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Why I Oppose a General Pardon for Historical Convictions for Homosexual Offences

Why I Oppose a General Pardon for Historical Convictions for Homosexual Offences
Justin Bengry

UK Labour Party leadership contender Andy Burnham recently proposed automatic pardons for all men convicted of historical homosexual offences that are no longer crimes. This has been an ongoing conversation in the UK, which in 2013 granted WWII Enigma codebreaker Alan Turing a posthumous royal pardon. The issue reappeared in the lead up to this year’s May 7 general election, when Labour’s then-leader Ed Miliband came out in favour of case-by-case pardons for living individuals and also posthumous cases. David Cameron and the Conservatives soon followed suit, likewise promising that if were they to form the next government, men convicted of historical offences would be pardoned. Burnham’s announcement has reinvigorated this question of whether all men should have similar convictions deemed spent, pardoned or erased.

pardon Turing

Alan Turing’s Royal Pardon (UK Government)

A well-publicised petition supported by Turing’s family, activists like Peter Tatchell and celebrities like Benedict Cumberbatch and Stephen Fry demands that a royal pardon be extended to all men convicted under ‘anti-gay’ laws. More than 600,000 people have signed the petition demanding the state ‘Pardon all of the estimated 49,000 men who, like Alan Turing, were convicted of consenting same-sex relations under the British “gross indecency” law (only repealed in 2003), and also all the other men convicted under other UK anti-gay laws’. As a historian of Britain’s LGBTQ past I cannot sign this petition nor support anything more than pardons for living individuals.

Historians of the ‘queer’ past have expressed deep concerns about the state issuing royal pardons for convictions under outdated and antiquated laws against homosexual sex. As Matt Houlbrook has pointed out, ‘Pardoning Alan Turing might be good politics, but it’s certainly bad history’. The same is even more true of a general pardon that includes further posthumous pardons. I believe it offers too great an opportunity for the state to strategically forget and erase history rather than atone for the damage it has wrought on the lives of queer men.

Bad History

Why is a general pardon bad history? The call for a royal pardon is incredibly ambiguous. It fails to take into account the full scope of same-sex sexual acts and behaviors that were criminalized, and therefore inevitably underestimates significantly the number of men impacted by various laws. By underestimating the number of men affected, a general pardon not only fails to bring justice to victims, but directly implies that state oppression was neither so extensive nor as violent as history shows that it in fact was.

In contrast to the oft-cited 49,000 men convicted for homosexual offenses, the Peter Tatchell Foundation estimates  that some ‘50,000-100,000 men were convicted under Britain’s anti-gay laws during the twentieth century’. These figures presumably comprise men, like Turing, who were convicted under Section 11, the infamous Labouchére Amendment, of the 1885 Criminal Law Amendment Act. The Act criminalized ‘gross indecency’ — any same-sex act short of buggery — committed in public or in private and made it punishable by up to two years imprisonment with or without hard labour. In addition to ‘gross indecency,’ many men were also convicted of ‘importuning’ or ‘soliciting’ other men to have sex. From 1861, consensual anal sex was punishable with life imprisonment. Before that it was a capital offence, with the last executions only in 1835. It was still a felony from 1956. Many men were convicted under these statutes until the 1967 Sexual Offences Act partially decriminalised male homosexual acts. And even then, various homosexual offenses remained on the statute books until the 2003 Sexual Offenses Act came into effect the following year.

Given the state’s history of violently punishing same-sex acts, why should a pardon be restricted only to those, including the dead, convicted of crimes in the twentieth century?  Why should men fined or imprisoned in 1935 be worthy of pardons whilst men killed by the state in 1835 should not? There is surely no logical or humane way to fairly dispense justice to men convicted of these historical crimes. Buggery, after all, has been a crime in England since 1533.  And if the Peter Tatchell Foundation estimates the need for some 50,000 — 100,000 pardons in the twentieth-century alone, how many should we expect from the previous five centuries?

How are we to determine which specific historical cases would not be crimes today? Not all queer sex is consensual, after all, and cases would inevitably include examples of forced sexual encounters. And what are we to do with cases in which men were convicted of sexual offences with young men and boys? Others have already, sensationally and perhaps strategically, raised the specter of pardoning paedophiles in a general pardon, but there is a reasonable concern given the limits of what we can expect from the historical record. We may have relatively reliable information about the ages of participants in more recent cases, but what of the more distant past? This kind of detail is unlikely to have been preserved. And the legal age of consent is itself historical, having changed over time. Will we judge cases on today’s age of consent, the law at the time of the conviction or using some other metric to apportion guilt and innocence? To answer these questions with any authority assumes a transparent and centuries-long historical record, with documents intact despite age, war and deliberate destruction. It also raises thorny questions about projecting our own sexual values upon the past.

For centuries, lives were destroyed, figuratively and literally; men were executed by the state for homosexual offences. This history should be preserved actively, publicly and loudly. It should not be employed to distract us from the continued struggles of LGBTQ citizens nor from injustices in the present.

Good Politics?

But let’s say for the sake of argument that the current government can make good on its election promise and resolve these issues, or simply choose to disregard them.

David Cameron’s Conservative government is no friend of the UK’s LGBTQ citizens, particularly the weakest and most vulnerable among them. This may be the government that oversaw the introduction of marriage equality, even if it was introduced by Lib Dem coalition partners (and fails to provide for inheritance equality and discriminates against trans people), but equality is hardly a consistent goal for the Conservatives. Many Conservative MPs, in fact, voted against marriage equality, including 43 percent of MPs promoted by David Cameron in a July 2014 reshuffle, and we can only assume that going forward power in the Conservative party will be inflected further in this direction. We see it already.

The current government’s austerity agenda has significant effects on LGBTQ citizens that range across employment, housing and virtually every other service and benefit. Chancellor George Osborne recently announced further cuts, including to housing support for citizens under the age of 25. Ideologically driven, this cut nonetheless disproportionately harms LGBTQ young people who make up 25 percent of urban homeless youth, many of whom have been driven from unwelcoming and even physically dangerous homes. In the same 2015 budget, the Conservative government also ushered in further cuts to mental health provision, another area that should be of particular concern to LGBTQ citizens, who, because of continued persecution, often require recourse to these services in higher proportions than others. Some 48 percent of young trans people, for example, have attempted suicide.

Just as we must not forget the state-sponsored violence against queer men in the past, we cannot be blind to continued injustices directed disproportionately at LGBTQ Britons today. By focussing our attention on the government’s apparent benevolence with regard to the past, a general pardon for past homosexual offences serves to obscure and white-wash the government’s record on LGBTQ issues in the present.

To Understand the Past

The Protection of Freedoms Act 2012 allows men convicted of homosexual offenses to apply to have a conviction declared ‘spent,’ meaning that while it still exists, it can be effectively ignored. While for some this option might satisfy the moral responsibility of the state, it admittedly does little to ameliorate the emotional and historical wounds of the past. It also requires men to petition the state for any redress. I sympathise with activists’ position that the onus of responsibility for addressing past injustices should not be placed on the shoulders of its victims. Still, while I would unambiguously agree that any living individual who today still suffers the indignity of having been convicted of past homosexual offenses should have recourse to have that conviction erased, be pardoned or receive some form of restitution, I cannot endorse an uncritical and disengaged general pardon. Yet, something further is needed.

Public historian Claire Hayward has noted that Britain is one of numerous countries with no public memorial to its persecution of its own LGBTQ citizens. Unlike a public memorial, a pardon makes no attempt ‘to understand the past,’ as she rightly points out. A monument to the victims of state-sponsored LGBTQ persecution instead offers the opportunity to engage with the past, with the nature of persecution and with ongoing questions of sexuality and gender. Such a monument would highlight the state’s acknowledgement of its own role in perpetrating past injustices and also signal its support for the need to celebrate diversity in the present.

I am a gay man but I’m also a historian, and I’m deeply invested in the life stories, defeats and celebrations of the past. I’m profoundly concerned that the state not be permitted to overshadow the injustices it meted out in the past with strategic (if, for some, well-intentioned) gestures in the present. Neither the British state nor its citizens should ever be permitted to forget or to sweep aside its role in the destruction of queer lives. The state must therefore be held publicly accountable. Far better to write these injustices indelibly in stone, than to erase the past with a pardon that exonerates the state as much if not more than the victims to which it purports to bring justice.

Justin Bengry is an Honorary Research Fellow at Birkbeck, University of London and lead researcher on the Historic England LGBTQ heritage and mapping project Pride of Place. Justin’s research focuses on the intersection of homosexuality and consumer capitalism in twentieth-century Britain, and he is currently revising a book manuscript titled The Pink Pound: Queer Profits in Twentieth-Century Britain. He tweets from @justinbengry

2015-02-17-notchesprofile.jpg This post originally appeared on Notches: (re)marks on the history of sexuality, a blog devoted to promoting critical conversations about the history of sex and sexuality across theme, period and region. Learn more about the history of sexuality at Notchesblog.com

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Shocking video reveals what happens when job seeker reveals the fact he’s gay at interview

Shocking video reveals what happens when job seeker reveals the fact he’s gay at interview

Two Swedish filmmakers have gone viral in their home country with a video that threatens to dent the country’s image as a haven of tolerance towards LGBTI people.

Actors Konrad Ydhage and Olle Öberg runs a YouTube channel called STHLM Panda and film themselves engaging in pranks and self-described ‘social experiments.’

‘We received a message by one of our followers,’ Konrad told Gay Star News.

‘He told us the he got fired from his job in a warehouse when his boss found he was gay.

‘He also told us that they were hiring. We applied for the job. Both got called to interview. We brought hidden cameras with us to find out if this was true.’

The video is below. To watch with English subtitles, press the box ‘subtitles’ next to the settings gearwheel.

Olle entered the interview appearing to be the perfect candidate, saying he had three years of previous warehouse experience and displaying plenty of eagerness for the role.

Konrad, on the other hand, purposefully said he had no experience and shows little enthusiasm. Asked if he has a license to drive trucks, Olle says yes while Konrad says no.

Olle’s interview appears to be going well. Until, that is, he mentions that he has a boyfriend. At this stage, the interviewer – whose identity has been protected – changes his tone. He cuts short the interview, tells Olle that ‘a lot of people have applied for this job’, and even avoids shaking hands with him as he gets up to leave.

Later, Konrad was called and told that he was being offered the job. The interviewer told him, ‘2-3 people applied. You were the best.’ Olle, on the other hand, is informed that he has not been successful.

‘We knew he would be slightly homophobic but we didn’t expect the conversation to take the sharp turn it took,’ Konrad told Gay Star News. ‘Nor did we foresee that he would not shake his hand. To be honest you don’t expect people to be like this 2015.’

‘LGBT is pretty accepted in the open in Sweden. But I believe there’s still much to do about prejudices.’

Swedish paper The Local showed the video clip to Clas Lundstedt, press spokesman for the Swedish Discrimination Ombudsman. He said that he was unable to comment on any specific case that had not been investigated by the Ombudsman, but confirmed, in his view, that it appeared to be ‘a case of discrimination.’

He said that proving cases of discrimination based on sexual orientation could be very difficult but recommended that anyone in a similar situation try to save as much detail as possible to support their case.

‘That could be saving email conversations, speaking to potential witnesses and also try to record as much about the circumstances as you can remember, so that it will emerge in a potential investigation. A video or audio recording can be used as evidence in some cases.’

Konrad said that he and Olle were pleased to have prompted a conversation around LGBT workplace discrimination, and at how the video had been widely viewed – clocking up almost 200,000 views in less than two days.

After posting the video online, Konrad said that Olle today received an email from the boss who featured in the film, in which he expressed remorse, and said that he knew who had tipped them off about his homophobic behavior.

‘I’m starting to realize that that my way of seeing things is very oppressive and degrading. Even if I don’t deliberately reject gay people I’ve seen them negatively,’ he said in the email, translated from Swedish, provided to us by STHLM Panda (included below).

The boss went on to say that the former employee has received an apology and been offered his job back.

‘I deeply regret how I acted, I’m willing to change.

‘I’m very remorseful as I said, but I hope this will lead to me becoming a better manager.’

STLHM Panda were unable to tell us if the former employee had confirmed receiving an apology or a new job offer. Konrad said they had chosen not to reveal the identity of the boss concerned because, ‘We would not gain anything from destroying his life, nor exposing the company. It could also lead to him getting beat up.’

‘He emailed us today, he was really remorseful for his behavior. We believe everybody deserves a second chance.’

Sweden is regarded as one of the most accepting and liberal countries within Europe with regard to LGBT rights. It is illegal to discriminate against anyone because of their sexual orientation, with discrimination described as ‘unjust or offensive treatment that is related to homosexuality, bisexuality or heterosexuality,’ according to LGBT rights organization RSFL. Discrimination according to gender identity is also illegal.

Ulrika Wreterlund, chairperson of RFSL, told GSN that Swedes who believe they may have experienced discrimination, ‘should contact their union and/or the Swedish discrimination ombudsman.’

The email sent to Olle Öberg of STHML Panda

The email sent to Olle Öberg of STHML Panda

The post Shocking video reveals what happens when job seeker reveals the fact he’s gay at interview appeared first on Gay Star News.

David Hudson

www.gaystarnews.com/article/shocking-video-reveals-what-happens-when-job-seeker-reveals-the-fact-hes-gay-at-interview/

VIDEO: HRC and Jim Obergefell Ask Candidates to Defend Same-Sex Marriages

VIDEO: HRC and Jim Obergefell Ask Candidates to Defend Same-Sex Marriages

Today, HRC released a video of Jim Obergefell, who’s lived in Ohio for nearly five decades, asking candidates to defend his marriage in advance of tonight’s debate in Cleveland.
HRC.org

www.hrc.org/blog/entry/video-hrc-and-jim-obergefell-ask-candidates-to-defend-same-sex-marriages?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

PHOTOS: Half-Naked Men Crash Your Favorite Disney Movies

PHOTOS: Half-Naked Men Crash Your Favorite Disney Movies

Need a little pick-me-up to help get you through the end of your work week? We’ve got just the thing!

The very relatable folks over at veryrelatable.com have done the world a ginormous favor by photoshopping pictures of super sexy half-naked men into Disney movies because, hey, why the hell not? Who doesn’t love hot guys and cartoons?

The images are unique in that they can appeal to both children and adults at the same time, which is no easy feat. Okay, maybe not the children part.

Scroll down to see some of our favs. And have a happy Thursday!

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Related: PHOTOS: Disney Princes Grab Their Crotches To Remind You To Play Safe

Graham Gremore

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/GpowUU-SBns/photos-half-naked-men-crash-your-favorite-disney-movies-20150806

Ted Cruz Hires Anti-gay Marriage Billboard Bigots to Help Lead Presidential Campaign

Ted Cruz Hires Anti-gay Marriage Billboard Bigots to Help Lead Presidential Campaign

odgaard

Earlier this week, we told you about Dick and Betty Odgaard and their plan to place 1,000 anti-gay billboards across the country after they shut down their wedding business to avoid serving same-sex couples.

The Iowa couple had hoped to place “1,000 points of light” across the nation in the form of signs reading “Marriage = 1 Man + 1 Woman,” but that lofty goal looks unlikely as they’ve managed to raise only $500 for their anti-gay crusade.

The Odgaard’s paltry fundraising efforts don’t seem to have fazed their buddy Ted Cruz however, as they’ve recently been added to the Cruz campaign’s Iowa leadership team along with eight other “courageous conservatives.”

“Iowa is an extraordinarily important state to our campaign, and I am incredibly excited to have these 10 courageous conservatives join our already exceptional Iowa Leadership Team,” said Sen. Cruz in a statement. “I am tremendously encouraged to see how much our grassroots support in Iowa has grown since the launch of our campaign in March, particularly with the addition of several pastors and our Religious Liberty Ambassadors Dick & Betty Odgaard. It is profoundly important that we have a strong leadership team to win the Iowa caucuses, and today, the campaign took another step in that direction.”

The post Ted Cruz Hires Anti-gay Marriage Billboard Bigots to Help Lead Presidential Campaign appeared first on Towleroad.


Kyler Geoffroy

Ted Cruz Hires Anti-gay Marriage Billboard Bigots to Help Lead Presidential Campaign

Brighton rock(s): Britain’s LGBTI community likes to be beside the seaside

Brighton rock(s): Britain’s LGBTI community likes to be beside the seaside

Down in the South of England, between the sea and the South Downs National Park, a diverse community draws in people from all walks of life to the UK’s unofficial LGBTI capital.

Whether it’s smelling the slightly salty air, watching the sea gulls soar through the sky and bob on the waves, listening to the waves break on Brighton’s shingle beach or the welcoming atmosphere, falling in love with this quirky seaside beauty is remarkably easy.

Hardly anyone in the city can resist the draw of Brighton's annual Pride.

The War Memorial at Old Steine serves a serious purpose, but in summer, people flock to the small park surrounding it.

A treasure trove of things to do, no matter if iconic or lesser known, it’s unlikely that Brighton will ever get boring (if it does, London can be reached in an hour, but never tell a Brightonian you prefer the UK capital over their hometown. They don’t take well to that.).

No matter if seen from the skies or the ground, Brighton Pier never fully loses its appeal.

No matter if seen from the skies or the ground, Brighton Pier never fully loses its appeal.

Brighton Marine Palace and Pier, often just called Brighton Pier or the Pier, is popular with tourists and the locals and always good for a laugh; if the amusement part leaves you unfazed, maybe snagging one of the free deckchairs to soak up some sun is more your thing.

From there, explore the seafront – it never sleeps: by day, people flock to bars, restaurants and the numerous attractions, but when darkness falls students and young professionals take over the clubs and paint the town red.

An air of India: the Royal Pavilion, often compared to the Taj Mahal gives Brighton an exotic note.

An air of India: the Royal Pavilion, often compared to the Taj Mahal gives Brighton an exotic note.

Pulsing beats aside, there’s plenty of calmer (but not less exciting) things to do in Brighton: the slightly misplaced-looking Royal Pavilion with its lavish interiors is a must-see and, what the guides won’t tell you, hosted one of the very first same-sex marriages in the UK on 29 March 2014.

Some truly unique things can be found in The Lanes and North Laine, full of unconventional shops bringing out Brighton’s individualistic side; for the bigger chains, Churchill Square Shopping Center is just up the hill.

The narrow, winding Lanes hide many gems, from small cafés to antique shops.

The narrow, winding Lanes hide many gems, from small cafés to antique shops.

Head to Northern Lights just off the seafront – a Scandinavian-themed bar serving authentic food and drink in a cozy, welcoming atmosphere, with staff always good for a cheeky joke – or an evening out away from the typical gastro pubs.

Silo, a zero-waste restaurant hailed as one of Brighton’s most promising new haunts, and much-loved vegetarian restaurant Food with Friends are also worth a visit for a taste of local produce and innovative recipes.

To dive headfirst into the LGBTI community, head to Kemptown; most gay bars and clubs line St James’s street and, much like the seafront, there’s always something going on, not just on Pride weekend.

Hardly anyone in the city can resist the draw of Brighton's annual Pride.

Hardly anyone in the city can resist the draw of Brighton’s annual Pride.

Once a year, Brighton Pride attracts nearly 200,000 visitors – aside from the parade, a festival and Preston Park and the Gay Village Party und Kemptown keep the masses entertained throughout the day.

Renters will face average prices of £940 (€1,335.34, $1,458.26) per month for a one bedroom flat or £1,308 (€1,858.12, $2,029.16) for two bedrooms, while properties to sell clock in at an overall average of £337,240 (€479,078, $523,177).

Regular train services link Brighton to London Victoria Station as well as St. Pancras International via London Blackfriars, City Thameslink and Faringdon and a limited service to London Bridge, making the city popular with commuters into London.

The post Brighton rock(s): Britain’s LGBTI community likes to be beside the seaside appeared first on Gay Star News.

Stefanie Gerdes

www.gaystarnews.com/article/brighton-rocks-britains-lgbti-community-likes-to-be-beside-the-seaside/

Man Gang Raped At Gunpoint By Half A Dozen Men In Washington, D.C.

Man Gang Raped At Gunpoint By Half A Dozen Men In Washington, D.C.

shutterstock_153974261A Washington, D.C., man was gang raped at gunpoint by nearly half a dozen men, the Washington Blade reports.

The horrifying episode happened in the Columbia Heights neighborhood last week. The victim, whose name and age has not been released, was apparently walking by himself when a white van pulled up beside him. A gunman jumped out and forced him into the back.

Related: Philadelphia Tourist Raped At Gunpoint During Grindr Hookup

According to police, as many as seven other men were waiting inside the van. They “drove [the victim] around” for a while before “Suspect 1 through Suspect 5 anally sexually assaulted him against his will and without his consent.”

According to police, the suspects ranged in age, from 17 to 27 years old. The victim could only describe the gunman who initially approached him: Hispanic, around 6’1, between 22 and 27 years old, with a slim build and short black curly hair.

This is the second time in less than a year that an adult male has been gang raped by a group of men in the area. Last December, a 52-year-old man was walking alone when a gang of armed men kidnapped him and raped him at another location.

Related: London Man Shares Harrowing Account Of Being Raped And How It Changed His Life

Graham Gremore

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/PXb6wWXBqWs/man-gang-raped-at-gunpoint-by-half-a-dozen-men-in-washington-d-c-20150806

This Job Interview Experiment is a Painful Reminder that Anti-gay Discrimination Still Exists: WATCH

This Job Interview Experiment is a Painful Reminder that Anti-gay Discrimination Still Exists: WATCH

 

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Even the most progressive regions in the world still harbor pockets of anti-LGBT resentment, as this social experiment in Scandinavia illustrates.

After being contacted by a guy who said he was fired for being gay, YouTube duo Konrad and Olle decided to find out if there was any truth to the man’s claim. The two discovered a job opening for an unnamed transport company and decided to don secret identities and apply for the position.

Konrad applied for the job as a do-nothing gamer without any experience in the industry or even a truck license. Olle, meanwhile, played the part of an applicant with relevant skills and an interest with the industry (who just so happened to have a boyfriend). Can you guess who was contacted after the interview with a job offer?

Be sure to stick around till the end to see Konrad’s fantastic response after hearing about his job offer.

[English subtitles are available]

The post This Job Interview Experiment is a Painful Reminder that Anti-gay Discrimination Still Exists: WATCH appeared first on Towleroad.


Kyler Geoffroy

This Job Interview Experiment is a Painful Reminder that Anti-gay Discrimination Still Exists: WATCH