Where Do the Lies About LGBTIs in Africa Come From?

Where Do the Lies About LGBTIs in Africa Come From?
Shocking legislative developments have focused Western media attention on the gay rights situation across Africa like never before. Many of the column inches dedicated to Uganda’s Anti Homosexuality Act have demonstrated an awareness of the complexity of the social and political landscape for African LGBTIs. The colonial provenance of the penal code provisions which outlaw same-sex intercourse has been explored. The claims that “homosexuality is unAfrican” have been shown to be false, thanks to a wealth of anthropological evidence to the contrary. The incoherence of using a religion imposed on Africa by proselytising European missionaries to decry same-sex attraction as unAfrican has not gone unnoticed. In short: on the issue of LGBTI rights in Africa, analysis has (largely) been surprisingly nuanced.

What is generally lacking from Western media, however, is an understanding of some of the most pernicious lies about LGBTIs in Africa — and relatively few people have asked the question, ‘where do the lies come from?’

One such lie is the idea that declaring you’re gay, or even pro-gay, opens up the floodgates to foreign money. African LGBTIs are therefore not really gay; they’re just in it for the money. And in a country like Uganda, where the GDP per capita in 2013 stood at just $572 USD, the (fictitious) idea that decadent, wealthy Westerners are using poverty to coerce Ugandans incites a nationalistic defensiveness, galvanising public opinion against LGBTIs and their supporters. “The team of homosexuals is very rich,” Ugandan former Archbishop Henry Luke Orombi was reported to have said. “They have money and they will do whatever it takes to make sure this vice penetrates Africa…[they want to] lure people into their club.” Indeed, the idea that LGBTI is synonymous with money is so embedded that Ugandan legal scholar, Professor Sylvia Tamale, recently told an audience at the London School of Economics that after she spoke out against the treatment of LGBTIs in her country, she received a text message from a friend, congratulating her on becoming a millionaire.

The trope of the wealthy gay man using his financial clout for nefarious purposes did not originate in Africa, however. In the early 1990s, voters in the US state of Colorado narrowly approved an amendment to the state constitution prohibiting the recognition of LGBTIs as a protected class — effectively making discrimination against LGBTIs legal. Opponents of LGBTIs, such as the Colorado Coalition for Family Values, propagated the notion that “homosexuals” were not a persecuted minority, but were in fact politically powerful, incredibly wealthy and enjoyed enormous influence on American cultural life. As scholar Mariana Valverde points out, “[t]he similarity between these beliefs and…anti-Semitic propaganda about Jews…is striking.”

The migration of the trope from North America to Africa can be explained through the influence of US neoconservative organisations, such as the Institute on Religion and Democracy (IRD). According to a report by the think-tank Political Research Associates, the IRD is “one of the main organizations promoting homophobia in both Africa and the United States over the last decade.” The report claims that while mainstream Episcopal church funding in Africa is directed towards visible projects — and therefore requires accountability on how money is spent — “conservative funding pays the salaries of archbishops and their staffs,” concluding that “archbishops’ offices have become mouthpieces of U.S. conservatives.”

The threatening spectre of the ‘gay agenda’ is further sustained in the African context as it allows governing authorities to exploit frustration at socio-economic conditions by redirecting public anger at a common enemy — the mythical, wealthy, privileged, powerful ‘homosexual’. Western donors unwittingly played into this trope when they threatened to pull development aid in response to poor treatment of African LGBTIs. The former Minister of Ethics and Integrity in Uganda, James Nsaba Buturo, commented: “I have been pressured by some donors to allow homosexuality, but I have told them they can keep their money and the homosexuality because it is not about charity at the expense of our moral destruction.”

While the situation for LGBTIs across Africa is far from uniformly pessimistic, any judicial victories will be diluted by the extreme social hostility fomented by these toxic beliefs and by the American religious fundamentalists who sustain them. What is needed is a brighter spotlight shone on the role that foreigners have had in stoking anti-LGBTI hatred in Africa by co-opting postcolonial politics for their own ends. The notion that money flows from abroad to fund a ‘homosexual agenda’ needs to be countered forcefully with the indisputable truth that foreign money is flooding from the US to fund an insidious neoconservative agenda. The lies told about LGBTIs in Africa need to be exposed as such.

The most effective way to counter lies is to tell the truth again and again: African LGBTIs are not awash with money. Declaring yourself pro-gay does not incite a tidal wave of Western cash to come your way. LGBTIs are not a foreign contagion.

US neoconservatives are behind these lies. Right-wing American religious fundamentalists do not care about Africa, no matter how much they may attempt to co-opt the postcolonial political debate. Only once these truths begin to uproot the lies that are so deeply embedded will the American neoconservative grip around the necks of African LGBTIs finally begin to loosen.

— 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.



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Tom Goss talks to GSN about stunning new video for his song Breath and Sound

Tom Goss talks to GSN about stunning new video for his song Breath and Sound

Openly gay singer-songwriter Tom Goss unveiled a stunning new video this week for his song Breath and Sound.

But don’t expect to see the blond-haired, blue-eyed stunner in it.

Instead, the video features three couples – one straight, one gay, one lesbian – dancing the same beautiful and very complex dance.

‘I want people to be moved,’ Goss tells Gay Star News. ‘I want them to see their own story in the dancers. If they can see their own story in one of the couples, they can relate to the other stories as well. At the end of the day, we are all moving through the same emotions.’

With videos portraying the LGBTI experience not a priority of major labels, Goss raised $19,500 earlier this year – more than double his original goal – through a Kickstarter campaign to make videos that tell these stories.

‘We shot the video in a day at YouTube Space LA,’ Goss says. ‘It was an extremely busy day, but artistically invigorating and inspiring. We actually shot a whole setup of me, singing and playing, but ultimately cut it. I had hours and hours of footage, so much beauty to play with.’

The video was directed by Michael Serrato who brought choreographer Andrew Pirozzi to the project who would also be one of the dancers.

‘It was a pleasure to work with Andrew because he really understood the idea, and the possible impact, from the get go,’ says Goss. ‘His dance partner was easy to cast, it’s his real life wife! They have two kids together. The other two couples were cast through a dance agency. We really wanted to cast a wide variety of people. We wanted the cast to be diverse, to reflect the reality in which we live.’

‘I want people to be moved,’ he adds. ‘I want them to see their own story in the dancers. If they can see their own story in one of the couples, they can relate to the other stories as well. At the end of the day, we are all moving through the same emotions.’

Goss tours internationally and has released five albums: Naked Without,, Back to Love, Turn It Around, Lost Songs and Underdogs and last year’s Wait.

Many of his songs and music videos speak to LGBTI issues and culture such as marriage equality, Don’t Ask Don’t Tell.

The post Tom Goss talks to GSN about stunning new video for his song Breath and Sound appeared first on Gay Star News.

Greg Hernandez

www.gaystarnews.com/article/tom-goss-talks-to-gsn-about-stunning-new-video-for-his-song-breath-and-sound/

HRC Joins HuffPost Live to Discuss White House’s First Openly Transgender Appointee

HRC Joins HuffPost Live to Discuss White House’s First Openly Transgender Appointee

Earlier today, HRC Senior Legislative Counsel Alison Gill spoke on HuffPost Live about Raffi Freedman-Gurspan, the White House’s first openly transgender official.
HRC.org

www.hrc.org/blog/entry/hrc-joins-huffpost-live-to-discuss-white-houses-first-openly-transgender-ap?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

They’re Back! Warwick Rowers Return To Make 2016 A Very Naked Year

They’re Back! Warwick Rowers Return To Make 2016 A Very Naked Year

The Warwick Rowers have returned to give us a summer sweat and make us look forward to all that 2016 has to offer.

Related: Warwick Rowers Finally Go Full Frontal

The famously nude Brits released some advance shots and a promo video for their upcoming calendar tease, and its filled with more hot pale cakes than we know what to do with.

Related: These Soaked Studs Make Bath Time So Much Fun

Grab a paddle and start rowing:

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Watch the video below (NSFW):

Warwick Rowers 2016 Crowdfunder from Low Fat Media on Vimeo.

Dan Tracer

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Ugandan Lawmaker Wants to Ban Adoption for Countries with Gay Marriage 

Ugandan Lawmaker Wants to Ban Adoption for Countries with Gay Marriage 

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Ugandan Minister for State for East African Affairs Shem Bageine has boldly announced a homophobic plan to ban foreign countries with same-sex marriage from adopting Ugandan children.

Bageine’s proposed plan would prevent countries with same-sex marriage from adopting children from the East African Community that includes the Republics of Burundi, Kenya, Rwanda, Uganda and the United Republic of Tanzania.

Even though anti-gay leaders like Bageine are lashing out toward other countries with LGBT rights on fears of their global influence, LGBT Ugandans are fighting back as the country recently celebrated pride in the capital of Kampala.

[h/t PinkNews]

The post Ugandan Lawmaker Wants to Ban Adoption for Countries with Gay Marriage  appeared first on Towleroad.


Anthony Costello

Ugandan Lawmaker Wants to Ban Adoption for Countries with Gay Marriage 

The Naked Truth: How Stripping Down Built My Self-Confidence

The Naked Truth: How Stripping Down Built My Self-Confidence
In my first foray into the world of Folsom Street East (the largest fetish block party on the East Coast) I didn’t know what to expect. A friend of mine had asked me to go with him. Upon our arrival, one of the first tents we encountered was of the Visual AIDS — an organization that utilizes art to provoke dialogue and supports HIV+ artists. A (very) handsome semi-naked man greeted us cheerfully and invited us to support the cause; “Do you want to take a polaroid for Benjamin’s project?” I was in for the thrill of the ride and had promised myself I would let whatever happened, happen. We signed a waiver (which we didn’t read) and as we headed down the cue my friend started stripping down. Was there a memo I never got? We were in the middle of the street in broad daylight.

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Being naked in public was basically my worst fear, coming to life. “well, if you can go surfing, you can get naked in front of hundreds of people, it’ll be a nice test!” — I figured. I took my clothes off, leaving on only the skimpy jockstraps I was wearing. Onlookers immediately complimented me for keeping it classic and not branching out with one of those more recent colorful designs. “wow, the real sports jock, that’s hot!” Parents and their young children walked by as I laid my clothes down on the foldable table; it was all vonnegutesque.

I had never experienced such freedom. I had never felt so proud about myself, my sexuality and my body, no matter how imperfect it is. Believe me, I was still petrified but somehow, it clicked. I was finally able to accept my body image for what it is. I felt I could stop comparing myself to all the hot bodies I see in the gym, or the porn stars in the movies that everyone watches, but no one cares to admit. I felt like one of them, not apart from them. There was nothing so terrible about my figure. No, I don’t have a six pack, yes there are muffin tops (perhaps from eating too many muffins) and my hair doesn’t always have the perfect wave, but that’s all me.

On my walk home I wondered: do these so to speak “hot bodies” feel 100% confident about themselves? Or do they too sometimes look at people like me and find something they would like to have? Do they also compare and despair?

After turning down a couple of post-Folsom festivities (the polaroid shot was enough of a thrill) I could not stop thinking of how fun it was to let go of all my fears for that moment, to be (semi) naked in front of other people. I thought about Nodeth Vang, a photographer who had once asked if I would pose for him. “I love your hair and how you look in your apartment” he said. I sent him a message; he was thrilled to hear from me. We set a date for our photoshoot. This was an opportunity to see myself as others see me. I wanted to discover how I looked on camera. No, I wanted to find out how I looked naked, on camera. I needed to know whether all my self-criticism was a reality or a fantasy.

I will tell you that the photoshoot was one of the most exciting and sensual experiences I had ever been in. I was in love with myself and my body for the first time in my life. I was completely comfortable naked in whatever scenario imaginable.

A few weeks passed and I received an email from the artist from Folsom, Benjamin Fredrickson. I recalled he was a very sweet guy, talented too; “a real artist” I thought. His work had been shown in museums and art galleries, there was nothing gauche about it. Benjamin sent the polaroid from the fair to my friend and I. We were both happy with the result. The picture was adorable, not at all sleazy (as it could have been) and it absolutely captured our friendship and our relationship: two grown men who deeply cared (and perhaps had the hots) for each other. In the email, he ended with “if you would like to pose for another portrait, don’t hesitate to contact”. So I did.

Benjamin and I met for coffee one afternoon after work, we talked for over an hour and shared so many interests. He was definitely not a pervert, I felt safe. We set a date and time for our shoot, shook hands and went our separate ways. I couldn’t wait to contribute with him as an artist. I wanted to understand what different interpretations might arise from different shoots and artistic visions. Moreover, I wanted to feel that same thrill I’d felt before.

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What happened for me that day was cathartic, I learned to let go of all the shame I had been carrying since my years as a fat kid, and just have fun. Benjamin put me in the most unexpected positions; I simply followed his lead. He told me to bend over, push my ass up, bend my legs over my head, stand up, sit down… I did it all! I felt complete serenity and connected with what those models must have felt when posing for Picasso. There is a connection that occurs, a fire that sparks in the eye of the artist and the way he thinks and interprets your beauty is so personal and unique to him. That is what I wanted to see in the film. At that moment I had no judgement; at that moment I was certain I would never feel ashamed of what I was doing. Whether those images ended in a magazine or an art show, it all made sense to me. At that moment I finally understood the difference between nudity for art and pornography. I know, this could unleash a long drawn-out conversation, but in my head it became simple and neither are bad or wrong — they simply are.

The last five years of my life have been all about self-acceptance and discovery, I’ve done things I never believed were possible. I learned surfing, I jumped from the top of a waterfall, I wrote a screenplay and I fell in love. Twice. Loving myself and my body, as it is, was probably my last threshold. I am happy to say I crossed it and will hopefully never go back again. First, I had to come out of the closet, then, I had to be accepted by my gay peers and live up to unrealistic beauty standards. Most of those standards however, lived in my head. Today all I want is to be real and happy. We are all different from each other, there is definitely room for everyone.

Follow Gabriel on Twitter and Instagram or visit his website.

— 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.



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Anti-gay marriage advocate Josh Duggar admits allegations about him cheating on his wife are true

Anti-gay marriage advocate Josh Duggar admits allegations about him cheating on his wife are true

Josh Duggar was speaking out against the right for same-sex couples to get married while he was cheating on his own wife.

The former executive director of the lobbying arm of the anti-gay Family Research Council issued a statement Thursday (21 August) admitting infidelity. This comes amid reports that he had an account with the website Ashley Madison which specializes in facilitating extramarital affairs.

‘I have been the biggest hypocrite ever,’ Duggar stated. ‘While espousing faith and family values, I have secretly over the last several years been viewing pornography on the internet and this became a secret addiction and I became unfaithful to my wife.

‘I am so ashamed of the double life that I have been living and am grieved for the hurt, pain and disgrace my sin has caused my wife and family, and most of all Jesus and all those who profess faith in Him.’

Duggar is one of the members of the evangelical Christian family that stars in the now-cancelled TLC reality series 19 Kids and Counting. He is one of the 19 children of Jim Bob and Michelle Duggar and a married father of three.

It’s the second scandal Duggar has been involved with this year.

In May, he admitted to sexually abusing five young girls, including some of his sisters, when he was a teenager.

This resulted in his family’s TV show being cancelled and to Duggar resigning from the Family Research Council which advocates and lobbies for socially conservative policies and opposes and lobbies against LGBTI rights such as same-sex marriage and adoption.

Duggar had one of the most visible positions and in May had posted photos on social media of himself with Republican presidential hopefuls Mike Huckabee and Scott Walker. In 2010, the Southern Poverty Law Center classified the FRC as an anti-gay hate group.

‘The last few years, while publicly stating I was fighting against immorality in our country, I was hiding my own personal failings,’ he stated. ‘As I am learning the hard way, we have the freedom to choose to our actions, but we do not get to choose our consequences. I deeply regret all hurt I have caused so many by being such a bad example.’

The post Anti-gay marriage advocate Josh Duggar admits allegations about him cheating on his wife are true appeared first on Gay Star News.

Greg Hernandez

www.gaystarnews.com/article/anti-gay-marriage-advocate-josh-duggar-admits-allegations-about-him-cheating-on-his-wife-are-true/

See Inside ‘Dismaland,’ Banksy’s Unhappiest Place On Earth

See Inside ‘Dismaland,’ Banksy’s Unhappiest Place On Earth

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Certain gays have rather strong ties to all things Disney — we’ve certainly seen more than a few Disney-inspired gay creations on Queerty:

All Your Childhood Disney Classics Have Been Outed On Grindr

PHOTOS: Half-Naked Men Crash Your Favorite Disney Movies

Artist Paints A Whole New World Where Every Disney Character Is Queer, And It’s Awesome

So for all you Maleficent loving, Ursula obsessed queens out there, how do you feel about Banksy’s new installation?

Dismaland may have a few familiar characters, but Banksy’s trademark dark humor and unapologetic focus on the uglier side of global commerce definitely give the place an uncomfortable if not fascinating vibe.

The park opens to the public Saturday and sits on the 2.5 acre site of the U.K.’s Tropicana lido, and is described as “a festival of art, amusements, and entry level anarchism.”

Check it out below:

Banksy’s Dismaland features migrant boats, dead princesses and the artist’s trademark dark humour.Krishnan Guru Murthy went to see the family theme park described as “unsuitable for young children.” www.channel4.com/news/dismaland-banksy-bemusement-park-shocking-funny-extraordinary

Posted by Channel 4 News on Thursday, August 20, 2015

Dan Tracer

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