Hillary Clinton’s New Ad Hilariously Skewers The Ridiculous Republican Debate

Hillary Clinton’s New Ad Hilariously Skewers The Ridiculous Republican Debate

Hillary_Clinton-Pantsuit-RainbowHillary Clinton‘s latest ad hones in on last Wednesday night’s CNN Republican presidential primary debate, focusing on a laundry list of issues close to Democrats’ hearts that nonetheless failed to be broached at any point during the not-so-animate arguments: paid family leave, affordable child care and college education, equal pay for women, and protecting voting rights.

Related: Hillary Clinton May Be Trying To Outdo Obama For Gay-Friendliness

However, the ad does emphasizes how eager each presidential candidate is to defund Planned Parenthood, repeal ObamaCare, and vilify, yes, Hillary Clinton.

Check it out below.

Jeremy Kinser

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Kayaker Speaks Out About Surviving Humpback Whale Breach: ‘I Was Going to Die’ 

Kayaker Speaks Out About Surviving Humpback Whale Breach: ‘I Was Going to Die’ 

humpback whale

Last week, we showed you footage of an incredibly close call captured from a whale-watching boat in Moss Landing, California. Kayakers Tom Mustill and Charlotte Kinloch were lucky to escape with their lives after a humpback whale breached over their tiny boat.

In an article for The Guardian, Mustill recounts what was going through his head at the time:

All of a sudden without warning, the water nearby to our right gave way to an adult whale shooting upwards, like a space shuttle taking off: a huge block of living thing impossibly held in the air. The only thing my brain registered was quite calmly that when it came down I was going to die. Then it fell, and I was underwater. I felt a yawing next to me and I was tossed around. I think this was the body or tail of the whale and I get a funny feeling in my guts when I think back on this.

I came to the surface. I saw Charlotte to my left and our kayak had a dent in the front. I was waiting for the pain to start, but it didn’t. Other kayakers came to our aid, someone fished Charlotte’s flip-flops from the water. Our friend who was in another kayak was very shaken. She had seen the whale land where we were, and then it was gone, and we – and our kayak – were gone too.

We laughed, partly to be alive, and partly because we didn’t know what else to do. The half-hour paddle to shore seemed so long; at the dock we started to shake. Our instructor gave us hot chocolate and a free hat, and told us this had never happened in 30 years. We agreed that no one would ever believe us – and they didn’t really until a video popped up online two days later.

Mustill says that after speaking to a whale specialist about the incident, he believes the gentle giant adjusted his landing after breaching to avoid directly crashing on top of the two kayakers. He adds that the encounter has left him more introspective:

When I lie in bed looking up at the whale in my mind, I think how lucky we are not to have continued to get rid of them as we have done until recently. It is strange that we search so avidly for aliens outside of this planet and are obsessed with creating artificial minds, while knowing so little about the workings of these enormous thinking animals in the sea.

Check out Mustill’s full account of his brush with death here.

The post Kayaker Speaks Out About Surviving Humpback Whale Breach: ‘I Was Going to Die’  appeared first on Towleroad.


Kyler Geoffroy

Kayaker Speaks Out About Surviving Humpback Whale Breach: ‘I Was Going to Die’ 

British Officer Will Be Jailed for Selling George Michael Gossip

British Officer Will Be Jailed for Selling George Michael Gossip

George Michael’s brushes with the law are notorious, but his most recent stint behind bars will end with a prison official going to jail. Amanda Watts, 43, will be sentenced next month after being found guilty of selling information about the gay singer to British tabloid, The Sun.

Michael was sentenced to eight weeks in Highpoint Prison and served half of the time before being released. While high on marijuana, Michael crashed his car into a photography store in early July. He has repeatedly been in trouble with the law for driving while intoxicated.

Watts admitted selling stories about Michael’s stint in jail to the tabloid for £2,100, or $3,200 in U.S. currency. She was granted bail until her sentencing hearing, but was warned that she will serve time, according to The Guardian.

“You should understand the fact I’m bailing you until then is to enable you to make appropriate arrangements,” the judge told Watts as she wept. “A prison sentence is inevitable. I’m sure you understand.”

Bil Browning

www.advocate.com/crime/2015/9/21/british-officer-will-be-jailed-selling-george-michael-gossip

New Infographic for Bisexual Awareness Week Highlights Stigma and Disparities Facing Bisexual People

New Infographic for Bisexual Awareness Week Highlights Stigma and Disparities Facing Bisexual People
Many are unaware that bisexual people comprise more than half of the LGBT population in the United States. Yet bisexual people are among the most invisible, and face stigma, legal inequality, and a lack of bisexual-specific data that all contribute to poor outcomes for bisexual people across the country.

Today, the Movement Advancement Project released a new infographic illustrating the inequalities and disparities facing bisexual people. As someone who is out and proudly bisexual, I’ve heard the stereotypes and myths about bisexuals. For example, when people come out as bisexual, it is often assumed that they are “confused” about or hiding their “real” sexual orientation. These stereotypes and myths can lead to discrimination, invisibility, or a lack of acknowledgement that bisexual people exist. People may assume a bisexual person is heterosexual or gay based on the gender of their current partner, or may intentionally refer to the “gay” community in order to exclude bisexual people.

Percentage of Bisexuals by Movement Advancement Project

In addition to stereotypes and myths, and perhaps because of them, bisexual people suffer from high levels of violence, economic insecurity, poor health, and employment discrimination. For example, 61 percent of bisexual women say they have experienced rape, physical violence, and/or stalking by an intimate partner, compared to 43 percent of lesbians and 35 percent of straight women. As we shared in our report Understanding Issues Facing Bisexual Americans, nearly half of bisexual men (47%) report experiencing sexual violence other than rape in their lifetime. These numbers are too high.

Prevalence of Violence by Movement Advancement Project

This Bisexual Awareness Week, the second annual week-long celebration centered on September 23, Celebrate Bisexuality Day, is a time for education and awareness. In a recent poll by You.gov, one-third of young Americans said they identified themselves as something other than “exclusively heterosexual.” At the same time, bisexual people are half as likely to be out in the workplace as gay men and lesbians. And only about one-third as likely to be out to their close friends and family.

Measure of Outness by Movement Advancement Project

As part of a group of bisexual advocates and policy experts from across the country who have been working to outline concrete policy changes — from suicide prevention and mental health services for bisexual youth to recommendations on data collection to protections for bisexual asylum seekers — I was struck by the volume of data finding just how many bisexual people face discrimination, poor mental and physical health, and violence, often at much higher rates than our gay or heterosexual counterparts. It is critical that we establish robust services and programs to finally address the deep disparities that bisexual people face in many areas of life.

Please help us celebrate Bisexual Awareness Week by sharing this infographic with your social media circles and finding MAP on Facebook, Twitter, tumblr, and Instagram.

— 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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Mark McBride-Wright: ‘Bringing your whole self to work gives you the capacity for creativity’

Mark McBride-Wright: ‘Bringing your whole self to work gives you the capacity for creativity’

I have had a very positive experience in the past ten years that I have been involved in engineering.

Whilst studying at university, I did not have any problems. Indeed, I was lucky that during my first term in halls, I vividly remember turning on TV and seeing Cherie Blair celebrating the passage of the UK’s Civil Partnership Act 2005.

Living and working in a country where I am legally backed and protected by law, and my relationship is recognized by law gave me even more confidence to be openly out.

Engineering does suffer from the stereotype of the predominantly male workforce which it contains, and with this it can mean it is difficult to be open in the workplace.

Other sectors such as banking and law have established LGBT diversity networks. When I was studying Chemical Engineering at Imperial College in London, there was a lot of LGBT specific networking and support available from businesses in these sectors for internship and job applicants.

Where were the LGBT engineering groups? They did not exist. And, to my mind, they still do not adequately exist.

The Royal Academy of Engineering held a landmark event entitled ‘Data Driven Diversity: The Facts About LGBT in Engineering’ in May 2014. This event was pivotal to me, because it was the first time I had seen ‘LGBT’ and ‘Engineering’ in the same sentence. Lord John Browne, the gay former BP CEO, released his book The Glass Closet which I consider a must-read for any LGBT employee within engineering.

After finishing my PhD at Imperial, I started my professional career as a Process Safety Engineer which focuses on preventing major accident hazards (fires, explosions, accidental chemical releases, etc.) on oil and gas production installations, both onshore and offshore.

I have worked in consultancies as well as the engineering contracting sector. I have never had any direct problems working as a gay engineer. People judge you based on the quality of the work you deliver. However, you are constantly coming out at work whenever you meet new colleagues, engage in polite conversation with new clients, or attend a networking function at your professional institute.

Whenever the conversation moves on to your personal life, there is the ‘pronoun game’. Do you say ‘she’ if you are a gay male? Do you say ‘husband’ if you are married, or keep the term ‘partner’?

This is a mind-juggle a lot of gay individuals will identify with. On principle, I refuse to play this game, as I see it as being dishonest and doing myself a disservice. I would say this is a core focus of anxiety for LGBT employees, and a barrier to being open in the workplace.

I have always found that by being open and bringing your whole self to work gives you the capacity for creativity and to dedicate your whole-self to your job, with no energy wasted on worrying about people’s perceptions of you.

I see the corporate diversity culture spectrum as being Tolerance – Acceptance – Celebrating. Different organizations are at different stages and this will vary across geographies too.

An open and honest, networked culture is where (I think) people feel comfortable. Why would I want to work in an organization where I am simply ‘tolerated’?

Each year I take my husband to our corporate Christmas Ball and my colleagues make him feel very welcome. I prefer to be in a company with a corporate environment where your work colleagues can become your friends, and it is an environment which I believe to be common across engineering firms.

There is a skills gap within the engineering sector, and many young students and children need to be inspired to consider the profession in the future. Lack of diversity should not be a reason to have an attrition rate of existing talent exiting the profession, and neither should it be a reason to miss attracting the future talent.

Find out more about InterEngineering here.

The post Mark McBride-Wright: ‘Bringing your whole self to work gives you the capacity for creativity’ appeared first on Gay Star News.

David Hudson

www.gaystarnews.com/article/mark-mcbride-wright-bringing-your-whole-self-to-work-gives-you-the-capacity-for-creativity/

Jeffrey Tambor, Jill Soloway Salute Transgender Community in Emmy Award Speeches: WATCH

Jeffrey Tambor, Jill Soloway Salute Transgender Community in Emmy Award Speeches: WATCH

Jeffrey Tambor Transparent

Jeffrey Tambor won Lead Actor in a Comedy Series for his role in Transparent as a trans parent, and Jill Soloway won Outstanding Directing for the same Amazon series. Both saluted the transgender community and Soloway pointed out the discrimination still faced by trans people across the country.

Said Soloway:

“Thank you to my Mapa Carrie for coming out, and coming to L.A. and coming here tonight. And something interesting about my Mapa Carrie. She could tomorrow, go and try to find an apartment and in 32 states it would be legal for the landlord to look her in the eye and say, ‘We don’t rent to trans people. We don’t have a trans tipping point yet — we have a trans civil rights problem, so go to TransEquality.org and vote to pass the Trans Equality Bill.”

RELATED: 2015 Emmy Awards Make History: FULL LIST, VIDEOS

Said Tambor:

“I’m so, so honored. You know I had a teacher who used to say, ‘when you act, you have to act as iffier life depends on it.’ And now I’ve been given the opportunity to act because people’s lives depend on it…Not to repeat myself, but to specifically repeat myself, I’d like to dedicate my performance and this award to the transgender community. Thank you for your patience, thank you for your courage, thank you for your stories, thank you for your inspiration, thank you for letting us be part of the change. God bless you.”

Watch their speeches:

The post Jeffrey Tambor, Jill Soloway Salute Transgender Community in Emmy Award Speeches: WATCH appeared first on Towleroad.


Andy Towle

Jeffrey Tambor, Jill Soloway Salute Transgender Community in Emmy Award Speeches: WATCH

Stonewall Site to Honor LGBT History, America’s Struggle for Equality

Stonewall Site to Honor LGBT History, America’s Struggle for Equality

In the early morning hours of June 28, 1969, the New York City Police Department raided the Stonewall Inn, a bar that served the LGBT community. What followed were six days of uprisings by hundreds of diverse individuals, demanding an end to police harassment, arrests and raids on LGBT establishments. This rebellion launched a civil rights movement that continues to this day, and in the more than 45 years since, the name “Stonewall” has become synonymous with the history of America’s struggle for LGBT civil rights and the fight for equality.

As a longtime advocate for lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender rights, over the years I have participated in many of the efforts to secure equal rights for all and have had a front-row seat to watch as our country made great strides towards that goal. However, while we celebrate these successes and look to the fights we still have ahead, we must remember and honor the hard work and bravery that have achieved those victories and shaped our country for the better.

That is why I and a broad coalition of elected officials, community members, advocates and Stonewall witnesses are urging President Obama to designate a national monument at the Stonewall site before the end of his term.

From the abolition of slavery with the Thirteenth Amendment to the enactment of women’s suffrage to the recent Supreme Court decisions in United States v. Windsor, which struck down the heart of the Defense of Marriage Act, and Obergefell v. Hodges, which legalized same-sex marriage, throughout the course of our nation’s history we have regularly redefined freedom. Just two decades ago these Supreme Court decisions for the LGBT community would have been nearly unimaginable.

In his second inaugural address, President Obama spoke about the star that guides our country — the premise that all of us are created equal — and how it guided our forebears through some of the most pivotal moments in our history: Seneca Falls, Selma, and, ultimately, Stonewall. What was unsaid but understood was that the expansions of freedom ultimately garnered by these moments and the movements they inspired resulted from impassioned stands by oppressed individuals standing together to demand equality.

As stewards of the freedoms that our predecessors struggled to obtain, we must protect and preserve the history of their battles so that future generations can be inspired to fight for liberties now considered impossible, much as those brave individuals at Stonewall once did. The National Park Service is charged with protecting and interpreting more than 400 national park sites, two-thirds of which are dedicated to cultural and historic significance, and they are working hard to incorporate LGBT stories into existing sites around the country. 

However, today you can walk by the Stonewall site and hardly even know such an important movement started here.

We have been working with the National Park Conservation Association and a coalition of elected officials, organizations, and activists to change that. Our campaign to designate a Stonewall National Monument will leave a legacy that will endure for generations to come by achieving formal recognition of Stonewall’s place in our national history.

A Stonewall National Monument would be the first unit within the National Park system fully dedicated to LGBT Americans, and the creation of this site is integral to telling the civil rights story of our nation. We are pushing to ensure that all of the stories of the brave individuals who launched the movement — such as the transgender women of color like Marsha P. Johnson — are included in this history. Far too many times the story of Stonewall has omitted minorities, lesbians, and transgender people, many of whom were key actors in the rebellion and the early LGBT civil rights movement. It is vital that we preserve, protect and retell this history in its entirety, honoring all of the brave men and women who stood up for their rights. 

The movement for LGBT equality has made significant progress since 1969 yet still has more work ahead to bring full equality for all Americans. As we continue to fight for full equal rights, we must always remember where the movement began and how far we have come in the struggle for freedom. The dedication of a monument to Stonewall would place it alongside other historic sites of America’s civil rights journey, like Seneca Falls and Selma, and would provide federal recognition of the birthplace of the LGBT civil rights movement.

REP. JERROLD NADLER is a Democrat representing New York’s 10th Congressional District, which encompasses portions of Manhattan and Brooklyn.

Advocate Contributors

www.advocate.com/commentary/2015/9/21/stonewall-site-honor-lgbt-history-americas-struggle-equality

Former prison officer to be jailed after selling George Michael stories

Former prison officer to be jailed after selling George Michael stories

A former prison officer is to be jailed for selling George Michael’s time in prison to a tabloid newspaper.

Amanda Watts, a 43-year-old from Suffolk, has pleaded guilty to one count of misconduct in public office.

It was found that Watts had leaked details of the gay singer’s time in Highpoint Prison to The Sun for £2,000 ($3,100, €2,750).

Michael had served half of an eight-week sentence in prison after crashing his car into a shop while high on cannabis.

Watts will be formally sentenced next month but was told a ‘prison sentence is inevitable’.

‘You should understand the fact I’m bailing you until [16 October] is to enable you to make appropriate arrangements,’ Judge John Bevan QC said at The Old Bailey, according to the BBC.

Watts was arrested as part of Operation Elveden, a Metropolitan Police investigation into alleged inappropriate payments by journalists to police and other public officials.

The post Former prison officer to be jailed after selling George Michael stories appeared first on Gay Star News.

Joe Morgan

www.gaystarnews.com/article/former-prison-officer-to-be-jailed-after-selling-george-michael-stories/

PHOTOS: Connect The Dots On Kanye Lawton’s Rear-Facing Constellation

PHOTOS: Connect The Dots On Kanye Lawton’s Rear-Facing Constellation

Kayne Lawton can fill a brief, that’s for sure.

Below, he models Teamm8’s latest line, renewing our interest in astrology at the same time.

That’s a lot of man to squeeze into some tiny underwear, and we aren’t complaining one bit.

Astro-White-Brief-004BAstro-Black-UW-006BAstro-White-Brief-005BAstro-Black-Brief-003BAstro-Black-Brief-001B-Landscape-Crop

Photo Credit: teamm8

Underwear Expert

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