Under Five Million People School the World

Under Five Million People School the World
2015-05-23-1432394679-1270948-ireland1.jpg
Click for a Great Irish Slide Show By Karel

A small island nation of under five million people in the North Atlantic just showed a country of 318 million, and a world over seven billion, a thing or two about equality by becoming the first country in the world to legalize same sex marriage via a referendum vote of the people. Yes, Ireland, a country and people I’ve had the pleasure of visiting over a dozen times, by an overwhelming margin voted for marriage equality on May 22, 2015 (Harvey Milk Day in the U.S.A., appropriately enough). They become the 20th country to legalize same sex marriage, but the first to do so by popular vote.

I knew if the people that I have met over the last 20 years showed up at the polls that the measure would win. Never once in Ireland have I experienced homophobia; well, there was one time in Matt Malloy’s pub in the West of Ireland, but the homophobes were from Nashville, TN, not Ireland. And yes, that always surprised me, as much as the Pope may be surprised today; you see, Ireland is a Catholic country — I mean, really Catholic. This is a country that didn’t get divorce until 1992, one that just decriminalized homosexuality in the last three decades and one that just allowed condoms to be purchased over the counter since I’ve been going.

It was a hard felt battle. When I was in Ireland March last, the “Yes” side felt pretty confident. Then the Catholic church poured millions in to the “No” campaign and went the whole family values route. But, the Irish didn’t buy it. At least not the younger ones, even many of the older by the amounts of “Yes” votes received.

I sat worried on May 22 in the U.S.A.. The New York Times ran an editorial stating what a huge step this would be world wide, an accelerant for GLBT rights across the globe. The converse would mean if it went down in flames, it would be a huge blow.

By 2:00 a.m. PST Saturday May 23, 10 a.m. Irish time, it was becoming clear that the “yes” votes would prevail. By 07:00 PST, 15:00 Irish (3:00 p.m.) both sides declared that the “yes” would carry the day with an overwhelming margin. In fact, as of this writing, no district has voted “no” yet.

“What do you say to the Catholic Church that wants a ‘no’ vote from you today,” one presenter asked a middle-aged woman on her way to the polls. “I think they should mind their own business, especially as of late,” she responded, “I’m taking my country in to the next century,” she added as she scurried off.

“You must remember, that compared to Americans, the Irish are screaming left-wing liberals,” presenter George Hook told me in our last interview. “We are a left leaning nation by far, which is often at odds with our religious roots in today’s world,” he went on. “And when we decide this, it will be decided. In other words, we won’t rehash it every year. It will be done, the law of the land,” Hook concluded.

And so it will be.

It’s the season of Gay Pride in America. Long Beach, Calif. just celebrated their Pride festival on May 16 and 17 and Los Angeles, New York, San Francisco and many cities in between will continue over the next few months. The festivals were meant to celebrate the spirit of Stonewall, the spirit of oppressed people who had taken enough and stood up for their civil rights.

All over Europe Friday, straights, gays, bis, everyone stood up for GLBT rights and yes, it makes me cry right here, right now. Truly, as one of America’s openly gay media figures for the last three decades, I’ve debated this issue a lot on CNN, MSNBC, in print, in other countries, on BBC, RTE. And I’ve watched homophobia rise, not fall, of late. As singer, Sam Smith, just revealed even he, in the last year, has been hit and called a “faggot” while on tour. It’s still not easy being gay.

Tears. My lesbian niece in Seattle, WA, just texted me, she’s been to Ireland with me before, Uncle Charles, We Won! We Won! and my friend Steven Cabral already this morning, “Karel, we won, it passed; they said yes!”

Joy, happiness, true exuberance, it comes from feeling accepted, from winning long fought battles, from not being discouraged for a change. It’s a shame America can’t do this for all of its people, but Ireland is and that gives the GLBT community around the world hope. Yes, hope that people, including people in our country, their country, wherever they may be, that people can get this issue right. If a Catholic nation can do it, anyone can. And should.

Dublin Castle is alive and electric Saturday, May 23, as people from all around the world gather in anticipation of the final victory’s announcement (it should come at 10:00 PST, 18:00 Irish 6 p.m.) “I’m a gay Irish-Catholic American and I’m here to bear witness to history,” Jay Lassiter told the Irish Times on May 23rd while waiting the final count. And he wasn’t alone. The world was literally waiting.

An award-winning video directed by Karel about Marriage Equality that uses the Jefferson Quote about changing Constitutions

This vote changes the Irish Constitution. That’s right — they changed their document to be inclusive, to grant rights. How Thomas Jefferson of them, the spirit of one of his most famous quotes living and breathing today in Ireland.

“I am not an advocate for frequent changes in laws and constitutions, but laws and institutions must go hand in hand with the progress of the human mind,” Panel Four on the Jefferson Memorial reads in Washington, D.C.

As that becomes more developed, more enlightened, as new discoveries are made, new truths discovered and manners and opinions change, with the change of circumstances, institutions must advance also to keep pace with the times.

We might as well require a man to wear still the coat which fitted him when a boy as civilized society to remain ever under the regimen of their barbarous ancestors.

It appears the Irish agree with Jefferson more than many Americans.

The Irish vote is a huge step for GLBT rights around the globe, and it comes at the time the progress of those rights are celebrated here in the U.S. It’s a lesson that a country can have faith, and believe me, the Irish have faith. This is not a vote saying they are a godless nation. On the contrary, many Irish believe that god and gays are fine with each other, that god is love and understanding and wants families to come together, not be torn apart — all families. It’s a country that struggles with the confines of its faith, but one that puts human rights tantamount to all else. Because they’ve suffered. I mean, they’ve really suffered in that country. Tyrants, plague, famine, Viking invasion — you name it, they’ve had it.

And yet, their hearts remain open to all people.

In 1999, I went to Ireland afraid because of violence in the North and the fact that it hadn’t even been a decade since being gay had been made legal. From the first step, the feeling of welcome was felt then, and over the years, I have always felt like a welcomed visitor in their country. I have brought my partner to meet their President, danced with my late husband in pubs all across the Temple Bar in Dublin, and walked the Moors hand in hand with a man. And never once did anyone say anything to me except “Hello!” or “Welcome.”

A small island nation in the North Atlantic is schooling the world on equal rights. I want every member of the GLBT community, and those allies, to remember Ireland when you are spending vacation dollars. Support this country, these people, who have made such a bold statement to the world, and to their church.

Religion and civil rights can exist side by side; good, god-fearing Catholics can be gay or accept them, and devastation won’t happen when equality is granted.

Thank you to every “yes” campaigner in Ireland. From a 52-year-old gay American, I feel very, very Irish today. As a country and as a people, you have my continued love. As an example to the world today you shine like no other.

Sláinte! What you’ve done is brilliant! I’ll see you in September, and until that time, thanks for giving millions hope around the world in your one, simple vote.

To hear my shows from Ireland and read many stories from the Huffington Post from my journeys, please go here

To hear this or other interviews get the FREE Karel Cast App, subscribe in Spreaker to the podcast or simply go to the most incredible website on all the planet, save this one: karel.media.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

www.huffingtonpost.com/charles-karel-bouley/under-five-million-people-school-the-world_b_7427818.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

Sweden's Eurovision Winner Previously Called Homosexuality an 'Abnormality' – VIDEO

Sweden's Eurovision Winner Previously Called Homosexuality an 'Abnormality' – VIDEO

Zelmerlow

Well this certainly puts a bit of a damper on the camp-tastic Eurovision Song Contest:

Sweden’s Mans Zelmerlow won the final of the Eurovision Song Contest in Vienna on Sunday, beating Russia and Italy in the big international talent show which will be held in his home country next year.

The 28-year-old singer and TV presenter performed the winning electro-pop ballad Heroes, dancing in front of a black screen with animated gnomes.

Last year, Zelmerlow came under fire and subsequently apologized for saying “it isn’t equally natural for men to want to sleep with one another.” He also called homosexuality an “avvikelse” which can be translated as “abnormality.” 

 
“I want to apologize to all who take offense,” he said in a follow up statement at the time. “I believe and hope that the vast majority know that I respect differences and all forms of love.”
 
Watch Zelmerlow’s winning performance during last night’s Eurovision finale (which also featured a sky high performance by Conchita Wurst), AFTER THE JUMP
 
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Kyler Geoffroy

www.towleroad.com/2015/05/swedens-eurovision-winner-previously-called-homosexuality-an-abnormality-video.html

'Inside Out: Portraits Of Cross-Gender Children' Beautifully Documents Transgender Kids

'Inside Out: Portraits Of Cross-Gender Children' Beautifully Documents Transgender Kids
For the past 12 years, Dutch photographer Sarah Wong has documented the lives and experiences of a group of children who have transitioned — or are in the process of transitioning — to live as their authentic selves.

Wong captured these images of children involved with VU University in Amsterdam, where they engaged in a type of therapy that aimed to support children who experience gender dysphoria. A number of these kids took or have taken puberty blockers in order to delay the effects of puberty until they decide how they want to live their lives. However, the photos were taken at the kids’ homes, schools, ballet classes — spaces where they felt most comfortable.

Wong shared the images with the world through a book called Inside Out: Portraits Of Cross-Gender Children, published in 2011. A medical research journalist from the Dutch Volkskrant newspaper, Ellen de Visser, wrote the book’s text.

The Huffington Post chatted with Wong this week about the children in these photos, as well as her own experiences documenting the lives of these kids.

ballet girl 2005
Ballet Girl, 2005

The Huffington Post: Who are the children captured in these photographs?
Sarah Wong: These are Dutch, cross-gender children aged 5 up to 17. I photographed them since 2003 by request of their parents. I worked as a photographer in health care and had just finished a photo book about a children’s hospital. We met, and the cross-gender children immediately touched my heart.

balletgirl 2010
Ballet Girl, 2010

boy with swimming suit 2009
Boy with swimming suit, 2009

“At the end we’re all the same — souls who want to be happy and live compassionately.”

What was your goal/intention with photographing these children?
My goal was to help them to find happiness. With their portraits I wanted to empower them — no sensational journalistic approach. Not a boy in a dress or a girl with a football. When people saw the portraits they said, “lovely children, but who are they?”

The photographs showed lovely children, with a strong consciousness: this is who I truly am. At the end we’re all the same — souls who want to be happy and live compassionately.

boy with swimming suit 2010
Boy with boxing trainer, 2010

girl 2003
Girl, 2003

boy 3 2007
Boy, 2007

What were the experiences of these children like at this European clinic?
The children had very good experiences at the VUmc because of the puberty blockers. The greatest nightmare from a cross-gender child is your body growing the wrong direction. A boy doesn’t want breasts and girls don’t want to have a beard. The puberty-blockers gave relief and thinking time, and they could grow up like “normal” teenagers.

boy3 2009
Boy, 2009

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Girl, 2015

Why, as a photographer, is providing these stories and experiences visibility so important?
As an artist your work can have a great impact on public opinion. I was always very interested in identity and compassion and felt sometimes more like a psychologist or detective-profiler, than a photographer.

I realized very young, at age 21 in art school, that as an artist, your photographs can have a great impact on the public opinion. I was very much inspired by Robert Capa and Henry Cartier Bresson, Magnum photographers.

It’s very important for society to see these images — theres nothing sensational about transgender kids. Again, at the end we’re pretty much the same: we’re all souls who want to live happy and give meaning to our life and others.

It was during the project that I suddenly understood why these photos were incredibly important for the kids. They showed who they really were. The photographs were almost forensic proof for them.

Mostly, photography is about the emotions and ego from the artist. Well, during this project my ego shrunk every photoshoot because I was in service of them. And I liked very much the idea that the photographs we made were for a greater purpose. Unfortunately, I could never expose them in a museum because of the integrity of the children. Now that they’re older I’m looking for a great spot. Society and public opinion has changed.

girl 2003
Girl, 2003

girl 2009
Girl, 2009

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Princess on white horse, 2012

What do you hope viewers take away from these images?
I truly hope The Huffington Post audience will take the compassionate way of looking. This means a way of looking with the heart — free from personal emotions.

If you get emotional with someone’s suffering you are not in a position of empowering someone. The very first doctor who helped these children was a pioneer as well. During the weekend he was a deacon in a church. The reason he wanted to help transgender gender people was because of this compassionate way of looking at them — not as a doctor but as a human being.

butterfly tableau 2010
Butterfly tableau, 2010

butterfly tableau 2012
Butterfly tableau, 2012

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/05/24/inside-out-portraits-cross-gender-children_n_7318026.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

Face Palm, Selfie, Bacon and 35 Other Emojis Set to Debut Next Year

Face Palm, Selfie, Bacon and 35 Other Emojis Set to Debut Next Year

Emoji

Emoji lovers take note, there’s a slew of adorable new images that may be coming to a smartphone near you:

The Unicode Consortium — a little-known Mountain View, California-based organization that standardizes characters and emoji across all the different operating systems — has gifted us with yet another batch of the popular pictographs, including a wilted flower, bacon, and a symbol for the word “selfie.” Yahoo Tech has learned that earlier this month the consortium’s emoji subcommittee finalized the additions and submitted them to members for a vote of approval. The new emoji will be added to the existing set in June 2016 as part of the Unicode 9.0 update if all goes according to plan.

Check out the full list of the 38 brand new emojis, AFTER THE JUMP

[h/t Digital Trends]

E1

E2

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Kyler Geoffroy

www.towleroad.com/2015/05/emoji.html

Dan Savage Points Out Hypocrisy Of Duggar Family Values

Dan Savage Points Out Hypocrisy Of Duggar Family Values
LGBT advocate Dan Savage noted the hypocrisy inherent in the Duggar family’s anti-trans agenda in light of Josh Duggar’s apparent admission that he molested five underage girls when he was a teenager.

“Particularly when religious conservatives want to talk about it, they want to point a finger at non-family. They want to point a finger at people that they define as the enemies of families or not from or having families of their own — LGBT people, particularly trans people increasingly with these anti-trans bathroom bills,” Savage said on Friday night’s episode of “All In with Chris Hayes.”

“That is what the Duggars have dug in on,” Savage continued, “is attacking trans people and opposing this LGBT civil rights bill in Fayetteville, where they were out there arguing that the threat to little girls in Fayetteville were transwomen when they knew, when they were covering for someone who had demonstrated, at least at that age, was a threat to little girls himself.”

josh duggar
Josh Duggar, executive director of FRC Action, speaks at the Arkansas state Capitol in Little Rock on Aug. 29, 2014. (AP Photo/Danny Johnston, File)

In August 2014, the family’s matriarch, Michelle Duggar, campaigned against an anti-discrimination bill in her home state of Arkansas.

In a robocall, Duggar is recorded saying:

Hello, this is Michelle Duggar. I’m calling to inform you of some shocking news that would affect the safety of northwest Arkansas women and children. The Fayetteville City Council is voting on an ordinance this Tuesday night that would allow men — yes, I said men — to use women’s and girls’ restrooms, locker rooms, showers, sleeping areas and other areas that are designated for females only. I don’t believe the citizens of Fayetteville would want males with past child predator convictions that claim they are female to have a legal right to enter private areas that are reserved for women and girls. I doubt that Fayetteville parents would stand for a law that would endanger their daughters or allow them to be traumatized by a man joining them in their private space. We should never place the preference of an adult over the safety and innocence of a child. Parents, who do you want undressing next to your daughter at the public swimming pool’s private changing area?

After the sexual abuse allegations surfaced this week, Josh Duggar resigned from his position as executive director of the conservative and anti-LGBT group Family Research Council Action, the Washington Post reported.

TLC pulled the Duggars’ “19 Kids and Counting” show in the wake of the controversy.

The network did not immediately respond to a request for comment from The Huffington Post.

H/T Advocate

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/05/24/dan-savage-duggar_n_7429464.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

An Oscar Wilde Tour Of The Metropolitan Art Museum’s Queer Hidden Treasures

An Oscar Wilde Tour Of The Metropolitan Art Museum’s Queer Hidden Treasures

Diadoumenos Oscar Wilde Met Tour by JJ KeyesAll eyes were on the Metropolitan Museum of Art for the Met Gala 2015 earlier this month as Sarah Jessica Parker, Rihanna, Cher and Beyonce took to the red carpet with some remarkable looks embodying the theme, China: Through the Looking Glass.

The Anna Wintour Costume Center’s highly anticipated exhibition of the same name, China: Through the Looking Glass, has many fashion fans excited, but the museum’s permanent collection houses some treasures that most people overlook. Visitors to the Met often check out the special exhibitions or go for a speedy tour attempting to hit all the highlights.

And while the Met is largely considered a “conservative institution,” historian Andrew Lear has discovered the gay nooks, crannies, and marble curves peeking out throughout the collection. Now, through Lear’s Oscar Wilde Tour, visitors can explore the sprawling museum through a queer lens.

Our small group ventured to the Museum’s collection of Greek and Roman art first. The collection comprises of more than seventeen thousand works ranging from the Neolithic period to the time of the Roman emperor Constantine’s conversion to Christianity in A.D. 312. Lear led us from the marble kouros to erotic Athenian vase paintings, to an extensive analysis on the sculpted bust of Antinous, the lover of Roman Emperor Hadrian. After we had our fix of the Greeks & Romans we ventured into the Melanesia Gallery, where Lear instructed us to look up to take in the surprising collection of ancestor poles from New Guinea. These bis poles are some of the most spectacular sculptures of the Asmat people, phallic in nature, and depicting male initiation and same sex rights of passage.

Rodin by JJ KeyesLear weaves his guests in and out of decadent galleries and stops to point out significant gems, like Picasso’s “Gertrude Stein” and Michelangelo Buonarroti’s “Young Archer”. Upstairs, Rodin’s handsome “The Vanquished” sculpture caught our eye on the way to the discreet and overtly homosexual depictions of Renaissance and more modern lovers.

The tour is equally informative for those new to the Met’s collection as it is for the culture hounds looking for a closer look at just what makes this glorious museum uniquely homoerotic.

“It’s all part of the hidden gay story in one of the great museums of the world, which you’ll never look at the same way again,” Lear says.

Check out more pictures from our tour here.

Click here for more information about Oscar Wilde Tours and the Tour of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

jjkeyes

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/MQjbluHPJOs/an-oscar-wilde-tour-of-the-metropolitan-art-museums-queer-hidden-treasures-20150524

Conchita Wurst Soars to New Heights in Eurovision 2015 Opening Performance: WATCH

Conchita Wurst Soars to New Heights in Eurovision 2015 Opening Performance: WATCH

Wurst

Eurovision 2014 winner and gender-bending singer Conchita Wurst opened this year’s Eurovision Grand Final with a soaring performance. The Austrian favorite ascended above the audience on wires before gracefully descending onto the main stage while singing the opening song “Building Bridges.”

You can watch the stellar opening, AFTER THE JUMP

Screen Shot 2015-05-23 at 2.37.21 PM

(Bottom photo via Twitter)

 


Anthony Costello

www.towleroad.com/2015/05/conchita-wurst-soars-in-eurovision-2015-opening-performance.html

Shape Up: Turn Up the Heat

Shape Up: Turn Up the Heat

phoenix

Derek Jameson

In today’s body conscious “nip n’ tuck” culture, we plug away on fitness machines, pump our bodies full of enhancements, and cake on the creams as if it’s our only saving grace to the glory days. However, at most of our community gym facilities we have two ancient forms of health and wellness at our disposal: the sauna and steam room. These methods have been implemented around the world to great positive effect for hundreds and hundreds of years.

Some may view these two amenities as just a sweatbox they can’t make time for, but a including a session a few times a week can positively affect your health, fitness, and appearance. Whether you like dry heat or prefer to get wet, both methods are extremely beneficial additions to your weekly fitness program.

Sweat!  A deep sweat can relieve stress, relax freshly trained muscles, and soothe aches throughout the body. An important function saunas and steam rooms can provide is the ability to flush toxins from the environment and from our various forms of consumption choices. If you’re hypertensive, this may also help with lowering your pulse and blood pressure. Both forms of wellness can cleanse skin, induce deep sleep, and burn calories. Our bodies already produce collagen and the penetrating heat brings it to the surface of your skin. This helps to aid in elasticity, making your skin look young, fresh, and more vibrant.

Steam rooms also aid with breathing problems associated with bronchitis, asthma, and other sinus problems. The heat opens up the airways, cleanses, and draws out impurities.

Rumor has it, sweating can also help us drop the water weight our bodies love to hold onto. Ever look in the mirror and see that extra layer sitting on top of your otherwise finely chiseled abs?  That’s water weight!  Our diets can contain a lot of water-hugging sodium. So, spending some time in the sweatbox can help shed the extra water if you want to look good for the summer pool parties! 

A question you may have is “What is the difference between the two?” 

The answer is simple: one’s dry and one’s wet!

Saunas provide dry heat and steam rooms give off a wet heat. Both can help cleanse the skin, loosen muscles, and give you all of the health benefits previously mentioned. It comes down to personal preference and the results vary from person to person. If anything, it’s a great time to relax and possibly make a new friend at the gym!

The Phoenix Effecta metabolic bootcamp that gets you in shape fast, is offered exclusively at Mansion Fitness, 7914 Santa Monica Blvd., West Hollywood.

Jeremy Kinser

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/BGHI1sDBg1k/shape-up-turn-up-the-heat-20150524