Michael Moore Warning Goes Viral: ‘Donald Trump is Gonna Get Us Killed’

Michael Moore Warning Goes Viral: ‘Donald Trump is Gonna Get Us Killed’

Michael Moore

A post from Michael Moore on Donald Trump’s blatant disregard for intelligence briefings has gone viral on social media.

Writes Moore in part:

Most would agree the #1 job of the leader of any country is to keep its people safe. There is no more important meeting every day for the President than the one where he learns what the day’s potential threats are to the country. That Trump would find it too cumbersome or too annoying to have to sit through 20 minutes of listening to his top intelligence people tell him who’s trying to kill us today, simply boggles the mind.

Of course, our minds have been so boggled so many times in the past year by this foolish man no one seems that surprised or concerned. He can get up at 5 in the morning and send angry, childish tweets about how he’s being portrayed on SNL (“Not funny! Unwatchable!”), or belittling the local elected union leader in Indiana, but he doesn’t have time to hear about the threats to our national security.

So, my fellow Americans, when the next terrorist attack happens — and it will happen, we all know that — and after the tragedy is over, amidst the death and destruction that might have been prevented, you will see Donald Trump acting quickly to blame everyone but himself. He will suspend constitutional rights. He will round up anyone he deems a threat. He will declare war, and his Republican Congress will back him.

And no one will remember that he wasn’t paying attention to the growing threat. Wasn’t attending the daily national security briefings. Was playing golf instead or meeting with celebrities or staying up til 3am tweeting about how unfair CNN is. He said he didn’t need to be briefed. “You know, I think I’m smart. I don’t need to hear the same thing over and over each day for eight years.” That’s what he told Fox News on December 11th when asked why he wasn’t attending the security briefings. Don’t forget that date and his hubris as we bury the dead next year.

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Michael Moore Warning Goes Viral: ‘Donald Trump is Gonna Get Us Killed’

A look back at the rich diversity of our lives: LGBTQ films from 2016

A look back at the rich diversity of our lives: LGBTQ films from 2016

Photo Credit: Logo

In a year that seemed to pit people against each other by the very intersections of our personal identity, 2016 also proved that storytelling can often be the glue that binds our humanity together at the seams. GLAAD President & CEO Sarah Kate Ellis wrote in a Guest Column within The Hollywood Reporter earlier this year:

“What we know to be true at GLAAD is that images matter. Onscreen images of diverse characters and storylines are usually society’s first entree into understanding a community that doesn’t look like them or act like them.”

Entertainment media reflects who we are as a people; whether we exist with dignity as whole and complete individuals or are erased from the landscape and become invisible.  By empowering LGBTQ people to share their rich and diverse stories across all media platforms, we accelerate acceptance at home and across the globe, especially in places where simply being out can be a life or death proposition.

Here is a look at scripted and documentary films from this past year that shined a light on LGBTQ lives through the lens of race, culture, ethnicity, age and disability.

 

On the heels of the December 9 announcement that the Cherokee National would now recognize same-sex marriage, there was a resurgence of First Nation and Aboriginal LGBTQ documentaries and scripted film.  In Fire Song, Adam Garnet Jones created a powerful and deeply moving tale about a young, queer First Nations man forced to choose between his community and the world outside.  The film tells the story of Shane, a gay Anishnaabe teenager in Northern Ontario, struggling to support his family in the aftermath of his sister’s suicide, and maintaining a relationship with his secret boyfriend.

 

Over twenty years since Madonna brought together an incredibly gifted and diverse group of male dancers, choreographing explosive dance numbers in her acclaimed and controversial Blond Ambition Tour of 1990, Strike a Pose reunites survivors of this talented corps of artists to not only relive that seminal moment in culture, but to make sense of the many changes in their lives after the spotlight moved on.

 

Placing the power of music and dance front and center, ever-vibrant in its flamboyant optimism, the award-winning documentary KIKI follows seven queer youth-of-color from the Kiki ball community in New York City over the course of four years.  In righteously creative anger, they battle homelessness, illness and prejudice by gathering in ballrooms, on the streets and in subways to express their affirmation of life through the artistic activist subculture named the Kiki Scene.

 

The transformative power of music plays a central role in this festival favorite set in Cuba by Irish director Paddy Breathnach.  Against the backdrop of a Havana nightclub, VIVA explores the relationship between an estranged father and the son who dreams of being a performer in an effort to liberate his dreams as the two clash over opposing expectations of each other.

 

Featured within this year’s FiveFilms4Freedom series, a highly successful digital LGBTQ film festival pioneered by the British Council and the British Film Institute and promoted by GLAAD, Xavier (Brazil) is a short piece about a father who notices that his 11 year old son is paying as much attention to slightly older boys as he does to his drum set.  The boys and the father share their love of music, trust and family connection.

 

Often overlooked in film are the stories of LGBTQ seniors and elderly couples who defied society’s thoughts of what defined a “traditional” relationship by staying together for decades.  Cecil & Clark had been partners for 43 years, 8 months, 1 week and 4 days when shooting started for this short documentary.  We meet and get to know Cecil after Carl has been moved to a care facility for the onset of dementia, separated for the first time in their many years together.

 

How far would you go to be with the love of your life? The documentary Out of Iraq answers this through a journey of love, sacrifice and courage.  In 2003, in the midst of war, in a country where even being perceived as gay could mean a death sentence, two Iraqi men meet by chance and fall in love.  Nayef, a translator for the U.S. military, and Btoo, a soldier in the Iraqi army, face persecution – and possible death – if they stay in their homeland.  After obtaining a visa, Nayyef leaves his love behind, and what follows is a tale of love, commitment from afar and the desire to live and love without fear.

 

If there was a movie this year that warmed your heart with the infectious spirit of love, laughter and resilience, Margarita with a Straw was that film.  Out bisexual director Shonali Bose tells the story of an Indian teenager with cerebral palsy who ventures to New York City for the education and respect denied her in Delhi University.  With a scholarship to NYU, she meets and falls in love with a Pakistani Bangladeshi young woman who is blind.  The movie revolves around her love of family, those around her and, ultimately, her love of self.

 

GLAAD concludes this retrospective with three different films shining a light on similar core truths of identity, acceptance and family.  Set against New York City’s slick and cutthroat fashion world, global festival favorite  Front Cover  is a film by Hong Kong director Ray Yeung which tells the story of a Chinese American stylist Ryan Fu and Beijing film star Ning who over the course of preparing for a major photo shoot develop a mutual attraction, forcing both men to confront their own buried feelings on race and sexuality at a personal cost.

 

Mobilizing working-class transgender hairdressers and beauty queens, the dynamic leaders of the world’s only LGBTQ political party wage a historic quest to elect a trans woman to the Philippine Congress.  In Out Run, S. Leo Chiang and Johnny Symons document their historic journey to “Make Politics Fierce!”

 

Finally, one of the year’s most lauded films, winning the Special Jury Prize at Sundance and the Grand Jury Award at Outfest, director Andrew Ahn’s  Spa Night  follows David, a closeted Korean-American teenager who takes a job at a Korean spa to help his struggling family, only to discover an underground world of gay sex at the spa that both scares and excites him.  In a 2015 interview with NPR’s Code Switch, Ahn talked about bringing worlds together in this film:

“The film is a way for me to forge a queer Korean-American identity, to find these situations where the two cultures aren’t separate, but they co-exist. It’s this question of being whole. That for me is what causes the tension, and is the point of the film. Korean Americans, Asian Americans, are sexual beings, and some of them are gay.”

December 13, 2016

www.glaad.org/blog/look-back-rich-diversity-our-lives-lgbtq-films-2016

Bruno Mars’ Carpool Karaoke Session is a Grenade of Uptown Funk Magic: WATCH

Bruno Mars’ Carpool Karaoke Session is a Grenade of Uptown Funk Magic: WATCH

Bruno Mars carpool Karaoke

Bruno Mars’ bright catalog of hits got a replay on this week’s Carpool Karaoke with James Corden, and it’s the perfect soundtrack for a drive in the car: “24K Magic,” “Locked Out of Heaven,” “Grenade,” “Versace on the Floor,” “If I Knew,” “Uptown Funk,” and “Perm.”

RELATED: Bruno Mars Did Not Come Out of the Closet

Corden and Mars also banter about the singer’s wardrobe choices, his sexy moves, his show rider — wine and wet wipes, and how he got started as an Elvis impersonator.

Watch:

The post Bruno Mars’ Carpool Karaoke Session is a Grenade of Uptown Funk Magic: WATCH appeared first on Towleroad.


Bruno Mars’ Carpool Karaoke Session is a Grenade of Uptown Funk Magic: WATCH

HRC Report Finds Opponents of LGBTQ Equality Are Ramping Up State Efforts to Sanction Discrimination

HRC Report Finds Opponents of LGBTQ Equality Are Ramping Up State Efforts to Sanction Discrimination

Despite significant progress over the last decade, many states are targeting the LGBTQ community with discriminatory legislation, according to a report released today by the Human Rights Campaign (HRC) Foundation, the educational arm of the nation’s largest lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer (LGBTQ) civil rights organization. The report comes just a week after North Carolina’s Governor Pat McCrory conceded defeat in his re-election bid after signing and championing the notoriously anti-LGBTQ HB2 — becoming the only incumbent governor to lose this fall.

HRC’s State Equality Index (SEI), issued in partnership with the Equality Federation, the national partner to state-based equality organizations, also reveals that in many states, opponents of equality are ramping up efforts to sanction discrimination against LGBTQ people by proposing state-level laws that would undermine existing protections, erode marital rights of legally-married same-sex couples, target transgender people — particularly youth — and limit the ability of cities and towns to pass their own inclusive laws. This coming year, HB2-style, anti-LGBTQ legislation are expected in several legislatures, including Texas, Tennessee, West Virginia, and Arkansas. Potentially dozens of discriminatory bills are expected in the State of Texas alone.

“State governments have a clear choice between sowing the seeds of division and discrimination or building an economy that works for everyone by fostering fairness and inclusion,” said HRC President Chad Griffin. “Unfortunately, too many lawmakers have decided to target LGBTQ people for state-sanctioned discrimination and to interfere with local protections for workers, customers, and residents. Now more than ever, it is crucial that legislators across the country stand on the right side of history and ensure full equality for all their citizens – nothing more and nothing less.”

During the 2016 legislative sessions, more than 200 anti-LGBTQ bills were introduced in states across the country. While the vast majority of harmful bills were defeated this year, states such as Mississippi and North Carolina did adopt discriminatory legislation. Mississippi’s HB 1523 grants a wide-ranging license to discriminate against LGBTQ people and North Carolina’s HB 2 forbids many transgender people from accessing shared facilities in accordance with their gender identity, among other discriminatory components.

In both instances, federal judges have blocked enforcement of parts of those bills. In North Carolina, the backlash against several elected officials who championed HB2 demonstrated that supporting anti-LGBTQ bills is a political liability.

While more than 111 million people live in states where LGBTQ people lack clear state-level protections against discrimination in the workplace, the SEI points to a few encouraging signs — particularly in areas related to LGBTQ youth, health and safety. States like Vermont and New York took steps to protect LGBTQ youth by banning conversion therapy. Massachusetts expanded the state’s non-discrimination law to include gender identity in public accommodations. Hawaii passed a law to make it easier for transgender residents to update their name and gender marker on a birth certificate or driver’s license. Five states, including Delaware, Hawaii, Maryland, Michigan and Pennsylvania banned transgender exclusions in health care insurance, a sizable increase from 2015.

“Last year our community faced a barrage of attacks on our freedoms, but we are more united and better prepared than ever to continue our momentum toward equality for all,” said Rebecca Isaacs, executive director of Equality Federation Institute. “This report serves as an important tool for advocates to keep pushing forward. We’re not going to stop until all LGBTQ people and their families are able to reach their full potential, free from discrimination, no matter what state they live in.”

The SEI assesses statewide LGBTQ-related legislation and policies — both positive and negative — in five areas: parenting laws and policies, non-discrimination laws and policies, hate crimes laws, youth-related laws and policies and health and safety laws and policies. Based on that review, the SEI assigns states to one of four distinct categories.

Nine states and the District of Columbia are in the highest-rated category, “Working Toward Innovative Equality
California, Colorado, Connecticut, District of Columbia, Illinois, Massachusetts, New York, Oregon, Vermont, Washington

These states and the nation’s capital have robust LGBTQ non-discrimination laws covering employment, housing and public accommodations, as well as protections in the areas of credit, insurance and jury selection. Most allow transgender people to change official documents to reflect their gender identity, and almost all bar private insurers from banning transition-related healthcare. LGBTQ youth are protected by anti-bullying laws, as well as innovative measures in some states that address conversion therapy, inclusive juvenile justice policies, homelessness and sexual health education.

Seven states are in the category “Solidifying Equality
Delaware, Iowa, Maine, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey and Rhode Island

These states have non-discrimination protections and are considered high-performing, but have not yet adopted innovative equality measures. Many of these states allow transgender individuals to change gender markers on official documents and more than half do not allow second-parent adoption. These states have relatively robust anti-bullying laws, but bad laws begin to crop up in this category.

Six states are in the category “Building Equality
Hawaii, Maryland, New Hampshire, New Mexico, Utah and Wisconsin

These states have taken steps toward more robust LGBTQ equality, including passing basic non-discrimination and hate crimes laws. They allow gender markers to be changed on official documents, but have few protections guaranteeing access to transgender health care. Some lack explicit gender identity protections and several lack comprehensive anti-bullying laws. Bad laws are more common, so advocates are working to stop bills that could undermine LGBTQ equality and pass more comprehensive non-discrimination laws.

Twenty-eight states are in the lowest-rated category “High Priority to Achieve Basic Equality
Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, West Virginia and Wyoming

Most of these states, including Arizona, North Carolina, South Dakota and Florida, have many laws that undermine LGBTQ equality, from those that criminalize HIV and sodomy, to measures allowing religious-based discrimination against LGBTQ people. None have non-discrimination laws that explicitly include sexual orientation or gender identity protections; few have hate crime laws with those protections. LGBTQ advocates largely work to defeat bad bills and pass municipal protections for LGBTQ people.

The full report, including detailed scorecards for every state, as well as a comprehensive review of 2016 state legislation, is available online at www.hrc.org/sei

www.hrc.org/blog/hrc-report-finds-opponents-of-lgbtq-equality-are-ramping-up-state-efforts-t?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

保坂展人: 「LGBT当事者の声」から見えてきた「生きづらさ」を解消するための支援政策

保坂展人: 「LGBT当事者の声」から見えてきた「生きづらさ」を解消するための支援政策
性的マイノリティの当事者の声から伝わってくるのは、子どもの時代に孤立し苦しんだ経験がある人が多く、当事者に届く支援や理解が乏しかったという現実です。

もっと見る: 保坂展人, 政治, 太陽のまちから, 世田谷区, 同性カップル, パートナーシップ宣誓書, Lgbt, Japan News

www.huffingtonpost.jp/nobuto-hosaka/partnership_b_13619414.html