32 Members of Congress Demand TSA Reform Trans Screening Procedures

32 Members of Congress Demand TSA Reform Trans Screening Procedures

Several members of congress are asking the federal Transportation Security Administration to revise its policies in the wake of the widely publicized and humilating experience of trans woman Shadi Petosky at Orlando International Airport last month. 

On September 21, Petosky endured a series of dehumanizing interactions with TSA agents while trying to return from a visit to see her mother, as The Advocate chronicled. Petosky’s live-tweets, along with the deluge of tweets that followed by trans allies using the hashtag #TravelingWhileTrans, lambasted a broken TSA screening system for trans travelers.

Now congressional leaders are speaking out for change. on Friday, Reps. Adam Schiff (D-CA), Mark Pocan (D-WI), and Brian Higgins (D-NY), along with 29 other members of Congress, sent a letter to the head of the TSA demanding an overhaul in the agency’s treatment of transgender passengers, according to a statement sent to The Advocate.

Pivotal among the changes urged in the letter is the insistence that TSA adopt a screening protocol which does not rely on TSA screeners’ subjective approximations about an individual’s gender identity. The letter highlights Petosky’s experiences and states the following:

“While we understand the importance of vigilant airport security, we cannot countenance a security protocol that subjects transgender travelers to this level of indignity. To that end, we urge TSA to complete a thorough review of its current procedures and address any shortcomings that may, however unintentionally, subject transgender travelers to inequitable or improper treatment by security personnel.”

The letter asks the TSA to take three steps to ensure equitable treatment of trans travelers:

First, the letter notes that the TSA’s “procedures regarding the use of full-body scanners present unique challenges for transgender passengers.” Screeners must rely on their own assumptions to determine gender after examining the scanners. Instead of subjective appraisals, congressional leaders want the TSA to honor the gender identity professed by the traveler.

Next, the letter urges the TSA to refine its policy by letting trans passengers know that they do not have to reveal prosthetic devices or binding materials while in a public area. Publishing all expectations within its policy on its website will help to clarify regulations for trans travelers, the members of Congress contend. The letter also demands more culturally aware and trans-affirmative training for screeners.

Lastly, while praising the Departments of Homeland Security and Health and Human Services for launching their own investigations into Petosky’s ordeal, the letter asks TSA to be transparent with the transgender community and the public when conducting its own investigation.

Previously, The Advocate reported that, one day after Petosky’s incident, a TSA spokesman claimed that “After examining closed circuit TV video and other available information, TSA has determined that the evidence shows our officers followed TSA’s strict guidelines. Supervisory personnel and a Passenger Support Specialist participated in the screening to ensure guidelines were met.”

But the Human Rights Campaign insisted that the TSA’s examination was not enough, and urged the TSA to conduct a full investigation into Petosky’s case, calling for “immediate action to ensure transgender travelers are treated equally and with full respect.”

But despite TSA’s claims that its agents strictly adhered to guidelines when screening Petosky, a Facebook post she wrote on Thursday contends quite the opposite. After thanking her friends, supporters, and the thousands of strangers online who shared her story, Petosky lays into what she calls the TSA’s “lying statement,” suggesting it plays on transphobic, debunked stereotypes that portray all trans people, and especially trans women, as inherently threatening. As Petosky explained on Facebook:

1. The TSA has NO written policy on trans and gender non conforming people. What up butches. There are no “strictest standards.”

2. The TSA policy says that people are to be treated at the gender they are “presenting as.” They violated that with me. There is no class on gender presentation. They read what they came in knowing. They make a guess, and if they guess wrong you get flagged as a potential threat. Not that we aren’t used to being called a threat. We’re sex perverts in bathrooms and pedophiles as teachers and body assimilation rapists in feminist spaces and killers on TV and traps in a bar and might attack someone in the hall on the a TV set and detrimental to gay and lesbian political progress and THE GREATEST THREAT OF ALL — are ruining stand-up comedy. …

3. The TSA did not conduct an investigation that morning. They called me three days later to start an investigation. We talked for two hours and I found out a lot. It takes 7 days to get audio/video recordings. Which are owned by the airport, not the TSA. There are many ongoing civil rights investigations within the TSA and they take 30 days minimum. They have to fly down to Orlando and talk to everyone involved.

 

Cleis Abeni

www.advocate.com/transgender/2015/10/10/32-members-congress-demand-tsa-reform-trans-screening-procedures

Wilmer Valderrama Has A Secret To Share; Andy Cohen Shows Off His Cute Bed Partner

Wilmer Valderrama Has A Secret To Share; Andy Cohen Shows Off His Cute Bed Partner

This week, America’s Next Top Model contestant Nyle DiMarco came out as sexually fluid, Madonna shared her opinion of Pope Francis and, of course, Justin Bieber frolicked au naturel. Here’s what happened recently on Instagram:

The Rock flashed back to hairier days.

#tbt To a crazier time in my life of winning my 1st wrestling title while learning how to “hustle and cut my teeth” in Memphis. Before the bright lights of the WWE, I started my wresting career in the U.S.W.A (United States Wrestling Association) based out of Memphis, TN. I drove over 2000 miles every week to wrestle in flea markets, state fairs, high school gyms and my personal favorite – wrestling in the parking lots of used car dealerships all throughout the south. Grinding away all for a contractual guarantee of making $40 bucks a match. True story. I had no bread and nothing to lose, but willing to drop sweat and blood nightly ’cause I was doing something I was passionate about. The night I won this title, I celebrated the only way I knew how and certainly the only way I could afford – your boy at like a king at the Waffle House. The takeaway here is never forget your hard times, find something you’re passionate about and go after with relentless drive. And always take a moment to eat like kings and queens at the Waffle House. #EmbraceFleaMarketGrind #ChaseYourGreatness #AndTryTheHashbrownsAndSweetTea ??

A photo posted by therock (@therock) on Oct 8, 2015 at 7:22am PDT

Michael Buble celebrated half a decade of Instagram excitement.

Happy 5th #anniversary Instagram! Check out the link in my bio featuring some of my favorite Instagram moments. A photo posted by Michael Bublé (@michaelbuble) on Oct 6, 2015 at 9:55am PDT

John Stamos has a very sex swimming buddy.

Early morning swim with the pooch. #Linka

A photo posted by John Stamos (@johnstamos) on Oct 7, 2015 at 6:58am PDT

Matthew Mitcham accentuated the positive with this trusty ukulele for mental health week.

Jake Shears got grossly indecent with Darren Criss.

Kellan Lutz is just your every day, average, run-of-the-mill vampire farm boy.

Alex Minsky is out to sea.

A photo posted by Alex Minsky (@mminskyy) on Oct 5, 2015 at 6:29pm PDT

Russell Tovey is getting ready to move on from Looking.

Who’s ready for this magic eh? @lookinghbo #lookinghbo 🙂 A photo posted by Russelltovey (@russelltovey) on Oct 5, 2015 at 6:18pm PDT

Halloween has come early for Johnny Weir.

And so it begins…@halloweenonice Opening Night! #bloodymary

A photo posted by JOHNNY WEIR (@johnnygweir) on Oct 8, 2015 at 3:59pm PDT

Steve Grand can’t get it in his mouth fast enough.

#blessed #praisebetohim A photo posted by Steve Grand (@stevegrandmusic) on Oct 2, 2015 at 10:13pm PDT

Colton Haynes is wearing pink again, but this time it’s to raise breast cancer awareness.

Ring in the holidays this year with a Christmas tree decoration featuring a nice Jewish girl like Barbra.

JUST ANNOUNCED: #barbrastreisand joins the #BCEFA holiday #ornament collection! Don’t miss out – get yours at broadwaycares.org. A photo posted by Barbra Streisand (@barbrastreisand) on Oct 8, 2015 at 3:39pm PDT

Even the Golden Gate bridge can’t compete with Jesse Metcalfe‘s beauty.

Trevor Donovan doesn’t like mayonnaise, but look at what he drinks straight from the bottle.

Andy Cohen always has the cutest bed partners.

A photo posted by Andy Cohen (@bravoandy) on Oct 4, 2015 at 2:59pm PDT

Careful with that razor, Max Emerson.

To #thank @kylekriegerhair for all of his help promoting #HOOKED (hotSissy.com), I’ve decided to treat HIM to a #haircut for once. Best #hairdo suggestion gets a personal selfie A photo posted by Max Emerson (@maxisms) on Oct 8, 2015 at 8:34am PDT

Jack Falahee, we can feel your pain.

Tonight’s episode will have you all like (Post workout foam roll)

A photo posted by Jack Falahee (@jackfalaheeofficial) on Oct 8, 2015 at 1:30pm PDT

Wilmer Valderrama knows how to keep a secret.

Nev Schulman is looking even more angelic than usual.

goodnight all you beautiful mortals.

A photo posted by Nev Schulman (@nevschulman) on Oct 9, 2015 at 7:18pm PDT

Sachin Bhatt is going to get a wedgie if he keeps this up.

Booked another National Commercial. ?Which has nothing to do with this picture. ?????????? ?: @timothyjoelwright

A photo posted by s a c h i n b h a t t (@sachinbhatt) on Oct 2, 2015 at 1:42pm PDT

Jeremy Kinser

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/8PBCRlF114U/wilmer-valderrama-has-a-secret-to-share-andy-cohen-shows-off-his-cute-bed-partner-20151010

Andy Cohen and His Parents Talk About How He Came Out to Them: LISTEN

Andy Cohen and His Parents Talk About How He Came Out to Them: LISTEN

Andy Cohen parents

Andy Cohen had his parents Ev and Lou join him on his SiriusXM radio show ‘Andy Radio’ yesterday in honor of National Coming Out Day this Sunday.

Their experience with their son’s coming out was a similar one that many parents have: trepidation, fear, grief, worry, and feeling a sense of loss. But as many good parents will also tell you, if they don’t accept you immediately (as they should, in the best scenario) the fear subsides and acceptance prevails, though sometimes it takes a bit of understanding and education.

RELATED: Tips for Coming Out as Gay from The Rhodes Bros and Raymond Braun: WATCH

Cohen’s mom said that she suspected he was gay after seeing him “prancing around in Carousel in high school” she “had an epiphany.”

“That was the day I went to your room and looked under the bed,” she said. Underneath the bed she found things that made her realize he was gay.

Listen:

In the next segment they talk about the six months after Andy came out and how they transitioned to be huge allies of the LGBT community and started going to a lot of gay events.

Said Cohen’s mom: “I wouldn’t stop crying because I had to mourn my expectations that you’d get married, that you would have children. At that time those were…

Not possible,” Andy adds, “So you had to mourn what the idea of my future was going to be.”

Adds Cohen’s mom: “I had one friend, Lynn I said, ‘oh my god I have to tell you something.’ Then I start crying. She says ‘what’s the matter?’ So she’s quiet for a minute and she says, ‘well, he’s the same today as he was yesterday, so what are you crying about?’ That was the best advice I ever got.”

And their involvement with the LGBT community:

The post Andy Cohen and His Parents Talk About How He Came Out to Them: LISTEN appeared first on Towleroad.


Andy Towle

Andy Cohen and His Parents Talk About How He Came Out to Them: LISTEN

Out Musician John Grant Says Gay Men Worry Too Much About Aging

Out Musician John Grant Says Gay Men Worry Too Much About Aging

john-grant-1This aging thing is quite strange. I don’t want to generalize too much, but gay men worry about aging a lot more than other men, from what I can tell.

Youth is prized above all things — the beauty of youth — and I know a lot of gay men who are very, very obsessed with keeping young.

I don’t understand it in most of their cases. I think older men are super sexy. The ‘beauty of youth’ thing, I totally get that. But by God! I would not want to be where I was in my 20s. I was clueless!”

John Grant discusses aging as a gay man — a theme on his acclaimed album Grey Tickles, Black Pressure — in an interview with NewNowNext

Jeremy Kinser

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/pLbJdC9a9mQ/out-musician-john-grant-says-gay-men-worry-too-much-about-aging-20151010

PHOTOS: Everything Was Coming Up Madonna In Boytowns

PHOTOS: Everything Was Coming Up Madonna In Boytowns

large_IMG_8922madonna9.23.15

Madonna made the people come together at Sidetrack in Chicago last week.

To celebrate the Queen of Pop passing through the windy city on her latest Rebel Heart tour, Boytown’s biggest bar hosted “All Things Madonna,” a special club night featuring Madge drag impersonators and music videos. Affectionados boogie woogied to the Material Girl’s biggest hits well into the early hours of the morning.

Scroll down for a taste of “All Things Madonna,” and check out the full gallery over at GayCities…

large_IMG_8804madonna9.23.15

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large_IMG_8955madonna9.23.15

Photo source: Sidetrack

Graham Gremore

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/gAGoeq-nGG8/photos-everything-was-coming-up-madonna-in-boytowns-20151010

Three gay bars in Dallas vandalized overnight

Three gay bars in Dallas vandalized overnight

Three gay bars on Cedar Springs Road in Dallas were vandalized overnight.

The three — Woody’s, Jr’s Bar and Grill, and the Mining Company — had their front doors smashed, according to NBC News.

A spokesperson from Caven Enterprises, which manages the three bars, says it doesn’t believe it to be a hate crime or related to the recent attacks as surveillance video confirms one person is responsible for the vandalism at all three bars.

The perpetrator is believed to be a disgruntled bar patron who has been banned from several of the bars along Cedar Springs Road.

The video has been turned over to the police who are now investigating the incidents as a case of criminal mischief, according to CBS local news.

Three gay men have been attacked in recent weeks.

A 29-year-old man was attacked by four men at the intersection of Sylvester Street and Wycliff Avenue in the Love Field neighborhood after the annual Alan Ross Texas Freedom parade.

The victim said his attackers made several gay slurs as they assaulted him ‘with their hands, feet and a baseball bat’ and took items from his pockets.

He was hospitalized with a fractured skull and numerous cuts and bruises.

On Sept 30 shortly after 1 am, Jaime Dominguez was attacked as he was leaving a bar on Cedar Springs.

He was stabbed multiple times, hit on the back of his head and knocked unconscious.

A third attack happened on Oct 2 in Cedar Springs, according to NBC News.

The post Three gay bars in Dallas vandalized overnight appeared first on Gay Star News.

Sylvia Tan

www.gaystarnews.com/article/three-gay-bars-in-dallas-vandalized-overnight/

Watch: Documentary shows electroshock therapy to ‘cure’ homosexuality still being used in China

Watch: Documentary shows electroshock therapy to ‘cure’ homosexuality still being used in China

A new documentary by UK’s Channel 4 has revealed that electroshock therapy and other treatments to ‘cure’ homosexuality are still being offered in Chinese hospitals although such treatments have no scientific basis and a Chinese court last year ruled such treatments to be illegal.

In a preview of the documentary produced by Unreported World, hidden camera footage shows two Chinese activists posing as potential clients and consulting doctors saying that they wanted to be cured of their same-sex attraction.

John Shen, deputy director of the Beijing LGBT Centre, a gay rights group, is seen going for a consultation at a hospital in Tianjin where he was told to have cold showers and strenuous exercise like jogging to get rid of excess hormones.

The doctor added that if that didn’t work, he could consider taking a drug although it would cause nausea and shock therapy using an electric rod to ‘avoid urges.’

Another activist is seen undergoing electroshock therapy at a different hospital after which he pointed to his face and said it has ‘gone numb.’

China’s psychiatric association stopped classifying homosexuality as a ‘mental illness’ in 2001.

In 2014, a Beijing court ruled that treatments involving hypnosis and electric shocks to ‘cure’ homosexuality are illegal after a man brought a case against the Xinyu Piaoxiang clinic in Chongqing.

The court ordered the clinic to pay Yang Teng 3,500 yuan (US$550) in compensation and post an apology to its website.

He said he wants the result of the case to inform gay people, parents and doctors that ‘gay conversion’ treatment  is without scientific basis and is illegal.

Yang’s legal challenge was filed with assistance from the Beijing LGBT Centre which has been protesting conversion therapy for years.

The 25-min documentary can be watched here.

The post Watch: Documentary shows electroshock therapy to ‘cure’ homosexuality still being used in China appeared first on Gay Star News.

Sylvia Tan

www.gaystarnews.com/article/watch-documentary-shows-electroshock-therapy-to-cure-homosexuality-still-being-used-in-china/

Why I'm Stonewalling 'Stonewall'

Why I'm Stonewalling 'Stonewall'
Stonewall, Roland Emmerich’s coming-of-age film about a young gay man from Kansas set amid the Stonewall riots has been bombingat the box office.

I didn’t go see it. I also wouldn’t watch a movie about the Montgomery bus boycotts that centered on a fictionalized white woman who fictitiously organized them.

What any work of art is centered around — particularly a major motion picture that tells the story of a major historical event — is a deeply political choice, and it’s time that we started treating it like one. And what’s so offensive to me and so many others is that this film feels like a slap in the face to the amazing progress the LGBTQ community — the entire LGBTQ community — has made in recent years.

Thankfully, representations of LGBTQ people in media have improved alongside our political and social changes — the Wills of 1990s TV have given way to the Shanes, Crazy Eyes, and Bos of modern entertainment, showcasing more thoughtful, diverse, and subversive characters.

Stonewall, however, does not follow this trend. In spite of the rich diversity of the activists behind the Stonewall riots, Emmerich chose to center his film on Danny, a fictional white, cisgender, straight-acting gay man, and put the non-white, non-cisgender, and non-male characters in the background of the film.

This was not just a filmic choice; it was a political one. By putting these people in the background of the riots — even though it was trans women, butch lesbians, and working class people, many of whom were people of color, who made up the majority of those who clashed with police during the riots and organized activist actions immediately following — Emmerich is engaging in historical revisionism, cheapening their contributions, and fostering the myth that only white, cis males can move our movement forward.

I’m a white, cis, male, and I’m calling bullshit.

In my work on DC marriage equality movement, on family acceptance, on employment non-discrimination, and on supporting LGBTQ asylum-seekers, I was happily but a small part of a constellation of LGBTQ allies and voices, of many races and genders. None of that work would have progressed without our collective efforts. None of us would progress with only white, cis men in the room.

Tragically, this movie will be the first time many people are learning about the Stonewall riots — and this opportunity to tell our story was wasted on a two-dimensional piece of fluff centering the most privileged, most normative kind of LGBTQ person there is, failing to show the diversity of the movement and failing to center the movie around people who actually were at the heart of these events.

Look, I get it. Movie-making is a business. Audiences respond well (and buy movie tickets) when they recognize something of themselves in characters. That being said, it is both narrow-minded and incredibly cynical to assume that this means that someone like me can only relate to, empathize with, and root for someone who looks exactly like me.

Yes, I am a white, cis, gay man. I live in Washington D.C., one of the “gayest” metropolitan cities in the U.S. And I adored watching the ferocity and vulnerability of trans actor Kiki Kitana Rodriguez in Tangerine. I have spent many a Netflix binge rooting for Lea DeLaria and Laverne Cox as they kill it playing the butchest of butches and an elegant trans femme in Orange is the New Black.

I’d like to quote more examples, but frankly, there aren’t enough.

These characters are the farthest thing from white-bread audience surrogate; they’re the farthest thing from what used to be considered a safe studio choice. And they’re addictively watchable.

Clearly, I don’t need to see myself in films to want to watch them. And when “seeing myself” in films does so at the expense of the communities of people who actually shape and move our cause, who face far more oppression that I do, then I don’t want to see characters that are stand-ins for me.

There is still a long way to go before our community has full equality, and there is far more work to be done for LGBTQ people with more marginalized lives and experiences. And because media shapes — as well as reflects — this marginalization, people working in this media have to do better. That is why a work of art or entertainment is a political choice, and why we must hold our storytellers and entertainers accountable for representing the truth of our community.

I hope Hollywood is listening. Tragically, this movie will be the first time many people are learning about the Stonewall riots — and this opportunity to tell our story was wasted on a two-dimensional piece of fluff centering the most privileged, most normative kind of LGBTQ person there is.

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