It's Here, it's Queer, it's… Trans Beer?

It's Here, it's Queer, it's… Trans Beer?

A brewery which will soon have roots in Columbus, Ohio, is giving new meaning to the term gender fluid, creating what it calls the first-ever transgender beer.

The beer, called “No Label” is made by BrewDog, a craft brewery in Scotland, and its owners say they plans to begin selling bottles this Friday in London.

And lest anyone think this is simply a marketing ploy to cash in on transgender acceptance, the company says it’s donating all the profits from “No Label” to an LGBT cause. 

BrewDog says it is quickly expanding to spread its message of inclusivity overseas. “No Label is the world’s first ‘non-binary, transgender beer’ designed to reflect the diversity of the area and champion inclusivity,” according to the company’s website.

Coincidentally, its Ohio brewery will be located on Gender Road. Yes, that really is the road’s name.

Beer, the company said, may naturally lend itself to discussions of non-binary identity. Hops, which are a key ingredient in many types of beer, are known to have different genders. BrewDog’s website explains it this way:

“This 4.6% ABV Kölsch has been brewed with hops that have changed sex from female to male flowers prior to harvest. We have used these to emphasize that, just like humans, beer can be whatever the hell it wants to be, and proud of it.”

To create the Kölsch style beer, BrewDog said it uses Jester hops, a variety naturally prone to altering sex while growing. The brewmakers say they brew No Label “with 20kg that have undergone this change and grown male flowers; to add diversity, rather than restrict it.”

The brewery described its new beer as a concoction that “blurs boundaries between the binary worlds of lager and ale. The beer draws parallels with individuals who identify themselves in a similar ‘non-binary’ way, as neither exclusively male nor female – a community of people that is still largely under-acknowledged by society,” the company wrote on its website. 

And in support of the community, BrewDog says all proceeds from sales of the beer will be donated to the LGBTQI+ organization Queerest of the Queer, a UK-based group, to support charities for transgender youth. Cheers to that!

Elizabeth Daley

www.advocate.com/food-and-drink/2015/11/04/its-here-its-queer-its-trans-beer

Agency Uncovers Widespread Anti-Transgender Discrimination In The Nation’s Capital

Agency Uncovers Widespread Anti-Transgender Discrimination In The Nation’s Capital

Discrimination against transgender job applicants is quite higher than the number of complaints might suggest.

The post Agency Uncovers Widespread Anti-Transgender Discrimination In The Nation’s Capital appeared first on ThinkProgress.

Zack Ford

thinkprogress.org/lgbt/2015/11/04/3718933/dc-transgender-discrimination-study/

Argentine Girl Becomes International Symbol Of Progress In Transgender Community

Argentine Girl Becomes International Symbol Of Progress In Transgender Community

MERLO, Argentina (AP) — Luana grabs her sparkly blue dress with one hand and spins, using her other hand as a guide while a strand of tulle floats around her body.

The 8-year-old has long brown curls, gold butterfly earrings and an amulet with a princess hanging from her neck.

“I love it when my hair does this,” she said, shaking her head as her hair flutters. “And I love dresses.”

Luana had to fight to be a girl. She was born a boy, and struggled with a world that insisted that was what she must be. Then, in 2013, she became the youngest person to take advantage of an Argentine law that allows people to identify their own gender for legal purposes.

The case turned the child into an international symbol of progress in the transgender community. At the same time, it sparked a debate in this conservative, Catholic country — the homeland of Pope Francis — about how best to raise children who identify themselves with the opposite sex.

But that discussion — one that has become more and more common around the world — feels very distant from the family’s modest, two-bedroom cement home in Merlo, a small town about 27 miles (43 kilometers) west of Buenos Aires.

“I’ve always been a girl,” said Luana, flashing a smile at her identical twin brother, Elias, the kind of boy who loves remote-controlled cars. He nods.

“If you gave Luana all my toys it would not make any difference,” Elias said. “She still wouldn’t be a boy.”

___

Gabriela Mansilla, Luana’s mother, says there were always clear differences in her twins. Manuel, Luana’s birth name, wore shirts on his head, apparently imitating long hair. He liked dolls. Princesses and mermaids were his favorite movie characters.

Among his first words: “I girl.”

In those first years slight differences can be seen in pictures of the boys. They are often dressed in identical outfits, but Manuel’s gaze is softer, his head more tilted.

By the time he was 2, Manuel was rejecting pants and insisting on wearing dresses. The struggles were so exhausting that sometimes Mansilla simply consented.

“People in the neighborhood would call me ‘the crazy lady who dresses up her kid,'” said Mansilla, 41.

When the boys were 3, a team of psychologists and doctors prescribed a regimen of “male reinforcement” for Manuel. He would be allowed to play only with male toys like action figures and wear boys’ clothes. The color pink was prohibited, as were cartoons with female protagonists.

While there is widespread agreement in medical circles that some children are simply born with such tendencies, there is little consensus on the best way to deal with the behavior.

Michael Bailey, a psychology professor at Northwestern University who has researched the topic extensively, argues that it’s better for children to accept their birth sex — if for no other reason than to avoid having to contemplate a painful and traumatic sex change. Bailey says long-term studies of boys with female tendencies show that when parents reinforce that they are boys, most turn out to be gay men who accept their gender.

“I feel for parents in this situation and I’m glad that societies are changing to become more tolerant of transgender people,” said Bailey. “But the advocacy here has lost sight of what we know about kids like this.”

But other child specialists, along with transgender advocates, argue that nobody but the individual can decide.

“Somehow we are supposed to prove our gender, but nobody else has to prove their gender,” said Mara Kiesling, the executive director of National Center of Transgender Equality, based in Washington. “It’s not a choice. Kids just know who they are.”

Sabrina Gabrielle Melo Bolke, an Argentine transgender woman who has befriended the family, says she has warned Luana that she will have to make tough choices about hormone therapy when she is a teenager, and ultimately whether to have a sex change.

Still, Bolke, who says she always knew she was female but couldn’t act on it until she was an adult, believes the early gender change will help Luana growing up.

“I wish I would have had the same chance,” she said.

___

Luana says she remembers her mom trying to make her a boy. Mansilla says the male reinforcement destroyed their family life.

Manuel frequently banged his head against the wall. Patches of hair fell out. He would pull at his penis, explaining in toddler logic that he used it in daycare but at home no longer wanted it.

Nights were so difficult that Mansilla took Manuel to a sleep specialist. A study found the child awoke dozens of times an hour for unexplained reasons.

The battle raged away from home, as well. There was the woman in the toy store who told Luana the doll she had picked out was “for girls.” And in daycare, when the children had to line up, the teachers forced her to go with the boys.

“Everybody told me, ‘No. Get in the line for boys,'” said Luana, whose two front teeth are coming in. “I didn’t listen.”

She began calling herself Luana. About the time she was 5, Mansilla reached out to the Homosexual Community of Argentina, a gay rights group.

“Just let her be a girl,” Mansilla remembered being told, and she agreed.

Argentina’s congress, meanwhile, was debating one of the most far-reaching transgender laws in the world. It would allow for a legal change of gender with only a person’s say-so. The few other nations that allow such a change often have many requirements, from an actual sex change to court orders.

The law was passed in 2012 despite strong opposition from the Roman Catholic Church and Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio, the archbishop of Buenos Aires who would be named pope in 2013.

Mansilla petitioned for Luana’s legal gender change in December 2012. Registry officials refused because of the child’s age, and the case played out in the media. Ten months later, Daniel Scioli, the governor of the Buenos Aires province and now a presidential candidate, intervened. Luana’s petition was granted.

“I remember signing my DNI to be a girl,” she said, referring to her national identity card. She grins.

___

Second grade teacher Judit Lacoa says when Luana enrolled in her state elementary school last year, many parents were wary. But they’ve adjusted, she says.

The eight girls and 13 boys in the class have taken it in stride. That Luana uses the girls’ bathroom is not an issue. Once, Locoa says, when one of the girls asked Luana why she had a penis, a friend jumped in.

“She’s transsexual,” the child explained nonchalantly, remembered Lacoa.

That level of comfort is no doubt in part because Luana herself appears so at ease. Ask her to define transgender, and she will say, matter-of-factly, that “trans girls have penises” and “trans boys have vaginas.” And when, in a recent recess game of “truth or dare,” a classmate asked her whether it was true she was a boy, she did not hesitate.

“No,” she said. “I’m a girl.”

Also on HuffPost:

— 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.



feeds.huffingtonpost.com/c/35496/f/677065/s/4b3c5b29/sc/14/l/0L0Shuffingtonpost0N0C20A150C110C0A40Cargentine0Egirl0Ebecomes0Einternational0Esymbol0Eof0Eprogress0Ein0Etransgender0Ecommunity0In0I84729520Bhtml0Dutm0Ihp0Iref0Fgay0Evoices0Gir0FGay0KVoices/story01.htm

Open Question: Did Democrats / Liberals have any victories in yesterday's election?

Open Question: Did Democrats / Liberals have any victories in yesterday's election?
A measure to legalize Pot lost in Ohio.

In Virginia, Democrats running on the theme of more gun control failed to take control of the State Senate. In facts, at this point, it looks like they will lose a seat.

In Houston, a pro-LGBT rights measure lost.

In San Francisco, 2 restrictions on housing aimed at promoting more affordable housing both failed

In Kentucky and Mississippi, Republicans won the Governors seats.

answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20151104091424AAd3Zaz

#AM_Equality Tip Sheet: November 4, 2015

#AM_Equality Tip Sheet: November 4, 2015

Despite vote, the fight for HERO continues; Governor O’Malley shares plan for LGBT equality; Pro-equality victory in Charlotte; New study shows increasing acceptance for LGBT people in faith communities; Turing Pharmaceuticals Fails to commit to lowering cost of Daraprim to its original price. 
HRC.org

www.hrc.org/blog/entry/am-equality-tip-sheet-november-4-2015?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

See Guys React To Ridiculously Racist Grindr Profiles

See Guys React To Ridiculously Racist Grindr Profiles

“Vanilla or spice, no chocolate nor rice.”

“NO ORIENTALS!!!”

“Is there a block all black button?”

“Asians, prease reave me arone.”

“Just a preference. Sorry!!”

These are just a few of the lines vlogger Davey Wavey uncovered on various men’s Grindr profiles. He asked five guys, including MTV’s Todrick Hall, of varying ages and backgrounds to read the profiles aloud and share their thoughts. The end result may be one of his most thoughtful, most important videos yet.

Check it out and share your thoughts in the comments below…

Related stories: 

This Gay Couple Was Targeted By Antigay, Racist Trolls. Here’s How They Proved Love Always Wins.

Is It True What They Say About Black Men?

Poll: Are We More Racist Than Straight Men?

Graham Gremore

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/PJ7kFwh9o84/see-guys-react-to-ridiculously-racist-grindr-profiles-20151104

NCAA Won’t Move Final Four From Houston Despite Defeat of Equal Rights Ordinance #HERO

NCAA Won’t Move Final Four From Houston Despite Defeat of Equal Rights Ordinance #HERO

final four

 

The NCAA will not move its championship tournament from Houston, Texas after the city voted yesterday to repeal an equal rights ordinance that provided non-discrimination protections for its LGBT citizens.

Dan Gavitt, vice president of men’s basketball championships, released a statement to OutSports saying it would not move the Final Four from Houston because “it takes years to plan and implement this world-class event”:

“The NCAA remains committed to hosting the Final Four and its many fan-related events in Houston so they are open and accessible for all,” Gavitt told Outsports in a statement. “The NCAA has no plans to move the 2016 Final Four, as it takes years to plan and implement this world-class event. We will continue our work with the Houston Local Organizing Committee to provide an inclusive environment for the student-athletes competing in and visitors attending our games and events in April.”

The NCAA added that Houston’s vote against LGBT rights could “impact” whether it would bring the final four back to Houston:

“There are many factors in a thorough bid process that the NCAA considers when determining what cities will host the Final Four, including but not limited to local, city and state laws and ordinances.”

OutSports founder Cyd Ziegler was unswayed by the NCAA’s rationale behind remaining in Houston for the 2016 Final Four, writing, “If a hurricane hit Houston tomorrow and destroyed the venue, the NCAA could move the event. They are choosing not to.”

Back in March of this year, the NCAA said it would re-evaluate its relationship with Indiana after that state legalized its anti-gay “license to discriminate” law.

The post NCAA Won’t Move Final Four From Houston Despite Defeat of Equal Rights Ordinance #HERO appeared first on Towleroad.


Sean Mandell

NCAA Won’t Move Final Four From Houston Despite Repeal of Equal Rights Ordinance #HERO

Kim Davis Heads Back To Court

Kim Davis Heads Back To Court

 

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — Kentucky clerk Kim Davis has asked a federal appeals court to scrap a series of unfavorable rulings issued by the district judge who sent her to jail for refusing to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples.

In a 126-page filing with the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals late Monday, Davis’ attorneys called U.S. District Court Judge David Bunning’s order that Davis license same-sex marriage a “rush to judgment” that trampled the clerk’s religious liberty.

Davis, the clerk of rural Rowan County, spent five nights in jail in September for defying that order, igniting a fierce debate about the collision of religious freedom and public service.

Davis stopped issuing all marriage licenses after the U.S. Supreme Court effectively legalized gay marriage in June. The American Civil Liberties Union sued her on behalf of four couples, and Bunning ordered her to issue the licenses. When she continued to refuse, Bunning held her in contempt and sent her to jail.

Jonathan Christman, Davis’ lawyer with the Liberty Counsel, asked the appeals court to reverse four of the lower court’s rulings, including the order that Davis issue licenses and the decision to hold her in contempt.

“By imprisoning Davis and threatening to hold her hostage indefinitely as a prisoner of her conscience, the district court imposed direct pressure and substantial burden on Davis, forcing her to choose between her religious beliefs and forfeiting her essential personal freedom on one hand, or abandoning those beliefs to keep her freedom on the other hand,” Christman wrote.

By jailing Davis and ordering her deputy clerks to issue the licenses, Christman wrote, the district judge “commandeered” the public office Davis was elected to oversee.

The licenses issued by a deputy clerk were altered to remove Davis’ name, and Bunning released her with orders not to interfere with her deputies issuing the licenses.

When she returned to work, Davis further altered the licenses to read they were issued “pursuant to federal court order.” The validity of those licenses remains under review by the judge.

Davis also filed a counter suit against Gov. Steve Beshear, who sent a letter to all county clerks on the day of the Supreme Court’s ruling that directed them to begin issuing licenses to same-sex couples. He declined to call the legislature for a special session to craft a law to accommodate religious clerks, and told them instead to issue the licenses or resign.

Both Beshear and the ACLU have a month to respond to Davis’ appeal.

— 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.



feeds.huffingtonpost.com/c/35496/f/677065/s/4b3b9d90/sc/38/l/0L0Shuffingtonpost0N0C20A150C110C0A40Ckim0Edavis0Eappeals0Ejail0In0I84721920Bhtml0Dutm0Ihp0Iref0Fgay0Evoices0Gir0FGay0KVoices/story01.htm