Mick Mulvaney, Ronan Farrow, Ferndale, Andrew Rannells, Mayflower, Gordon Sondland, Helen Mirren: HOT LINKS

Mick Mulvaney, Ronan Farrow, Ferndale, Andrew Rannells, Mayflower, Gordon Sondland, Helen Mirren: HOT LINKS

‘CATCH AND KILL’ NUGGET. Ronan Farrow is engaged to Jon Lovett.

GORDON SONDLAND. EU ambassador to tell Congress Trump ordered him to work with personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani to push Ukraine to investigate political rival Joe Biden: ‘While he denied in a September text message already obtained by Congress that there were “quid pro quo’s of any kind,” Sondland will tell committee staff and lawmakers Thursday that Ukraine announcing “anti-corruption” investigations “was one of the pre-conditions for securing a White House meeting with President [Volodymyr] Zelenskiy,” the country’s new president eager for U.S. support.’

BUTTIGIEG. Debate performance applauded by conservatives

KANSAS CITY. Fourth transgender woman of color killed in KC this year… ‘The victim in the most recent case has been identified as 30-year-old Brianna “BB” Hill of Kansas City. Hill was shot about 11:30 a.m. Monday near 43rd Street and Hardesty Avenue in eastern Kansas City and died by the time officers arrived.’

EMOLUMENTS. Mick Mulvaney announces next G7 will be held at Trump hotel.

Mulvaney goes on to provide an infomercial for Trump’s Doral resort. #corruption pic.twitter.com/bShnWi8mkf

— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) October 17, 2019

OMG — Mulvaney dismisses concerns that Trump is turning the G20 into a branding opportunity: “Donald Trump’s brand is probably strong enough as it is. Doesn’t need any more help on that. It is most recognizable name in the English language and probably around the world.” pic.twitter.com/r9NuKYhlFX

— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) October 17, 2019

CALIFORNIA. Earthquake early warning alert system launched: “The California Earthquake Early Warning System will marry a new smartphone application with traditional alert and warning delivery methods such as Wireless Emergency Alerts (WEA). The system uses ground motion sensors from across the state to detect earthquakes before humans can feel them and will notify Californians so that they can “Drop, cover and hold on” in advance of an earthquake.”

CARBS ARE THE ENEMY. Tim Tebow enthuses about his keto diet, serves up food with Rachael Ray.

MICHIGAN. Ferndale bans gay conversion therapy: “The ban comes about four months after Huntington Woods became the first city in Michigan to prohibit conversion therapy. In September, East Lansing banned the practice. Ferndale’s actions go further by making the practice a misdemeanor punishable by up to 93 days in jail. Huntington Woods made it a civil fraction.”

MICHAEL MARTIN. Gay former soccer goalie runs for Board of Education in West Virginia: “The former Wilson College and Musselman High School goalkeeper — whose 2014 coming out story was that year’s most-read piece on Outsports — has announced that he is running for a seat on the Berkeley County, West Virginia Board of Education. Berkeley County encompasses Musselman H.S. in the Eastern Panhandle region of the state.”

MILO YIANNOPOULOS. The white supremacist alt-right troll’s website has been sold: ‘A grammatically incorrect message on the site Sunday states that “Dangerous.com has been sold and is no longer associated with it’s previous owner.”’

HELEN MIRREN. It’s much better to age disgracefully.

ONE BIG HAPPY. Tuc Watkins and Andrew Rannells take the kids for a beach day:

View this post on Instagram

I think we nailed beach day.

A post shared by theandrewrannells (@andrewrannells) on

IRELAND. Presbyterian Church elder forced from role over same-sex marriage fears ‘witch hunt’ by the church: ‘Defending its actions, the Presbyterian Church in Ireland said ordained leaders should “in their own lifestyle reflect the clear and consistent position of the church with regards to marriage”.’

ANNIVERSARY VOYAGE OF THE DAY. Autonomous Mayflower ship to cross Atlantic on 400th anniversary. “The autonomous Mayflower will be decked out with solar panels, as well as diesel and wind turbines to provide it with its propulsion power, as it attempts the 3,220-mile journey from Plymouth in England, to Plymouth in Massachusetts in the U.S.”

BLOOPER REEL OF THE DAY. Michael Henry’s sketches.

THIRSTY THURSDAY. Luis Miguel.

The post Mick Mulvaney, Ronan Farrow, Ferndale, Andrew Rannells, Mayflower, Gordon Sondland, Helen Mirren: HOT LINKS appeared first on Towleroad Gay News.


Mick Mulvaney, Ronan Farrow, Ferndale, Andrew Rannells, Mayflower, Gordon Sondland, Helen Mirren: HOT LINKS

HRC Joins Activists to Testify in Favor of D.C.’s Community Safety and Health Act

HRC Joins Activists to Testify in Favor of D.C.’s Community Safety and Health Act

Today, HRC staff attended joined local advocates for a D.C. City Council hearing and offered testimony in support of the Community Safety and Health Amendment Act of 2019, legislation that would eliminate criminal prohibitions and penalties for consensual sex work and establish a task force to recommend further improvements to public safety, health and human rights. The legislation, which maintains the prohibitions on coercion and trafficking, is sponsored by Councilmember David Grosso.

Testifying on behalf of HRC was Carmarion D. Anderson, HRC Alabama State Director. Her full testimony as prepared:

Thank you Chairperson Charles Allen and members of the Committee.  My name is Carmarion D. Anderson, and I am a senior staffer with expertise in public health at the Human Rights Campaign currently serving as the Alabama State Director. I am also a Black woman of trans experience. HRC is America’s largest civil rights organization working towards full equality for the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer community. On behalf of our more than 3 million members and supporters nationwide, I am honored to provide this testimony in support of the Community Safety and Health Amendment Act of 2019.

The criminalization of consensual sex work poses a serious threat to public health and increases violence in LGBTQ communities. These laws are not motivated by sound public policy goals but by institutionalized shame, a desire to shame people for daring to survive. It is no coincidence that the criminalization of sex work disproportionately punishes the poor, black and brown women, transgender women — particularly those living at the intersection of multiple marginalized identities. The U.S. Trans Survey of 2015 (USTS) found that 12% of transgender respondents engaged in sex work in exchange for income with 9% doing so in the past year, with higher rates among trans women of color. This year alone, at least 20 transgender people have been killed across the United States, all but one black transgender women, with indicators that many were likely engaged in sex work. These alarming statistics underscore the urgent need to decriminalize sex work to bringing these workers out of the shadows and closer to critical services and protections.

Arresting individuals with the expectation that this will eradicate or reduce sex work demonstrates a profound misunderstanding of why people engage in sex work in the first place. People must eat, have shelter, and provide for their basic needs. This is the human condition we all share. Sex work offers a means of survival for those who are cut off from other labor markets. Black and brown transgender women, who frequently face discrimination in multiple areas of life, may turn to transactional sex work as a means of survival. Without creating viable alternatives to sex work and offering services and support, the threat of arrest does not deter sex workers from pursuing underground economies. Arresting sex workers and branding them with shame and the stigma of a criminal record has the effect of making other labor markets even more inaccessible, reinforcing poverty.

Shame exacerbates public health challenges, deterring people from showing up to be tested and learn about prevention of STIs. Criminalization disempowers people from taking control over their health by accessing and adhering to regiments of Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) or utilizing Post-Exposure Prophylaxis (PEP).  It also discourages sex workers from carrying condoms since condoms are often considered evidence of sex work. Changing the relationship of sex workers with the law will allow them to secure both their health and the health of their clients while advancing the goal of achieving an AIDS-free generation.

Criminalization, by its nature, creates a target population vulnerable to violence and exploitation by forcing those trading sex to weigh the fear of their own arrest against the need to report victimization. Decriminalization has the potential to foster better relationships with law enforcement across the board and allow sex workers to self advocate when they experience violence while engaged in sex work such as sexual assault or battery. In addition, decriminalization allows people experiencing intimate partner violence to seek safety without fear that their abuser will land them in jail for sex work. Current law encourages clients and intimate partners of sex workers to see the sex workers as criminals which when combined with feelings of self-shame lowers inhibitions to violence.  For those who are trafficked, criminalization contributes to victim distrust of law enforcement, so that victims do not seek out help for fear of arrest or deportation. Eliminating criminal statutes that target consensual sex work allows law enforcement to focus on helping people who are forced into sex work.

Our Nation’s Capital should instead focus on providing tools that will actually change lives. By partnering with organizations that provide sex workers with necessities like stable housing, intimate partner violence survivor services, substance abuse treatment, health care, and job training, DC government has an opportunity to meaningfully reduce survival sex work.

On behalf of the Human Rights Campaign, I urge you to pass the Community Safety and Health Amendment Act of 2019. The decriminalization of sex work allieviates a myriad of problems by helping to reduce the high rate of HIV in the LGBTQ community, increasing the physical and emotional well-being of sex workers, fostering better relations with law enforcement, and decreasing violence and harassment against sex workers who are often afraid to seek police assistance. Thank you for your time and consideration.

Community activist and HRC Operations Coordinator Laya Monarez also submitted testimony. An excerpt is included below:

Incarcerating sex workers makes it difficult for them to find other employment especially with several charges. Oftentimes multiple charges result in sex workers returning to the streets. It also makes it easier for pimps and traffickers to make sex workers afraid of going to authorities for aid. Decriminalizing sex work builds trust between the police and sex workers, which allows them to report violence or instances of trafficking. We need to stop spending police hours and resources on criminalizing and harassing sex workers and focus on the real problem, which is trafficking and violence against sex workers.

More information on the legislation and why it’s important:

The Community Safety and Health Amendment Act of 2019 was drafted in consultation with Sex Worker Advocates Coalition (SWAC), a coalition of public health and civil and human rights organizations, including HIPS, ACLU DC, GLAA, Collective Action for Safe Spaces, National Center for Trans Equality, Whitman Walker Health, Casa Ruby, Best Practices Policy Project, SWOP-USA, Black Youth Project (BYP) 100, Black Lives Matter DMV, No Justice No Pride, D.C. Center for the LGBT Community, Bread for the City, Network for Victims Recovery DC, National Center for Lesbian Rights, Ultraviolet, Center for Health and Gender Equity, and URGE.

Eighty percent of street-based sex workers reported violence, according to one report. Nearly nine in ten transgender people engaging in sex work or suspected of engaging in sex work reported being harassed, attacked, sexually assaulted or mistreated in some other way by police, according to the 2015 U.S. Trans Survey. Out of those who were working in the underground economy at the time they took the survey, nearly 41% were physically attacked in the previous year and over one-third were sexually assaulted in that same time.

In many instances, the criminalization of sex work can exacerbate the epidemic of violence targeting the transgender community, particularly transgender women of color.

www.hrc.org/blog/hrc-joins-activists-to-testify-in-favor-of-dcs-community-safety-health?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

CNBC Supports LGBTQ Youth and Stands Against Bullying for the 10th Year

CNBC Supports LGBTQ Youth and Stands Against Bullying for the 10th Year

Spirit Day started in 2010 and one of the anti-bullying campaign’s earliest supporters was CNBC. CNBC has participated each year and is one again leading news networks with its participation! 

Today, CNBC anchors and reporters from around the globe are purple for Spirit Day, in a show of support for LGBTQ youth and against bullying.

“Thanks to CNBC’s participation in Spirit Day, critical mesages about supporting LGBTQ youth have reached countless business leaders and parents around the world,” said GLAAD Chief Communications Officer Rich Ferraro. “Whether on air, in the office, or online, CNBC’s consistent participation demonstrates a true commitment to the LGBTQ community here and abroad.”

The OUT@NBCUniversal Englewood Cliff chapter passed out purple cupcakes to employees today and posted photos on Facebook.

 

The network’s peacock logo turned purple for the day on-air, on CNBC.com, and on CNBC’s flagship social media handles. 

Today NBCUniversal partners with GLAAD once again and Go Purple for #SpiritDay. Along with millions of others nationwide, we take a stand against bullying by sending a message of solidarity and acceptance for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer (LGBTQ) youth. #prideNBCU

— CNBC (@CNBC) October 17, 2019

 

Anchors including Jim Cramer, Jon Fortt, Frank Holland, Melissa Lee, Becky Quick, Andrew Ross Sorkin, and anchors from CNBC International all participated. 

CNBC International also participated with anchors in Asia and Australia once again kicking the day off.

It’s #SpiritDay in Australia and @CNBCi is purple to take a stand against bullying. t.co/7Fj6bEVKHn

— GLAAD (@glaad) October 17, 2019

Spirit Day

Emily @EmilyCNBC and I going purple to show our support for standing against bullying #SpiritDay #PrideNBCU  @CNBCi @cnbcipr @CNBC pic.twitter.com/1yDpjBTCeD

— Chery Kang (@cherykang) October 17, 2019

 

About Spirit Day

Each year, millions go purple for GLAAD’s Spirit Day to support LGBTQ youth in a united stand against bullying. Started in 2010 by high school student Brittany McMillan in response to numerous young LGBTQ lives lost to suicide, Spirit Day now draws the participation of celebrities, schools, faith institutions, national landmarks, corporations, media outlets, sports leagues, and advocates around the world, all joining together to stand against bullying and support LGBTQ youth.

Presenting partners Pantene and Target, official partners Kellogg’s and the NBA and WNBA, and community partners Amazon, Johnson & Johnson, Kirkland & Ellis, and Wells Fargo will all participate in the anti-bullying campaign. 

As anti-LGBTQ policies, hate crimes, and harassment are on the rise, it is now especially important to let all marginalized youth know they are supported.

This year, Spirit Day is on October 17, 2019. Take the Spirit Day pledge to show LGBTQ youth you’ve got their backs at glaad.org/spiritday. Follow @GLAAD on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram to keep up to date with #SpiritDay news.

October 17, 2019
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www.glaad.org/blog/cnbc-supports-lgbtq-youth-and-stands-against-bullying-10th-year

Matthew Shepard’s Parents Slam AG Bill Barr in Letter Read at DOJ: ‘We Do Not Honor Our Son by Kowtowing to Hypocrisy’

Matthew Shepard’s Parents Slam AG Bill Barr in Letter Read at DOJ: ‘We Do Not Honor Our Son by Kowtowing to Hypocrisy’

Judy and Dennis Shepard, the parents of Matthew Shepard, the gay University of Wyoming student who was beaten, brutally tortured, and left to die on a fence in Laramie in 1998, slammed Attorney General Bill Barr in a letter read at the Department of Justice on Wednesday.

The letter was read at a ceremony held to commemorate the 10-year anniversary of the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd, Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act. The Shepards were not present at the ceremony.

The Shepards took the opportunity to denounce the Trump administration’s position on transgender rights. The administration filed briefs in two cases currently before the Supreme Court, arguing that transgender people are not protected under Title VII.

Wrote the Shepards: “We find it interesting and hypocritical that he would invite us to this event commemorating a hate crime law named after our son and Mr. Byrd, while, at the same time, asking the Supreme Court to allow the legalized firing of transgender employees.  Mr. Barr, you cannot have it both ways.  If you believe that employers should have the right to terminate transgender employees, just because they are transgender, then you believe they are lesser than and not worthy of protection.  If so, you need not invite us to future events at the Department of Justice that are billed as celebrating the law that protects these same individuals from hate crimes.  Either you believe in equality for all or you don’t.  We do not honor our son by kowtowing to hypocrisy.”

The NYT reports: ‘A Justice Department news release sent to reporters after the event made no mention of the Shepards’ criticisms. In the statement, Mr. Barr said that “hate crimes are especially reprehensible because of the toll they take on families, communities, and our nation as a whole.”’

The Shepards’ letter in full:

“Throughout the history of this country, discrimination against someone because of their race, religion, sexual orientation, ethnicity, or because of another characteristic, has been, unfortunately, quite prevalent.  Along with that discrimination came violence to remove those considered “other”. Our son, Matt, was the result of that discrimination and violence when he was beaten brutally and left to die on the outskirts of Laramie, Wyoming in early October 1998.  He died five days later, never having regained consciousness from the eighteen plus blows to the skull, resulting in a crushed brain stem from which he never recovered.  His two assailants each received two consecutive life sentences without parole.  In state court.

After the trials concluded, some members of both the Laramie City Police Department and the Albany County Sheriff’s Department were furloughed to help defray the cost of the investigation and the prosecution of the two assailants.  Due to the fact that Wyoming had no hate crime law, federal money was not available to help cover those expenses. Even now, more than twenty years after Matt’s death, Wyoming is still without a hate crime law to protect its citizens.

To this day, we are unable to understand why he was murdered for being gay.  Being gay is not a choice.  Matt stood 5’ 2’’ in height and weighed a mere 105 pounds at his death.  Matt spoke five languages and was learning a sixth when he died.  He was a people person, always wanting to help others.  His dream was to work for the U.S. State Department overseas to help citizens of other countries enjoy the same rights, responsibilities, privileges, and freedoms he thought – I repeat – he thought he had in this country…the country he loved so much…the country he was so proud of.

Matt’s death was an eye-opener for us, his parents.  We had raised him and his brother to believe that they could do anything they wanted in life, as long as they were willing to work hard and make the right choices.  We found out that that was true for only one of our sons, not both.  It was then that we began to learn about the blatant discriminatory practices against the LGBTQ community and the violence that accompanied some of those practices.  Even though both of our sons were born in Casper, Wyoming, in the middle of the United States, and even though both were American citizens, they were not considered equal.

Our gay son would not have been allowed the same rights as our straight son.  Our gay son would not have been allowed to marry the person he loved if that person was another man.  Our gay son would not have been allowed to serve in the military, not have been allowed to protect and defend the country he loved.  Our gay son would not have been allowed to adopt, to bring someone into his home to be loved, cherished, supported, and encouraged as he was when he was growing up.  Our gay son could have been fired from his job, simply because he was gay.  All these so-called rights of American citizens, along with many others, that his straight brother enjoyed but he would never have been allowed to enjoy.  Such blatant discrimination encourages bullying, vandalism, and other acts of violence, encouraging close-minded people to push harder against those they consider “different” because they don’t fit their pre-conceived notions of “same” and, thus, are intimidated by these “others”.

We realized that we could do nothing for Matt.  It was too late for that.  However, we could do something for Matt’s friends in the LGBTQ community, so we established the Matthew Shepard Foundation.  Our mission is to empower individuals to embrace human dignity and diversity through outreach, advocacy and resource programs.  We strive to replace hate with understanding, compassion, and acceptance.  We educate the public, most notably members of the straight cisgender community, on the lack of civil rights protections for those who identify as LGBTQ.

It was understood that nothing would be accomplished at the federal level as long as George W. Bush was President.  He opposed marriage equality, opposed the right of gays and lesbians to adopt children, and believed that private organizations had the right to discriminate against the LGBTQ community.  It was understood that work needed to be done at the grassroots level to educate America on the inequities faced by LGBTQ American citizens. We worked closely with other people and groups to accomplish that goal, knowing that, sometime in the future, a person would be elected President who recognized and understood the destructive nature of discrimination and would support actions that protected all U.S. citizens, not just some.

In 2008, it happened.  Barack Obama was elected President.  He understood the historical effects of discrimination and the need for equal opportunities for all Americans.  After much lobbying and, finally, verbal public acknowledgement, a law was passed and signed on October 29, 2009.  It was the Matthew Shepard James Byrd, Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act – the first federal law to criminalize violence against members of the LGBTQ community.  It expanded protections found in the Civil Rights Act of 1964, including some key protections for gender, gender identity, disability, and sexual orientation.  It gave federal prosecutors and state district attorneys additional options to pursue to prosecute hate crimes.  It also provided additional funding, if needed, for local and state law enforcement in the investigation and prosecution of alleged hate crimes.

Less than two weeks from now, we will celebrate the ten-year anniversary of that hate crime law.  In the past decade, this law was used dozens of times to investigate, prosecute, and convict individuals for inflicting violence against those deemed to be “others.”  It has brought an additional weapon into the struggle against hate – helping to protect all citizens, especially those in marginalized communities who have the most to fear and the most to lose, including immigrants, racial and religious minorities, and the LGBTQ community.

The attorneys in the Civil Rights Division of the Department of Justice, many of whom we consider friends, are the enforcers of this law.  You are the guardians against hate, discrimination, and bias-motivated violence.  Since the passage of Shepard-Byrd, you have been led by four confirmed Attorneys General.  Eric Holder, testifying before Congress in support of Shepard-Byrd stated, “One has to look at the unfortunate history of our nation.  There are groups that have been singled out, that have been targets of violence.  We have to face and confront that reality.”  When referring to the seventh anniversary of the Shepard-Byrd law, Attorney General Loretta Lynch stated, “We are… concerned with crimes against our LGBT brothers and sisters… We have been active, bringing hate crimes cases in a number of states around the country… I… [will] meet with LGBT youth… to reaffirm the department’s steadfast commitment to the rights and well-being of all LGBTQ Americans.”  By contrast, then Senator Jeff Sessions argued against passage of this law stating, “Some are protected groups and [will] get special protection under this law.”

Attorney General Barr stated in July that he was “deeply concerned about the rise in hate crimes and political violence that we have seen over the past decade.”  He then declared that “[w]e must have zero tolerance for violence that is motivated by hatred for our fellow citizens whether based on race, sex, or creed.”  While we agree with him on these points, we disagree with his statement later in that speech when he said, “Hate crime and civil rights prosecutions are important tools but they cannot solve the problem on their own.  Hearts and minds must be changed, but that is not always a task to which the government is particularly well-suited.”

Mr. Barr represents the government and he is well-suited and has the power to change hearts and minds to promote diversity, inclusion, and equity among all groups of people, and drive out the forces of hate.  As the head of the Department of Justice, he can take a stand as a member of this administration to disavow and condemn any person who fuels the fires of hate with their words and actions.  He must lead and demonstrate his refusal to accept hate in all its manifestations.  He must demonstrate courage, even if it means disagreeing with the administration.  So far, he has done none of these deeds.

We find it interesting and hypocritical that he would invite us to this event commemorating a hate crime law named after our son and Mr. Byrd, while, at the same time, asking the Supreme Court to allow the legalized firing of transgender employees. 

Mr. Barr, you cannot have it both ways.  If you believe that employers should have the right to terminate transgender employees, just because they are transgender, then you believe they are lesser than and not worthy of protection.  If so, you need not invite us to future events at the Department of Justice that are billed as celebrating the law that protects these same individuals from hate crimes.  Either you believe in equality for all or you don’t.  We do not honor our son by kowtowing to hypocrisy.

The Matthew Shepard and James Byrd, Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act is the law of the land and is needed now more than ever.  Unfortunately, we have seen government funding and resources shift to fighting international terrorism in the decade since the passage of Shepard-Byrd, despite the fact that hate crimes have led to far more deaths of Americans here at home.  Acts that would be considered domestic terrorism in any other country.

For those of you who are career employees of the Department of Justice and truly believe in protecting all Americans from injustice, who believe in equal rights and representation for all Americans, who fight daily to protect the freedoms of all Americans, we thank you from the bottoms of our hearts.  We never doubted your commitment or resolve to honor our son’s memory and legacy by enforcing this law.  We appreciate all of the Assistant United States Attorneys and FBI agents who have joined our hate crime training initiatives.  We understand how frustrating and thankless it is when you are fighting an uphill battle under today’s political climate and with little or no support or assistance from the administration.  Don’t give up.  Continue fighting for those who can’t fight for themselves.  You are their most cherished friend, advisor, confidant, and protector.

We don’t want to see another incident or life lost as we lost Matt.  Any loss of life, any loss of a job, any loss of desire to work towards fulfilling a person’s dreams and goals because of hate related words or actions is a loss to the local community where that person lives, a loss to the state where that person lives, and a loss to this country.

We look forward to a re-focus on the causes of hate crimes and the reduction of hate crime incidents as America changes direction and moves forward towards a more equal and just country.”

Respectfully,

Judy and Dennis Shepard

The post Matthew Shepard’s Parents Slam AG Bill Barr in Letter Read at DOJ: ‘We Do Not Honor Our Son by Kowtowing to Hypocrisy’ appeared first on Towleroad Gay News.


Matthew Shepard’s Parents Slam AG Bill Barr in Letter Read at DOJ: ‘We Do Not Honor Our Son by Kowtowing to Hypocrisy’