The Best Responses To Gov. Bobby Jindal’s Antigay Executive Order (So Far)

The Best Responses To Gov. Bobby Jindal’s Antigay Executive Order (So Far)

Screen shot 2015-05-21 at 12.02.13 PMGov. Bobby Jindal has once again done the impossible. The deeply unpopular Louisiana governor has somehow managed to become even more unpopular by issuing an Executive Order this week legalizing discrimination against LGBT people.

It may be partly coincidence (he’s pretty much bad at every aspect of his job), but his negative job rating among voters went from the toilet into the sewer, reaching an all-time low of 64.7 percent.

Here’s what happened:

Earlier this week, lawmakers in the Bayou State voted against a religious freedom bill that would allow business owners to discriminate against gay people. Evidently, they saw what happened in to legislators in Indiana earlier this year and wanted to save themselves the embarrassment of national ridicule. The bill was killed in a 10-2 vote in the House Civil Law and Procedure Committee.

Related: Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal Calls Antigay Religious Freedom Laws “Common Sense”

That should have been the end of things. But Gov. Jindal, who just launched an exploratory committee for a possible 2016 run for president, had different ideas.

Two hours after his own party killed the bill, Jindal’s office declared the good gov would be issuing an Executive Order “that will accomplish the intent of HB 707 to prevent the state from discriminating against persons or entities with deeply held religious beliefs that marriage is between one man and one woman.”

Related: Gov. Bobby Jindal: GOP Can Win With Anti-Gay Agenda

Louisianians, the majority of whom were against the bill to begin with, have taken to their yards to protest. Signs like this one have begun popping up on front lawns all across the state:

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They’re also taking to the Internet to voice their disapproval. Dirty Coast magazine has begun marketing these t-shirts of the governor:

Screen shot 2015-05-21 at 11.52.13 AM

But it was Senator Karen Peterson’s scathing criticism of Gov. Jinal to her fellow colleagues that takes the top prize. Seriously, if you need a lesson in ripping a person a new asshole, this is it.

Good luck with that presidential run, Bobby. You’re definitely going to need it.

Graham Gremore

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/kxZ9uai1Akk/the-best-responses-to-gov-bobby-jindals-antigay-executive-order-so-far-20150521

The OXD Mirror: Welcome Summer with Tropical House Tunes and the Return of The Magician

The OXD Mirror: Welcome Summer with Tropical House Tunes and the Return of The Magician

MagicianWeb

BY OCCUPY THE DISCO / RU BHATT 

Belgian producer & DJ Stephen Fasano, a.k.a. The Magician, is an artist we’ve enjoyed since the inception of Occupy The Disco. He originally caught our ear with his brilliant remixes and his long standing series of mixtapes, called Magic Tapes, but it’s on his original tracks where he truly gets a chance to shine.

Following the success of last year’s ‘Sunlight‘ (more on that track below), he releases his first original track in 6 months, ‘Together’. The catchy lyrics, bubbling melody and thumping basslines make the whimsical tune a surefire way to to bring joy to any dance floor.

Check out more summery tracks, AFTER THE JUMP

   

  • Monarchy producer Andrew Armstrong’s Horixon project (with John Sambrooke) has returned and enlists vocalist Maya on their latest, single, ‘Hold It Like I Own It.’ Tim Sullivan gives the seductive track a cosmic-disco makeover under his This Soft Machine moniker.  
  • Bicep goes balearic with their latest tune, ‘Celeste’. It’s a reconstructed version of Thievery Corporation‘s ‘Satyam Shivam Sundaram,’ from the south-Asian inspired 2005 album The Cosmic Game.  The percussive rhythms and gentle pianos are complemented by ethereal, soulful vocals reminiscent of an ashram. 
  • We first encountered NYC’s Sean Glass through his involvement in bringing major early OXD favorites such as Moon Boots, Duke Dumont and Plastic Plates to New York. Glass turns up the atmosphere on Flight Facilities ‘Down to Earth’ creating an epic track that is available for a free download. The track is dedicated to his friend Dan Fredinburg, who fell victim to the Nepal Earthquake. 
  • UK’s Shura brings an early Janet Jackson-like quality to her breathy ode to hidden desire, ‘2shy’.
  • Finally, we return to the ashram with a throwback to last year’s Magician track, ‘Sunlight’, which is given a ‘Shanti/Ashtangi‘ treatment thanks to NYC’s Scott Martin. It’s a beautiful take on the dance anthem, perfect for your sun salutations. 

 OCCUPY THE DISCO (OXD) curates and recommends music events to the gay community in NYC—in an effort to move the focus of the nightlife scene beyond the promoter and venue and to the music itself. OXD’s goal is to educate, entertain, engage and empower the gay audience to reclaim their ability to question and experience the unknown. The OXD Mirror will serve to showcase tunes that are definitely off-the-beaten-path but rightfully deserve the attention of the gay ear. 

This week’s post was written and curated by Ru Bhatt. Check out more of his music picks on his podcast, The Ru-Mix and on Made In Brazil. 

Be sure to check out these tracks and more on Soundcloud. For more information on OXD, check out our website and accompanying blog at www.occupythedisco.com, like us on Facebook, or follow us on Twitter: @OccupyTheDisco.


Occupy the Disco

www.towleroad.com/2015/05/welcomesummer.html

Messages From the Playground: Healing Homophobia Before it Begins and Preventing Bullying Before it Starts

Messages From the Playground: Healing Homophobia Before it Begins and Preventing Bullying Before it Starts
2015-05-19-1432070214-234044-749492_43001879.jpgImage source: freeimages
“Uncle Chris, is she your girlfriend?” Suddenly I felt like I did before I was out of the closet. How is it that I, who have been out of the closet for 10 years, who’s life is dedicated to LGBT advocacy work, have a six year old nephew who doesn’t know his uncle is gay?

Kids really do say the darndest things because what occurred to me with that question was what wasn’t being communicated. If my sister’s son was in the dark, what about the other kids I know?

I began asking around and the parents I spoke with didn’t feel like their child was old enough to understand. The theme was one of discomfort around addressing the conversation.

This interested me because I remember knowing that I was gay even as a young child. In fact, I was the same age as my nephew. Studies show that by age 2-3, children start to develop a sense of being male or female, otherwise known as gender identity. By age 3-5, most kids have a strong sense of being a boy or a girl. As one report I read says, “This is the age (3-5) that children will learn important sexual attitudes from their parents.” Around ages 6-10, kids are interested in things like, pregnancy and gender roles and ask questions like, “where do babies come from?” or “is she your girlfriend?” This is also the age where their outside world begins to influence sexual attitudes, what I call “messages from the playground.”

Messages from the playground are the subconscious beliefs we all pick up from our childhood. We all have them. They formulate our belief system and it’s our belief systems that control the way we operate our lives.

I wondered how many parents I know have considered the possibility that their child is gay. I’m not saying they’re homophobic, I’m addressing the fact we live in a heteronormative society. You are assumed straight upon birth, which creates the closet experience.

The dictionary’s definition of the term benign neglect is “an attitude or policy of ignoring an often delicate or undesirable situation that one is held to be responsible for dealing with.” Benign neglect was a policy proposed in 1969 by Daniel Patrick Moynihan, President Nixon’s Urban Affairs Advisor. During which, Moynihan sent the President a controversial memo, stating, “The time may have come when the issue of race could benefit from a period of ‘benign neglect.'”

I went to a lecture once where it was suggested that benign neglect and racism in the US is directly correlated to events like the death of Trayvon Martin and Michael Brown in Ferguson, MO. Just because something is benign doesn’t mean it’s not harmful. Not communicating something communicates something.

My sister not having a conversation with her kids about her gay brother communicates something. It communicates being uncomfortable with the conversation, which implies that it’s different, further perpetuating guilt, shame, and the closet experience. As a gay child, this is what I picked up from my surroundings, what wasn’t being communicated, the benign neglect, which formulated my messages from the playground – the subconscious beliefs I had about what it meant to be gay; the internalized homophobia I developed in my childhood.

Internalized homophobia is something that all gay people have to some degree and it’s important to acknowledge because it sheds light on something that has to do with shame. If any of us, gay or straight, has guilt or shame, we will subconsciously seek punishment. That could look like many things, but includes, unhappiness, unhealthy relationships, and self-deprecating behavior.

Dr. Brene Brown, a shame and vulnerability research professor, shows that kids start shutting parts of themselves down around middle school. She refers to 4th and 5th grade as the “creativity slump” because kids begin to compare themselves to each other. Her studies show that shame-prone children are more likely to commit suicide, drop out of school, engage in high risk sexual behavior, and experience increased drug use.

Shame is something all humans experience to some degree. For the gay community, the closet is the place most of us spend our developmental years in and is a hotbed for shame. Research shows that shame and addiction are so closely related they don’t know where one starts and the other begins. Shame is also highly correlated with suicide. The Trevor Project, a suicide prevention and crisis intervention organization, shows that suicide is the second leading cause of death for people 10-24. Lesbian, gay, and bisexual youth are four times more likely to attempt suicide than their straight peers. And nearly half of young transgender people have seriously thought about taking their lives.

By talking about shame, we are exposing it and nipping it in the bud. Having uncomfortable conversations with children at a young age doesn’t put them at risk, instead, it does the opposite. It keeps them from risk.

My sister may or may not have a gay child. My cousins or friends may or may not have gay children. But they might. At the very least, their child will jump rope or play tag with one on the playground. Studies show that anywhere from 2-10% of Americans identify as gay, lesbian, or bisexual. This doesn’t include people who aren’t out of the closet or don’t identify as being gay.

And if the thought has ever crossed your mind of whether or not your child is gay, don’t not talk about it. Not communicating something communicates something. The argument is no longer around whether or not homosexuality is a choice, the argument is around the choice whether or not to unconditionally support the child you love. As a parent, you have the potential to change the trajectory of your child’s life by being patient, supportive, and vulnerable. There are many resources, professional groups and individuals out there. Ask for guidance, follow your heart, and continue being the parent you’re capable of being.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

www.huffingtonpost.com/chris-tompkins/messages-from-the-playgro_b_7337462.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

The “Heterophobic” Cabbie Will Drive You Anywhere… So Long As You’re Not Straight

The “Heterophobic” Cabbie Will Drive You Anywhere… So Long As You’re Not Straight

Need a lift? The heterophobic cabbie is happy to drive you to your destination. Assuming you’re not “a breeder,” that is. (His bumper sticker’s words, not ours!)

In a new video released by the taxi app Hailo, hidden cameras capture passengers’ reactions as they listen to their Irish cab driver make derogatory comments about heterosexuals.

“We don’t usually take heteros in the car, you know?” the driver tells one passenger. “Nothing against them. Don’t get me wrong. I’m not a heterophobe.”

“We have an uncle that’s straight,” he continues. “We don’t talk to him that much…It was Cain and Abel, you know? It wasn’t Jane and Abel.”

The whole thing is a prank, of course. It’s designed to combat homophobia and promote the same-sex marriage referendum in Ireland, which voters will decide upon this Friday.

Check out the amusing video below.

Graham Gremore

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/YEBsVzxO1Z4/the-heterophobic-cabbie-will-drive-you-anywhere-so-long-as-youre-not-straight-20150521

Gay Pride Flags Out In Force During Russia's Eurovision Performance 'A Million Voices' – VIDEO

Gay Pride Flags Out In Force During Russia's Eurovision Performance 'A Million Voices' – VIDEO

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The Pride flags were out in force on Tuesday night during Russia’s performance at the Eurovision semi-final.

At last year’s Eurovision final, Russian act the Tolmachevy Sisters received a less than enthusiastic reception. This year however, the audience appeared to be generally enthusiastic during Polina Gagarina’s performance of “A Million Voices”.

MoldovaRob Watts, who was at the semi-final co-hosted by Conchita Wurst in Vienna, told BuzzFeed that he noticed many more pride flags in the audience during Russia’s song than in any other performance. “We were all told to be nice to all the countries ‘no matter who is in charge.’ We were asked not to boo anyone.”

His friend Laura Cress said “there seemed to be much less resistance [and] apart from the extra flags everyone around us actually really liked the Russian entry.”

Gagarina is likely a shoe-in to win but with Australia performing and voting for the first time anything could happen especially as Moldova’s ridiculous but brilliant entry “I Want Your Love” (right) and the Netherlands’ old-school entry didn’t even qualify for the finals.

Watch “A Million Voices”, “I Want Your Love” and the Netherlands’ entry, AFTER THE JUMP

The second semi-final takes place tonight followed by the grand final on Saturday.


Jim Redmond

www.towleroad.com/2015/05/pride-flags-out-in-force-for-russia-at-eurovision-but-song-actually-not-too-bad-video.html

Why We Love 7-Year-Old Transgender Activist, Avery Jackson, And Her Incredible Family

Why We Love 7-Year-Old Transgender Activist, Avery Jackson, And Her Incredible Family
By Alex Temblador | The Next Family

Avery Jackson is a 7-year-old transgender girl and she is blowing the Internet away with her amazing story of transition. The Next Family is so impressed with Avery Jackson’s spunk and courage and all that her parents have done in support of Avery’s transition that we just have to share with you 10 reasons why we love Avery and the Jackson Family.

Avery was brave and shared her story on YouTube.
With her first “Avery Chat” video, Avery Jackson shared the story of her transition. In the video, she explains how she knew that she was a girl, the fear she had about telling her parents about her transgender identity, and then how she eventually shared her identity with her parents. In a four-minute video, Avery shares a personal story that echoes the pride she has in who she is. Viewers will be swept away by the bravery and wisdom that this little girl displays.

Avery’s parents supported their daughter through her transition.
Despite the fact that Debi Jackson, Avery’s mother, had never heard of the term “transgender” before a Google search, she and her husband, Tom, have supported their daughter throughout her transition. They took Avery to a child psychologist when Avery announced her gender identity and then took the psychologist’s advice: Let her be a girl.

Their love and support has been unwavering toward their daughter and because of it they’ve lost friends and family members, but have made lasting friendships with people across six continents and have done so much for other trans children by just supporting and loving their own.

Debi Jackson gave an amazing speech on Avery’s transition that went viral. She counteracts the ignorant and hateful comments about transgender persons with humor and Bible verses.
Debi Jackson spoke on the “Listen to Your Mother Show” about Avery’s transition, a speech that got a lot of attention on YouTube. Her speech is honest and at times, humorous. More importantly, it shows the diversity of transgender families and the amazing love and support that any mother (and father) should show their children regardless of gender identity.

“People look at the outward appearance but the Lord looks at the heart. My daughter is a girl in her heart. She knows it, God knows it, and that’s good enough for me.” — Debi Jackson

Tom Jackson wrote an awesome essay that is posted on The New York Times website which shows his devout love and responsibility as a father to his child.
“I love my daughter for who she is without preconditions, and I promise to help nurture her into becoming a happy, healthy and productive member of society. After all, isn’t that our jobs as parents?” — Tom Jackson

Bravo, Tom.

Avery proves that trans children are no different than other children who love to be active.
“I did trampoline, gymnastics, dance, 4-H, Tae Kwon Do, Girl Scouts and more.”

Nothing holds Avery back from being the normal little girl that she is.

For a 7-year-old, Avery shares some wise words. Just look:
“So I may have some boy body parts, but that’s not wrong. That is okay.”

We think so too.

“I decided to quit preschool because it was better to be myself and lose all my friends than keep pretending.”

Wow! What wisdom!

“But who cares about my body parts? I don’t ask about what’s in your underwear!”

So true, Avery!

“Being transgender is a hard thing but you can be who you want to be.”
Sometimes it’s that simple.

Avery made new friends despite losing her friends in preschool.
“When I started to dress like a girl in preschool my friend were cool with it, but their parents weren’t. And they thought it was contagious like transgender pox or something.”

Just goes to show you that children accept people for who they are, not for how they look or dress.

Despite those parents, it didn’t hold Avery back from making new friends.

“My new friends know me for the girl I am in my heart and brain.”

Avery’s comfortable in her own body and rocks that pink hair.
There’s nothing better than a young girl with fierce confidence. Pink hair, don’t care!

The Jackson parents are a great example for parents of trans children all over the world.
There is so much media attention on the LGB part of LGBTQ, and unfortunately many people are still not aware of what it means to be transgender. Even more unfortunate is that not every parent reacts the way Debi and Tom Jackson did when Avery told them she was a girl. The transgender community needs people like Debi and Tom, positive examples of parents who accept and love their transgender child. With Debi as an active LGBTQ advocate, Avery’s excitement to share her journey, and Tom’s commitment to his child, they are doing so much for the transgender community and for other parents who may need some insight or advice when it comes to their transgender children.

Avery is looking to make a big change in the world.
She may be 7 years old, but I imagine we will be seeing a lot more of Avery, blazing through the world and making some big changes for the transgender community and in society.

“There’s still some people that still don’t understand and are scared because I’m a little bit different but we want to fix that!”-–Avery Jackson

More on The Next Family:

Gay Dads: A Unique Way To Fund Adoption

An Interview with Gay Dads from Canada

A Gay Dad Draws Protest from the Penguin Play with Gay Theme

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/05/21/avery-jackson-transgender-youth_n_7337948.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

Scottsdale Community Continues the Conversation for Non-Discrimination Protections

Scottsdale Community Continues the Conversation for Non-Discrimination Protections

On Tuesday, more than 80 people came together at North Scottsdale United Methodist Church for a community forum on LGBT issues and non-discrimination protections.
HRC.org

www.hrc.org/blog/entry/scottsdale-community-continues-the-conversation-for-non-discrimination-prot?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

'Harry Potter' Star Matthew Lewis Looks Magically Delicious on the Cover of UK's 'Attitude' – PHOTOS

'Harry Potter' Star Matthew Lewis Looks Magically Delicious on the Cover of UK's 'Attitude' – PHOTOS

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Matthew Lewis, who played bumbling Neville Longbottom in the eight Harry Potter films, has grown up quite nicely as evidenced by the new cover of UK’s Attitude magazine. 

In the interview, the 25-year-old British actor discussed his physical transformation for his new film Me Before You co-starring Game of Thrones‘ Emilia Clarke:

My character, Patrick, is a triathlete and personal trainer, so he’s totally focused on the race that he’s going to be running. I spoke to the director and I said it’d be nice to get into the mindset of someone like that, because he’s not drinking alcohol, he’s just eating salads all the time, and I was very interested to know where you go to in your mind to have that level of commitment. So I sort of gave up alcohol – I say sort of, I have given up alcohol [laughs].

And on waxing his body for the role:

Apparently triathletes shave their legs for added aerodynamics, to buy you that extra couple of milliseconds. And my character, that is what he would do, so I think I’ll be losing the leg hair! I haven’t waxed before. I was quite keen just to shave every day but it was Emilia’s idea. She was like ‘no just wax it! Then you’ll only have to do it once!’ I was like ‘argh!’ I haven’t done it yet but we’ll see! 

Pietro2The latest issue also included a secondary cover featuring Pietro Boselli, the mathematics teacher at University College London who blew up the internet in March after it was discovered he doubled as an insanely attractive male model.

Check out the other cover, as well as another shot of Lewis (in even less clothes) AFTER THE JUMP

Pietro

Lewis2

 

Longbottom
you’re welcome


Kyler Geoffroy

www.towleroad.com/2015/05/harry-potter-star-matthew-lewis-looks-magically-delicious-on-the-cover-of-uks-attitude-photos.html