Category Archives: MISC

Don’t miss these LGBTQ nominees and presenters at Sunday’s Globes!

Don’t miss these LGBTQ nominees and presenters at Sunday’s Globes!

Daniela Vega in A Fantastic Woman
Photo Credit: GLAAD

The 75th Annual Golden Globe Awards will air live this Sunday, keep an eye out for the LGBTQ stars and inclusive projects that are nominated! Be sure to tweet along with @GLAAD using #RepresentationMatters, starting at 5pm PT/8pm ET.

The Chilean film A Fantastic Woman is nominated in Best Motion Picture – Foreign Language. The movie follows Marina (new star Daniela Vega), a lounge singer whose life is turned upside down by an unexpected loss of someone close to her and the discrimination she then faces from individuals and institutions as a trans woman. The film is also Chile’s official entry for the Oscars’ Best Foreign Language Film award, and will roll out widely on February 2nd after a limited release late in 2017.

Sony Pictures Classics’ Call Me By Your Name picked up three total nominations, including a nod in the Best Motion Picture – Drama category. Breakout star Timothée Chalamet picked up a nomination in Best Actor in a Motion Picture – Drama for his portrayal of Elio, while Armie Hammer (Oliver) is up for a trophy in Best Supporting Actor. Call Me By Your Name has done just over $4.9 million at the domestic box office in its six weeks of release. The film is still rolling out to additional cities; find a screening near you here.

The Shape of Water will also be competing for the award in Best Motion Picture – Drama, one of the film’s seven nominations. Richard Jenkins joins Hammer as a Best Supporting Actor nominee; Jenkins plays Giles, a gay man and the neighbor, best friend, and confidant of the film’s lead character. Check out what Jenkins had to tell us about his character’s journey.

Emma Stone picked up a nod in Best Actress in a Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy for her portrayal of out tennis legend, Billie Jean King, in Battle of the Sexes. Lady Bird, which included a gay storyline, is nominated in Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy. This is one of four nominations for the film.

Moving over to television, the rebooted Will & Grace, Master of None, and Smilf all picked up nominations in Best Television Series – Musical or Comedy. Will & Grace star Eric McCormack (Will) also earned a nomination in Best Performance by an Actor – Musical or Comedy. Hulu’s The Handmaid’s Tale and NBC’s This is Us are nominated in Best Television Series – Drama. Top of the Lake: China Girl and Feud: Bette and Joan picked up nods in Best Television Limited Series or Motion Picture Made for Television.

In music, out artist and GLAAD Board Member Justin Tranter is nominated in Best Original Song – Motion Picture for his work on co-writing the music and lyrics of “Home” from Ferdinand. Out songwriter and composer Benj Pasek was also nominated in the category for the song “This is Me” from The Greatest Showman, written with his work partner Justin Paul.

Ricky Martin, out singer and star of the upcoming season of The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story, has been announced as one of the evening’s presenters. Out actors Neil Patrick Harris and Angelina Jolie will also be presenters.

Many on the red carpet will be wearing black in recognition of the sexual abuse allegations in Hollywood that have emerged over the past few months. Some stars will additionally be sporting Time’s Up pins in reference to the sexual harassment prevention initiative launched earlier this week by over 300 women working in entertainment. The initiative aims to combat harassment with a legal defense fund for survivors across all industries, lobbying for legislation against companies that enable perpetrators, and working towards gender parity in leadership positions.

The 75th Annual Golden Globes will air live Sunday, January 7 at 5pm PT/8pm ET on NBC, hosted by Seth Meyers. Tweet with @GLAAD using #RepresentationMatters.

January 5, 2018

www.glaad.org/blog/dont-miss-these-lgbtq-nominees-and-presenters-sundays-globes

2018 Resolutions All Gay Men Should Consider

2018 Resolutions All Gay Men Should Consider
2018 gay

2018 gay

Resolutions for 2018 Gay Men Should Consider

2017 was the kind of year we dreaded at the end of 2016. For many queers, the country regressed decades. The antics of the new regime reached the camp of a John Waters movie. Our “President” made it clear he doesn’t give a flying f**k about the LGBT community. While politically and culturally we’re stronger than in our recorded history, our victories lose their luster when we watch our trans family so blatantly oppressed, while HIV is once again ignored, while our country sits idly as queer men are taken into concentration camps across the globe.

For queer men, fatigue, the absence of mentors lost to AIDS, and a lack of blueprints to measure our success can make the future seem even more hopeless. Maybe it is the end of times. Or maybe it’s the same old world, the same old hate, and it’s us getting older and weary. But one way we’ve always fought that hatred, and what we do best, is take small actions and gatherings, turn them into a protests and celebrations, becoming political and cultural juggernauts.

As a gay men living in America, we’re damaged, privileged, lucky, and full of what Harvey Milk called “Fabulous Emotions.” We need to use these emotions to fight the communal malaise and anxiety that shadowed most of our discourse in 2017, so that in 2018 we can remind these oppressors who they’re dealing with. Mary, we’ve survived jail cells, lynchings, the closet and an unstoppable virus. We’re still here. Our family is growing and we’re not going anywhere.

1. Question Who the Hell You Think You Are.

Gay men do not have many examples as to what a “successful” gay life means. Most of hetero culture promotes a white picket fence, but there’s no equivalent for us. We can feel directionless, not knowing “what we’re doing with our lives.”

The last two years I’ve written these resolutions and this year’s was the most difficult. 2017 was a rough year for me personally. My long-term relationship failed for the same reasons I’ve watched other gay couples fail. I moved to a gay mecca that is now too expensive for those who need it most. Two artist friends I admired killed themselves violently. I struggled with depression, anxiety, keeping my vices under control. I felt I’d lost my moral compass, doubting what was good about being gay anymore. Who the hell was I to give any kind of advice or resolutions?

While misogyny is a big issue, it’s usually a form of self-hatred for our own femininity and calling one another “girl” is a milestone for many gays.

I had to look deep within myself and then to our history to find the answer. What I found were many, many men just like me. I’m part of a long lineage. As a Mexican queer activist and artist, I travel the country for work, meeting all kinds of queer men, I’ve seen most of our issues are the same regardless of race, wealth or age. My forefathers gave their lives for me to live this life. You’re damn right I’m going to sit here and tell you what I know, it’s my f**king duty.

This year look within yourself and find out what kind of gay man you are and want to be, research your history to find those that lived like you, those gay teachers, leathermen, drag queens, activists, doctors, their lives can hold the answer to many of your questions.

2. Remember, Your History IS Your Resistance.

As most authoritarian regimes have shown, a way to oppress a people is to deny them their history and culture. Throughout our existence, queer people have been especially susceptible to this; our records go back only a fraction in time, stigma and the law forced us into closets, AIDS nearly wiped a generation and even our family members have been complacent in erasing us. Yet, one of our beacons against this smudging are the archives and museums that hold our histories. Support and join your local archives and institutions, like the GLBT Historical Society in SF, the Leather Archives in Chicago, The One Archives in LA, The Leslie Lohman Museum in NYC. When we diversify and increase the memberships of these institutions, we help them get grants, raise money, acquire priceless artifacts for future generations to learn from.

2018 Gay Men Resolutions

3. Roll Up Those Sleeves Mary, We Got Work to Do (and It’s Not Gonna Be Glamorous).

It’s going to take sweat, humility and persistence to fight for the rights those before us earned with their lives. History, the press, even corporations are on our side, but elbow grease and gatherings will change the next elections. We have always represented the vanguard and being queer now also means supporting immigration rights, women’s rights, gun control. It’s not a thrill to phone bank, knocking on doors during elections, asking people for donations can take humility and mimosas, but queer people know the smallest actions can turn into the most powerful movements. Remember a dance party in a firehouse eventually became the Gay Activists Alliance. A queer Mardi Gras Krewe became the first political organization in the South. A  zine became the first lesbian publication. A brick through a bar window set millions of gay people free. You don’t need to throw bricks, but maybe throw a dinner party with friends to strategize on what you can do to get out the vote, change the minds of your bio-family members. If thousands of us do that this year, 2018 elections won’t know what hit ‘em.

4. Expand Your LGBT Family.

Gay men tend to self-segregate for pleasure and survival, but now’s the time to expand and include our entire LGBT community, outside of the comforts of our social bubbles. We need to take the privileges that we earned and make sure that they extend to all queers. We need to seek and create spaces that include all of us and not hide behind online activism. We can take all the feminist theory classes and get into heated arguments online, donate to the HRC and ACLU, but if we remain separated by race, gender, and class, if we don’t have trans and lesbian friends, we miss the opportunities to truly understand and strengthen our larger community.

Yes, there are mistakes to be made, wrong pronouns and antiquated words that will be used. There will be arguments and uncomfortable discussions, but they are dialogues we need to have. Doing it face to face will be more fruitful than doing it online and a friendship can always overcome a wrong word or pronoun. You can learn a lot from a misunderstanding.

5. Girl, Speak for Yourself and Don’t Let Others Do It For You.

Our oppressors don’t differentiate between gay or trans or queer, yet word policing among us has reached a fever pitch. A straight woman told me that referring to another gay man as “girl” was misogynistic. A trans woman told me that I wasn’t allowed to use “queer” if I only had sex with men. What bothered me most about was they were speaking for me as a gay man. Gay men have our own language other folks may not understand. While misogyny is a big issue, it’s usually a form of self-hatred for our own femininity and calling one another “girl” is a milestone for many gays. I’ve had sex with trans-men but it’s not something that defines me. Having to calmly explain this was a challenge.

Many arguments within the LGBT community are folks speaking for other folks. Writing this piece I was confronted by my own doubts. Was it ok to use “gay”? Who would be offended or left out? While I can stand for trans rights, or black lives, I can only speak from my own experience as a gay man. We need to demand that folks in our community have the same respect for our own traditions and languages. As our chosen family grows and as inclusion becomes crucial to battle the political forces that threaten us, there are many nuanced conversations we need to have with the rest of our LGBT family (why male-only spaces are still important, for example) and having a healthy rapport will be crucial.

6. Talk about Depression and Say “Suicide”.

Queer men have freedoms we still don’t fully comprehend. Our lives can become unstructured and directionless, sometimes leading to doubt and depression. High suicide rates haunt us from our teens to middle age and yet the stigma is still so strong we rarely say the word out loud when one of us commits it. “Sudden death” has become a sad synonym. In the last 2 years, one of my friends smoked so much meth, his lung collapsed. My gay cousin swallowed pills and died in a truck. One of my favorite people hanged himself and left no note. This is the first time I’ve typed those words.

Suicides are like shrapnel bombs in our chosen families. They affect us in ways that need to be treated head on, which can take a long time to recover from. Social media puts a pressure to present a perfect life, but we need to talk about our depression directly, to acknowledge when our brothers take their lives so that the rest of us can learn something from those tragedies, so that we can ask each other “Are you OK?” we can be ready to hear the answer, even if it’s not pretty.

2018 Gay Men Resolutions

7. Use the Buddy System.

Anxiety can make us self-centered and isolated, leaving us alone in a version of reality comprised of our worst thoughts and opinions of ourselves. Is there someone who you check up on daily? Someone who checks up on you? In our darkest moments, it can be hard to ask for help. Sometimes the best solution can be to check in on someone else, without expecting anything in return and create a link of friends and “buddy system.” Seeing ourselves reflected in someone else’s eyes, can show us a kinder, better version of how we see ourselves and that can literally save lives.

8. Appreciate Touch.

A straight friend was admiring the way that gay men touch each other in public spaces. “In a crowded straight bar,” he said, “it’s impossible to get from one side to another, you can’t touch other dudes, certainly not other girls, and definitely not other dude’s girls.” He said he liked the vibe of gay bars, because we navigate spaces with a gentle touch to the shoulder or waist, we hug and kiss each other hello. He called this “Gay Synergy.” We even have the luxury of spaces where “implied consent” is real (and yes it is real, so if you can’t stand the heat and a pat on your butt, get your ass out the Eagle queen). It’s a touch many of us take for granted. Sexual assault and consent are important conversations we still need to have, especially where HIV, drugs and group sex are involved, but we also need to celebrate our comfort with one another.

9. Discuss the Health of our Bears.

The flourishing of our Bear community is a grand example of how queer men can join to overcome adversity. In this case, the victory over our own rigid, self-imposed standards of male beauty. Yet, it goes more than skin deep. As a proud bear chaser that a real good bear gathering can be vibrant, sexual taste of gay men during early gay liberation. Every bear body is built differently though and there are health issues that face some of our bears that need to be spoken of more openly, so that the stigma we have about other diseases doesn’t cause any more harm. It’s time we talk openly about the effects of obesity and lack of exercise, about sleep apnea, heart and cholesterol issues on members of this sub-culture and what we could be doing to keep our bears informed and healthy.

10. Check your PrEP Privilege.

For those with access, PrEP has been revolutionary, changing our sexual paradigm forever. Yet for many, especially for our brothers and sisters of color, undocumented immigrants and low-income trans family, it’s not always within reach. Find out what your community’s access is, and what you can do to increase it for other groups. This may mean donating a few bucks to health organizations, spreading information online or just taking the time to calmly educate that uninformed guy on Scruff.

11. Don’t Replace Self-Care with Sex.

As soon as we come out, we’re inundated with images and the illusion of endless sex, an abundance that’s supposed to be political and liberating, even an obligation. This can give way to gluttony, a system of excess that, left unchecked and combined with addiction, becomes a weapon for epic self-destruction. We’re left feeling empty when we’re told we should be full. Some of us deal with boredom or depression by wasting hours on sex apps, confusing self-gratification for self-care. Sometimes what you need Mary is a nap and a salad, or a good cry on a good friend’s shoulder…and not a dick in your mouth.

12. Be a Gentleman on the Apps.

Sheesh, can’t believe we still need to talk about this but some of us are so rude online. The ghosting, blatant racism, body shaming, and general lack of etiquette. Remember for some these apps are a phone game, for other’s they are the only way they can relate to the gay world. Grow up queen, talk to people online with the same respect you’d use to their face, follow through with plans and meetings the same way you would with your friends.

13. Support the Neighborhoods We Gentrify.

It is very expensive to be an out queer man in America, to live in places where holding hands still doesn’t feel like a risk. For many fleeing conservative towns, living in expensive cities is a matter of self-preservation. For low-income queers and artists, it’s a necessity to live in low-rent neighborhoods, but our presence can be part of the vast, complex issue of gentrification. We don’t always have a choice in how we change the dynamics of a neighborhood, but we have responsibility to them nonetheless. We need to get to know our neighbors, to support the small businesses, the bodegas, barbers, grocery stores, dry cleaners that were there before we arrived. These are small but important habits and especially true for white gay men who move into neighborhoods of color. If all we do is shop at that new $10 chocolate bar shop, or eat at the clichéd restaurants with Edison bulbs and Shishito pepper appetizers, we are becoming part of a very real problem.

14. Make a Reverse To-Do List.

Gay men can demand so much of ourselves, from our careers and our bodies. Our life goals and To-Do lists, especially this time of year, can be daunting. “Get A Six Pack” “Finish the Novel” “Get a Boyfriend” “Land the Promotion.” When these are not achieved to our expectations, it can leave us asking dark questions about our place in the world. Here is a good exercise for this anxiety: at the end of the day, list the things you did do. “Went to the gym” “Wrote 10 pages” “Scheduled a meeting with the boss” “Got the balls to finally text that gym crush.” This exercise can calm us feel when faced with figuring out what “winning” at gay life is meant to be. Going into 2018 we need to be kinder to one another, but even more kind to ourselves.

Leo Herrera2018 gay men -- Leo Herrera is a Mexican artist/activist. His work focuses on queer history, sexuality and nightlife. He is working with the GLBT Historical Society on History Is Resistance, a membership campaign to bring queer history to a new generation.  His latest project FATHERS: Sex & Politics if AIDS Never Happened is a Sci-Fi Doc that you can view at www.iftheylived.org You may also follow him on Instagram.

All opinions expressed are those of the author.

The post 2018 Resolutions All Gay Men Should Consider appeared first on Towleroad.


2018 Resolutions All Gay Men Should Consider

Trump Judicial Nominee Howard Nielson: Gay Judges Shouldn’t Hear LGBT Cases

Trump Judicial Nominee Howard Nielson: Gay Judges Shouldn’t Hear LGBT Cases
Howard Nielson

Howard Nielson

Howard Nielson, one of President Donald Trump’s newest judicial nominees, says he believes gay judges shouldn’t hear cases involving issues that affect the LGBT community. A report by Alliance for Justice found that Howard Nielson was representing the plaintiffs in Hollingsworth v. Perry, a 2013 case that would have banned same-sex marriage in California. As the case played…

RELATED: ABA Gives ‘Qualified’ Rating to Trump Judge Pick Who sees Transgender Kids as Part of ‘Satan’s Plan’

The post Trump Judicial Nominee Howard Nielson: Gay Judges Shouldn’t Hear LGBT Cases appeared first on Towleroad.


Trump Judicial Nominee Howard Nielson: Gay Judges Shouldn’t Hear LGBT Cases

#AM_Equality Tipsheet: January 5, 2018

#AM_Equality Tipsheet: January 5, 2018

TRUMP-PENCE DISCRIMINATORY AND INVASIVE “VOTER FRAUD” COMMISSION DISBANDED: ICYMI, the White House announced it would disband the so-called Presidential Advisory Commission on Election Integrity following numerous lawsuits and no real evidence of election fraud. “This is a victory for democracy,” said David Stacy, HRC Government Affairs Director. “The Trump-Pence Administration’s dangerous and false claims of election fraud were a farce from the start and a threat to the voting rights of all Americans, particularly citizens of color. Our government has an obligation to protect the right to privacy of all its citizens and ensure their fair and equal access to the ballot box. Mike Pence has failed miserably on all counts.” Pence, who led the commission, was unable to uncover significant evidence of voter fraud despite maintaining that millions of people had engaged in criminal conduct during the election. It was disbanded largely due to the determined efforts of a coalition including the Brennan Center, the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, state chapters of the NAACP, the American Civil Liberties Union, the League of Women Voters, and the League of United Latin American Citizens. More from HRC.

The Trump-Pence administration’s dangerous and false claims of election fraud were a farce from the start and a threat to the voting rights of all Americans, particularly citizens of color. t.co/kgXgSCR5Qs

— HumanRightsCampaign (@HRC) January 4, 2018

SHOCKER! ANOTHER ANTI-LGBTQ JUDICIAL NOMINEE FROM TRUMP: Howard C. Nielson Jr., Trump’s nominee for the U.S. District Court in Utah, doesn’t think that LGBTQ judges should hear cases involving LGBTQ issues. If he extends that ridiculous logic to himself, he’ll have to start recusing himself from cases involving white people. Or men. Or straight people. Or cisgender people. Nielson is just the latest in a long line of extreme and unqualified anti-LGBTQ officials Donald Trump and Mike Pence have appointed and nominated to crucial agencies and court benches — some of whom will serve lifetime appointments. Last year, HRC aimed a bright spotlight on five federal judicial nominees — Jeff Mateer, Damien Schiff, L. Steven Grasz, Mark Norris, and Stephen Schwartz. And last month, HRC’s work to expose these nominees’ shameful anti-LGBTQ rhetoric paid off, as  Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley announced that Mateer would not be confirmed for a seat on the federal bench. More from Advocate.

CLAP BACK OF THE WEEK:  At his dad’s U.S. Senate swearing in, Doug Jones’ openly gay son served some epic side-eye to notoriously anti-LGBTQ Mike Pence. Get your life from Bustle and Advocate.

#DougJones t.co/HsiUx1CggE

— The Advocate (@TheAdvocateMag) January 4, 2018

WASHINGTON STATE TO ALLOW ‘X’ GENDER MARKER ON BIRTH CERTIFICATES: The rule, officially announced by the state’s Department of Health yesterday, will go into effect on January 27. Washington joins California in instituting this change. More from The Olympian.

ONE YEAR LATER — MURDER OF MESHA CALDWELL REMAINS UNSOLVED: Said HRC Mississippi State Director Rob Hill: “The unique and tragic stories, like Mesha Caldwell’s, reflect the obstacles that many transgender Americans — especially trans women of color — face in their daily lives. It is crucial that we know, lift up and highlight these stories in order to combat the transphobia, misogyny and racism fueling this violence so that we can end this epidemic before it takes any more lives.” More from Deep South Voice.

305 DAYS UNTIL ELECTION DAY 2018: Bay Area Reporter’s Matthew S. Bajko (@politicalnotes) speaks to California LGBTQ leaders about the upcoming election season and what’s at stake for equality. More from The Bay Area Reporter.

HORRIFYING — TRANS WOMAN ALLEGES SHE WAS BEATEN BY RIKERS GUARDS: Avion Stinson is suing New York City and the Department of Corrections, alleging she was left with a broken jaw, missing teeth and two black eyes after being beaten and harassed by Rikers guards. More from The New York Post.

BROWARD (FLA.) COUNTY COMMISSIONERS CONSIDER MEASURE TO PROTECT YOUTH FROM SO-CALLED “CONVERSION THERAPY”: They will vote on the proposed ordinance next Tuesday, and could join municipalities across the state that have already protected residents from the dangerous and debunked practice. More from WSVN.

MEMO TO STATEHOUSES — ANTI-LGBTQ LAWS ARE EXPENSIVE: Companies are increasingly looking to locate and expand in regions that can attract and support a diverse, talented workforce. Knowing that all their employees will be protected from discrimination is a priority. Case in point — a new study from UCLA’s Williams Institute found that states that fail to protect their LGBTQ  residents are losing billions in potential revenue. More from The Daily Beast.

“Studies show that states lose millions when they discriminate against LGBT people. They are also losing out on potentially billions of dollars by failing to pass pro-LGBT laws.” — @SLAwrites t.co/C7VZ5Rp1rf

— Sara Ramirez (@SaraRamirez) January 4, 2018

TRANS MAN IN PHILLY SUES IHOP FOR HARASSMENT: Jahkee Wade alleges he was sexually harassed and discriminated against by his employer because of his gender identity — including being called anti-LGBTQ slurs and refusing to use his correct name and pronouns. More from Philadelphia Magazine.

IN D.C., WHILE CRIME IS DOWN, REPORTED ANTI-LGBTQ CRIMES ARE UP: Metropolitan Police Department Lt. Brett Parson noted that this increase may be due to LGBTQ victims being more comfortable reporting such crimes. More from Washington Blade.

SAN ANTONIO LGBTQ CENTER TO OPEN NEW HEADQUARTERS: It will offer counseling, mental health services, meetings spaces, parenting classes among other services through partner agencies. More from Texas Public Radio.

PROFESSIONAL ICE SKATER MATT EVERS COMES OUT AS GAY: The Dancing on Ice star (@TheMattEvers) told Attitude, “I live my life by example, and I want to show young people that what you feel or how you were born isn’t something bad.” More from Attitude.

HONG KONG EQUAL OPPORTUNITIES COMMISSION ASKS GOV’T TO ROLL BACK TRANSPHOBIC RULE: EOC Chairperson Alfred Chan asked Hong Kong’s government to roll back a requirement that transgender people undergo medical transition before updating their gender marker on legal documents. More from Hong Kong Free Press.

SINGAPOREAN COURT DENIES GAY MAN’S BID TO ADOPT BIOLOGICAL SON: The child was born to a surrogate in the U.S. More from HuffPost.

BEIJING COURT AGREES TO HEAR CASE INVOLVING ANTI-LGBTQ CENSORSHIP: The suit challenges China’s ban on portraying “abnormal sexual lifestyles” on TV and in online videos, often used to censor LGBTQ stories and characters. More from Ozy.

LGBT INTERNATIONAL POWERLIFTING CHAMPIONSHIP ADDS NON-GENDERED CATEGORY: The category, called “Mx,” was designed to welcome nonbinary and intersex competitors. More from HRC and NewNowNext.

READING RAINBOW

Detroit Metro Times reviews a new documentary featuring a local transgender man; PrideSource announces a program from SAGE aimed at combatting loneliness and isolation of LGBTQ elders; Advocate shares the life of the late Atlanta Mayor Maynard Jackson, an ally who helped create Black LGBTQ-inclusive spaces; Vice meets with three anti-LGBTQ hate groups; Independent takes a look at the history of Cuba’s LGBTQ advocacy; Advocate highlights LGBTQ-inclusive graphic novels released in 2017; San Diego LGBT Weekly reports on a new effort to digitize historic copies of The Bay Area Reporter;

Have news? Send us your news and tips at [email protected]. Click here to subscribe to #AM_Equality and follow @HRC for all the latest news. Thanks for reading!

www.hrc.org/blog/am-equality-tipsheet-january-5-2018?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

7-Jähriger schickt verstorbener Oma Postkarte – dann kommt plötzlich eine Antwort

7-Jähriger schickt verstorbener Oma Postkarte – dann kommt plötzlich eine Antwort

  • Ein siebenjähriger Junge aus Niedersachsen schickte seiner toten Oma einen Brief 
  • Und bekam eine Antwort, wie das Video oben zeigt

Das war sicher eine große Überraschung. Als eine Mutter aus der Nähe von Quakenbrück in Niedersachsen den Briefkasten öffnete, fand sie eine ganz besondere Postkarte. Der Frau und ihrem Sohn kamen sofort die Tränen.

Auf der Beerdigung seiner Oma hatte der kleine Luis einen Luftballon mit einer Postkarte an seine Großmutter steigen lassen. Jetzt hat der siebenjährige Junge tatsächlich eine Antwort erhalten:

“Lieber Luis, danke, dass du mir eine Karte geschickt hast. Natürlich werde ich immer Dein Schutzengel sein und gut auf Dich aufpassen. Ich werde jeden Tag auf dich herabschauen! In Liebe, Deine Oma.”

Wer ist der Absender?

Um sich dafür zu bedanken, sucht die Mutter jetzt den anonymen Absender, der für ihren Sohn Engel gespielt hat. 

Ihr Facebook-Post wurde dafür bereits mehr als 12.000 Mal geteilt. 

“Ich bin völlig sprachlos über diese große Teilnahme der Facebook Gemeinde”, schreibt Ruthenburg. “Ich bin glücklich über soviel Zuspruch und hoffe, dass wir diesen besonderen Menschen bald finden werden.”

 

www.huffingtonpost.de/entry/7-jahriger-schickt-verstorbener-oma-postkarte-dann-kommt-plotzlich-eine-antwort_de_5a4f42cde4b003133ec6eb40

HRC Responds to Failure of Discriminatory and Invasive “Voter Fraud” Commission Led by Mike Pence

HRC Responds to Failure of Discriminatory and Invasive “Voter Fraud” Commission Led by Mike Pence

HRC issued the following response after the Trump-Pence administration announced they would disband the Presidential Advisory Commission on Election Integrity, led by Vice President Mike Pence, following numerous lawsuits and no real evidence of election fraud.

Last May, Mike Pence was named Chairman of the newly-created Commission to prove he and Donald Trump’s claim that millions of black and Latino voters had cast ballots illegally in the 2016 election. It was disbanded on Wednesday, largely due to the efforts of a coalition of organizations, including the Brennan Center, the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, state chapters of the NAACP, the American Civil Liberties Union, the League of Women Voters, and the League of United Latin American Citizens. HRC is proud to be part of this coalition.

“This is a victory for democracy,” said David Stacy, Government Affairs Director for HRC. “The Trump-Pence administration’s dangerous and false claims of election fraud were a farce from the start and a threat to the voting rights of all Americans, particularly citizens of color. Our government has an obligation to protect the right to privacy of all its citizens and ensure their fair and equal access to the ballot box. Mike Pence has failed miserably on all counts.”

After seven months and an earmarked budget of $250,000 for FY2017, Mike Pence has been unable to uncover significant evidence of voter fraud despite maintaining since December, 2016 that millions of people had engaged in criminal conduct during the election.

The Commission immediately ran into trouble when they ordered election officials in all 50 states to hand over private voter data, including Social Security Numbers and voting histories. This was met by the refusal and outcry of state election officials, including Republican Mississippi Secretary of State Delbert Hosemann, who told the Commission to “go jump in the Gulf of Mexico”.

In November, Maine Secretary of State Matthew Dunlap, a member himself, sued the Commission, claiming it lacked transparency and expressing a fear that it would lead to policy recommendations that hadn’t been properly vetted. This followed an announcement by the Government Accountability Office that they were opening an investigation into the Commission on the request of several senators.

Additionally, the NAACP-LDF has issued a FOIA request with the Department of Homeland Security, whom Trump has now tasked to take over the fraud panel, to see all work and communication done by the Commission.

The fight to protect fair access to the ballot box will not end here. The Human Rights Campaign will continue to support efforts to protect voting rights.

www.hrc.org/blog/hrc-responds-to-failure-of-discriminatory-voter-fraud-commission?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

‘Celebrity Big Brother’: Dapper Laughs’ Potential Arrival Has Already Caused A Stir Among Fans

‘Celebrity Big Brother’: Dapper Laughs’ Potential Arrival Has Already Caused A Stir Among Fans
‘Celebrity Big Brother’ kicked off earlier this week and, as fans will know, this series is apparently all about celebrating women.

As it marks 100 years since (some) women in Britain won the right to vote for the first time, the series started with an all-female line-up and on Friday (5 December), they’ll be joined by a some male housemates.

So who’s going in, you ask? Channel 5 have confirmed that John Barnes will be among them and while the rest of names are yet to officially be revealed, The Sun has claimed Dapper Laughs will probably be among them.

Yes, Dapper Laughs, the one-time Vine star who hit headlines when he joked a woman was “gagging for rape” in 2014.

Dapper – real name Daniel O’Reilly – then spent a year defending himself, attempting to do so via an interview with campaigner Caroline Criado-Perez, another in The Sunday Times and, of course, there was his infamous ‘Newsnight’ appearance.

And how has news of his imminent arrival gone down? Hmm. See for yourself…

Dapper Laughs going in #cbb. I really hope this is the year we get a live lion taming task.
The news that Dapper Laughs is entering the #CBB @bbuk house means I shall no longer be watching it. ‘Year of the Woman’ my female arse… ?
Watch Dapper Laughs win now showing this whole ‘year of the Woman’ stuff was all a huge joke #cbb
Big Brother: This is gonna be year of women Big Brother: send Dapper Laughs in #CBB pic.twitter.com/MdLFjZpdKw
not that i watch the dull parade of nobodies that is big brother but that dapper laughs is literally only famous for making rape jokes…like what goes through their head when they book these bellends

January 4, 2018
Monday – #CBB puts in 6 women and dedicates the series in tribute to 100 years since women got the vote. Tuesday – The ratings come in. Friday – Dapper Laughs enters. That’s @channel5_tv for you.

January 4, 2018
Dapper Laughs is a comedian that landed his own show on ITV. The show was pulled as a result of him telling a woman that she was ‘gagging for a rape’. CBB is hosting a special in honor of women’s rights, but have casted him to enter tomorrow.

January 4, 2018
When you hear Dapper Laughs is going into the Celebrity Big Brother this year filled with women because it’s supposed to be the Year of the women, you couldn’t make this up. pic.twitter.com/Qbx3rXjUl2

January 4, 2018
Channel 5: We are celebrating women and it is the Year of the Woman- Also Channel 5: -So we’re sticking Dapper Laughs in the Big Brother house

January 4, 2018
We may be just days into the new series, but the usual conveyor belt of controversies is already in action.

The first came in the form of a conversation about Harvey Weinstein, during which Ann Widdecombe suggested his alleged victims “had a choice”.

India Willoughby is also facing criticism, for stating that drag stars, including RuPaul – who she singled out for a mention – “cheapens the seriousness” of what it means to be a trans person.  

www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/celebrity-big-brother-dapper-laughs-new-series_uk_5a4e52bbe4b06d1621bdcc92