HRC HIV 360° Fellow Speaks Out on National Asian & Pacific Islander HIV & AIDS Awareness Day

HRC HIV 360° Fellow Speaks Out on National Asian & Pacific Islander HIV & AIDS Awareness Day

Post submitted by Sasanka Jinadasa. Jinadasa is the Capacity Building and Community Resource Manager at HIPS in Washington, D.C., and an HRC HIV 360° Fellow

As a self-identified queer, Sri Lankan hard femme and an HRC HIV 360° Fellow, I frequently speak out about the impact of HIV and AIDS on the Asian and Pacific Islander (API) community. While often over-looked, HIV prevention and treatment efforts need to take into consideration the unique challenges facing the API community, especially since 1 in 5 Asians living with HIV do not know they have it.

For example, as a kid, I never got “the talk.” My parents never sat me down and explained how sex worked and how and where to access condoms and birth control. I didn’t get this talk, much less one that was inclusive of LGBTQ people and the current realities of HIV.

I don’t blame my parents for their reluctance because sex is a taboo topic in many API households, including the Sri Lankan immigrant community I grew up in. I remember a number of my cousins, friends and acquaintances spreading misinformation about HIV simply because they didn’t know any better. This type of environment made it much more difficult for me to talk openly and honestly about my sexuality, sexual health and HIV.

This year, on National Asian & Pacific Islander HIV and AIDS Awareness Day, I’m asking everyone in the API community to learn about the effects of the HIV epidemic on our communities. API people, especially those who identify as LGBTQ, should get tested early and often. I want us to seek out information about HIV, get acquainted with resources in our neighborhoods and take advantage of the many prevention and treatment options available to us. Organizations like HIPS are serving API people year-round and we’re eager to support folks who want to stay healthy and be part of the generation that ends the HIV and AIDS epidemic once and for all.

It’s also important that members of the API community stand in solidarity with other communities disproportionately impacted by HIV & AIDS. The Black community, particularly transgender women and gay and bisexual men, bear the heaviest burden of new HIV transmissions in the United States. As people of color, we should be mindful that conversations about health and HIV will often be bigger than just the API community and will require having that dialogue across cultural differences. But I know we can do it, because I’ve seen it done before.

No more shame. No more stigma. Together, let’s create an AIDS-free generation.

To find out more about the HRC HIV 360° Fellows, click here. Join the conversation about National Asian & Pacific Islander HIV and AIDS Awareness Day by using the hashtags #BeInTheKnow and #APIMay19.

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Sia Surprises Gay Contestant on ‘Survivor’ Finale with Unexpected Gift: WATCH [SPOILERS]

Sia Surprises Gay Contestant on ‘Survivor’ Finale with Unexpected Gift: WATCH [SPOILERS]

Sia Survivor

[SPOILERS]

Survivor is known for its twists and surprises, and last night’s finale was no different. There was a surprise wig-wearing guest at the reunion show who emerged from the audience at one point: Sia, the Australian pop phenomenon who won’t show her face, and didn’t last night.

Towleroad readers might recall Tai Trang, the 51-year-old gay gardener who fled Vietnam with his family during the war, survived 11 days on the open ocean, and ended up in an Indonesian refugee camp, and this year became one of the season’s most intriguing characters, and finalists.

RELATED: Bromance Blooms Between Tai and Caleb on Survivor Koah Rong: WATCH

Tai is also an animal lover who protected one of the show’s chickens for an entire season so it wouldn’t be devoured by his starving fellow castaways.

Sia, a fellow animal lover and massive Survivor fan, was so impressed by Tai’s authenticity and care for animals, that she donated $50,000 to Tai and another $50,000 to his choice of animal charity.

Watch:

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This Britain’s Got Talent Contestant Can Do Amazing Things with His Pole: WATCH

This Britain’s Got Talent Contestant Can Do Amazing Things with His Pole: WATCH

Saul Sarmiento

Saul Sarmiento walked out on the Britain’s Got Talent stage this week and had David Walliams at hello, but proved there was much more of his anatomy in store for the judges.

Watch:

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House Approves Defense Bill That Would Undo Obama’s LGBT Executive Orders on Job Bias

House Approves Defense Bill That Would Undo Obama’s LGBT Executive Orders on Job Bias

The U.S. House of Representatives last night approved the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) which contained a “religious liberty” amendment added by freshman Rep. Steve Russell (R-OK) which undermines President Obama’s 2014 executive order prohibiting anti-LGBT workplace discrimination among federal contractors.

Rep. Steve Russell (R-OK)HRC reports:

The anti-LGBT provision, offered as an amendment by Rep. Steve Russell (R-OK) in the House Armed Services Committee, would allow, under the guise of religious liberty, sweeping anti-LGBT discrimination in all federal agencies, not just the Department of Defense. The provision jeopardizes President Obama’s executive order prohibiting LGBT discrimination in federal contracting, and could have far-reaching consequences, potentially even undermining existing federal nondiscrimination provisions protecting workers against discrimination on the basis of race, religion, sex, pregnancy, sexual orientation, gender identity, and more.

Representatives Charlie Dent (R-PA) and Adam Smith (D-WA) filed an amendment to strip the Russell Amendment, but the House Rules Committee — an arm of House Republican Leadership — rejected the bipartisan amendment, refusing to allow debate or a vote on the House floor. The amendment to strip the discriminatory Russell Amendment was also cosponsored by Reps. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-FL), Carlos Curbelo (R-FL), Richard Hanna (R-NY), Mike Coffman (R-CO), Jerry Nadler (D-NY), Rick Larsen (D-WA), Kurt Schrader (D-OR) and Scott Peters (D-CA).

A last-ditch effort by House Democrats to strip the amendment failed along nearly party lines on a procedural vote. Representative Sean Patrick Maloney (D-NY) spoke on the floor against the Russell Amendment. “The anti-LGBT provision in NDAA is not about supporting our troops, defeating ISIS, or protecting religious liberty – it’s about bigotry, plain and simple,” said Rep. Maloney. “We had an opportunity to strike this anti-LGBT language and in doing so, strike a blow for equality, but unfortunately many of our colleagues chose to strip LGBT Americans of basic workplace protections, saying it is once again legal for our LGBT brothers and sisters to be fired because of who they are, and who they love – this is wrong.  I am incredibly disappointed in many of my colleagues refusal to take a stand against discrimination and strike the hate.”

The Senate is expected to vote on its own NDAA shortly after which both bills will be combined, approved again, and sent to the President for signature.

The White House has said it opposes the Russell amendment.

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House Approves National Defense Authorization Act Embedded With Discriminatory Anti-LGBT Provision

House Approves National Defense Authorization Act Embedded With Discriminatory Anti-LGBT Provision

Today, HRC called out the U.S. House of Representatives for approving a new National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) containing an anti-LGBT provision that would allow sweeping taxpayer-funded discrimination.

“Taxpayer funded discrimination is always wrong and today the House followed in the footsteps of North Carolina, Mississippi, Indiana and other states that are targeting LGBT Americans,” said HRC Government Affairs Director David Stacy. “Instead of listening to the super-majority of the American people who support legal protections for LGBT people, the House majority is catering to right wing extremists who would turn back the clock on equality. We are very disappointed that House Republican Leadership allowed this bill to move forward with a discriminatory and harmful anti-LGBT provision, and we are committed to  working with our allies in the Senate and House to keep this harmful language from the final version of the defense bill.”

The anti-LGBT provision, offered as an amendment by Rep. Steve Russell (R-OK) in the House Armed Services Committee, would allow, under the guise of religious liberty, sweeping anti-LGBT discrimination in all federal agencies, not just the Department of Defense. The provision jeopardizes President Obama’s executive order prohibiting LGBT discrimination in federal contracting, and could have far-reaching consequences, potentially even undermining existing federal nondiscrimination provisions protecting workers against discrimination on the basis of race, religion, sex, pregnancy, sexual orientation, gender identity, and more.

Representatives Charlie Dent (R-PA) and Adam Smith (D-WA) filed an amendment to strip the Russell Amendment, but the House Rules Committee — an arm of House Republican Leadership — rejected the bipartisan amendment, refusing to allow debate or a vote on the House floor. The amendment to strip the discriminatory Russell Amendment was also cosponsored by Reps. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-FL), Carlos Curbelo (R-FL), Richard Hanna (R-NY), Mike Coffman (R-CO), Jerry Nadler (D-NY), Rick Larsen (D-WA), Kurt Schrader (D-OR) and Scott Peters (D-CA).

A last-ditch effort by House Democrats to strip the amendment failed along nearly party lines on a procedural vote. Representative Sean Patrick Maloney (D-NY) spoke on the floor against the Russell Amendment. “The anti-LGBT provision in NDAA is not about supporting our troops, defeating ISIS, or protecting religious liberty – it’s about bigotry, plain and simple,” said Rep. Maloney. “We had an opportunity to strike this anti-LGBT language and in doing so, strike a blow for equality, but unfortunately many of our colleagues chose to strip LGBT Americans of basic workplace protections, saying it is once again legal for our LGBT brothers and sisters to be fired because of who they are, and who they love – this is wrong.  I am incredibly disappointed in many of my colleagues refusal to take a stand against discrimination and strike the hate.”

The Senate is expected to soon consider its version of the NDAA on the Senate floor. Following Senate passage, the two chambers will negotiate a final version of the bill, which must then be approved by both chambers and signed by the President. The White House has already issued Statement of Administrative Policy indicating its strong opposition to the Russell Amendment.

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