Wife of Orlando Shooter Says She Knew He Was Planning Attack, Tried to ‘Talk Him Out Of It’ – VIDEO

Wife of Orlando Shooter Says She Knew He Was Planning Attack, Tried to ‘Talk Him Out Of It’ – VIDEO

mrsmateen

The wife of the shooter who killed 49 people at the Orlando gay nightclub Pulse early Sunday morning reportedly knew her husband was planning an attack on the club and ‘tried to talk him out of it.’

NBC News reports:

Omar Mateen’s current wife, Noor, told the FBI she was with him when he bought ammunition and a holster, several officials familiar with the case said. She told the FBI that she once drove him to the gay nightclub, Pulse, because he wanted to scope it out. […]

She is cooperating with investigators, several officials say.

Federal authorities are currently considering charging Noor Salman for failing to notify authorities about her husband’s plans for mass murder.

Noor’s revelation that she drove her husband to Pulse to “scope out” the location raises more questions about reports that suggest Mateen was gay, had profiles on gay dating apps, and frequented the club he would ultimately target.

Watch a news report from NBC on Noor, below.

And another report from WSVN 7 News, here:

#DEVELOPING: Orlando gunman’s wife tried talking him out of attack, according to NBC News t.co/drDPyH2iRk t.co/11zYm4V9rE

— WSVN 7 News (@wsvn) June 14, 2016

The post Wife of Orlando Shooter Says She Knew He Was Planning Attack, Tried to ‘Talk Him Out Of It’ – VIDEO appeared first on Towleroad.



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What Does #StopTheHate Really Mean? — Sarah Schulman on Orlando

What Does #StopTheHate Really Mean? — Sarah Schulman on Orlando

Instagram Photo

 

The patterns of U.S. mass killings show that any group of people are vulnerable: Latino queers in a club, Black church goers, little kids in grade school, people in the movies, high school students, co-workers at a Christmas party. What can we conclude?

While race, sexuality etc. are important in specific choices of victims, the larger reality is that gun availability, fear of identifying mental illness, and rhetoric normalizing violence are the problems. And since the killers are almost all men, there is a lot of thinking to do about male concepts of control. But escalating policing that is already too violent, condemning larger communities of humans, or projecting that we should walk around in fear of strangers, is the opposite of where we should be going. Yet, these terrifying, brutal killings in Orlando have been exploited along many divergent ideological lines, underscoring opposing agendas in ways that do not address the real source of our pain.

The most blatant exploitation of these deaths is by people who dehumanize Muslims.

Voices in all political corners have positioned the killer as an instrument of Islamic fundamentalist movements, or representative of religious extremism. Yet there is no evidence to date that he was recruited, financed, organized, encouraged or supported by any known organized entity. His own claims to affiliation have been contradictory and confused. While reportedly he called 911 and proclaimed himself associated with ISIS, in the past he claimed affiliation with Hezbollah, ISIS’s bitter enemy, and even Al Qaeda.

Like most of the other men who have committed mass murder with legally purchased weapons, this killer was an American, whose penchant for NYPD t-shirts revealed a glorification of domination, and who carried out a distinctly American tradition of pointless gun violence.

The second, and more complex myth that has arisen around this tragedy is that the LGBT community is threatened or under siege.

While, clearly, the 49 men and women murdered in Orlando were killed because they were gay or in a gay space, in the context of legislative attacks in the US south, this was not part of any organized campaign to kill us by a cohered group. Just as the killings in Charleston were not an organized campaign against Black people who go to church, the dead are devastating, evocative, personally resonant, and trigger all kinds of fears and losses for the rest of us.

But there is nothing here beyond one very anxious, angry, conflicted, confused person who could not figure out how to live, and was able to get a gun. If he had not been able to get weapons, these killings would not have occurred. And while the statements of support and solidarity recognize the profound bonds queer people feel with each other, how we identify with each other, any rhetoric about us being in a collective danger from organized shooters is inflated.

What is dangerous here, is that the exaggerated threat becomes a vibrant excuse to increase police surveillance of both LGBT and Muslim communities, spaces, conversations. The false charge that these killings were Islamic, and the exaggerated sense of fear that LGBT people are expressing create a climate in which the police can escalate their reach into the lives of the people. And we know from vast experience that more policing means more violence towards people of color.

We do not have a policing system that is accountable to people with mitigated rights, who face social prejudice. So, increasing police presence is not a functional alternative to gun control and transforming our attitudes about mental illness. In fact, history shows it will cause more harm.

As a result, statements like #StopTheHate really require a thoughtful conversation. Whose “hate” are we trying to stop? Can we honestly say that Omar Mateen “hated” queer people, when evidence showed that he may have been one himself, or at least that he had a history of socializing with us. If he was in fact, agonizing over his own queerness, that may be a consequence of his personal context and painful exterior cruelties. He may have internalized these conflicts through the lens of his own distorted thinking/mental illness.

Over and over again, in every realm of human relationship, we see people, cliques, families, nations, religious/ethnic/racial groups project their anxieties onto other people. The most salient dynamic in intimate and geopolitical conflict is when we scapegoat other people, rather than face ourselves.

If he found being queer unbearable, where did that guilt and rage originate? The man had a history of violence and of threatening violence: to his wife, to co-workers, and he expressed anger and destructive thoughts about blacks, gays, Jews and women repeatedly over the years.

When we say #StopTheHate, do we really mean raising our individual and group commitment to helping each other address mental illness without stigma or punishment? Isn’t that the best way to avoid these very painful kinds of projections and exteriorizing of internal suffering?

Because, since there is no organized campaign at the root of these senseless killings, since this is not ISIS, since there is no reason for more police outside of gay bars, what is this really? It’s a very confused and angry man, who no one intervened to help, who murdered 49 people for no reason, simply because he was able to buy a gun. And the stark simplicity of those facts may be the hardest thing of all to bear.

 

Sarah Schulman is a writer living in New York City. Her most recent novel is The CosmopolitansForthcoming in October is her new nonfiction book Conflict Is Not Abuse.

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Muslims Leaders Say Yes to Love

Muslims Leaders Say Yes to Love

In an unprecedented outpouring of solidarity with the LGBTQ community, Muslim civil rights and religious leaders lined up to extend the Islamic tradition of love and compassion to victims and their families after the deadliest mass shooting in U.S. history left at least 49 people dead and more than 50 injured at an Orlando, Fla., LGBTQ nightclub.  

LGBTQ Muslims are especially affected by the shooting, living at the intersections of their LGBTQ identities and religion. And they have been providing voices of reason and love in the wake of the massacre. In a statement released Sunday, Muslim Alliance for Sexual and Gender Diversity (MASGD), a national organization working to support, empower and connect LGBTQ Muslims, appealed for solidarity and for peace-loving people to resist Islamophobia and anti-LGBTQ bigotry.

The National Queer Asian Pacific Islander Alliance (NQAPIA) also released a statement urging “our community and allies to refrain from rhetoric that lays responsibility on any one community. The acts of an individual are not representatives of any one ethnicity, race or faith.”

Brenda Abdelall, director at the Muslim Advocates, joined HRC at a press conference on Sunday. “We stand in solidarity with the LGBTQ community. Your grief is our grief,” she said. “Your outrage is our outrage. We are one family together.”

MASGD is devastated by the massacre at “Latin Night” at the Pulse gay nightclub… Full statement: t.co/WQrSX40kku #PulseNightclub

— TheMASGD (@TheMASGD) June 12, 2016

.@NQAPIA: “We are proud to be both queer and Muslim, and cherish both of our communities.” #OrlandoUnited t.co/YlAhramteu

— NCAPA (@NCAPAtweets) June 13, 2016

Violance against LGBTQI is un – Islamic. Please share our press release t.co/M1HVSPWe7s t.co/P3VDg5jQvR

— MPV (@mpvusa) June 13, 2016

American Muslim leaders have also emerged as among the strongest supporters of the LGBTQ community during these difficult times. National Muslim organizations including the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), the Islamic Society of North America, Muslim Advocates, American Islamic Congress, Muslim Students Association of US & Canada, the Mosque Foundation and the The Fiqh Council of North America have been repudiating violence against the LGBTQ community.

“For many years, members of the LGBTQIA community have stood shoulder to shoulder with the Muslim community against any acts of hate crimes, islamophobia, marginalization, and discrimination,” said Nihad Awad, Executive Director of CAIR. “Today, we stand with them shoulder to shoulder. The liberation of the American-Muslim community is profoundly linked to the liberation of other minority groups–Blacks, Latinos, gay, Jewish, trans, and every other community that has faced discrimination and oppression in this country.”

Meanwhile, Muslim clerics have turned to Twitter to condemn the attack, and offering prayers and support to the Orlando victims and their families.

On behalf of American Muslims, I want to express our outrage and shock of the mass shooting in DT Orlando, FL…. t.co/nxR1j9pVKc

— Imam Muhammad Musri (@ImamMMusri) June 12, 2016

My thoughts and prayers are with you all. #OrlandoShooting pic.twitter.com/VExFMVRfGY

— Khalid Latif (@KLatif) June 12, 2016

In addition to condemning the Orlando shooting on social media, CAIR appealed to American Muslims to donate blood for victims of the attack.

“We’ve organized a blood drive, organized an online fund drive to raise funds for the victims,” said Hassan Shibley, the chief executive director of CAIR Florida. “We’re also coalition-building to unite the community and send a very clear message that we, regardless of your race, religion or sexual orientation, will stand united as Americans and as human beings.”

Muslim community, @CAIRFlorida condemn #Orlando attack, calls for blood donations t.co/iFlSIJRSOl via @CAIRFlorida @CAIRenEspanol

— CAIR Florida (@CAIRFlorida) June 12, 2016

In this tragic time when others are responding with hatred and divisiveness, it is critical that we amplify these powerful voices of love and unity.

To learn more, please visit www.hrc.org/muslim.

www.hrc.org/blog/muslims-leaders-say-yes-to-love?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

Ms. Essay at SAGE of PROMO Fund Celebration Event

Ms. Essay at SAGE of PROMO Fund Celebration Event

s_a_essay posted a photo:

Ms. Essay at SAGE of PROMO Fund Celebration Event

Ms. Essay at the St. Louis SAGE of PROMO Fund Celebration Event on Sunday, June 12, 2016. In St. Louis, SAGE and PROMO combined organization chapters a couple years ago due to the similarities in their missions and membership. SAGE, Support & Advocacy for Gay (LBGT) Elders, is a decades old organization that has accomplished much for seniors in the community. The celebration at this event was greatly tempered by the tragic mass-shooting in Orlando earlier that same day.

(Special thanks to Steph James for taking this and other photos at this SAGE event.)

www.flickr.com/photos/s_a_essay/27595349951/

Here Are The Victims Of The Orlando Shooting At Pulse Nightclub

Here Are The Victims Of The Orlando Shooting At Pulse Nightclub

candle

In the early morning of June 12, 2016, the deadliest mass shooting in America took the lives of at least 50 people. These people are not a statistic or a number. We will not let them be nameless or faceless numbers. They are our partners, friends, our family, our allies. That is why we have created a special In Memoriam page listing each person along with their photo.

Please visit the page. Add your memories and reflections. And if you know of a victim who is missing from this list (or if we are missing their picture), write to holla AT queerty DOT com and we’ll add them.

Visit the In Memoriam page.

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If Only There Was Something We Could Do About Mass Shootings. Oh Wait, Sam Bee Gets It.

If Only There Was Something We Could Do About Mass Shootings. Oh Wait, Sam Bee Gets It.

sam-bee-guns

If you haven’t been watching Full Frontal with Samantha Bee, you’re missing out on the closest thing to Jon Stewart’s The Daily Show currently on the air (no disrespect to Trevor Noah and John Oliver, who are both excellent at what they do).

On her most recent episode, Sam had a few things to say about America’s gun laws.

It’s embarrassing how often we are forced into having this debate, and unconscionable that nothing ever seems to be done about it.

Watch below: 

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Georgia Judge Denies Transgender Man’s ‘Dangerous’ Name-Change Petition

Georgia Judge Denies Transgender Man’s ‘Dangerous’ Name-Change Petition

Rowan Feldhaus Transgender Augusta Georgia

A transgender Georgia man’s petition to change his name to reflect his gender identity was denied because it might offend the “sensibilities and mores” of other state residents.

Augusta resident Rowan Feldhaus filed a name change petition in the Superior Court of Columbia County in July 2015. He provided all necessary documentation at a hearing in February, including an affidavit from his therapist confirming he is transgender and that changing his name would be an important part of his treatment.

J. David Roper Goergia JudgeHowever, Georgia Voice reports that Superior Court Judge J. David Roper (right) denied the request unless Feldhaus chose a middle name other than Elijah because it is not gender-neutral and he doesn’t “approve of changing names from male to femalemale names to obvious female names, and vice versa.”

Roper also said it could be “dangerous” for people not to know someone’s gender by someone’s name. Feldhaus refused to choose a gender-neutral name. Roper denied Feldhaus’ petition in March because of “this court’s policy” of denying names that are not indicative of a gender. Roper added that Feldhaus’ name might offend the “sensibilities and mores of a substantial portion of the citizens of this state.” It has also been alleged that Roper said “I know who Elijah is – one of the greatest men who ever lived,” referring to the Christian prophet.

RELATED: Georgia Transgender Teen Elected to School’s Homecoming Court

Last Thursday, Lambda Legal filed a brief in the Georgia Court of Appeals on behalf of Feldhaus, arguing that the court abused its discretion and that the decision was arbitrary and based on insufficient reasons. The brief also argues that the petition denial was unlawful discrimination based on sex and a violation of Feldhaus’ First Amendment right to freedom of expression.

A note to the press: do NOT deadname people. It is NOT necessary to your story.

His name is Rowan Elijah Feldhaus#RowansRights #transguy

— Clair Ellen Burrell (@ClairBurrell) June 10, 2016

Feldhaus said he “felt insulted and objectified to be told by the court that I would not be able to have the name that my family, my friends, and my co-workers all call me, based on sexist opinions about ‘appropriate’ names.” He added, “It can be a scary situation when I show up for work or the first day of class and my legal name does not match my public presentation and my gender identity. I just want to change my name so that it reflects who I am.”

Beth Littrell, senior attorney in Lambda Legal’s Southern Regional Office in Atlanta, said:

“For many transgender people, going to the court to change their legal name is an important first step towards aligning their legal documents with their gender identity.

“There are only a few exceptions that allow a court to deny someone the right to change their name. Being transgender is not one of those exceptions. Changing your name is time-consuming and costly and should not be denied based on sexist notions or transgender bias.”

You can read the Lambda Legal petition in full here.

(Feldhaus image via Twitter. Roper image via Augusta.gov)

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