states such as Texas — where vindictive politicians want to stop paying any official who certifies a gay wedding — Vietnam’s political class has responded with a collective shrug.

Make no mistake: Vietnam is an authoritarian state. Dissent is criminalized. Critics who blog or protest against the government end up in prison. Human Rights Watch, which points to a “human rights crisis” in Vietnam, has catalogued abuses ranging from rampant bribery to abusive police.

But as long as gay couples refrain from denouncing Vietnam’s communist party, they’re generally left alone.

Same-sex marriage still isn’t totally endorsed in Vietnam. Unlike for straight couples, whose marriages are protected by laws dictating rights to assets (and other legal perks), gay marriages aren’t fully recognized on par with traditional marriage.

Huy“But marriage is no longer banned,” says Luong The Huy (pictured), a legal expert with ISEE, a non-governmental organization formally titled the Institute for Society, Economy and Environment in Hanoi. “That’s important because anything banned in Vietnam is officially seen as harmful to society.”

“It’s not perfect,” says Nguyen Anh Tuan, the owner of Gay Hanoi Tours. “It’s not completely there but it is a great step in the right direction. … Vietnam has always adapted and by learning we become stronger individuals, families and country. I think everyone would agree Vietnam is a quick learner.”

Still, Vietnam is hardly a gay utopia. An ISEE study suggests that roughly one-third of Vietnam’s gay population is closeted. Gay couples holding hands on the street “may get some verbal abuse but it’ll probably be behind [their] back,” Huy says.

As Tuan puts it: “Some people will clap and cheer. Others will, I’m sure, shout and spit.”

Comparing the road toward same-sex marriage in Vietnam and the US is tricky, Huy says, because “we have a totally different system and context.” Vietnam — unlike much of the United States, or many of its Asian neighbors — isn’t under the sway of a religious doctrine casting gay couples as deviant.

In Aceh, the most orthodox corner of Muslim-majority Indonesia, gay sex is punishable by 100 lashes by a man in dark robes. The Philippines, a bastion of Catholicism and a former US colony, is mired in an America-style debate over same-sex marriage.

But Vietnam is an atheist state with few religious hang-ups. Gays in Vietnam are more likely to fear condemnation from mom, not God, according to Hoang Van Chuyen, operator of the gay-friendly service Rainbow Tourism Vietnam. “Almost all parents would like their sons or daughters to get married and have babies,” he says. This family pressure, he says, forces many gay Vietnamese to “live two lives” and conceal their romantic interests for fear of disappointing family.

Fully legalized gay marriage, with all of the benefits enjoyed by straight couples, may be in store for Vietnam in the near future. During official deliberations on same-sex marriage, Huy says, Vietnam’s officials were prepared to offer full benefits to gay couples.

But they retreated, he says, and decided to merely repeal the gay marriage ban in the eleventh hour. “The lawmakers,” he says, “are saying our society just needs a little more time to accept gay marriage.”


GlobalPost

www.towleroad.com/2015/01/vietnam.html

NYC Transpeople Can Now Legally Change Their Birth Certificates Without Surgery

NYC Transpeople Can Now Legally Change Their Birth Certificates Without Surgery

NYC

Beginning yesterday people living in New York City will be able to have their birth certificates changed to reflect their gender identities without having had sexual reassignment surgery or having legally changed their names. The NYC City Council first passed the bill proposing the change last October. The new, more relaxed requirements to modify one’s birth certificate are designed to allow trans-identified persons easier access to a wide variety of other legal documents requiring proof of birth.

NYC12The challenges faced by transpeople without proper identification (obtained with birth certificates) are well documented. Last fall the Williams Institute released a damning report estimating that some 84,000 eligible trans voters could be disenfranchised by aggressive voter registration laws. Additionally a birth certificate that accurately reflects one’s gender is often necessary to obtain housing, employment, and marriage licenses in states that have yet to legalize gay marriage.

Clerical issues aside, dropping the medical requirements from the process allows a broader range of trans bodies equal recognition. 66% of transpeople elect not to undergo corrective surgeries because of the sheer cost and the fact that many insurance providers don’t cover the procedures. For those reasons, the American Medical Association has shifted its official position on the necessity of requiring transpeople to go under the knife to change their birth certificates.

“For many transgender people, a needless operation should not be a government requirement to amend a sex designation on a birth certificate,” AMA President Ardis Dee Hoven said in a public statement. “State laws must acknowledge that the correct course of treatment for any given individual is a decision that rests with the patient and the treating physicians.”


Charles Pulliam-Moore

www.towleroad.com/2015/01/nyc-transpeople-can-now-legally-change-their-birth-certificates-without-sexual-reassignment-surgery.html

Cleansed, Crisp and Crippled: The Challenges of Staying Dapperly Delicious While Disabled

Cleansed, Crisp and Crippled: The Challenges of Staying Dapperly Delicious While Disabled
Picture this: You’re lying next to this dude whom you have gone on three awesome dates with. You met him at a bar, went out for a few coffee dates, and now it is the “third date.” He comes to your place and brings an assortment of high-class food, which you know under normal circumstances you would never eat, let alone be able to afford. You awkwardly talk about the usual nonsensical things one does when they nervously “wanna bone,” but don’t know how to initiate: weather, TV, pop culture icons, etc., and then, quicker than you realize, the sex is occurring. He pulls you toward him and all you can smell is a sweet, masculine, pungent mixture of cologne, body wash, and him. It is altogether intoxicating.

Naturally, things progress as they do, and just as he is about to get to your “promise land” (you call it that because it is without a doubt an amazing specimen indeed), and you are whispering dirty, sexy commands in his ear begging him to continue “southbound on the guy-way” (ooh, I like that one!), he stops and looks up at you with a befuddled look. In this moment, you are thinking one of two things, “Ooooh, he likes what he sees down there!” or “Great! Now is the moment where he realizes I have a disability?!” But no, something much worse escapes his lips.

He looks at you and says: “I can’t continue. You have an odor down there.” In this moment, you are truly horrified at what he is telling you. Everything sexually appealing about this long-awaited rendezvous evaporates in mid air. You realize that he thinks you are dirty (unfortunately, not in the Christina Aguilera-smash-hit kind of way), and there is olfactory evidence to prove this fact. You are lying in your bed in the “dead turtle position”, trying desperately to pinch yourself and wake up. This can’t possibly be happening, right? Needless to say, you don’t see him again after that. You do, however, spend a good chunk of time worrying that you are unclean and unwanted.

Let me break it down for you — when you have a disability requiring sexy wheels, two truths become apparent: 1. When you sit in a 300-lbs chair all day you are bound to sweat in all the little crevices that would normally be aired out by ambulation (I assume. Having never walked, I do not have proof of this). 2. Cleaning yourself can be difficult due to the fact you rely on someone else to do the majority of your personal care routine (Sidebar: it is altogether angering that these persons do not, in any way, resemble Mark Wahlberg (Beiber has nothing on Marky Mark) or Hugh Jackman).

So, you’re thinking, “Great, just have your Personal Care worker come in and shower you. No big deal.” The trouble with this is that in many of these attendant programs, everything is booked and nighttime showers are often not allowed due to less staffing. In real terms, this means you get one shower a day. Also, this isn’t one of those showers where you can luxuriate and sing off-key Britney Spears in private, or have a moment with yourself and an unsuspecting shower nozzle.

On the contrary, this is an efficient, quick spray more akin to a prison shower (unfortunately without Christopher Meloni from Oz). Moreover, it can be super awkward asking someone to “scrub them again” as they are singing Christian hymns to you (actually happened!). So, you direct them as best you can, and blindly trust that all will be spic-and-span in that area… until that awkward moment when you aren’t.

Real Talk: One of the reasons why I have never engaged in any backdoor deliciousness on my end, is for the very real reason that I cannot ask my caregivers to douche me out, and the whole idea of asking a lover to give me a wipe before going in, makes me cringe because I worry they’ll simply assume that I am dirty due to my disability and think: “He can’t do it himself, so of course he isn’t clean.”

The fear of being seen as dirty by a sexual partner lingers in the back of my mind every time I am with someone, because I know that, even though I can tell someone how to clean me and what to do, the end result is out of my control. You are constantly worried and wondering if they cleaned your “Creamy Crippled Center,” and this can make you doubt your overall deliciousness. You worry that every time anyone comes near your dangly bits or any intimate part of you, that the most offensive odor will stop them in their tracks.

Cleanliness is next to crippledness for me, in every way. Knowing that I am clean makes me feel that much closer to a ‘normal’ person. I may not be able to run into my lover’s arms, but damn it, I will smell amaze balls! When that is called into question in anyway, I am forced to reconcile with the fact that I can’t clean myself because I am disabled, and those feelings are very real and very deep. In those moments, I question all the things: my manhood, my desirability, how my life might be different if I could clean myself (true fact: I imagine sexy men banging down my door, wearing nothing except towels and wielding scrub brushes).

There is an upside to this cleaning quandary for the crème de la crip though, and it is this: Next time your lover worries about a possible whiff from the nether regions, invite them to your bathroom and give them a reason to do more than just “scrub them again.”

Thanks for reading. Please check out the work I do as a Disability Awareness Consultant, and find out how I can make disability accessible to you at: www.andrewmorrisongurza.com

www.huffingtonpost.com/andrew-morrisongurza/cleansed-crisp-and-crippl_b_6449506.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices