Marin’s Spahr Center Is Moving
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Trans advocates are outraged prominent trans health professionals have suggested creating an international global registry of trans children.
A recently published article in the Journal of Sexual Medicine called for the registry to ‘further study of this basic demographic and its associated factors’.
One of the authors is Dr Polly Carmichael, the director of the UK’s National Health Service (NHS) Gender Identity Development Service (GIDS). The GIDS is currently undergoing a self-imposed review after a senior staff member accused it of ‘fast-tracking’ children to gender transition.
Called ‘Evidence for a Change in the Sex Ratio of Children Referred for Gender Dysphoria: Data From the Gender Identity Development Service in London (2000–2017)’, it researched the difference in the number of trans boys and girls and at what age they were most likely to start accessing treatment for gender dysphoria.
As far as the research goes, trans advocates don’t consider it a ‘priority’. But one sentence in the article’s conclusion has them worried.
‘It’s not really interesting in terms of priorities, it’s not an area of research that should be a priority for children referred to the gender identity service,’ Twitter user @Dad-Trans told Gay Star News.
Dad-Trans has a trans child and is a vocal advocate for trans children. He remains anonymous to protect his child’s and family’s identities.
‘On the scale of things this paper is really something that is very minor in interest as parent of a trans child,’ he said.
‘They’re (researchers) are seeing a difference in numbers and they think it’s interesting. I’m not so concerned about the numbers.
‘It seems less interesting than thinking why these children need help and what we can do to help them.’
Dad-Trans describes the call for a trans registry as ‘chilling’.
‘We’re living in a time when Donald Trump recently released a memo where he’s basically talking about legislating about assigned sex and then basing laws upon that, so it’s concerning,’ he said.
‘Once your name is on that registry it can be used for any number of reasons.
‘I don’t trust these people with my child’s data, with my data and i’m really concerned about how it might be misused politically and as we’re seeing now, the intention is there and we’re already seeing policy and legislative decisions by people in power who wish ill of trans children.’
The trans advocate expressed concern about private data being shared across international borders and with private medical practitioners.
One of the practitioners he was most concerned about was Canadian doctor, Kenneth Zucker. The Canadian doctor also contributed to the controversial article.
Zucker is a controversial figure in trans children’s health globally.
Until 2015, he headed Child And Adolescent Gender Identity Clinic at Toronto’s Centre For Addiction And Mental Health (CAHM). The centre stood him down from the role after Canada banned reparative therapy for gender identity or sexual orientation.
Zucker’s methods came under review because he argued that gender dysphoria is not fully formed in very young children. He also encourages parents to stop their children engaging any ‘cross-gendered behavior’.
‘Allowing a little boy to cross-dress just perpetuates [his] confusion,’ Zucker told Daily Xtra.
Even though Zucker successfully sued CAHM he is still widely criticized among LGBTI advocates.
Dad-Trans said it was very worrying that Zucker called for an registry of trans children.
‘It’s deeply worrying, an international database of gender dysphoric kids is just rife for abuse and every time we see something like this, [it reminds me] every time fascists begin and that’s with creating a list of people,’ he said.
‘They’re not seeing these children as humans, they’re seeing them as numbers.
‘I don’t feel that they’re putting the health of and the well being of those young people front and centre which is what they should be doing.’
Zucker told Gay Star News that criticism of the proposed registry is ‘absurd’ and ‘ridiculous’.
‘If one did establish some kind of registry or a cross-clinic database you would go through institutional review board procedures [to approve it],’ he said.
‘You would have the permission of parents, of minors to use information anonymously. So, individuals would be de-identified.’
Zucker said while the details haven’t been ironed out, the database would include anonymous data such as: the age of the child’s referral to the gender center, ‘sex assignment at birth’, did they meet the full criteria for gender dysphoria or were they sub-threshold for it’.
The doctor admitted there wasn’t a strong need for the register but cross-referencing the data would be ‘interesting’.
‘The suggestion isn’t to identify individuals,’ he said.
‘It’s to understand a phenomenon, so, even if you do research in a single centre, and you have your institutional review board, databases are always anonymous with regards to individuals. I could send you a raw data file of, let’s say, 500 participants in a research you would have no idea who they are. It’s an absurd criticism.’
But Zucker’s arguments have not eased Dad-Trans’ concerns.
‘If they’re using data up to 2017, even if that’s been anonymised, at a minimum they’ve got the gender, the sex assigned at birth, their age and the time they went to the service,’ he said.
‘So when your dealing with a very small number of children at the age of 12, you can create a jigsaw of data that’s very simple to find out the identity of those children.
‘I think it’s utterly disgraceful that they’re involved in sending data across international borders.’
Along with concerns about the international registry, trans advocates have questioned the appropriateness of Carmichael teaming up with Zucker to publish a medical journal article.
‘I am concerned that by publishing with Zucker the Head of GIDS, is effectively endorsing his (Zucker’s) widely discredited approach, and that this signals a broadening division between GIDS and the rest of the world including Canada, America, Australia, Spain, the Netherlands, who, unlike Polly, and the England service, follow both the latest World Professional Association of Transgender Health approach to affirmative care, and the clinical guidance from the Endocrine society,’ Dad-Trans said.
‘I am also very concerned about the data protection considerations of sharing referral data of NHS patients, including my daughter, with a dismissed psychologist in private practice across international boundaries.
‘I call on NHS England, the Health Ombudsman, the Care Quality Commission and the Information Commissioner’s Office to investigate as a matter of urgency.’
Gay Star News sent Carmichael and the GIDS multiple requests for comment but did not receive a reply.
Barbra Streisand has dropped an LGBT anthem, in a not-so-guarded F.U. to President Trump.
The legendary gay icon released her thirty-sixth studio album, Walls, on November 2.
The title of the record is a direct reference to the Trump administration’s border wall policy, and many of the tracks bear an overtly-political nature.
Get your home ready for the holidays with Boll & Branch.
Speaking to Canadian outlet Maclean’s, Streisand confirmed the meaning behind the track.
She said: “He’s trying to divide our nation and the world. That’s what’s so scary. Diversity is proven to be our strength.
“To say people are how they are because of how they were born—it’s that thinking that is wrong. I believe different shouldn’t be judged by any other kind of meter.”
She added: “Statistically, in terms of genome studies, people have 99.9 percent of the same genetics. We are alike. We all want peace and happiness and family and love and understanding.”
The track’s lyrics include: “Love’s always right/Love always knows the way/When some are just too blind to see the light/ You know what’s true/Be true to you/Be proud, be strong/‘Cause love’s never wrong.”
Maclean’s noted that the release comes after an October 21 report that the Trump administration is drawing up regressive new regulations that would define gender as a person’s fixed biological sex at birth, effectively banning recognition of transgender people.
The US Justice Department under Jeff Sessions has also reversed work on LGBT+ civil rights protections launched under the Obama administration, filing court cases supporting the ‘freedom to discriminate’ against same-sex couples.
Streisand, 76, has been a beloved gay icon for decades.
The Funny Girl star has a gay son, Jason Gould.
The musical star campaigned alongside Hillary Clinton in 2016, headlining LGBT+ fundraisers and even performing a re-purposed cover of Broadway anthem “Send in the Clowns” taking aim at Trump.
Streisand is one of the best-selling music artists of all time, with more than 68.5 million albums in the US and a total of 150 million albums and singles sold worldwide.
In 2014, Streisand entered a spat with outspoken HIV/AIDS activist Larry Kramer, when he accused her of being “uncomfortable” with gay sex.
Kramer had blamed Streisand for the lengthy delay in securing a screen adaptation of his theatrical AIDS crisis drama The Normal Heart, claiming production was held up because of creative conflicts with Streisand, who held the rights to the adaption.
Streisand accused Kramer of “misrepresenting” her feelings, saying: “As a filmmaker, I have always looked for new and exciting ways to do love scenes, whether they’re about heterosexuals or homosexuals.
“It’s a matter of taste, not gender. I was trying to reach a large audience, and I wanted them to root for these two men to get married.”
A film version of The Normal Heart was released in 2014 on HBO, 29 years after the play of the same name.
From the site Business For Trans Equality:
We, the undersigned businesses, stand with the millions of people in America who identify as transgender, gender non-binary, or intersex, and call for all such people to be treated with the respect and dignity everyone deserves.
We oppose any administrative and legislative efforts to erase transgender protections through reinterpretation of existing laws and regulations. We also fundamentally oppose any policy or regulation that violates the privacy rights of those that identify as transgender, gender non-binary, or intersex.
In the last two decades, dozens of federal courts have affirmed the rights and identities of transgender people. Cognizant of growing medical and scientific consensus, courts have recognized that policies that force people into a binary gender definition determined by birth anatomy fail to reflect the complex realities of gender identity and human biology.
Recognizing that diversity and inclusion are good for business, and that discrimination imposes enormous productivity costs (and exerts undue burdens), hundreds of companies, including the undersigned, have continued to expand inclusion for transgender people across corporate America. Currently more than 80 percent of the Fortune 500 have clear gender identity protections; two-thirds have transgender-inclusive healthcare coverage; hundreds have LGBTQ+ and Allies business resource groups and internal training efforts.
Transgender people are our beloved family members and friends, and our valued team members. What harms transgender people harms our companies.
We call for respect and transparency in policy-making, and for equality under the law for transgender people.
Accenture
Adobe Systems Inc.
Airbnb
Altria Group
Amalgamated Bank
Amazon
American Airlines
Apple
Automatic Data Processing Inc. (ADP)
Bank of America Merrill Lynch
Ben & Jerry’s Homemade
BNY Mellon
Cargill
Cisco Systems Inc.
Citi
Clifford Chance
The Coca Cola Company
Corning Incorporated
Corteva Agriscience™, the Agriculture Division of DowDuPont
The Dow Chemical Company
Deutsche Bank
E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company
Fastly, Inc.
Hogan Lovells International LLP
HSBC
IBM Corporation
Intel Corporation
Intuit Inc.
Iron Mountain
JPMorgan Chase & Co.
Levi Strauss & Co.
Lush Handmade Cosmetics
Lyft
Marriott International
MassMutual
MGM Resorts International
Microsoft Corp.
Nike, Inc.
PepsiCo
Replacements, Ltd.
Ropes & Gray
Royal Bank of Canada
S&P Global
Salesforce
Sheppard Mullin
Sodexo Inc.
Splunk
State Street Corporation
TiVo Corporation
Trillium Asset Management
Twitter Inc.
Uber
Warby Parker
Addy Chen, left, has been charged under Myanmar’s sodomy law. (Photo courtesy of Myo Min Latt)
YANGON, Myanmar — The LGBTI community in Myanmar has demand fair media coverage of a gay man with HIV who is charged under the controversial Penal Code 377 for allegedly committing sexual abuse against one of his employees.The accused, Aung Myo Htut, aka Addy Chen, is an outspoken LGBTI rights advocates and commonly known to be HIV-positive. Chen, who also owns a restaurant in Yangon, allegedly asked one of his waiters to give him a massage and sexually assaulted him in March.
Chen was arrested on the same day the man who accused him of sexual assault filed a case against him at a local police station. Chen was charged under Section 377 of the national penal code, which makes same-sex sexual acts illegal, regardless if they were consensual or not.
Chen faces of a sentence of between 10 years to life in prison if convicted.
The media’s portrayal of LGBTI people in Myanmar is unfavorable, adding to deeply rooted social stigma and stereotypes against sexual minorities and people living with HIV/AIDS. LGBTI rights advocates in the country say the portrayal of Chen’s case in the mainstream media is biased against the accused and is very damaging to the LGBTI population as a whole.
“We do not see any media ethics here,” says Yaya Aye Myat, a well-known transgender activist. “Many media reports Addy Chen’s case as if he was already convicted. That makes the public outrageous. In fact, a person is not guilty until proven by the court of law and until then, the person is entitled to the benefits of doubt.”
The Irrawaddy, an influential newspaper in Myanmar, first published a sensational video of Chen’s accuser’s testimony and it went viral among the country’s netizens. The video shows a one-sided story in which Chen’s accuser claims Chen coerced him into performing oral sex on him and later engaging in unprotected receptive anal sex.
Chen’s accuser emotionally said he is just a poor rural boy trying to earn a living in the city to support his siblings. He added Chen ruined his life because he may have been infected with HIV after having unprotected sex.
The restaurant manager, who helped Chen’s accuser to file the case against Chen and is also one of the key witnesses against him, also appeared in the video that has had 1.9 million views and 24,000 shares on the Irrawaddy’s Facebook page.
Other Burmese language media outlets followed up in Chen’s case after the video went viral.
Many people find the allegations against Chen outrageous and are demanding harsh punishment for him, even though a court has not found him guilty. Chen’s accuser in the video showed HIV-preventative drugs he has been taking as suggested by a doctor, but tabloid media has mistakenly described them as antiretroviral drugs, assuming he is already HIV-positive.
Chen’s family deactivated his Facebook page within a week of his arrest because of an overwhelming number of hate messages, derogatory comments and even death threats that he received.
Nay Oo Lwin, a gay rights advocate in Myanmar, says the LGBTI community is against sexual assault, regardless of whether the perpetrator is gay or straight. Lwin added he wants to see a fair trial in Chen’s case.
“We respect the rule of law but we don’t want to be repressed by the laws,” he said. “I feel that the media reports on Addy Chen’s case and discussions on social media are attacking the gay community and intensifying the stereotypes.”
Although the mainstream media reports unanimously describe Chen as guilty, the recent court testimony suggests the opposite.
During a hearing that took place on Oct. 4, the court physician said he didn’t find semen or any tears and lacerations on the anuses of both Chen and his accuser, in contrast to his earlier testimony in which he said Chen had penetrative anal sex with him for 20 minutes. There were also inconsistencies in testimonies by the plaintiff and witnesses.
Media reports also did not report the fact the restaurant manager and witnesses who testified owed a significant amount of money to Chen. They are now postponing payment of these debts due to the trial.
“Addy trusted the manager girl and loaned her lots of money,” said Chen’s relative, Myo Min Latt. “All six witnesses summoned by the plaintiff are debtors to Addy Chen. We have documents that Addy loaned them money. They also admitted to owing money to Addy during the court hearing.”
The defendant’s attorney says she believes her client never abused any of his staff except for asking his accuser to give him a massage. She said the alleged victim has exploited the fact that Chen is a gay man living with HIV to frame him as an abuser.
Despite this evidence, the trials continue.
Chen’s request for bail was denied for the third time on Oct. 30.
Chen’s family says his health is now deteriorating in prison. They say he only has limited access to medicine and medical facilities that people with HIV need.
“He has been detained in prison for eight months so far,” says Latt. “He is already very depressed by the media portrayal of him as gay rapist. He is now getting frequently ill. The trials are going on although the court physician had testified of not finding any signs of abuses on the victim. In the last hearing, the plaintiff attorney requested to add an additional witness to extend the trial. I think they are deliberately delaying the final verdict.”
Myat says the court’s decision to deny Chen’s request for bail will impact the entire LGBTI community.
“There are cases, charged under Section 375 of Penal Code for accused of minor rape and the alleged perpetrators were released on bail, given their age or health condition,” she said. “But not for this particular case. So, who will hold accountable, if the accused in this case does not survive all the trials and found to be not guilty in the end?”
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The Democratic Party hopes to paint Congress in blue at the midterm elections—but there is more than one colour in the spectrum of candidates hoping to win political office on November 6.
A so-called ‘Rainbow wave’ of openly LGBT+ candidates is running for major political office in the upcoming elections, which will call voters to the ballots to fill all 435 seats in the House of Representatives, 33 seats in the Senate seats and pick 34 state Governors.
LGBT+ people are severely underrepresented across all levels of politics in the US. The 21 openly LGBT+ candidates running for the House of Representatives, the two in the run for Senate seats, and the four hoping to win their state’s gubernatorial race could be about to break barriers on November 6.
In a sign of the extreme political divide on LGBT+ issues, all 27 of the out LGBT+ candidates are Democrats, with no Republican candidates running for major political office publicly identifying as LGBT+.
University of North Carolina politics professor Andrew Reynolds, an expert on LGBT+ representation in politics, is however cautious in predicting widespread electoral success for the Rainbow Wave, telling PinkNews that “small increases” in LGBT+ representation are the most likely outcome.
For several LGBT+ candidates, their close-fought races continue to hang in the balance ahead of election day. PinkNews took a look at the most closely-watched races.
Wisconsin Democrat Tammy Baldwin was the first-ever out member of the US Senate when she was first elected in 2012.
Baldwin co-chairs the Congressional LGBT Equality Caucus, and has championed LGBT+ rights across her six years in the Senate to date.
The only Democrat who holds statewide office in Wisconsin, Baldwin is facing a challenge from Republican state lawmaker Leah Vukmir, an opponent of LGBT+ rights.
The Human Rights Campaign notes that Vukmir “has repeatedly taken extreme positions far outside the mainstream,” and has derailed efforts to pass common sense protections for LGBT+ people in the state, including protections for LGBT+ youth facing discrimination and bullying at school.
Anti-LGBT activists have been extensively fundraising against Baldwin, with a conservative Political Action Committee (PAC) branding her a “pervert” who wants to “require children starting at age 5 to learn about gay sex.”
Baldwin said: “As more members of the LGBTQ community are elected and become public servants, [our] voices will become louder.
“But for now, we must do everything we can to promote tolerance and fight discrimination. We have work to do until we achieve full acceptance and equality.”
An NBC News/Marist poll on October 3 has Baldwin with 54 percent of the vote, 14 points ahead of Vukmir on 40 percent.
The race for the US Senate seat vacated by Senator Jeff Flake is one of the most closely-watched battles ahead of the midterms, as a Democratic victory in the election could upset the chamber’s narrow 51-49 GOP majority.
If elected, Sinema, who currently sits in the US House of Representatives, will become the first openly bisexual member of the US Senate.
Her opponent, Republican Martha McSally, has supported Trump’s ban on transgender troops in the military and backed ‘freedom to discriminate’ laws.
During her time in Congress, Sinema has co-sponsored the Equality Act, which would amend the 1964 Civil Rights Act to also ban discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity.
She has also sponsored HR4041, a bill that would enshrine transgender people’s right to serve in the US military.
Annise Parker of LGBTQ Victory Fund, a PAC seeking to support LGBT+ elected officials, said that this race is important ”not just for the Democratic party and for the LGBTQ community, but for all Americans who demand an end to the political divisiveness that Martha McSally embodies.”
She added that the result in the race will be a “defining moment” for the ‘Rainbow Wave,’ and will further “the evolution in how Americans view LGBTQ people and candidates.”
Polling shows the vote on a knife-edge. A CBS News/YouGov poll on October 5 showed Sinema leading McSally by 47 percent to 44, but a New York Times poll on October 19 showed her trailing by 46 percent to 48, firmly within the poll’s margin for error.
Brown is running for her first full term as governor of Oregon, after assuming the role on an acting basis in 2015 when the previous governor resigned.
The bisexual Democrat already made history as the first out governor of a US state, and is now set to challenge for another four years in the role.
As governor, she signed a transgender equality bill, outlawed gay ‘cure’ therapy, and has been among the state Governors to stand up to the Trump White House’s policies towards refugees.
Victory Fund, which is backing Brown, praised her work to date in advancing legislation that improves the lives of LGBTQ veterans and trans people.
It added: “When she wins in November, Governor Kate Brown will remain a strong leader for equality and inclusion in Oregon, and that is why Victory Fund is thrilled to endorse her for reelection.”
Brown has a lead over lead over Republican Knute Buehler, with an OPB/DHM poll on October 11 showing her with 40 percent to Buehler’s 35.
There are currently no transgender politicians in federal or statewide office across any of the 50 states, with the sole example of trans representation in American politics limited to Virginia lawmaker Danica Roem.
But Christine Hallquist, the Democratic candidate for Governor of Vermont, is hoping to change that.
If elected, Hallquist could become the first openly transgender politician in the US. She faces an uphill battle against incumbent Republican Governor Phil Scott, but Vermont has a reputation for picking outsiders—not least one Senator Bernie Sanders, who was first elected as an Independent in 2006 and was re-elected in 2012.
Although she has focused her campaign on local issues, Hallquist has faced transphobic attacks. Her campaign has experienced an influx of abusive messages and death threats.
Speaking to The Hill, she said: “I told the campaign team right in the beginning that if we’re successful and the more successful we get, the more hatred, the more vitriol and more death threats would occur.
“I think it’s a natural outcome of where our country is today. We are a divided country… I land that squarely at the administration in Washington.
“I should tell you, it doesn’t scare me at all (…) We lay our lives on the line for a healthy democracy.”
An October 14 Braun Research poll had Scott on 42 percent of the vote, ahead of Hallquist on 28, with 22 percent still undecided.
A few years ago, the possibility of a Mexican-American lesbian police sheriff becoming governor of Texas might have seemed like a long shot.
But Democratic candidate Lupe Valdez has picked up momentum in her challenge against anti-LGBT Republican incumbent Greg Abbott, as the red state turns a deep shade of purple thanks to increased support for Democrats.
Her campaign could be buoyed by a surge in support for Beto O’Rourke, the Democratic challenger for the state’s Senate seat against incumbent Ted Cruz, who is up for election on the same day.
O’Rourke has led a fiery challenge against anti-LGBT Senator Cruz, with a surge in popular support bringing a competitiveness not generally seen in Texas races.
If elected, Valdez would become one of the first out LGBT+ official in Texas.
Speaking at a rally, Valdez said: “We’re going to make it happen. A stronger and fair Texas. A tolerant and diverse Texas. A Texas where the everyday person has a voice and a shot just as I did.”
Addressing the odds at the same event, she said: “Please tell me when I didn’t have an uphill battle… I am getting darn good at uphill battles, and I’m not done yet.”
A CNN poll on October 13 shows Valdez trailing Abbott by 18 points, with 39 percent of the vote to his 57 percent.
Polis has been one of the leading lights for LGBT+ rights in the House of Representatives, co-chairing the LGBT Equality Caucus and co-sponsoring the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd, Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act, which federally recognises anti-LGBT hate crimes.
He is now running to become governor of Colorado, and if successful would be the first openly gay man elected governor in the United States.
In a recent speech to Colorado Democrats, Polis highlighted the impact that being an openly gay person in the state’s highest position could have, particularly under the current President and administration.
Polis said: “I think it really gives Colorado an opportunity to stick a thumb in the eye of Mike Pence, whose view of America is not as inclusive as where America is today.”
He faces Republican candidate Walker Stapleton.
Victory Fund praised the work of Polis in Congress, adding that he is “someone we can all count on to fight and win the tough battles.”
The organisation said: “Whether as an entrepreneur creating hundreds of jobs, a superintendent at a school for vulnerable kids, or a representative fighting on the front lines for LGBTQ equality, Jared’s entire career has been defined by turning bold ideas into real results for Americans from all walks of life.
“We will be proud to stand by him when he becomes the first openly gay person to be elected governor.”
A Magellan poll on October 10 showed Polis on 47 percent, seven points ahead of Stapleton on 40 percent.
Jones is the Democratic candidate for Texas’s 23rd congressional district in the House of Representatives, challenging incumbent Republican Rep. Will Hurd.
The Air Force veteran could become the first openly gay woman of colour from Texas elected to Congress.
Her opponent’s seat is one of the most vulnerable in Texas in the event of a Democratic surge, with Hurd having retained the seat in 2014 and 2016 by fewer than 3,000 votes—lower than the number of votes attracted by third-party candidates.
Hurd has a poor record on LGBT+ rights, scoring 48 on the Human Rights Campaign’s Congressional scorecard.
Equality PAC Chair Rep. Mark Takano (D-CA) said that Gina Ortiz Jones is “exactly the kind of candidate we need to gain a pro-equality majority in 2018.”
Takano explained: “Gina bravely served our country in uniform under Don’t Ask Don’t Tell, and knows first hand the corrosive effect of anti-LGBT policies.
“Her voice and perspective will be an invaluable addition to not just debates on equality, but military readiness, national security, health care policy, and all the myriad issues members of Congress face every day.”
New York Times polling on October 18 showed Ortiz Jones with 38 percent of the vote, trailing Hurd with 53 percent.
Davids is the Democratic candidate for Kansas’ 3rd congressional district in the House of Representatives, challenging four-term GOP incumbent Kevin Yoder.
If elected, she will be the first out member of Congress from Kansas, and the first female Native American elected to Congress—which is somehow something that hasn’t happened yet.
The political hopeful worked on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, before serving as a White House Fellow under President Barack Obama.
Yoder has a zero rating from the Human Rights Campaign for his LGBT+ rights voting record, opposing same-sex marriage.
However, Davids has an uphill battle, given the district’s strong Republican leaning.
Victory Fund’s Parker said: “Sharice’s commitment to smart public policy that addresses the real concerns of constituents makes her the best candidate for Kansas’ 3rd congressional district. When she wins [in] November, Sharice will become a vital LGBTQ voice.”
A New York Times poll on October 17 shows Davids with a health lead in the race. She is on 48 points, ahead of Yoder on 39 percent.
Homelessness charity boss Katie Hill is the Democratic candidate for California’s 25th congressional district in the House of Representatives.
The candidate, who is bisexual, is challenging anti-LGBT Republican Rep. Steve Knight.
Knight was behind a 2016 plot to pass a law permitting sweeping anti-LGBT discrimination in all federal agencies by attaching it to a defence spending bill.
He was accused of “catering to right wing extremists who would turn back the clock on equality” with the proposal to exempt religious contractors from anti-discrimination rules.
Knight also insists that marriage is “a union of one man and one woman” and opposed California’s ban on gay ‘cure’ therapy.
Annise Parker of Victory Fund said that the race is a key battle between a “positive, solutions-oriented vision” and the “politics of hate and destruction.”
Parker added: “Steve Knight and his family made careers out of attacking LGBTQ people and working to rollback equal rights. Now, voters have an opportunity to defeat him with an openly bisexual woman who has pledged to represent all her constituents.”
The Republican narrowly won the seat in 2014 and 2016, and polling shows the race is on a knife-edge between the two.
An October 4 UC Berkeley poll has Hill on 50 percent, ahead of Knight on 46 percent, but a New York Times/Siena poll on September 19 showed Knight with a two-point lead, on 47 percent to Hill’s 45.
Nerites is not your typical Roman youth. First of all, he is a demigod (begotten by Neptune upon a mortal Roman matron); secondly, he really enjoys oral sex (despite being a freeborn Roman citizen). Eager to satisfy his appetite for fellatio, he frequents the Baths of Caracalla, and there it is that he meets his own father, who, upon discovering his son acting in such an unmanly fashion (upon Neptune himself, no less—awkward!), curses Nerites to spend eternity upon his knees, forever servicing men in order to survive. Thus begins Nerites’ haphazard journey back and forth through time, appearing and reappearing in these havens for men like him, from the Continental Baths of disco-era Manhattan, to bathhouses in feudal (and also present-day) Japan, and the baths of the Roman Empire.
For a man under a curse, Nerites certainly doesn’t act like it: he never bemoans his fate, nor simply accepts it in a stoic fashion; rather, he unapologetically glories in the endless feast of male flesh, never tiring or being bored by the unending diet of oral copulation. It is not until his dark half-brother Obsidio (his mother’s son by Pluto) begins shadowing him and cold bodies begin appearing in the hot tubs and steam rooms that Nerites pauses his non-stop orgy to deal with this threat.
Tom Cardamone is no stranger to horror, or the erotic, and The Lurid Sea combines both, but not in equal amounts. The majority of this short novel is an erotic memoir by Nerites, from his sexual awakening with his half-brother, to his adolescent explorations, to the many, many, nameless men through the ages that he has sucked off. (In a story that spans the ages, the few recurring characters would naturally be other immortals like Nerites: the satyr Zotikos, a Japanese kitsune, and Obsidio.) Horror arrives near the end, when Nerites must confront Obsidio, after first descending into the realm of Pluto. (Who knew that Hades had a bathhouse? Although I suppose it makes sense that the Land of the Dead would have one, or at least the shadow of one.) Nerites’ clash with Obsidio is the climax of the novel, in more ways than one. Confronting Death also forces Nerites to mature, something that clearly happens on a different timeline for immortals.
Nerites’ complicated relationship with Obsidio weaves throughout the novel, his joyous, life-affirming sexuality contrasting to Obsidio’s brutal carnality and deadly kiss. Only Nerites can withstand the lethal power of Obsidio’s semen (Nerites’ own semen can drive mortals mad—he doesn’t know how it would affect another immortal), so he services Obsidio in part to spare the mortals who would die if they attempted to do so, while recognizing that he truly does so for the sheer pleasure of it, rather than any sense of duty to mere mortals. And apparently it is only the presence of Obsidio that can halt Nerites’ saturnalia, and potentially lift the “curse” he lives under—much as the specter of AIDS halted the bacchanalia that was the 1970s, and closed many bathhouses.
Cardamone’s novel is a pleasurable romp through space and time, and Nerites makes an entertaining guide. Still, hidden among the unending conflict between eros and thantos, Cardamone leaves small pearls of wisdom: keen philosophical insights into history, as well as the nature of lust, love, and desire, not unlike the pearls that Nerites laps up endlessly.
The Lurid Sea
By Tom Cardamone
Bold Strokes Books
Paperback, 9781626399112, 180 pp.
March 2018
A group of men, women and children with their backpacks and other things they needed for a long trip left Plaza del Divino Salvador del Mundo in the Salvadoran capital at around 8 a.m. on Oct. 28.
They were part of a caravan that formed with the ultimate goal of reaching the U.S. The Salvadoran government has asked people not to risk their lives on such a trip, but more than 300 people decided to ignore this plea and replicate the caravan of Hondurans that left the city of San Pedro Sula on Oct. 13.
“Stand with the people who will participate in this caravan. Let people know where you are so others know,” reads a message that was published on a Facebook page on Oct. 24. “It is easier for everyone to arrive in groups.”
“There are people from across the country,” it says. “El Salvador emigrates for a better future.”
This page was created on Oct. 16, and it is administered by a person who has not identified themselves. The page encourages people who want to leave the country to create and join groups on social media to find out about groups in their areas that would travel with the caravan.
This situation has sparked concern among different activists and civil society groups, including LGBTI organizations that are part of the LGBTI Salvadoran Federation. COMCAVIS Trans, a transgender advocacy group, published an advisory that warns members of the LGBTI community not to migrate.
“TO MIGRATE is a RIGHT, but doing it in an illegal way carries high risks, especially for LGBTI people,” says the COMCAVIS Trans advisory that it posted to its Facebook page.
“Some LGBTI people migrate to improve their economic conditions, since in El Salvador many LGBTI people, especially transgender women, face clear discrimination in employment,” COMCAVIS Trans Executive Director Bianca Rodríguez told the Washington Blade. “There is a lot of concern over their personal safety, gangs who target them, cruel treatment and abuse of power on the part of police officers and soldiers.”
The advisory, among other things, mentions an LGBTI person should not expect to receive refuge in the U.S. because of their sexual orientation or gender identity. It also emphasizes the U.S. government has said anyone who enters the country illegally will be detained and be processed for deportation.
Liduvina Magarin, vice minister of El Salvador’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, declared the government would provide “escorts” to the group of Salvadoran migrants with the sole purpose of keeping families informed so they make responsible decisions and not put the lives of children at risk on the migratory route.
But another group of people gathered at Plaza del Divino Salvador del Mundo on Oct. 31 to form a second caravan with the same goal of seeking a better future for their families.
“If it is normally dangerous for us in our daily lives, this risk triples in the caravans,” Aldo Peña of Hombres Trans HT, an advocacy group for trans men, told the Blade. “Not only are they violated or will be violated at the borders by the authorities or become victims of crimes, but they will also be victimized by those who are part of the caravans.
“I would not go to possibly die on the road,” added Peña. “They (migrants) must remember that their families will continue to experience the injustices of this country if they leave.”
A Salvadoran trans advocacy group has issued this advisory that urges LGBTI Salvadorans not to join migrant caravans to the U.S.
Camila Portillo, a trans activist, for her part told the Blade that “we must not stop the dream of emigrating for a better future, if, for example, the government and the country does not guarantee socio-economic development for the LGBTI community.”
“In practice, it is not carried out in the correct way, although there are people in power who tend to support LGBTI people,” she said.
“Here there is a lot of forced internal displacement because of the issue of violence, so I don’t think it’s a trend,” Portillo added. “It’s mostly a structural issue that the government does not guarantee safety not only the LGBTI community, but the population in general, but it is an at-risk population that is more vulnerable and the government therefore must guarantee the welfare of the people.”
Portillo remains hopeful the migrants will have the help they need and be able to fulfill their objectives without many obstacles in the countries through which the caravans pass. She also urged the Salvadoran government to begin to tackle corruption within its institutions, to enforce decrees and different guidelines that have been created in support of the LGBTI community and to make sure it implements them as opposed to simply have them in writing.
“Given the high rates of violence in El Salvador, many of the people who make up that caravan will have their own reasons for migrating,” said Rodríguez. “But the Salvadoran government in this situation should at least coordinate with national institutions, international associations and bodies to provide some protection (to them) along the route and urge countries through which they travel to reach the U.S. (Guatemala, Mexico) protect their human rights.”
Articles 13 and 14 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights says people have the right to move freely, including seeking refuge and asylum in extreme cases where their life is in danger.
People with the first caravan had reached Mexican territory as of deadline and families provided them shelter in which they were allowed to remain together. They also received medical assistance, food and access to baths and showers.
Police have reportedly arrested 10 women on suspicion of lesbian activity in Indonesia.
The women were detained in Padang, West Sumatra, over the weekend, reports Reuters.
The Facebook account for Padang’s police force posted about the arrests on Monday (November 5).
Police said the women were arrested on Sunday (November 4) on suspicion of “lesbian deviant behaviour.”
In a statement, head of police Pol Yadrison explained that intelligence authorities had been monitoring the women’s activities on social media.
Yadrison said that one of the women’s Facebook account showed her “kissing and cuddling” with another woman, as if they were “men and women.”
“From this discovery the officer finally conducted a search and managed to find the identity and whereabouts of the photo uploader,” said Yadrison.
The head of police added that authorities in Indonesia are currently receiving reports about suspected LGBT+ activities “almost every day.”
In Indonesia, gay sex is illegal in the province of Aceh under Sharia law and for Muslims living in the city of Palembang.
However, the country is updating its criminal code, which looks set to ban same-sex sexual activity throughout the country.
Indonesian authorities have also clamped down on LGBT+ activities in the past year.
In October, two Indonesian men were arrested on suspicion of setting up a Facebook page that co-ordinated gay hook-ups.
In July, two men were publicly flogged for having gay sex in Aceh.
And, in February, Indonesian authorities set up a task force to stop “the LGBT disease.”
The new task force was established by Mayor Muhammad Idris of Depok, a district in West Java with more than 1.75 million people.
According to Indonesian publication Kompas, Idris said: “Religion has agreed that LGBT [people commit] forbidden acts, but legally we will overcome this problem so as not to worsen the issue.”
The mayor added: “This is our effort to prevent LGBT because many phone calls come to the Social Service requesting to help solve the LGBT disease”.
He said that “the campaign of rejecting LGBT will be conducted by this integrated team,” which would, he explained, “coach” LGBT people.
In January, police arrested 12 trans women in Aceh, shaving their heads and forcing them to wear typically male clothing in an effort to “turn them into men.”
In 2017, Indonesian police raided nightclubs, saunas and hotel rooms on suspicion of LGBT+ activities being carried out inside.