Thor and Captain America Have 'Earth's Mightiest Kiss'

Thor and Captain America Have 'Earth's Mightiest Kiss'

Marvel Entertainment made waves Friday when it tweeted an image of two of its iconic superheroes kissing.

The comic book titan teased an illustration of Thor and Captain America in a mid-air embrace, previewing an upcoming Avengers comic book. The photo is captioned: “Earth’s mightiest kiss.”

 

January 2016 – All-New, All-Different #Avengers #4: Earth’s Mightiest Kiss pic.twitter.com/mrek3fS7wV

— Marvel Entertainment (@Marvel) October 16, 2015

 

The image is part of Marvel’s All-New, All-Different Avengers, a comic book universe that seeks to be more inclusive in its character representations. In this universe, Thor is a woman and Captain America is black.

The characters are widely known from the Avengers film franchise, in which they are portrayed by white male actors, Chris Hemsworth and Chris Evans.

Daniel Reynolds

www.advocate.com/arts-entertainment/2015/10/18/thor-and-captain-america-have-earths-mightiest-kiss

Pennsylvania Candidate Promises to Discriminate Against Gays if Elected

Pennsylvania Candidate Promises to Discriminate Against Gays if Elected

Sharon Thomas

Pottstown, Pennsylvania Mayor Sharon Valentine-Thomas, a candidate for Montgomery County Register of Wills, said this week that she’ll refuse to issue any marriage licenses to same-sex couples should she be elected to office, the Times Herald reports.

Said Valentine-Thomas:

“I am opposed to gay marriages on religious grounds, and my conscience will not allow me to sign off on marriage certificates for gay couples. People should not have to violate their conscience to run or to serve. I am not an obstructionist and will not force my values on others.”

Thomas is running against incumbent D. Bruce Hanes, who made headlines in 2013 when he began issuing marriage licenses to gay couples, saying he was compelled to do so by the ruling against DOMA in United States v. Windsor. At the time, Hanes said he wanted to be “on the right side of history.”

Said County Commissioner Josh Shapiro of the wannabe Kim Davis: “We cannot have the same courthouse where Pennsylvania’s first same-sex marriage licenses were issued by D. Bruce Hanes become a place where the register of wills would refuse to honor the love two people share by not signing their marriage licenses.”

The post Pennsylvania Candidate Promises to Discriminate Against Gays if Elected appeared first on Towleroad.


Andy Towle

Pennsylvania Candidate Promises to Discriminate Against Gays if Elected

IMG_1175

Rink Foto posted a photo:

IMG_1175

Director and Co Producer Russell Blackwood, in black, with the cast of “Shocktoberfest 16: Curse of the Cobra” at the Hypnodrome Theatre on Opening Night, October 10. A spectacular four show tour de force that is celebrating Halloween through November 21.

Signs of Gay Mayoral Candidate Are Destroyed, Defaced

Signs of Gay Mayoral Candidate Are Destroyed, Defaced

The campaign signs of a gay mayoral candidate in Michigan have been the target of vandalism.

Ken Siver, a former city councilman who is running for mayor of Southfield, a Detroit suburb, revealed Thursday that one of his signs was defaced with antigay slurs earlier this week, reports The Detroit News. Two others were destroyed.

“I’m upset and disturbed by the [vandalism],” said Siver. “It’s not a Southfield value. There hasn’t really been any racial strife here. We’ve had a lot of harmony in this community.”

In response, Siver and his campaign erected another sign next to one that was torn. It reads, “Hate is not a Southfield community value.”

The destruction of the signs has not been the only controversy in this election. Fliers reading, “Let’s get the blacks out of Southfield,” which included a photo of Siver, who is white, were placed in the mailboxes of community members.

“I think they are trying to find ways to discredit me,” Siver said.

Police are investigating the incident.

Daniel Reynolds

www.advocate.com/politics/2015/10/18/signs-gay-mayoral-candidate-are-destroyed-defaced

TSA to Discontinue Using the Term ‘Anomaly’ to Describe Transgender Passengers

TSA to Discontinue Using the Term ‘Anomaly’ to Describe Transgender Passengers

Screen Shot 2015-10-18 at 8.09.35 AM

The Transportation Security Administration announced this week that they’re discontinuing the use of the term “anomaly,” to describe transgender passengers reports CNN.

The TSA’s decision comes after transgender writer Shadow ‘Shadi’ Petoscary documented her heinous experience at the hands of Orlando TSA security officials who flagged her for an “anomaly,” after passing through an airport security scanner.

TSA policies state transgender passengers must be treated as how, “he or she presents themselves at the security checkpoint,” CNN reports. Petoscary’s live tweets of the incident stated that a TSA agent told Petoscary to “get back in the machine as a man.”

Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton praised the decision:

Transgender people deserve respect, safety, and equal treatment everywhere. Good move by @TSA. t.co/9ZZV0NV6IW

— Hillary Clinton (@HillaryClinton) October 16, 2015

Petoscary weighed in on the TSA’s decision in a subtle tweet while praising presidential candidate Hillary Clinton tweet on the TSA’s decision.

A good start. That sucked. t.co/WdwyDVzPNq

— Shadow Petoscary (@shadipetosky) October 14, 2015

So much ugly cry. No selfie. t.co/wcIaruRwgC

— Shadow Petoscary (@shadipetosky) October 16, 2015

Clinton addressed the Human Rights Campaign at a daytime event earlier this month, voicing her support of LGBT rights, transgender service members in the military and the passage of a nationwide Equality Act guaranteeing protections for LGBT people nationwide.

The post TSA to Discontinue Using the Term ‘Anomaly’ to Describe Transgender Passengers appeared first on Towleroad.


Anthony Costello

TSA to Discontinue Using the Term ‘Anomaly’ to Describe Transgender Passengers

Vietnam Has Been Praised As A Leader In LGBT Rights. Activists Beg To Differ

Vietnam Has Been Praised As A Leader In LGBT Rights. Activists Beg To Differ

This is the eighth part of a 10-part series on LGBT rights in Southeast Asia, which uncovers the challenges facing the LGBT community in the region and highlights the courageous work of activists there.

***

“Vietnam: Flawed on Human Rights, but a Leader in Gay Rights” read a 2013 Atlantic headline. “On Gay Rights, Vietnam is Now More Progressive Than America,” NBC News reported in January. A few days earlier, Bloomberg had declared: “Gay Weddings Planned as Vietnam Marriage Law Is Repealed.”

But the positive headlines only tell part of the story. Activists say while Vietnam is certainly evolving when it comes to LGBT issues, it’s not a “leader in gay rights.” LGBT people face widespread abuse and discrimination, particularly in their homes. And though the country — one of two communist nations in Southeast Asia — abolished a ban on same-sex marriage earlier this year, gay couples are neither recognized nor protected by law.

Lương Thế Huy, the LGBT rights program manager at Vietnam’s Institute for Studies of Society, Economy and Environment (iSEE), tells The Huffington Post that overcoming rigid family attitudes remains one of the greatest obstacles facing Vietnam’s LGBT community.

“Because of traditional norms — such as keeping the family line intact, saving face, etc. — there is a lot of stigma and misunderstanding,” he says. “Many people also think that LGBT people are ‘social evils,’ or that it is ‘fashion’ or ‘social trend.’ [As a result] most LGBT people still hide their sexuality from their parents.”  

Activists say Vietnam is certainly evolving when it comes to LGBT issues, but a “leader in gay rights” it is not.

When iSEE surveyed 3,000 gay, lesbian and transgender people in Vietnam in 2008, 20 percent of respondents said they had been beaten by family members.

“My father beat me, saying, ‘I don’t accept a homo in my house. You were born a real boy, I care for you like the rest of them, why do you do this to me?’” one child told the organization in 2012.

Another survey conducted by iSEE in 2009 found that a majority of gays and lesbians in Vietnam choose to keep their sexual identity hidden for fear of social repercussions. Only 2.5 percent of gay men said they had come out “completely,” and 5 percent said they were “mostly open.”  

The group has also found that public perceptions of LGBT people are largely negative in the country. About a third of respondents to the 2009 iSEE survey said that homosexuality is an “illness or contagion,” while 54 percent said that it is “due to a lack of parental care/love/guidance.” Half of all respondents said LGBT people “can be cured.” 

Some LGBT children reportedly run away from home because of the abuse they face. Most of these children turn to sex work to make a living, according to a 2012 study conducted by iSEE in collaboration with Save the Children.

That year, Tran Lan Anh, a teenage sex worker, told Viet Nam News that she had turned to the sex trade as a last resort after running away from home at the age of 13. 

She said she left home after enduring daily beatings and verbal abuse from her parents who condemned “her lesbian relationship.”

She recalled that later, when she applied for “manual jobs, the employers refused to hire me and used impolite words, reasoning that because I am not a normal person, I will steal their money.” 

Discrimination of LGBT people is not only common in the home and in the workplace, but also in schools, according to a 2014 USAID/UNDP report on LGBT rights in Vietnam. “Surveys report high levels of physical violence, sexual harassment and verbal abuse” in educational environments, the report said. “The result is that LGBT people do not feel safe. They experience violence, drop out of school and have suicidal thoughts.”

A lack of LGBT-friendly health care facilities and services is another major issue for the community, as are the discriminatory attitudes of medical practitioners.

In 2011, Thanh Nien News quoted an officer at Hanoi Community Health Care clinic as saying that “sex between a man and a woman is normal but sex between two men or two women is not normal.”

“I think it’s something sick,” the unnamed officer added. 

For the transgender community in Vietnam, another health care challenge is limited access to gender confirmation surgery options and hormone treatments.

Transgender people are also currently unable to legally change their gender designation, and may also encounter difficulties when trying to change their names on official documents.

Homosexuality, however, is not criminalized in Vietnam, and LGBT persons can serve in the military. Conversations about marriage equality and protections for LGBT people have begun at the government level. In recent years, the country has also hosted annual Pride events. 

Last year, activists celebrated a big win when Vietnam accepted the UN Human Rights Council’s recommendation to enact anti-discrimination laws to guarantee the equality of all citizens, regardless of their sexual orientation and gender identity.

Such legislation, however, remains purely theoretical.

Vietnam, which has been led by the communist party since reunification in 1975, is currently undergoing major legal reform, with many important laws slated for amendment. Huy says activists are now focused on pushing for the improvement and addition of laws pertaining to LGBT people, and also for greater awareness about LGBT issues.

“Sexuality education in public schools is one of the most challenging areas that we are trying to work on now,” he says. “The future is in the hands of the next generation. They need to have correct knowledge and be taught to be tolerant with diversity.”

The challenges facing activists, however, are immense. The human rights situation in Vietnam remains “critical,” because of a general lack of basic freedoms for citizens and endemic official corruption, according to Human Rights Watch. 

“The education curriculum is the same for all schools in Vietnam, even for private schools, and it’s controlled by the government. Trying to add sexuality education to the formal program is difficult and needs to be advocated for from the highest level,” Huy says.

“More public awareness about LGBT issues is also needed,” he adds. “We have a lot of things to advocate for when it comes to LGBT rights.”

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