Upcoming Bravo Show ‘Stripped’ Strips Participants of Everything, Including Their Underwear: WATCH

Upcoming Bravo Show ‘Stripped’ Strips Participants of Everything, Including Their Underwear: WATCH

Stripped

Bravo has been aggressively promoting its upcoming summer show Stripped in which folks are stripped of everything. It seems to be a Naked and Afraid in the real world:

This new social experiment will have participants give up of all of their material possessions, from clothing to furniture to money, for 21 days with only toilet paper, water, and food rations provided. So yes, that means they’ll have to strip down to their birthday suits in front of a camera crew and the whole world, as you can see in the above sneak peek of the series. All the while, they still have to go about their daily lives, doing things like showing up to work and hanging out with friends. Each day, participants will be able to get back one item they absolutely can’t live without from a mobile storage container with their belongings located a half-mile away from their home. And what do they get after surviving three weeks of an experiment that “most Americans would consider insane”? Well, there are no prizes at the end of Stripped, at least of the tangible variety, but participants will find that figuring out what really matters to them most will prove to be a life-changing experience.

Some of you, however, may have just as fine a time checking out the promotional spandex.

Watch:

The show hit SXSW recently:

 

 

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Steve Bannon and the Trump alt-right want you. Don’t be fooled by the new homophobia.

Steve Bannon and the Trump alt-right want you. Don’t be fooled by the new homophobia.

So now we know that Steve Bannon, the Trump advisor who turned Breitbart into the house organ of the alt-right, doesn’t really care all that much about us one way or another. This is hardly a revelation for someone who gave professional troll Milo Yiannopoulos his prominent and profitable (until recently) perch. But Bannon and Milo are figureheads in a bait-and-switch scheme.

The scheme is this: convincing some of us that the alt-right is okay with homosexuality in order to convert some of us to the white nationalist cause, which can make room for the participation of privileged white gay men. In order to do this, Bannon and Trump must convince us that the real enemy of  LGBTQ is Islam, not the alt-right. Remember when Trump, after the Orlando Pulse nightclub massacre, claimed that as president he would do a better job protecting LGBTQs from the threat of “Islamic terrorism?”

Don’t be fooled. The alt-right is a stew of hatred, and homophobia is a huge part of it.

On the surface, it’s easy to think that Bannon and Milo represent a new kind of conservative. And in one sense, they do. They want to blow up the existing order because the existing order is irredeemably tainted by liberal ideas. The world that Bannon and the alt-right have in mind is white nationalism, a world in which “Judeo-Christian values” reign. (Funny, though, how the Judeo part keeps getting lost.)

Sounds a lot like standard social conservatives, right? But it’s not. Bannon doesn’t really care all that much about the usual culture war –same-sex marriage, abortion–unless they intersect with his belief that political correctness is robbing people–his people–of their liberty. It’s a world in which the oppressed become the oppressor.

Take religious “liberty,” for example. The religious right has taken up this cause because they believe that marriage equality is wrong and that homosexuality is a sin. This isn’t Bannon’s thinking. He doesn’t seem bothered by marriage equality. But when it becomes a political correctness issue involving the rights of homophobic florists, then he cares.

As a result of this crossover belief, a lot of conservatives have been willing to cast their lot with Bannon. They might not agree with his line of reasoning, but they are fine with his conclusions. The fact that some of the worst homophobes are happy to form an alliance with Bannon should be warning flag enough.

Of course, there will always be some gay people so desperate for conservative approval that they will gladly sign on to the Bannon bandwagon. Chris Barron, of the rightfully defunct GOProud, thinks Bannon is a swell fellow. (The fact that Barron is on the Breitbart payroll may help.)

In theory, if homophobia was no longer a core characteristic of American conservatives, there would be a significant number of LGBTQ people who would be willing to identify as conservative. There’s no question a minority of white, gay men lead fairly protected lives. In fact, some like Barron, may even be among the two-thirds of men who believe there actually is something called political correctness and that it goes too far. Who wants to worry about offending someone when things are good, their thinking may go?

Now that the alt-right viewpoint has a powerful perch within the White House, it may be all too easy for some of these privileged men to succumb to the illusion that it’s actually not as bad as it’s been made out to be. Add to that the idea that maybe the leaders are friendly toward us, and it’s a recipe for recruitment.

The problem is that the alt-right isn’t just a conservative movement. It’s a way far-right movement that loves to fan the flames of hatred, so much so that the lines between white nationalism and white supremacy are often blurred beyond recognition. Up until Trump’s election, the alt-right was considered the fringe, a word often properly proceeded by the word “lunatic.”

Putting Bannon and Milo aside, on this issue they are hardly representative of most alt-right followers–young men who aggressively flout their heterosexuality. Their mascot is the vaguely creepy Pepe the Frog, but their memes are a lot worse than that. One popular one is Electric Pence, images of a high-voltage Mike Pence electrocuting gay people to cure them of their homosexuality. Or take a look at the slurs hurled at popular writer Michaelangelo Signorile after he criticized Jimmy Fallon’s softball treatment of then-candidate Trump.

You don’t even have to dig that far to see that even Milo wasn’t immune to their antigay hatred. The Daily Stormer website referred to Milo as a “deplorable kike faggot” who was harming the movement by claiming to represent it.

What the next four years will bring is anyone’s guess. But let’s not fool ourselves into believing that it’s an advance for us because the leader of a hate movement doesn’t automatically despise us. There are plenty of others who are part of that movement and allies of it who do.

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The Vatican is ‘All Words, No Action’ on Addressing Child Sex Abuse

The Vatican is ‘All Words, No Action’ on Addressing Child Sex Abuse

Pope Francis

When Pope Francis named two victims of clergy sexual abuse to a new Vatican commission on the protection of minors in 2014, some observers took it as a sign that the pope was getting serious about the issue.

But Marie Collins says there was still some skepticism.

“A lot of people felt that I was just being asked [to join] the commission as a sort of token survivor,” says Collins, who was sexually abused as a child by a Catholic priest in Ireland. “I wanted to be sure that the commission was sincere.”

Collins went ahead and joined the Vatican commission. If there was a chance for finding solutions to this problem in the Catholic Church, she wanted to be part of it.

Nearly three years later, however, Collins decided she had to resign. She officially stepped down from the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors on March 1, which was also Ash Wednesday.

Collins says the work being done by the members of the commission to protect children and vulnerable adults, and to find justice for survivors like herself, is all very important.

“Everyone on the commission [was] working very hard for that,” Collins says. “That was good. But the response from the Vatican, not so good.”

In a written statement about her decision to step down from the commission, Collins said, “I find it impossible to listen to public statements about the deep concern in the Church for the care of those whose lives have been blighted by abuse, yet to watch privately as a congregation in the Vatican refuses to even acknowledge their letters!”

“It is a reflection of how this whole abuse crisis in the Church has been handled: with fine words in public and contrary actions behind closed doors.”

Collins says the Vatican bureaucracy was slow to fund the commission’s work and to grant access to officials, and that she is not entirely sure why.

“There are still those in the Vatican,” Collins says, “that have the old attitudes and the old views towards anyone coming in from the outside, as they would see it, telling them what to do. They don’t like it.”

“Although the pope has backed initiatives put forward by the commission, they haven’t actually turned into reality. So, what we have now still is words and no actions.”

Some leaders within the Vatican want things to change, says Paul Vallely, author of “Pope Francis: The Struggle for the Soul of Catholicism.”

Among them, Vallely says, is Cardinal Sean O’Malley, who is the archbishop of Boston and the head of the Vatican commission on protecting minors. “He’s working pretty hard behind the scenes to get movement, but he’s being blocked by other people in the Vatican,” Vallely says.

Vallely adds that there is a risk in the approach taken by Pope Francis. On the one hand, the pope has talked about “zero tolerance” for Catholic clergy who’ve sexually abused children.

“He talks about setting up a tribunal to discipline bishops who fail to act on abuser priests. But then, he doesn’t actually enforce these things,” he says.

Particularly egregious to some observers, Vallely says, was the appointment by Pope Francis of a bishop in Chile with a dubious record when it comes to child abuse. That sort of thing, Vallely says, does not amount to “zero tolerance.”

The Vatican commission on child protection is expected to continue its work. In addition to Collins, the second member who was also a victim of sex abuse is Peter Saunders. But he was put on a leave of absence after having disagreements with his fellow commission members and becoming increasingly critical of Pope Francis.

Vallely says Pope Francis could decide to take the recommendations from the commission and implement them. For example, he says the pope could tell Vatican authorities to put members of the Catholic clergy suspected of sexual abuse of children in front of new tribunals.

But so far, that does not appear to be happening.

“There are lots of things he could do, if he wanted to act decisively on this, as he has in other areas of his papacy,” Vallely says.

The foot-dragging inside the Vatican could be about politics, turf wars or resistance to the pope, says Collins, the former commission member, adding, “Maybe [Pope Francis] could have been stronger.” But in any case, she says the holdup is simply unacceptable.

“We haven’t seen any accountability really. You’ve seen one or two people maybe being allowed to resign, but even then, it’s all to avoid scandal. You don’t see people removed, and I’m talking about bishops.”

“It’s depressing, it’s dispiriting, it’s frustrating. In 2017, it should not be still happening,” Collins says. “Accountability is the main issue, because if there’s some consequence for not protecting children properly, then you might see better protection.”

This article first appeared on PRI The World.

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The Vatican is ‘All Words, No Action’ on Addressing Child Sex Abuse

HRC Honors Senator Tammy Baldwin for Women’s History Month

HRC Honors Senator Tammy Baldwin for Women’s History Month

During Women’s History Month, HRC honors Senator Tammy Baldwin for her tireless work in advocating for LGBTQ rights.

Senator Baldwin broke two barriers the night she was elected to represent Wisconsin in the U.S. Senate in 2012. Not only was she the first woman elected from the Badger State, she was also the first open lesbian elected to serve in the upper chamber of Congress.

Baldwin’s achievement garnered her The Advocate’s Person of the Year in 2012. She told the magazine that she found inspiration in Geraldine Ferraro, who in 1984, became the first woman ever nominated for vice president on a major party’s ticket. Just as the nomination of Ferraro inspired women like Baldwin to serve in public office, the Wisconsin senator’s win is sure to have a ripple effect for women and LGBTQ people across the country as well.

Since her historic election to the Senate, Baldwin has been one of Capitol Hill’s most progressive voices and has championed LGBTQ legislation during her tenure in office. She co-authored The Equality Act in 2015, which provides basic non-discrimination protections against discrimination based on sexual orientation or gender identity in employment, access to public spaces, housing, education, jury service, credit and federal funding.

Baldwin knows that inclusion and fairness for LGBTQ people only helps strengthen our nation. “With each passing year and each generation, our country must become more equal, not less,” she said during the 2012 Democratic National Convention.

Baldwin has consistently received a perfect score on HRC’s Congressional Scorecard, which scores elected officials on how they have voted on issues of equality.

Despite the setback of this past election, it’s now more important than ever we rely on trailblazers like Senator Baldwin and other female endorsees to continue to move us forward and to fight back against discrimination and hatred in all of its forms.

Baldwin will be facing re-election in 2018. 

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Lenten Devotional: Carry Your Own Water

Lenten Devotional: Carry Your Own Water

This year for the season of Lent, HRC Foundation launched a campaign that aims to tell the stories of LGBTQ people of faith. The Lenten season marks the days which lead up to Jesus’ crucifixion and subsequent resurrection.

For Christians, the resurrection is both a reminder and celebration of life, yet people continue to suffer, including members of the LGBTQ community.

“A central and inspiring part of my ministry has been working to make sure the institutional church — and religion in general — is affirming and inclusive of LGBTQ persons,” said the Reverend Dr. J. Edwin Bacon, author and reverend in the Episcopal Church. “I am a more joyful and faithful priest because of that part of my work.”

We hope the meditations offered every day from Ash Wednesday to Easter on April 16, will bless souls, revive spirits, renew minds and strengthen bodies. These stories will be hosted on the HRC website and on Twitter and Facebook.

The Lenten Devotional is a faith-filled resource that compiles meditations written by 47 faith leaders from across the United States. This project and other public education work with faith leaders in HRC Alabama, HRC Arkansas and HRC Mississippi is made possible in part by the generous support of the  E. Rhodes and Leona B. Carpenter Foundation.


As we engage in the process of reflection, recommitment and renewal attendant to the Lenten season, I want us to focus on one of the two essential elements of life. In this instance we will not consider the air we breathe (as important as it is) but rather we will consider water.

Water is understood in some ways to define human experience, nourishing and sustaining all life on planet Earth. Water is indeed a gift of nature. Water is a product of imagination and an inescapable part of the ecological reality of life. Our very bodies are comprised of and dependent upon water.

Water is precious and we have come to understand ever more profoundly since the lead- poisoned disgrace of Flint, Michigan and the unethical, immoral threat to the Mississippi River posed at Standing Rock that “Water Is Life!”

In recent days I spent time on the continent of Africa and there the bare essentials of life are more clearly visible in daily existence. Among the common experiences of living is the requirement of water. I cannot count how many times throughout the day I witnessed the process of either people carrying water from one place to another or pumps and wells being accessed to draw water.

In my quiet moments, it occurred to me that in truth, one cannot expect someone else to carry the water. In many regards, each of us should carry our own.

Consider the phrase, “to carry someone’s water.”

As a former high school basketball team manager, I know something about the position of “water boy” who is charged with catering to the players’ comfort. Often, people view serving as water boy is the lowest job in the team hierarchy. Yet, without the water provided by the waterboy, dehydration, cramps and the inability to perform are guaranteed results.

In these future-defining times, we ought endeavor to imagine and embrace new possibilities to creatively carry our own water. To carry water is to take on primary responsibility, to ensure something is accomplished, to resist and to take action – even though the people elected, appointed and others holding positions of authority should be the ones doing the work.

I pray that a renewed internal urgency will arise in each of us to be responsible agents in justice-making. All persons are diminished when any one person, group or segment of our society is diminished. Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was correct in 1963 and even more correct today,  “No, no, we are not satisfied and will not be satisfied until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

Oh, Holy One and Creator, grant us more grace and divine fortitude to unceasingly pursue your kin-dom here on earth. Remind us always of your requirements to do justice, love kindness and walk humbly with you, our God.

Reverend Cedric A. Harmon

Executive Director, Many Voices A Black Church Movement for Gay and Transgender (LGBTQ) Justice

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