I see you, I know you, I love you

I see you, I know you, I love you

Photo Credit: MiTu

When the best thing in your life is the one thing you can’t talk to your mom about.

Posted by We are mitú on Wednesday, March 23, 2016

MiTú, the popular digital network that shares Latino inspired content launched in 2012, shares a love poem with its audience in the video Chicano 2.0: Queer Xicanas. The refrain of the poetic narration says “This is for the queer brown folks…I see you, I know you, I love you.” The affirmation is both for the queer xicanas and queer brown people who watch the video as much as it is for the speaker. @conchitaqween can’t share her love for the woman in her life with her mother. @conchitaqween says that her mother and the mothers of many people she knows choose to stop talking about or to their daughters after they come out. They hope that by not talking about it, their daughters’ orientation will cease to exist.

Although Latinos have shown increasing rates of support for LGBT people and issues, it is important to acknowledge that some families do reject their LGBT children and this leads to the worst outcomes. A video like this is an antidote for the hurt.

March 31, 2016

www.glaad.org/blog/i-see-you-i-know-you-i-love-you

Mississippi pastor speaks out, says #NOHB1523

Mississippi pastor speaks out, says #NOHB1523

Brandiilyne Dear

Award-winning pastor, LGBT Mississippi advocate, and featured cast member of the documentary L Word Mississippi: Hate the Sin, Brandiilyne Dear has released a statement about the harmful HB 1523 that is expected to be signed into law by Governor Phil Bryant at any time.

The faith-filled and personal statement speaks to the experience of being an LGBT Christian woman in Mississippi and the harmful impact HB 1523 would have, not just on the community, but on the state as a whole.

Bradniilyne’s statement reads:

“Paul said, ‘when I was a child, I spoke as a child, but when I became a man, I put away childish things.’ He said this as an introduction to the love chapter in Corinthians. There is probably no place more Christian than Mississippi, but I tell you, it is time for Mississippi to put away the childish behavior of discrimination. It is NOT Christian. Stand up and tell Governor Phil Bryant not to sign HB 1523. It repulsive, childish, and harmful; the Governor should not sign it! 

“I speak as a lesbian, a mother, a wife, and a Pastor. I am a friend, a daughter, and a student. You see I am more than my sexuality, as is every person in the LGBTQ community. Sadly, our state legislators refuse to see our full humanity. They have just passed this horrific bill (HB 1523) which makes me and almost everyone vulnerable to discrimination and hate,” she said. “If Governor Bryant signs this bill, it will be legal to hire, fire, deny service, and establish dress and behavior codes based on any ‘sincerely held religious belief or moral conviction.’

“Legislators seem to think they are invincible, but they, too, are more vulnerable today,” said the pastor. “All people in Mississippi are now open to having someone say to them, ‘You are not welcome here. My religion says you are a sinner—my religion says, you are a son of Ham—my religion says women should not teach men—my religion says a lot of things, and we don’t take your money here.’ Is that what we want? I don’t think so.

“Governor Bryant, do not turn your back on Mississippi. Do not sign this dastardly bill that sets us back 50 years!” said Pastor Mangum-Dear. “Today I say, I AM Mississippi, and my voice and my rights are relevant. We, LGBTQ, are Mississippi! We are your mothers, fathers, brothers, sisters and neighbors. We are teachers, students, doctors, and pastors.

“‘Jesus said, Love the Lord your God with all of your heart, and love your neighbor as yourself. This IS the greatest commandment.’ We are your neighbors, and we deserve to be treated equally and respectfully without discrimination!”

The Southern Povery Law Center helps breaks down the pervasive impact of discrimination within the bill: 

 

Mississippi Lawmakers on Brink of Passing Georgia-Style Anti-LGBT ‘Religious Freedom’ Bill t.co/Ie7K5yCsjF pic.twitter.com/lUx5d55lH0

— SPLC (@splcenter) March 30, 2016

GLAAD has been speaking out against discriminatory laws in several states, including most recently Georgia, North Carolina, and South Dakota. GLAAD’s resource, “Debunking the ‘Bathroom Bills Myth‘” is a valuable resource for journalists and everyday people to understand the importance and impact of nondiscrimination bills, and ways to debunk falsehoods that often are raised in opposition to such bills. GLAAD is calling on media, both in Mississippi and nationally, to ask media to hold promoters of such discriminatory bills as HB 1523 accountable for false claims they have made.

LGBT advocates and media figures can also find background information about the LGBT community in Mississippi through GLAAD’s guidebook on the state. GLAAD developed the resource with the ACLU of Mississippi and The PRISM Center.

 
 

 

Tweet your opposition to Mississippi’s ‘license to discriminate’ bill using the hashtag #NoHB1523. Follow GLAAD on social media for regular updates about HB 1523.

March 31, 2016

www.glaad.org/blog/mississippi-pastor-speaks-out-says-nohb1523

Sintonizate HOY Jueves 31 de Marzo de 6:00 a 8:00pm www.kdhksandiego.com Tema:Como saber cuando tu relación ya no funciona!!! No se pueden perder "Out of the Closet" como cada semana causando nuevas expectativas y controversias en todo el mundo! #out

Sintonizate HOY Jueves 31 de Marzo de 6:00 a 8:00pm www.kdhksandiego.com Tema:Como saber cuando tu relación ya no funciona!!! No se pueden perder "Out of the Closet" como cada semana causando nuevas expectativas y controversias en todo el mundo! #out

OutoftheCloset.radioshow posted a photo:

www.kdhksandiego.com Tema:Como saber cuando tu relación ya no funciona!!! No se pueden perder “Out of the Closet” como cada semana causando nuevas expectativas y controversias en todo el mundo! #out‘>

Sintonizate HOY Jueves 31 de Marzo de 6:00 a 8:00pm  www.kdhksandiego.com  Tema:Como saber cuando tu relación ya no funciona!!!  No se pueden perder "Out of the Closet" como cada semana causando nuevas expectativas y controversias en todo el mundo!   #out

HOPE Act Delivers Life

HOPE Act Delivers Life

Yesterday, physicians at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore, Maryland announced they had successfully completed the nation’s first ever transplant of an HIV-positive organ from a deceased individual to an HIV-positive individual. The landmark medical procedure was made possible thanks to the HIV Organ Policy Equity (HOPE) Act that lifted a twenty-five year federal ban on the use of such organs. HRC helped draft the legislation and shepherd it through Congress in 2013 with incredible bipartisan leadership from Reps. Lois Capps (D-CA), and Senators Barbara Boxer (D-CA), Tammy Baldwin (D-WI), Tom Coburn (R-OK), and Rand Paul (R-KY). National Public Radio’s Morning Edition reported on this historic step this morning. Click here to listen to the story.

At any given time, about 122,000 people are on the transplant waiting list in the U.S., and thousands die while waiting for a compatible organ. Surgeons at Johns Hopkins estimate that each year, about 500 to 600 HIV-positive, would-be organ donors die, and their organs could have saved more than 1,000 people. Allowing HIV-positive transplant candidates the option to accept an HIV-positive organ, is expected to decrease the time all transplant candidates wait for life-saving organs. The HIV-positive to HIV-positive transplants are currently limited to the research setting, however the Johns Hopkins transplant team will be training colleagues at transplant facilities around the nation on proper safety protocols in preparation for future procedures.

 As we celebrate LGBT Health Awareness week, what better news to share than our work is saving lives.

www.hrc.org/blog/hope-act-delivers-life?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

#AM_Equality Tip Sheet: March 31, 2016

#AM_Equality Tip Sheet: March 31, 2016

IN MEETING WITH NC GOVERNOR, ADVOCATES DEMAND HE REPEAL ANTI-LGBT LAW: This morning, HRC President Chad Griffin, Equality NC’s Executive Director Chris Sgro and transgender advocate Candis Cox went to the North Carolina State Capitol to hand deliver a letter from more than 100 major CEOs & business leaders urging Governor McCrory and the North Carolina General Assembly to repeal the radical provisions of the deeply discriminatory HB 2 in the upcoming legislative session in April. Upon delivering the letter, the three were met by the governor’s chief of staff, who initially agreed to only allow Griffin and Sgro to meet with the governor. He was eventually persuaded to allow Candis Cox to come into the private meeting as well, where she was able to share the personal challenges she has faced as a transgender woman of color. During the meeting, Governor McCrory heard firsthand the harm that he and the state legislature are inflicting on LGBT North Carolinians through the enactment of this law. They urged Governor McCrory to convene a broader meeting with additional members of the LGBT community–and specifically transgender North Carolinians and their families–to discuss the impact of the discriminatory new anti-LGBT law that was rammed through the legislature last week and signed by the Governor in the dead of night. More on the meeting here: bit.ly/1MEttLs

LETTER WITH MORE THAN 100 CEOs AND BUSINESS LEADERS CALLING ON REPEAL OF HB2 GIVEN TO MCCRORY: In the meeting with Governor McCrory, Griffin and Sgro delivered the letter from more than 100 CEOs from leading American companies—including Apple, American Airlines, and Bank of America, among many others– that urge both him and the General Assembly to repeal the discriminatory law, HB 2, that was passed last week. A copy of the letter and its signatories can be found here. The letter was made public Tuesday afternoon, and came only a day after Georgia Governor Nathan Deal announced he would veto anti-LGBT legislation in Georgia after facing a sustained outcry from a broad chorus of advocates and companies.

HAS PAT MCCRORY EVEN READ THIS BILL?: Politifact has weighed in on Pat McCrory’s rhetoric around NC HB 2, and, not surprisingly, found it to be completely false. The North Carolina governor has made the rounds in the media lately, claiming that the new discriminatory law doesn’t take away any existing rights, and urging people to read the bill. However, based on Politifact’s findings, it seems that, perhaps, Gov. McCrory should read the bill himself. The bill specifically dissolved sexual orientation and gender identity protections in Charlotte’s and other cities’ and towns’ nondiscrimination ordinances, literally taking rights away from these communities. When called out on this falsity at a press conference on Monday, Gov. McCrory was unable to come up with a response. Well, we’re speechless too — speechless as to how a governor can purposefully spread lies to his constituents in order to promote his hateful agenda. More here: bit.ly/234cjej

MCCRORY’S TERRIBLE, HORRIBLE, NO GOOD, VERY BAD WEEK: This week, North Carolina Gov. Pat McCrory has struggled to defend his appalling new law that was rammed through the state legislature last week in a single-day, 10 hour special session. The News & Observer reports that McCrory tried to suggest that his bill did not take away any rights that were on the books — a blatant falsehood given that the LGBT community in Charlotte absolutely lost protections, as did veterans in some places, to name just two examples. McCrory was also interviewed by NBC News, who asked him how he would respond to a transgender North Carolinian who is now being forced to use the wrong restroom. He responded by actually saying, “You know, we all have to make adjustments in life. And we’ve had the proper etiquette situation for decades in our country, and all of a sudden through political correctness we’re throwing away basic etiquette.” While Gov. McCrory goes around the state with this bizarre argument, the reality is that he moved North Carolina backwards by targeting LGBT people and forcing transgender people across the state to use restrooms inconsistent with their gender identity. In addition, he took away protections against discrimination for veterans in places like Greensboro and Orange County. And while McCrory says that no businesses have pulled out of the state, the Charlotte Regional Visitors Authority is already sounding the alarm and networks are already vowing to pull out of the state. Democratic State Rep. Darren Jackson and North Carolina AG Roy Cooper, McCrory’s likely gubernatorial contender, have both launched petitions calling for the law to be repealed. Cooper has also refused to defend the law which he rightly called a “national embarrassment” which is unconstitutional. Watch the full NBC News interview here: nbcnews.to/1XZy4bD 

WHAT A TRANS, CHRISTIAN NORTH CAROLINIAN HAS TO SAY ON HB 2: In a moving op-ed in today’s Washington Post, Adam Plant, a Christian transgender man in North Carolina, speaks out against H.B. 2. As Adam shares, for many transgender people, a lot of “fear and anxiety” can be associated with public restrooms. As a young child he recalls hiding and waiting for everyone to leave the restroom so he’d feel comfortable, and risking punishment from his teacher rather than attacks from his peers in the bathroom. And while that fear still exists today, Adam writes, “Regardless of what my state’s law now says, and regardless of the gender that appears on my birth certificate, I do not plan on frequenting any women’s restrooms now or anytime in the future. Doing so would guarantee two things: that I would be uncomfortable, and that the women sharing the bathroom with me could be uncomfortable. And so I will continue to use bathrooms that correspond with my gender identity.” Some may call it an act of protest, but he calls it “peeing” More here: wapo.st/1SBTmL9 

STATES AND CITIES BAN TRAVEL TO NORTH CAROLINA: This week, the Mayors of Seattle, New York City, West Palm Beach, and Chicago, as well as Governors from Vermont, Washington, and New York State, all signed executive orders banning all non-essential travel to North Carolina following the passage of HB 2. In his statement, Governor Cuomo said, “From Stonewall to marriage equality, our state has been a beacon of hope and equality for the LGBT community, and we will not stand idly by as misguided legislation replicates the discrimination of the past. As long as there is a law in North Carolina that creates the grounds for discrimination against LGBT people, I am barring non-essential state travel to that state.” Governor Malloy of Connecticut on the other hand, is encouraging business concerned over North Carolina to set up shop in Connecticut. The state has fully inclusive non-discrimination protections for the LGBT community. On Friday, San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee also issued a travel ban to NC.

NEW DATA SHOWS DRAMATIC INCREASE IN AMERICANS WHO KNOW SOMEONE WHO’S TRANSGENDER: Released today to mark International Transgender Day of Visibility, a groundbreaking new survey commissioned by HRC’s Foundation found that 35 percent of likely voters personally know or work with a transgender person — twice as many as two years ago, and up from 21 percent from just last year. Significantly, more than two-thirds of those who say they know a transgender person express support for full LGBT equality. In HRC’s 2015 national survey, 66 percent of those who said they know a transgender person expressed favorable feelings toward them, compared with 13 percent who did not — a net favorability of 53 percentage points. This means that the number of voters motivated to support critical laws and protections for transgender people is growing fast. However, while visibility is increasing, sobering issues remain. In 2015, there were more reported killings of transgender women of color than ever before in the U.S.  Additionally, the transgender community continues to face disproportionate levels of poverty, homelessness, employment discrimination, violence, and HIV. This year alone, an unprecedented 44 anti-transgender bills are being considered in 17 states. Some bills undercut the ability of transgender people to access gender-affirming health care, create state-sanctioned avenues of anti-transgender discrimination and, last but not least, deny transgender people — including children and young people — access to bathrooms, locker rooms and athletic teams consistent with their gender identity. Read additional detail about the HRC survey here

AFTER GOVERNOR’S VETO, ANTI-LGBT LAWMAKERS IN GEORGIA VOW TO FIGHT: After weeks of pressure by HRC, Georgia Equality and others, earlier this week Governor Nathan Deal announced that he was vetoing HB 757, a deeply discriminatory bill which sparked a massive outcry of opposition from a broad array of civil rights groups, leaders in Hollywood, and corporate America. The legislation would have weakened local non-discrimination protections, allowed businesses to discriminate and deny service to LGBT people, and explicitly empowered discrimination by taxpayer-funded religious organizations. In light of the huge victory, opponents of equality are already vowing to find new ways to roll back LGBT progress. State lawmakers are said to be exploring legislative action in the 2017 session which convenes in January, because they don’t have sufficient support to convene a special session this year. The Associated Press reports, “Lawmakers have already left the Capitol for the year, adjourning Thursday. They would need a three-fifths majority of both houses to ask the governor to convene a special session, and even then, vote totals suggest they lack the two-thirds vote necessary in both chambers to override his veto. ‘It’s more likely we’ll continue this debate for the next nine months and have a bill introduced in January and fight it out again,’ McKoon (one of the key sponsors of the failed bill) said, adding that he’s willing to author a new bill if necessary. As their fight continues, so does ours. We remain committed to doing what’s necessary to ensure that every Georgian can feel safe at work, at school, at home and in every community. More here: bit.ly/1Urqad9

LAWMAKERS IN CONGRESS URGE DHS TO TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT LGBT PEOPLE IN IMMIGRATION DETENTION: In a letter made public this week, twenty-three Democrats in the House and ten Democratic Senators called on the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to take serious steps to address the mistreatment of LGBT people in ICE detention centers. In a statement yesterday, Rep. Mike Honda–who led the effort–said “DHS created a policy to protect LGBT detainees, yet not one of their facilities has implemented this policy. Our treatment of our fellow human beings in this instance is a disgrace and not appropriate for the government of the United States of America. We are calling on Secretary Johnson to do the right thing.” The letter also seeks to get answers to six points of concern regarding LGBT detainees including the implementation of the Transgender Care Memorandum and how transgender individuals will receive access to qualified medical professionals while in custody. More from the Washington Blade here: bit.ly/1UzqIOj

TRANSGENDER WOMAN’S ASSAULT AT STONEWALL IN HIGHLIGHTS SEXUAL VIOLENCE AGAINST COMMUNITY: Authorities are asking the public for help in finding a suspect they say sexually assaulted a transgender woman at the Stonewall Inn last weekend. The woman reported to police that a man came into the bathroom she was using and assaulted her. The incident took place at Stonewall Inn in New York City’s Greenwich Village, the site of the historic 1969 Stonewall Riots where LGBTQ bar patrons –– many of them transgender –– fought back against police harassment. The riots are generally considered the beginning of the modern LGBTQ rights movement. This brutal assault highlights the issue of sexual violence against transgender people. Research suggests that about half of transgender people will be sexually assaulted at some point in their lives. If you or someone you know has been sexually assaulted, there are some LGBTQ-friendly resources including Let’s Talk About It: A Transgender Survivor’s Guide to Accessing Therapy

STATE SNAPSHOT

OUTRAGEOUS ANTI-LGBT BILL IN MISSISSIPPI DANGEROUSLY CLOSE TO PASSAGE: Last night, by a 31 to 17 vote, the Mississippi Senate passed H.B. 1523, a horrific piece of legislation that would allow individuals, religious organizations and private associations to use religion to discriminate against LGBT Mississippians in some of the most important aspects of their lives. This comes despite the tremendous backlash that states like Georgia and North Carolina have faced for their legislatures voting in favor of bills that would put the LGBT community at risk of discrimination. Now, H.B. 1523 returns to the House for a procedural vote on a new amendment, and will then head to the desk of Governor Phil Bryant, who will either sign or veto the measure. Under H.B.1523, religion could be used by most any individual or organization to justify discrimination against LGBT people, single mothers, unwed couples and others. Taxpayer funded faith-based organizations could: refuse to recognize the marriages of same-sex couples for provision of critical services including emergency shelter; deny children in need of loving homes placement with LGBT families including the child’s own family member; and refuse to sell or rent a for-profit home to an LGBT person — even if the organization receives government funding. More on H.B.1523 here: bit.ly/235dlGO

VIRGINIA GOVERNOR VETOES ANTI-LGBT BILL: Yesterday, Virginia governor Terry McAuliffe showed true leadership by vetoing SB 41, one of several anti-LGBT bills taken up in the legislature this year in Virginia–and the only to advance to Governor McAuliffe’s desk. The veto highlights the importance of retaining a pro-equality governor in office. SB 41 was a harmful bill that would have allowed taxpayer-funded agencies and service providers to discriminate against LGBT people. Among the other anti-LGBT bills introduced in Virginia this year were: attempts to undermine marriage equality; proposals aimed at authorizing individuals, businesses and taxpayer-funded agencies to cite religion as a legal reason to refuse goods or services to LGBT people; a bill to prevent state universities and public schools from adopting LGBT non-discrimination protections; a bill to prevent transgender Virginians from changing their birth certificates to match their identity and multiple bills seeking to restrict transgender people from using facilities consistent with their gender identity. More here: on.wsj.com/1Y2bcIA

PENNSYLVANIA GOVERNOR WANTS STATE TO PROTECT LGBT RESIDENTS: The Governor of Pennsylvania wants his state to stand on the right side of history. Governor Tom Wolf is calling on the Pennsylvania General to pass LGBT-inclusive non-discrimination protections in light North Carolina’s new anti-LGBT law. Spokesperson Jeff Sheridan shared, “What North Carolina did last week is simply wrong. But equally as troubling is the fact that the Pennsylvania General Assembly has not moved to pass non-discrimination legislation in the commonwealth that would ensure that all people, regardless of sexual orientation, gender expression and identity, are treated equally under Pennsylvania law.” With nearly 6 million Pennsylvanians going to work every day to support themselves and their families, Pennsylvania’s economy is the sixth largest in the country and the 18th largest in the world. Pennsylvania is among the majority of states that lack clear laws protecting LGBT people from discrimination in employment, housing, and business services. Equality Pennsylvania, American Civil Liberties Union of Pennsylvania, American Unity Fund, HRC and Freedom for All Americans are part of Pennsylvania Competes, a coalition of large and small businesses, universities, and grassroots supporters focused on making sure all Pennsylvanians are explicitly protected from discrimination. More here: bit.ly/1Sx96ie and bit.ly/1TlcbEC

SOUTH CAROLINA LAWMAKERS POINTLESSLY ATTEMPT TO ROLL BACK THE CLOCK ON MARRIAGE EQUALITY: Last week, a handful of conservative state senators in South Carolina voted to advance S.31, a bill calling on the US Congress to amend the United States Constitution to allow states to roll back marriage equality on a state by state basis. Seeking to undermine the historic marriage equality ruling last year by the Supreme Court of the United States, S.31 calls on Congress to host a constitutional convention to amend the Constitution of the United States to allow all states to determine their own definitions of marriage. If the Constitution were to be amended in this way, it would give states the ability to roll back marriage equality if they oppose it, effectively stripping away years of progress and placing same-sex marriages in jeopardy. Fortunately, that prospect is not likely, as the South Carolina legislature has no authority to force Congress to begin the process of amending the Constitution. This bill is nothing more than a way for anti-equality legislators to publicly show their animosity toward marriage equality. After the committee voted to advance the bill, Senator Hutto placed an administrative hold on the bill known as a “minority report,” meaning that the bill cannot be brought up on the Senate floor unless it receives a two-thirds vote to place it on Special Order. If the bill were to receive Special Order, it would be placed behind a mounting pile of other contentious legislative priorities for this session. This bill is one of nearly 200 anti-LGBT bills in 34 states introduced in the 2016. For more information, visit: hrc.org/2016legislature

WISCONSIN TOWN VOTES TO PROTECT LGBT PEOPLE: Janesville, Wisconsin approved LGBT-inclusive non-discrimination ordinance. On Monday night, by a vote of 6-1 the City Council of Janesville Wisconsin voted to approve a non-discrimination ordinances that protects residents and visitors on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity and 15 other categories. As the Huffington Post points out, Janesville is the hometown of none other than House Speaker Paul Ryan. More here: huff.to/21TASrG

AROUND THE WORLD

BREWING SOMETHING GOOD: It isn’t all bad news out of the Dominican Republic. Though forces from within the Catholic Church are bent on trying to oust U.S. Ambassador James “Wally” Brewster simply because he is gay, it seems like he has become a symbol for LGBT equality in the Island nation. From an increase in LGBT people running for office, to advances in fights against stigma and discrimination, it seems like the Dominican Republic is experiencing unprecedented progress towards equality. More here: abcn.ws/1MODMal

READING RAINBOW

The Los Angeles Times gives an overview of the fights for equality in Georgia and North Carolina…. The Washington Post contextualizes the lawsuit against NC HB2… ESPN highlights how sports leagues are moving equality forward… ThinkProgress fact checks NC Governor Pat McCrory’s statements on HB2… Time lifts up Marc Benioff’s comment that anti-LGBT bills are anti-business… Reuters highlights the trans community’s fight for their rights in the states… The Associated Press compares and contrasts Ga. Gov. Deal and NC Gov. McCrory’s responses to anti-LGBT legislation… The Charlotte Observer looks at anti-LGBT extremists obsession with bathrooms… BuzzFeed covers a trans University of Pittsburgh student’s quest for justice after being denied access to the facilities that matched his gender identity… The Washington Post calculates just how much Missouri’s religious liberty bill could cost the state… The Gay News Network introduces us to Darragh Tibbs, a 15 year-old boy calling for marriage equality in Northern Ireland.

Have news? Send us your news and tips at [email protected]. Click here to subscribe to A.M. Equality and follow @HRC for all the latest news. Thanks for reading!

www.hrc.org/blog/am-equality-march-31?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

How 6 LGBT Mississippians would be harmed by HB 1523

How 6 LGBT Mississippians would be harmed by HB 1523

GLAAD

In 2015, GLAAD shared the work of six LGBT Missippians who are among the many leading advocates in the Magnolia state, working on the ground to accelerate LGBT Acceptance. Yesterday, HB 1523, an anti-LGBT “license to discriminate” bill, passed in the state Senate after passing with overwhelming support in the state House, threatens the well-being of these advocates and the many other LGBT people living in MS. It currently sits on the desk of Governor Phil Bryant, who has already voiced support for the bill.

For GLAAD’s Southern Stories Summer Tour GLAAD visited Jackson, attending events and meeting with diverse local leaders of all ages working towards full LGBT acceptance. Here are just a few of those whose daily work is not only changing hearts and minds, but saving lives, and how HB 1523 targets people like them statewide.

It’s also worth noting that, under The Religious Freedom Act, which was signed by Gov. Bryant in Apri 2014, it is already legal to for businesses to deny goods and services to everyone on this list, just for being LGBT.

Constance Gordon

Constance Gordon was born and raised outside McComb in Pike County near the Louisiana border. Gordon, who describes herself as a “masculine-gendered woman”, worked for the American Civil Liberties Union of Mississippi from early 2012 through 2014. Her work there primarily focused on youth and LGBT advocacy that included the implementation of anti-bullying policies and other issues where “youth, justice and LGBT rights kind of crosses over.” While there, she ran Youth of Color, a program that seeks to create Gay-Straight Alliances, and is active in working with several other LGBT rights organizations. Nowadays, she is running her own consulting business, where she helps owners and managers innovate products and services. Under HB 1523, the youth Candace serves can be denied counseling from suicide hotlines, but can subjected against their will to so-called “ex-LGBT conversion therapy,” a harmful practice that’s been criminalized in multiple states. Also, were Constance to start working for a for-profit corporation, she could be fired for wearing pants.

Yes–for wearing pants.

Dr. L.B. Bell

L.B. Bell, a trans farmer and physician, received his medical degree from West Virginia School of Osteopathic Medicine in Lewisburg, West Virginia. While legally married in Connecticut in 2011, as a push for marriage equality in their area, L.B. and his partner Sara Bell requested, and were denied, marriage licenses in Forrest County, Mississippi. The applications were part of the Campaign for Southern Equality “WE DO” Campaign. The couple did finally obtain a marriage license after L.B. was able to fight to successfully change his gender markers on his birth certificate. L.B. fiercely advocates for LGBT equality through his work with the trans community and the Hattiesburg Center. The deep connections and culture changing impact of his work are palpable to many individuals, trans or otherwise, in the Jackson area. The Bells make their home in Hattiesburg, Mississippi. While Dr. Bell helps heal people every day as a professional physician, it would be legal under HB 1523 for a doctor to deny him medical treatment, solely because he is trans.

Brandiilyne Dear

Brandiilyne Dear, also known fondly as Bb, is a Pastor of Joshua Generation MCC, a welcoming and affirming church in Hattiesburg, Mississippi that seeks to welcome people of all gender and sexual identities into the faith community. In fact, on the very day marriage equality became the nationwide law of the land, Brandiilyne officiated services for same-sex couples in her area. She is also the founder of The Dandelion Project, an LGBTQ organization in Laurel, Mississippi. She is pursuing her degree in social work at the University of Southern Mississippi. Brandiilyne, who was featured in the documentary ‘L Word Mississippi: Hate the Sin‘, is an advocate for LGBT equality and often finds herself protesting on the steps of the state Capital in hopes of achieving equality in the South. If Bb and her wife, Susan, shared a home together before marriage equality came to Mississippi, adoption agencies could legally deny them the opportunity to adopt children under HB 1523. This also applies to straight or different-gender couples who have lived together before marrying.

 

Todd Allen

Todd Allen wears many hats, actively serving Mississippi’s LGBT community alongside many others in the area. While serving as the Advocacy Coordinator for ACLU-Mississippi, Todd also works at Grace House, which offers support services to men and women who are homeless, living with HIV or AIDS, and recovering from substance abuse. He was part of a team of community leaders to establish the PRISM Center, the city of Jackson’s first LGBT+ community center. Todd makes his home in Jackson, Mississippi. Todd works hard to place people in safe homes, but Todd himself could be denied housing in certain buildings if Gov. Bryant passes HB 1523.

 

Kaylee Nicole Jolee

Kaylee serves as the Young Adult Ministry Facilitator at the Joshua Generation, based in Hattiesburg, Mississippi. Joshua Generation is a radically inclusive Metroplitan Community Church with an award-winning, LGBT-affirming ministry. Kaylee is dedicated to making equality a reality for transgender people and is helping develop a faith-based community built first and foremost on the commandment of love. Kaylee has been a long-time supporter of LGBT rights in the South and continues to fight for greater acceptance in Lamar and Forrest Counties and beyond in the Magnolia State. HB 1523 passing would mean Kaylee could be barred from women’s restrooms and made to use men’s bathrooms or other male-specific facilities, should service providers or her boss deem it fitting.

 

Knol Aust

For more than a decade, Knol has been the Chairman of Unity Mississippi, an organization dedicated to establishing and promoting unity the LGBT communities and its allies by serving as a catalyst for statewide education, interaction, entertainment, community growth, visibility, and awareness. In addition to being a web developer and graphic designer, Knol played an integral role in organizing OUToberfest, one of Mississippi’s only LGBT festivals that soon become Mississippi Pride. Knol and his partner, Duane, were featured in national and local outlets (among them LA TimesWashington PostRolling StoneBuzzFeed, and Jackson Free Press) when couples in Mississippi were delayed in receiving marriage licenses after the Supreme Court made marriage equality a nationwide reality. While Duane and Knol eventually received their marriage license, state employees will be allowed to refuse them assistance and abdicate any duty Duane and Knol may seek. Couples like Knol and Duane can be denied license or solemnization of their marriage, should HB 1523 pass.

 

The Southern Povery Law Center helps breaks down the pervasive impact of discrimination within the bill: 

Mississippi Lawmakers on Brink of Passing Georgia-Style Anti-LGBT ‘Religious Freedom’ Bill t.co/Ie7K5yCsjF pic.twitter.com/lUx5d55lH0

— SPLC (@splcenter) March 30, 2016

GLAAD has been speaking out against discriminatory laws in several states, including most recently Georgia, North Carolina, and South Dakota. GLAAD’s resource, “Debunking the ‘Bathroom Bills Myth‘” is a valuable resource for journalists and everyday people to understand the importance and impact of nondiscrimination bills, and ways to debunk falsehoods that often are raised in opposition to such bills. GLAAD is calling on media, both in Mississippi and nationally, to ask media to hold promoters of such discriminatory bills as HB 1523 accountable for false claims they have made.

LGBT advocates and media figures can also find background information about the LGBT community in Mississippi through GLAAD’s guidebook on the state. GLAAD developed the resource with the ACLU of Mississippi and The PRISM Center.

 
 

 

Tweet your opposition to Mississippi’s ‘license to discriminate’ bill using the hashtag #NoHB1523. Follow GLAAD on social media for regular updates about HB 1523.

March 31, 2016

www.glaad.org/blog/how-6-lgbt-mississippians-would-be-harmed-hb-1523

In Meeting With North Carolina Gov. McCrory, LGBT Equality Advocates Demand Repeal of Anti-LGBT Law

In Meeting With North Carolina Gov. McCrory, LGBT Equality Advocates Demand Repeal of Anti-LGBT Law

This morning, HRC President Chad Griffin, Equality NC Executive Director Chris Sgro, transgender advocate Candis Cox-Daniels, and other LGBT equality advocates went to the North Carolina State Capitol to hand deliver a letter from more than 100 major CEOs & business leaders urging Governor McCrory and the North Carolina General Assembly to repeal the radical provisions of the deeply discriminatory HB 2 in the upcoming legislative session in April.

Upon delivering the letter, the three were met by the governor’s chief of staff. After initially agreeing to only allow Griffin and Sgro to meet with the governor, he was persuaded to allow Candis Cox-Daniels, a North Carolinian who is a transgender woman of color, to come into the private meeting with the governor. During the meeting, Governor McCrory heard firsthand the harm that he and the state legislature are inflicting on LGBT North Carolinians, and particularly transgender North Carolinians–through the enactment of this law. As a transgender woman of color, Cox-Daniels shared the lived experience and personal challenges she has faced. The three advocates urged Governor McCrory to convene a broader meeting with additional members of the LGBT community–and specifically transgender North Carolinians and their families–to discuss the impact of the radical and discriminatory new anti-LGBT law that was rammed through the legislature last week and signed by the Governor in the dead of night.

“In our meeting with Governor McCrory, we made crystal clear that HB 2 is discriminatory, shameful, and needs to be repealed immediately,” said HRC President Chad Griffin. “We also called on him to continue to meet with LGBT North Carolinians in the days and weeks prior to April’s legislative session. The question Governor McCrory faces is a simple one: will he seize this opportunity to show true leadership, or will he allow North Carolina to remain on the wrong side of history?  This law is doing extraordinary damage to the state’s economic prospects, its reputation, and most importantly, it’s LGBT community.  The nation is waiting and watching to see which path he will take.”

“While we were glad that the Governor agreed to meet with us today to take the first step towards doing the right thing, we reiterated that he must continue to meet with LGBT North Carolinians who are directly affected by the new law,” said Equality NC Executive Director Chris Sgro. “We strongly urged the governor to repeal this harmful bill and restore North Carolina’s image by working with the General Assembly to pass comprehensive non-discrimination protections including sexual orientation and gender identity.”

“Despite the fact that he was reluctant to meet with me, I hope that Governor McCrory took to heart my personal story and the very real harm this law is inflicting on North Carolina’s transgender community,” said Candis Cox-Daniels. “The people of North Carolina are looking for the governor to show the leadership needed to repeal this appalling law.”

On Monday, Gov. McCrory claimed, “We have not taken away any rights that have currently existed in any city in North Carolina” — but PolitiFact rated that claim as false. H.B. 2 has eliminated existing municipal non-discrimination protections for LGBT people and prevents such protections from being passed by cities in the future. The legislation also forces transgender students in public schools to use restrooms and other facilities inconsistent with their gender identity, putting 4.5 billion dollars in federal funding under Title IX at risk. It also compels the same type of discrimination against transgender people to take place in government buildings, including in public universities.  Lawmakers passed the legislation in a hurried, single-day session last Wednesday, and Governor McCrory quickly signed it into law in the dead of night.

North Carolina has the unfortunate distinction of becoming the first state in the country to enact a law attacking transgender students, even after similar proposals were rejected across the country this year — including a high-profile veto by the Republican Governor Dennis Daugaard of South Dakota. North Carolina school districts that comply with the law will now be in direct violation of Title IX, subjecting the school districts to massive liability and putting an estimated $4.5 billion of federal funding from the U.S. Department of Education, as well as funding received by schools from other federal agencies, at risk. This section of House Bill 2 offers costly supposed solutions to non-existent problems, and it forces schools to choose between complying with federal law — plus doing the right thing for their students — or complying with a state law that violates students’ civil rights. Read more about how this bill puts federal funding at risk here.

North Carolina

North Carolina

North Carolina

www.hrc.org/blog/in-meeting-with-north-carolina-gov.-mccrory-lgbt-equality-advocates-demand?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed