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Utah Man Who Reported Hate Crime Now Says Wounds Self-Inflicted
Utah Man Who Reported Hate Crime Now Says Wounds Self-Inflicted
Rick Jones said he carved ‘Die Fag’ into his own arm, in what his attorneys are calling ‘a cry for help.’
Trudy Ring
www.advocate.com/crime/2015/06/30/utah-man-who-reported-hate-crime-now-says-wounds-self-inflicted
Share This: American Pride
Share This: American Pride

We are all equal and all American. Some would claim otherwise.
Don’t let the American flag be held hostage by conservatives. Celebrate equality and positive change in the world.
The post Share This: American Pride appeared first on Towleroad.
Andy Towle
Facebook`s LGBT Employees

LGBT Immigrant Rights Protesters Arrested Near White House
LGBT Immigrant Rights Protesters Arrested Near White House
WASHINGTON — Six LGBT immigrant rights activists were arrested Tuesday after blocking a street near the White House to protest the Obama administration’s treatment of LGBT immigrants in detention.
Protesters, organized by advocacy group United We Dream, took turns criticizing Obama administration detention policies as some participants linked themselves with chains or lay in the street and blocked traffic.
“We are asking President Obama to free all LGBT people from detention because detention is not protecting them. Detention is brutalizing them,” said Brooke Cerda-Guzmán, an undocumented transgender woman who was arrested.
The protest came a week after an undocumented transgender woman was kicked out of the White House for heckling President Barack Obama about immigrant detention. It followed Monday’s small victory for advocates for better treatment of LGBT people in detention, when U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement announced it will consider transgender detainees’ gender identity when deciding where they should be housed.
The protesters — four undocumented, and three transgender — were arrested after the group marched from the White House to K Street, where they blocked a busy intersection. As police hauled them away, others continued to chant from the sidewalk.
“Detention is bad for everyone, but it is especially bad for LGBTQ immigrants,” said Carlos Padilla, who coordinates United We Dream’s Queer Undocumented Immigrant Project. “No one should should have to face such horrific conditions for simply being who they are.”
LGBT people are more likely to experience abuse and sexual assault in immigration detention than heterosexual inmates, according to the progressive think tank Center for American Progress. The Williams Institute at the University of California, Los Angeles, estimates there are more than 267,000 undocumented LGBT immigrants in the U.S. The U.S. government reported more than 140 undocumented immigrants died in detention from 2003 to 2013. The number of LGBT people included in that figure is unknown.
ICE has taken steps to better accommodate LGBT detainees. The agency on Monday revealed plans to allow transgender detainees to be placed in facilities with the sex they identify with. Andrew Lorenzen-Strait, ICE deputy assistant director for custody programs, said agency has been conducting a pilot program at one of its facilities and is looking to expand it to a few of its other detention centers.
“We do know the procedures that we put in place are working,” Lorenzen-Strait said. “We want this to be an option for more facilities.”
ICE will begin keeping data on detainees’ gender identity and will offer more training for immigration officers to help transgender detainees in a respectful manner.
But Padilla said it does not go far enough.
“No matter how much better you make that cage, it doesn’t change the fact that it is a cage,” Padilla said.
— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.
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Marcha por el Orgullo 2015 / @Movilh por Cristobal Molina

Michael Sam Back With Montreal Team, 'Fully Committed'
Michael Sam Back With Montreal Team, 'Fully Committed'
The out footballer, back after a personal leave, also says the Supreme Court’s marriage equality decision is ‘freaking awesome.’
Trudy Ring
www.advocate.com/sports/2015/06/30/michael-sam-back-montreal-team-fully-committed
A Memorable Month of Pride in America
A Memorable Month of Pride in America
For too long, same-sex couples have fought tirelessly for their basic civil rights. Loving, committed partners, along with millions of families and supporters, have challenged the status quo, and demanded that all Americans receive equal treatment under the law, and the opportunity for them and their families to live anywhere in this great country, with the dignity, respect, and rights that all Americans deserve.
On Friday, June 26th, the Supreme Court honored their fight and handed down one of the most historic rulings of our generation. The highest court in the land ruled that same-sex couples have a constitutional right to marriage equality.
Friday’s decision was momentous — and as President Obama said in his remarks following the decision, the Supreme Court has “reaffirmed that all Americans are entitled to the equal protection of the law. That all people should be treated equally, regardless of who they are or who they love.”
After years of waiting, marriage equality is a reality. The ruling represents an enormous victory for same-sex couples, their children, and their supporters, many of whom have dedicated their lives to this struggle. The decision also provides a historic close to this year’s LGBT Pride Month — an annual celebration of the courage of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender communities. But central to celebrating Pride is recognizing the work that is yet to be done. Not until every American — whether gay, straight, lesbian, bisexual, or transgender — is treated equally under the law will we fully realize our potential as a nation.
As the president said on Friday, “The decision affirms what millions of Americans already believe in their hearts: When all Americans are treated as equal we are all more free.” This is the Administration’s guiding principle on issues of LGBT equality — from the repeal of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” to ending the legal defense of Section 3 of the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA). From restructuring benefits following the end of DOMA, to appointing a record number of openly LGBT Americans to the Administration. And last July, of course, the President signed an Executive Order that prohibits federal contractors from discriminating on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity — protecting up to 1.5 million Americans from discrimination based on who they are or who they love.
Throughout Pride Month this June, the White House has welcomed leaders from around the world to discuss issues facing the LGBT community. On June 1st, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration kicked off the month by releasing its Guide to Restroom Access for Transgender Workers, upholding the principle that all employees should have access to restrooms that correspond to their gender identity. On June 12, the White House, National Security Council, State Department, and USAID welcomed experts on policing and LGBT rights from Europe, Africa, and Latin America to discuss community efforts to prevent bias-motivated violence, the role of law enforcement, and other steps the government can take to protect LGBT individuals.
And on June 23rd, the White House hosted an LGBT substance abuse roundtable to discuss best practices for recovery and treatment in the LGBT community. The next day, the White House hosted a briefing on how the president’s priorities around health care, climate change, education, and international LGBT rights are impacting the LGBT community. This briefing was in conjunction with a White House announcement that after 2015, federal employees’ health insurers can no longer contain blanket exclusions for transgender-inclusive health care such as hormone therapy.
Also last week, the Office of Science and Technology Policy hosted a “We The Geeks: Made With Pride” Google hangout to recognize the accomplishments of makers and LGBT people in technology, and explore strategies for diversifying science and technology fields.
To close out the month, the president hosted a Pride Month reception for LGBT leaders and allies at the White House on Wednesday, June 24th.
2015 has also marked some important steps forward in our society for transgender Americans, as more and more of our neighbors, family members and loved ones are feeling the freedom and support they need to embrace their personal identities. More businesses are standing up against anti-LGBT legislation in states and we’ve seen a real shift towards broader public acceptance and understanding.
As our work continues in the months and years to come, we must remember to keep pushing for things like a fully inclusive Employment Non-Discrimination Act and a society in which every child in America feels supported and safe to pursue their happiness, regardless of who they are or whom they love. We also must remember this period as proof of what is possible when we work hard, work together, and pursue the highest ideals of our country.
President Obama said it best while honoring the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington: “But we would dishonor those heroes as well to suggest that the work of this nation is somehow complete. The arc of the moral universe may bend towards justice, but it doesn’t bend on its own. To secure the gains this country has made requires constant vigilance, not complacency.”
— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.
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Girls Scouts Reaffirm Commitment to Transgender Inclusion
Girls Scouts Reaffirm Commitment to Transgender Inclusion

Yesterday, the Seattle Met reported that the Girl Scouts of Western Washington returned a $100,000 donation after the donor requested that the money not be spent on transgender youth.
HRC.org
Tennessee Hardware Store Posts ‘No Gays Allowed’ Sign In Response To SCOTUS Marriage Ruling
Tennessee Hardware Store Posts ‘No Gays Allowed’ Sign In Response To SCOTUS Marriage Ruling

Backlash against the Supreme Court’s ruling on same-sex marriage continues. A Tennessee hardware store owner has posted a sign in the window of his store that reads, “NO GAYS ALLOWED” in response to the Court’s ruling.
Jeff Amyx, the owner of Amyx Hardware and Roofing Supplies in the eastern county of Grainger, said that he posted the sign because “gay and lesbian couples are against his religion”, as WBIR puts it. Amyx added that the Supreme Court’s decision and the public outpouring of support for LGBT rights inspired him to put his bigotry on display.
Amyx, who is also a baptist minister, said he realized Monday morning that homosexual people are not afraid to stand for what they believe in. He said it showed him that Christian people should be brave enough to stand for what they believe in.
“They gladly stand for what they believe in, why can’t I? They believe their way is right, I believe it’s wrong. But yet I’m going to take more persecution than them because I’m standing for what I believe in,” Amyx said.
The sign was brought to the attention of WBIR on Facebook.
Amyx says he no plans to take it down.
The post Tennessee Hardware Store Posts ‘No Gays Allowed’ Sign In Response To SCOTUS Marriage Ruling appeared first on Towleroad.
Sean Mandell
Tennessee Hardware Store Posts ‘No Gays Allowed’ Sign In Response To SCOTUS Marriage Ruling
