Two Gay Killers Become First Same-Sex Couple To Marry In UK Prison: VIDEO

Two Gay Killers Become First Same-Sex Couple To Marry In UK Prison: VIDEO

Mikhail Gallatinov Marc Goodwin

Two convicted killers have become the first same-sex couple in the UK to be married in prison, reports the Independent.

Mikhail Gallatinov (above left) is a convicted pedophile serving a life sentence for the murder of Adrian Kaminsky. Marc Goodwin (above right) was sentenced to life in 2007 for a homophobic murder that was described as part of a “gay-bashing spree.”

4889940-largeThe pair married at a small ceremony in the visitor’s center at Full Sutton Prison, East Yorkshire.

Under the Marriage Act 1983, all prisoners have the right to marry while being detained.

Reacting to the news, Peter Benfold, whose brother was murdered by Goodwin, said:

“Hopefully they will strangle each other. It’s going to be terrible when they’re set free, given they’re both killers and one is a strangler and ­pedophile. It could be double trouble. It’s a marriage made in hell.”

40-year-old Gallatinov can be considered for parole next year.

Watch a Young Turks report, AFTER THE JUMP


Jim Redmond

www.towleroad.com/2015/04/two-gay-killers-become-first-same-sex-couple-to-marry-in-uk-prison-video.html

Fear of Violence Connects Cis and Trans Women

Fear of Violence Connects Cis and Trans Women
2015-03-30-1427749315-7675641-Girllove.jpg

I stopped by a little produce store on my way home to pick up a few things. I had my two-year-old with me. There was a woman standing behind an outdoor fruit stand with her parcels of produce. She was moving from foot to foot, unable to stand still and trembling. When I looked her in the eyes, I saw that she was choking back tears. When I asked if she was okay, she told me she was spooked because someone had tried to grab her from outside a motel. Her terror emanated from her body in waves. I noticed she had a scissor attached to her bag.

The produce store employees kept walking outside and giving her dirty looks, as if her fear was inconvenient or bad for business. I wondered why they couldn’t invite her inside the store and give her a place to sit. I asked how I could help her, but because I had my child with me, was hesitant to stay because of the scissor. As she continued trembling with fear, she said her mother was coming to pick her up.

While I was paying for my groceries, I decided to wait with her until her mother arrived. When I walked outside, I saw her striding toward a white car. They drove off with her mother’s placid face behind the wheel, and the woman’s face crumpling into a mask of tragedy. They drove away, but her agony and anxiety stayed with me — the undercurrent of fear that laces its way into every woman’s life, the fear of being violated.

I have felt familiar with this fear from a young age, from my own experiences, but also from the news stories of horrible things happening to girls. I was just a couple of years younger than Mary Vincent, a teenage hitchhiker, who survived after being raped and mutilated when she was 15 years old. Her attacker chopped off her forearms. He cut off her physical agency, her ability to hold something in her hand, her ability to hug freely, or to hold her hand up in protest. He only served eight years for his crime.

The experience of being female is intertwined with the fear of violence. Even so, I have always felt empowered to be a woman and would never have it any other way.

Recently, a friend brought her two children to my home for a playdate. Her oldest went to preschool with my daughter. His shoulder length black hair was tied back with a rubber band to keep it out of his beautiful dark eyes. His peach colored t-shirt with the sequined heart appliqué reminded me of a shirt my daughter has. He was adorable down to his purple and white polka dotted socks. In contrast, his brother was like a miniature linebacker Lothario in the making, handsome and strong-headed. Their parents have compassionately risen to the challenge of creating a social and academic world where it is safe for their children to express their gender organically. As I watched the children play, I couldn’t help but wonder about this gender variant Latino child’s future and hope for a safer world for him wherever he goes, no matter his eventual gender identity and expression.

As I watched him play, I found myself thinking about the many trans women who have been willing to give up everything — safety, family, male privilege, societal acceptance — to actualize their gender. As Cecilia Chung, of Transgender Law Center so aptly stated,

Statistically, trans women of color are more likely to experience discrimination and violence. According to a meta-analysis, trans women of color are 49 times more likely to have HIV when compared to the general population. So why do we still choose such a path when odds are stacked against us? Because the pain of not being our authentic (selves) outweighs any perceived risks.

Nationwide, seven trans women have been murdered in 2015 alone. The year started with a murder per week. This is chilling and tragic. I can’t help but think about those old blame the victim tropes — that women invite violence and rape based on how they are dressed. Women don’t dress for violence — not the terrified woman nearly abducted from outside a motel, not Mary Vincent who had her arms taken from her and not the murdered trans women. Trans women don’t invite attack when they choose to be their authentic selves, just as cisgender women don’t invite violent attack with their choice of clothing and self-adornment. However, by choosing to live their lives as their authentic female selves, despite all the risks, they enter the sisterhood — the sisterhood of the fear of violence.

What can we do to help? Make eye contact, offer to help, be present, be a friend. And as Cecilia Chung suggests,

If you know a trans woman of color, please give her a hug and let her know her life is precious and you accept her unconditionally. It might mean giving her a glimpse of hope that she thought she had lost.

While our culture of violence isn’t going away any time soon, we can make efforts each day to counteract it by creating a culture of love and acceptance. Love the woman who is shaken and scared at the produce market. Love the sweet gender variant child. Love the brave trans women who risk everything to live authentically. And most importantly, love yourself. Be safe, my friends.

www.huffingtonpost.com/georgia-kolias/fear-of-violence-connects-cis-and-trans-women_b_6972772.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

Update: More Tech Industry Leaders Make Unprecedented & Historic Joint Statement to Legislators

Update: More Tech Industry Leaders Make Unprecedented & Historic Joint Statement to Legislators

Today, in response to a host of anti-LGBT bills pending or signed in to law in states around the country, tech industry leaders signed a statement supporting the addition of non-discrimination protections for LGBT people.
HRC.org

www.hrc.org/blog/entry/tech-industry-leaders-make-unprecedented-historic-joint-statement-to-legisl?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

Corporations Agree: It’s Time to Stop the Harmful Attacks on LGBT People

Corporations Agree: It’s Time to Stop the Harmful Attacks on LGBT People

Since Indiana Governor Mike Pence signed the so-called “Religious Freedom Restoration Act” last week, a variety of corporations, both large and small, from across the country have spoke out this discriminatory measure.
HRC.org

www.hrc.org/blog/entry/corporations-agree-its-time-to-stop-the-harmful-attacks-on-lgbt-people?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

David Letterman Shreds Mike Pence Over His Home State’s Discrimination Of Gays And Lesbians

David Letterman Shreds Mike Pence Over His Home State’s Discrimination Of Gays And Lesbians

Screen Shot 2015-04-01 at 12.38.09 PMIt’s almost become sad to watch all the abuse heaped at walking punchline Indiana Gov. Mike Pence over his “religious freedom” bill. OK, not really. It’s still a lot of fun to witness and the scorn is well-deserved. Last night comedy icon David Letterman, an Indiana native, got in on the mockery. The veteran funnyman addressed his Late Show audience and blasted Pence for his archaic viewpoint. Letterman told the studio crowd and television viewers that the state Pence governs isn’t the Indiana he grew up in.

“I lived there for 27 years. Folks were folks and that’s all there was to it,” Letterman states with visible irritation and lists ways straights and gays are exactly alike. “Now this guy throws a monkey wrench into the works.”

Watch Letterman blast Pence with a Top 10 list below.

Jeremy Kinser

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/6B4CPGyZqKg/david-letterman-shreds-mike-pence-over-his-home-states-discrimination-of-gays-and-lesbians-20150401

Bryan Fischer: Making Christians Serve Gays is a Form of Slavery Outlawed by 13th Amendment – VIDEO

Bryan Fischer: Making Christians Serve Gays is a Form of Slavery Outlawed by 13th Amendment – VIDEO

Fischer

Bryan Fischer came up with a good one on his show today, arguing that Governor Mike Pence, if he gives in to ‘Big Gay’ on the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, will be compelling Christian bakers, photographers, and the like to provide services against their will, which is a form of slavery, Right Wing Watch reports.

Said Fischer:

“I’m afraid Governor Pence is dangerously close to allowing the homosexual lobby to get the state of Indiana to compel people to provide labor against their will.  What do we call it when people are compelled to provide labor against their will? Involuntary labor, what do we call that, ladies and gentlemen? That is involuntary servitude, that is slavery, that is something that is forbidden by the Thirteenth Amendment”

Watch, AFTER THE JUMP


Andy Towle

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