Indiana RFRA Fuss Shows Where the Real Mainstream Now Runs

Indiana RFRA Fuss Shows Where the Real Mainstream Now Runs

The light-speed legislative “fix” for Indiana’s Religious Freedom Restoration Act is a gobsmacking, humiliating defeat for the religious far right, and a stunning, couldn’t-be-predicted demonstration of where the mainstream now lies on LGBT rights.

More than defeat, it was political jiu jitsu: all the force and passion that had impelled the RFRA forward suddenly got turned against its proponents, to devastating effect.  A law that was intended as a consolation prize for the faction that lost the fight on gay marriage has now become evidence of how far outside the mainstream – even the mainstream of Indiana – that faction actually is. 

On top of it, the controversy has made it more likely that Indiana will get a statewide LGBT rights bill next year.  The state’s largest newspaper is behind it, as are the mayor of Indianapolis and much of the business community.

The new fix forbids using RFRA for the main reason its most ardent proponents wanted it: to gain religiously motivated exemptions from laws in Indianapolis and other cities that forbid discrimination in employment, housing, and places of business on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity.  As the religious right’s losing battle against homosexuality enters its final phase, Indiana’s RFRA has been declawed.  It will no longer be a cudgel for the culture war.  Indeed, arguably it is now the most progressive of all 20 state RFRAs.

RFRAs can potentially be used to challenge almost any state or local law or practice – from building codes to prison regulations to school curricula – on the grounds they violate someone’s exercise of religion.  We can debate whether or not it’s wise or fair to give special rights – that is, accommodation over and above what the Constitution’s Free Exercise Clause requires – to religious practitioners.  But the point is, from its actual language, there was no reason to think Indiana’s RFRA was only about gay rights. 

Except, for its key proponents, it was.  Governor Mike Pence ineptly tried to claim otherwise, and looked foolish, if not dishonest.  But to know the truth, all you had to do was read what the web sites of groups like the Indiana Family Institute and  Advance America had been saying for months.  A florist who claimed her “relationship with Jesus Christ” prevented her from arranging some “twigs or sticks in a vase” for a gay customer’s wedding has become the heroine of this movement.  The law of the RFRA was more complicated than many people understood, but the anti-gay politics were not.  

The Indiana legislative fix smoked out this truth.  According to the Heritage Foundation, the fix “amounts to nothing less than a wholesale repeal” of RFRA.  And according to the group led by Eric Miller, who was an honored guest at Pence’s bill signing, RFRA will be “destroyed” if “Christian” businesses can’t use it to turn away homosexuals. 

Finally, some candor.

For a long time, groups like Miller’s traded on the perception that they represented the mainstream.  But Miller and his colleagues overreached, and the RFRA controversy demonstrated that they are actually on the fringe.  

As recently as a generation ago, gays and lesbians were widely despised: fired from government employment, arrested for their private sexual conduct, openly demeaned by politicians.  Most Americans reported unfavorable attitudes toward them. 

But today, the NCAA and NASCAR (and you can’t get any more middle-American than those) leap to disassociate themselves from right-wing religious groups who have become obsessed with scapegoating gays for their own declining support and relevance.  Their fleeting success with Indiana’s RFRA was a briefly encouraging paroxysm for groups that have otherwise “begun to seem like the enemy in Sun Tzu’s Art of War—exhausted, bewildered, devoid of hope or spirit.

That’s now more true than it was a week ago.  We have seen the mainstreaming of outrage against the very idea of anti-gay discrimination.  Contrary to the sputtering of Tea Party lunatics, support for gay rights is not a matter of “LGBT Activist Fascists” intimidating politicians and business leaders.  Gays and lesbians, by themselves a small minority, do not have that kind of power.

The movement for LGBT rights has succeeded, instead, due to an extraordinary mixture of rational persuasion, empathy, friendship, family bonds, and economic self-interest.  And the Indiana controversy specifically has been about (mostly) heterosexual business, religious, and civic leaders, politicians, and cultural icons recognizing that they have gay friends, customers, family members, congregants, co-workers, and employees whom they don’t want to see treated as second-class citizens.

While groups like the Family Research Council and the Alliance Defending Freedom sink into tantrums of frustration and victimization, we can see that the RFRA controversy was worth having, because it demonstrated where the real mainstream now runs.

 

www.huffingtonpost.com/steve-sanders/indiana-rfra-fuss-shows-w_b_6997014.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

PHOTOS: Furry Pups Do It Doggy Style In Seattle

PHOTOS: Furry Pups Do It Doggy Style In Seattle

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Things once again got pretty ruff at Arf!, Seattle’s monthly night of kink, fetish, bath house disco and sleazy dance tunes. Special guest this month: L.A.’s magical and muscular James Cerne, who will return to town to DJ for Pride in June. Hopefully Seattle can persuade him to move up to the Pacific Northwest for good. Hint, hint, James.

Check out some photos from the puppy pile below and see the full gallery at GayCities.

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Photo credit: Matt Baume

Graham Gremore

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/HycUx1Ma6Gg/photos-furry-pups-do-it-doggy-style-in-seattle-20150403

Indiana Pizzeria Owner Who Refuses to Cater Same-Sex Weddings Has A Message for 'The Gays' – VIDEO

Indiana Pizzeria Owner Who Refuses to Cater Same-Sex Weddings Has A Message for 'The Gays' – VIDEO

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Speaking with Fox Business Network host Neil Cavuto last night, Memories Pizza owner Crystal O’Connor spoke out on the backlash (and support) she and her Walker, Indiana business have received after she was interviewed by a local television station saying she supported the state’s “religious freedom” bill and would refuse to cater a gay wedding if asked to do so.

Crystal, who said she plans to reopen her restaurant soon after a brief shut down, added that while she doesn’t have any gay friends she and her father “show no hatred” towards “the gays.”

She also shared her thoughts on the GoFundMe campaign that has already raised over $500,000 in support of Memories Pizza.

Watch, AFTER THE JUMP

 


Kyler Geoffroy

www.towleroad.com/2015/04/memoriespizzafox.html

California To Pay For Inmate's Gender Confirmation Surgery, Judge Rules

California To Pay For Inmate's Gender Confirmation Surgery, Judge Rules

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — A federal judge on Thursday ordered California’s corrections department to provide a transgender inmate with sex reassignment surgery, the first time such an operation has been ordered in the state.

U.S. District Judge Jon Tigar in San Francisco ruled that denying the surgery to 51-year-old Michelle-Lael Norsworthy violates her constitutional rights. Her birth name is Jeffrey Bryan Norsworthy.

The ruling marks just the second time nationwide that a judge has issued an injunction directing a state prison system to provide the surgery, said Ilona Turner, legal director at the Transgender Law Center in Oakland, which helped represent Norsworthy.

The previous order in a Massachusetts case was overturned last year and is being appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court.

In his ruling in California, Tigar cited testimony that the surgery has actually been performed just once on an inmate, an apparent reference to a person who castrated himself in Texas then was given the surgery out of necessity.

Norsworthy, who was convicted of murder, has lived as a woman since the 1990s and has what Tigar termed severe gender dysphoria — a condition that occurs when people’s gender at birth is contrary to the way they identify themselves.

“The weight of the evidence demonstrates that for Norsworthy, the only adequate medical treatment for her gender dysphoria is SRS,” Tigar wrote, referring to sex reassignment surgery.

California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation officials said they were considering whether to appeal the ruling.

“This decision confirms that it is unlawful to deny essential treatment to transgender people” in or out of prison, said Kris Hayashi, executive director of the Transgender Law Center. “The bottom line is no one should be denied the medical care they need.”

If the order stands, Norsworthy would be the first inmate to receive such surgery in California, said Joyce Hayhoe, a spokeswoman for the federal receiver who controls California prison medical care.

Hayhoe said it’s not known how much the surgery would cost, but it could run as high as $100,000 depending on the circumstances. The Transgender Law Center called the estimate “a gross exaggeration” and said Medi-Cal, California’s health care program for low-income residents, has covered the procedure for years.

Corrections officials, in previous court filings, argued that Norsworthy has received proper medical and mental health care for more than 15 years and is in no immediate medical danger if the surgery is not performed.

Her care has included counseling, mental health treatment and hormone therapy that the department said “has changed her physical appearance and voice to that of a woman” while helping her find her gender identity.

That care is consistent with what other judges nationwide have found to be appropriate for transgender inmates, the department said.

Norsworthy has been in prison since 1987, serving a life sentence for second-degree murder. She has twice delayed her scheduled parole hearings in recent months.

She currently is housed at Mule Creek State Prison, an all-male prison in Ione, 40 miles southeast of Sacramento.

The sex change surgery would prompt practical problems, the department said.

It said keeping Norsworthy in a men’s prison could invite violence, including possible assault and rape.

But she could also face danger at a women’s prison — or pose a threat herself — because she had a history of domestic violence before her murder conviction, the department said.

Last month, attorneys for the transgender inmate convicted of murder in Massachusetts asked the U.S. Supreme Court to overturn a ruling denying her request for sex reassignment surgery.

A federal judge in 2012 ordered the Massachusetts Department of Correction to grant the surgery to Michelle Kosilek, but the ruling was overturned in December by the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

As in California, the appeal in Massachusetts cited security concerns about protecting the inmate.

Courts in other states have ordered hormone treatments, psychotherapy and other treatments but not surgery.

www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/04/02/california-inmate-gender-surgery_n_6996910.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

So Ruby Tandoh came out? It won’t be the last time

So Ruby Tandoh came out? It won’t be the last time
Gay and bi women constantly have to deal the assumption that they’re heterosexual – particularly if they don’t conform to people’s expectations that lesbian equals butch “I think Ruby Tandoh may have come out.” My good friend, a fellow LGBT Great British Bake Off fan, wrote on my Facebook wall 20 minutes after Guardian writer and ex- GGBO contestant, Ruby Tandoh, had made her Twitter …

feeds.theguardian.com/c/34708/f/663828/s/45141c01/sc/7/l/0L0Stheguardian0N0Ccommentisfree0C20A150Capr0C0A30Cruby0Etandoh0Ecame0Eout0Elesbians0Ebi/story01.htm