Chinese Court Rules Against Same-Sex Couple, But They Aren’t Giving Up

Chinese Court Rules Against Same-Sex Couple, But They Aren’t Giving Up

“Once you knock on the door, you can knock on it for a second and third time, and there’s a chance the door will finally open someday.”

The post Chinese Court Rules Against Same-Sex Couple, But They Aren’t Giving Up appeared first on ThinkProgress.

thinkprogress.org/world/2016/04/13/3768930/china-gay-marriage-case/

LGBT Advocates Deliver Letter From 60 Major Business Leaders To Top Tennessee Elected Officials

LGBT Advocates Deliver Letter From 60 Major Business Leaders To Top Tennessee Elected Officials

Today, HRC, the Tennessee Equality Project, the ACLU of Tennessee, and the Tennessee Transgender Political Coalition hand-delivered to Tennessee House Speaker Beth Harwell and Senate President Ron Ramsey a letter from 60 major CEOs and business leaders urging the state’s elected officials to scrap discriminatory, anti-transgender legislation.

Earlier, Griffin was joined at a press conference by Chris Sanders, Executive Director of the Tennessee Equality Project; Dr. Marisa Richmond, lobbyist for the Tennessee Transgender Political Coalition; Hedy Weinberg, Executive Director of the ACLU of Tennessee; and Dr. Renee Mclaughlin, Senior Medical Director, Cigna HealthCare.

The open letter from top executives calling on Tennessee lawmakers to abandon their legislative assault on transgender students now has 60 signatories, a dramatic increase since the letter’s first release last week with support from business leaders at the Dow Chemical Company, Hewlett Packard Enterprise, Choice Hotels International, Inc., and Alcoa Inc. Major executives are increasingly speaking out because they know the legislation is bad for business and bad for Tennessee. They have been joined by country music stars including Emmylou Harris, Chely Wright, Ty Herndon, and Miley Cyrus, who are publicly condemning these discriminatory bills, as isCountry Music Television and its parent company, Viacom.

“Tennessee has an opportunity to learn from the mistakes of those who have planted themselves on the wrong side of history,” HRC President Chad Griffin said at a morning press conference in the shadow of the State Capitol. “Lawmakers must listen to fair-minded Tennesseans, to child welfare groups warning of the harm that will be inflicted on transgender youth, and to the growing coalition of businesses calling for this bill to be stopped. And Tennessee lawmakers must ensure this state does not follow in North Carolina’s disastrous footsteps.”

Chris Sanders, of Tennessee Equality Project, said: “Community voices have sounded the alarm in Tennessee about the wave of attack legislation. Now is the time for allies to speak out and act.”

The Tennessee General Assembly’s Fiscal Review Committee has warned that the discriminatory legislation would lead to $800,000 in lost revenue, $324,000 in expenses – in addition to the potential loss of billions in federal funding.

The state’s top lawyer has also sounded the alarm about the potential dire financial consequences of the discriminatory legislation. In an opinion released last week, Attorney General Herbert Slatery III writes: “In sum, if a transgender student is required by a school district in Tennessee to use a restroom or locker room facility that is consistent with his or her anatomical gender rather than his or her gender expression or gender identity, and if that student files a complaint, [the U.S. Department of Education], applying its current interpretation of Title IX, will almost certainly require the school district to permit the student access to the facility consistent with his or her gender expression, and refusal to do so could very well result in loss of federal funding — at least until [Department of Education’s] interpretation is overruled by authoritative and binding judicial decision.”

Tennessee Governor Bill Haslam has also voiced concerns that these discriminatory measures would compromise the state’s $3 billion in federal funding for its schools and universities. His spokesperson has said that the governor “trusts our teachers and local school boards to make necessary accommodations” for transgender students. The legislation offers costly supposed “solutions” to non-existent problems, and would force schools to choose between complying with federal law — while also doing the right thing for their students — or complying with a state law that violates students’ civil rights.

Several federal departments have announced that they are looking into whether to cut federal funding for North Carolina following the recent passage of their anti-LGBT laws. Read more about how these bills put federal funding at risk here.

Over the past month, bills with language similar to Tennessee’s discriminatory proposal were vetoed in South Dakota, but enacted in North Carolina, where lawmakers are facing fierce backlash. In South Dakota, Republican Governor Dennis Daugaard vetoed a similar bill after listening to child welfare organizations, pediatricians, and parents, and meeting with transgender children.

In North Carolina, Governor Pat McCrory and the state legislature rammed through a measure that, among other discriminatory provisions, includes a similar appalling attack on transgender students. More than 140 business leaders are calling on North Carolina’s elected officials in their upcoming legislative session to repeal that law, which puts thousands of youth, citizens, employees, and visitors to the state at risk. In the meantime, a number of businesses have begun removing investments from the state.

www.hrc.org/blog/lgbt-advocates-deliver-letter-from-60-major-business-leaders-to-top-tenness?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

GLAAD draws media attention to Tennessee anti-LGBT laws

GLAAD draws media attention to Tennessee anti-LGBT laws

GLAAD

Yesterday, GLAAD and the Tennessee Equality Project held a press conference in Nashville, Tennessee to call on the country music industry to take a stand against a pair of discriminatory bills which, if passed, would threaten the safety and rights of LGBT Tennesseans. GLAAD’s press conference has since cast a spotlight on Tennessee’s House Bill 1840 and House Bill 2414, which would allow medical professionals to refuse mental health services to LGBT patients and would deny transgender youth from using the bathroom that matches their identity, respectively. GLAAD’s message and actions has also garnered the attention and accolades of numerous national and international news outlets including Salon, The Advocate, Gay Times, and  Rolling Stone.

“Each celebrity, business owner and politician who speaks out about this bill is helping to create awareness and change,” wrote one journalist for Salon, acknowledging the significance and overall impact of GLAAD’s message. “Is that going to happen overnight? Of course not, but in the process of speaking up about this particular law, they are sending a message to other states considering passing such laws that they too would likely be next in line for a boycott.” Such sentiments echoed statements made by GLAAD President & CEO Sarah Kate Ellis during the press conference:

There is no doubt that these anti-LGBT bills will jeopardize this state’s economy. Nashville is America’s music capital, and the companies, artists, and allied businesses here alone contribute more than $9.7 billion dollars to this state’s economy. I am here today to call on the country music industry to stand with us, alongside television networks and film studios who stood with us in Georgia, in a united from against discrimination.

Rolling Stone not only noted that “Miley Cyrus, Emmylou Harris, Chely Wright and Ty Herndon, along with Viacon and CMT, have already spoken out against the bills,” but also quoted Ellis, who went on to name several companies in the enternainment industry whose voices and actions are needed to challenge this harmful legislation:

We need big voices in this industry like Sony Nashville, Big Machine Records, Universal Music Group, RCA, Curb Records, Warner Brothers and others to speak out. 

Check out statements put out in support of GLAAD’s activism by celebrities, companies, and news outlets, and add your voice by signing this petition urging Tennessee Governor Bill Haslam to veto these bills.

We’re in Nashville calling on the music industry to take a stand against discriminatory bills pending in Tennessee pic.twitter.com/lLLLK3PHnY

— GLAAD (@glaad) April 11, 2016

Today’s GLAAD and TEP press conference on hate legislation… t.co/3fh8pYClfC

— TN Equality Project (@tnequality) April 11, 2016

.@billyraycyrus is joining the list of artists speaking out against anti-LGBT bills proposed around the country pic.twitter.com/EphbM7JuDz

— GLAAD (@glaad) April 11, 2016

GLAAD calls on the Nashville music industry to protest discriminatory bills t.co/toNlUoWMng pic.twitter.com/fWuLZmyTaf

— Rolling Stone (@RollingStone) April 11, 2016

Entertainment industry leaders join @glaad in open letter against anti-#LGBT legislation: t.co/9EDSUCwkup pic.twitter.com/ZsEmAsOPEi

— Out Magazine (@outmagazine) April 12, 2016

.@GLAAD asks music industry to speak out against Tennessee’s anti-gay bills t.co/AzDXWN5bT9

— billboard (@billboard) April 11, 2016

April 13, 2016

www.glaad.org/blog/glaad-draws-media-attention-tennessee-anti-lgbt-laws

LGBTQ Advocates and Allies Stand Up and Speak Out at Historic Rally in Mississippi

LGBTQ Advocates and Allies Stand Up and Speak Out at Historic Rally in Mississippi

Post submitted by Harry Hawkins, Field Organizer HRC Mississippi

Last week, over 400 supporters rallied in front of the Governor’s mansion in Jackson, Mississippi, to call on Governor Phil Bryant to veto HB 1523, the so-called “Religious Liberty Accommodations Act.” The discriminatory law, which Bryant signed into law last week, allows almost any individual or organization to use religion as a justification to discriminate against LGBTQ Mississippians. 

In response to the horrific legislation, the community organized to show love and solidarity with LGBTQ Mississippians.  We stood together to say, both spiritually and verbally, “No Hate in Our State.”

In addition to these voices of love and protest, major corporations, including The Coca-Cola Company, Northrop Grumman, Intel, Replacements, Ltd, Nissan Group of North America, Tyson Food Inc, MGM Resorts International, AT&T, IBM, MassMutual and Toyota, have publicly voiced their opposition to the appalling legislation.

Gov. Bryant also ignored the call of the Mississippi Manufacturers Association to veto the discriminatory measure. Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff has joined an effort to get more CEOs to speak publicly against the law, and top executives from Microsoft and IBM have asserted that the law is bad for business.

As a proud Mississippian, it’s almost hard to believe that in a state with failing schools, closing county hospitals and crumbling infrastructure, the legislature and the governor would find time to enact and enforce state-sanctioned discrimination.

HRC Mississippi will continue to mobilize supporters across the state to contact their state and local leaders to let them know the dangerous impact this law will have on our state. We will also continue to engage our business community through our Equality is Our Business program, including those business owners in the past several days that have bravely stood up and proclaimed that they are there to serve all customers. And finally, we are engaging our faith leaders and faith communities through a public letter campaign to voice opposition of this harmful law.  

www.hrc.org/blog/lgbtq-advocates-and-allies-stand-up-and-speak-out-at-historic-rally-in-miss?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed