Monthly Archives: January 2015
Best Art of the Year: 2014
Best Art of the Year: 2014
Over 40 editors’ picks from this year’s art portfolios.
Christopher Harrity
www.advocate.com/arts-entertainment/art/2015/01/03/best-art-year-2014
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton s Historic LGBT Speech 1
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton s Historic LGBT Speech 1
Este Es Mi Trailer GAY Dedicado Para Toda La Comunidad LGBT En YouTube
Este Es Mi Trailer GAY Dedicado Para Toda La Comunidad LGBT En YouTube
SUSCRÍBETE A MI CANAL AQUÍ: goo.gl/hI1lNo Hola este es mi trailer Gay y creo que las imágenes en el video lo dicen todo, aquí te doy la bienvenida y muchas gracias por mirar…
Take Me to Church – Holzier, 幻灯片6
Idaho Gov, AG Fighting to Re-ban Marriage Equality
[Nhảy cover] Liên Khúc Kpop – LGBT
[Nhảy cover] Liên Khúc Kpop – LGBT
IMG_3917
#GIRLCODEFRIDAZE = WE ARE FREE B4 MIDNIGHTTTTTT….If THIS happened to you last week…don't let it happen TONIGHT!! – WE'RE kicking off the new year just like we closed 2014… EVERYONE FREE BEFORE MIDNIGHT!! – DC'S HOTTEST WEEKLY PARTY FOR LESBIANS….
Sen. Elizabeth Warren Challenges FDA Gay Blood Ban: 'Have the Courage to Set Policies Based on Science'
Sen. Elizabeth Warren Challenges FDA Gay Blood Ban: 'Have the Courage to Set Policies Based on Science'
Last week, Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) again spoke out against the FDA’s new blood donation policy — accepting blood from gay men, but only those who have been abstinent for at least one year.
Through Twitter, Warren called for concrete, alternative methods of ensuring blood safety, challenging the FDA to shake up the status quo.
Here’s the Tweet:
The FDA must commit to building a bigger, safer blood supply through risk-based screening & have courage to set policies based on science.
— Elizabeth Warren (@SenWarren) December 24, 2014
This statement is in line with the recent letter, signed by 80 congressional Democrats including Warren, which called for “risk-based blood donation policy,” and stated:
The pertinent scientific question is not whether a cross-section of the population is more likely than another to transmit an infection, but rather whether an across-the-board, risk-based screening will reduce the likelihood of all infectious contaminations.
In related news, the FDA released a statement this week saying it had considered individual self-assessments, but did not find them reliable:
“Assessment of high-risk sexual behaviors would be highly burdensome on blood donation establishments and potentially offensive to donors.”
John Aravosis over at AMERICAblog has some colorful commentary on the FDA’s recent response:
So to recap, the FDA believes that a total stranger asking a man if he’s gay — a highly personal, and for some embarrassing, admission that could get you fired from your job, and disowned by your family — is not “offensive.”
Nor is it offensive to ask a gay man when the last time is he screwed another guy.
But if you ask a straight man whether he’s monogamous, how non-monogamous he is (how many different partners he’s had), and whether he use condoms during intercourse, suddenly the FDA becomes a collective prude.
I try not to over-use the word “homophobia.” But the FDA’s response to this mess is deplorable, offensive, and homophobic.
What do you think of the one-year deferral policy and the FDA’s handling of the situation?
Jake Folsom