San Diego Gay Men’s Chorus Humiliated in Homophobic ‘Nightmare’ at Padres Game: WATCH

San Diego Gay Men’s Chorus Humiliated in Homophobic ‘Nightmare’ at Padres Game: WATCH

San Diego Gay Men's Chorus

The San Diego Gay Men’s Chorus was at the center of a disturbing incident that happened at Petco Park on Saturday night. Called upon to sing the Star-Spangled Banner, there singing was replaced with a recording of a woman, nobody stopped it, and they were led off the field afterward while being taunted by homophobic fans in the stands.

Video of the incident below:

The SDGMC statement:

What should have been a night of joy and celebration at Petco Park last night, instead turned into a nightmare raising serious questions about homophobia within the San Diego Padres organization and its relationship with the LGBT community.

Before the start of the last night’s San Diego Padres game, 100 volunteer singers of the San Diego Gay Men’s Chorus took to the field to proudly sing the National Anthem. Instead, in front of the large crowd gathered for the LA Dodgers game, the San Diego Padres played the recorded voice of a woman singing the anthem.

No attempt was made to stop the recording and start over. No announcement of apology was made to the singers or their friends and families in the stands. No attempt to correct the situation occurred other than to force the 100 men to stand in the spotlight of center field for the song’s duration and then be escorted off the field to the heckles of baseball fans shouting homophobic taunts including “You sing like a girl.”

This incident followed several days of troubling comments and behavior within the San Diego Padres organization. Three days before the game, San Diego Padres representatives aggressively sought to prevent singers from performing the National Anthem unless they purchased a ticket to the game—even if they did not plan to stay for the game—which was not part of any previous discussion or written or verbal agreement and would have cost the small, community-based non-profit thousands of dollars. The demand eventually was rescinded on Friday following repeated complaints made by SDGMC and San Diego Pride to San Diego Padres management.

With this as background, we call on the San Diego Padres and Major League Baseball to immediately launch a full and transparent investigation into the incident to determine if someone or some people intentionally engaged in anti-gay discrimination or a hate crime by playing a female’s voice to represent a group of gay men with the purpose of denigrating and/or ridiculing gay men. The historic significance of such an act is not lost on the LGBT community—especially in relation to professional sports—and added to the depth of embarrassment experienced by the singers and their families.

We also call upon the City of San Diego City Attorney’s Office and the City of San Diego Human Relations Commission to independently investigate this incident to determine if members of the San Diego Padres organization engaged in activity in violation of the San Diego Human Rights Ordinance or engaged in any deliberate hate crimes based on sexual orientation.

We applaud San Diego Padres President and Chief Executive Office Mike Dee for reaching out to our organization to apologize and to offer to meet with LGBT leaders to discuss the incident. We look forward to this meeting. We believe it is important to work together with the San Diego Padres organization to build bridges within the LGBT community rather than burn them down as happened last night.

However, we are very disappointed with the San Diego Padres dismissively brief two sentence statement at 9:37 p.m. on Saturday, May 21, 2016 which did not appropriately address the gravity of the situation nor pay due to the 100 volunteers who took to the field in celebration and were led off in humiliation.

Watch:

 

The Union-Tribune reports that the voice broadcast was reportedly that of the Friday night anthem singer:

The Padres issued a one-paragraph statement during Saturday night’s game to apologize for the incident:

“This evening, during the pregame ceremony, a mistake was made in the Petco Park control room that prevented the San Diego Gay Men’s Chorus from performing the National Anthem as scheduled. We apologize to anyone in the ballpark who this may have offended, and have reached out to the Chorus to express our deep regret for the error.”

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Trump’s SCOTUS List: Why It’s Bad News for LGBT People

Trump’s SCOTUS List: Why It’s Bad News for LGBT People

Donald Trump Trumps SCOTUS list

Donald Trump is working hard to make amends with the GOP’s most conservative voters, who weren’t exactly #teamtrump just a few months ago.

On Friday, he earned the endorsement of the National Rifle Association, slamming Hillary Clinton’s stance on gun control. Last month he tweaked his opposition to North Carolina’s HB2 law, just one day after voicing his objection to the legislation. And earlier this month, he warned supporters about the dangers of a possible appointment of a liberal-leaning Justice, saying that it would “destroy our nation.”

True to form, on Wednesday he released a list of 11 possible nominees to fill the void left by the sudden death of gay rights foe Justice Antonin Scalia last February.

The names surely pleased the Republican Party’s most hard-line conservatives: eight men and three women, all white, all heterosexual. Not all of them have ruled in LGBT cases. Some have, while others have ruled to restrict voting rights, or limit abortion rights. Most of them have clerked for the Court’s most conservative Justices, like Scalia and Clarence Thomas, and all of them are affiliated with the very influential conservative legal group The Federalist Society. Of the 11 possible picks, we came up with the four most likely to win the Kim Davis Intolerance Award, whenever that is created.

William Pryor1. William Pryor, a judge on the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals. When he served as Alabama’s attorney general in 2003, he wrote an amicus brief defending Texas’s antigay sodomy law in Lawrence v. Texas, comparing homosexuality to prostitution, adultery, necrophilia, bestiality, possession of child pornography, and even incest and pedophilia. Lambda Legal called him the “most demonstrably antigay judicial nominee in recent memory,” and opposed his nomination to the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals in 2005. Pryor also changed his vacation plans to avoid being at Disney during gay days, according to former HRC President Cheryl Jacques.

 

Diane Sykes2. Diane Sykes, a judge on the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals, has argued that an anti-LGBT student group, the Christian Legal Society, did not violate Southern Illinois University’s School of Law’s anti-discrimination policies by denying membership to people who “engaged in or affirmed homosexual conduct.” In Christian Legal Society v. Walker, Sykes denied that CLS engaged in discrimination, Think Progress notes, because “it made an exception to its policies for LGBT people who refrained from having sex.” And so, Sykes opined, CLS should still be recognized as an official campus group and keep receiving public funding.

 

 

David Strass3. David Stras, Associate Justice of the Minnesota Supreme Court, was among the court majority who opposed the assignment of a new title for a 2012 constitutional amendment against marriage equality. Instead of “Recognition of Marriage Solely Between One Man and One Woman,” Minnesota’s Secretary of State Mark Ritchie had proposed “Limiting the Status of Marriage to Opposite Sex Couples,” but conservative lawmakers feared the new title would make voters more likely to vote against the amendment. Stras and the court majority sided with the lawmakers, and the title wasn’t changed.

 

Don Willet4. Don Willett, Texas Supreme Court Justice, likes to make jokes on social media and criticizes Trump regularly. Perhaps not unsurprisingly, he has also used Twitter to mock marriage equality, tweeting early last year that he could “support recognizing a constitutional right to marry bacon.” Willlett also retweeted FOX News’ tweet about a transgender student in California who joined the girls’ softball team adding: “Go away, A-Rod.”

 

 

I could support recognizing a constitutional right to marry bacon. pic.twitter.com/HKPW6tE4H6

— Justice Don Willett (@JusticeWillett) April 30, 2015

Go away, A-Rod. “@FoxNews: California’s transgender law allows male high schooler to make girls’ softball team t.co/hnTrWAaV8g

— Justice Don Willett (@JusticeWillett) February 14, 2014

The other (very conservative) jurists on the list are: Steven Colloton and Raymond Gruender, both judges on the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, Thomas Hardiman, a judge on the 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals, Raymond Kethledge, a judge on the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals; Allison Eid, Justice of the Colorado Supreme Court; Joan Larsen, justice of the Michigan Supreme Court; and Thomas Lee, Associate Chief Justice on the Utah Supreme Court.

(Trump photo: Michael Vadon Wikimedia Commons)

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Mr. Gay Great Britain Gets Personal On Testing HIV Positive After Resisting PrEP

Mr. Gay Great Britain Gets Personal On Testing HIV Positive After Resisting PrEP

Sadiq Ali photo

When Sadiq Ali heard about a clinical trial for pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) happening in the United Kingdom in 2013, the athletic 26-year old hesitated. He worried about what starting PrEP might say to people about his sexual behavior. The stigma he associated with being on the prevention pill was just too much for him.

“I was ashamed to even be offered this thing, even though I barely knew what it was,” the Londoner says now. “I thought that only highly promiscuous and risky sex practitioners would take this. I went through this process of ‘slut shaming’ myself. I was still very naïve at this point.”

So, Sadiq waited a few more months, had second thoughts, and decided to enroll in the PrEP study after all. Unfortunately, fate had dealt him a crushing blow.

Between the time Sadiq heard about the study and before he actually began taking PrEP, he was infected with HIV. It occurred literally days before he started taking the pill. His first HIV test during the study, in January of 2014, revealed the infection.

“I thought if I took PrEP it would make me all the things I didn’t think were me. Things that I didn’t want to be,” he says, pointing to the promiscuity about which many gay men taking PrEP are accused. “But instead, not taking it resulted in me contracting HIV.”

Related: Five Sexy Men On PrEP Explain Why They Are Taking The Pill

The irony of Sadiq’s tragic timing forged an advocate who is fighting both HIV stigma and for the adoption of PrEP in the United Kingdom (it is an advocacy issue that was further ignited when the UK National Health Services took action that has delayed the approval of Truvada as PrEP, perhaps for years).

This past year, Sadiq won the title of Mr. Gay Great Britain, and his advocacy platform is something he now understands all too well: HIV stigma among gay men, and why PrEP is such an important new prevention tool.

In his emotional and inspiring video as a contestant for Mr Gay World, Sadiq courageously shared his story of deciding to join the PrEP trial too late, and what the experience has taught him about internalized stigma.

“Something was lifted from my shoulders when I filmed the video,” Sadiq says. “I can now be in a position to educate.”

 

British PrEP advocate and gay internet personality Greg Owen understands just how frustrating the unfortunate timing of Sadiq’s HIV diagnosis was. Greg, too, was infected with HIV just as he was to begin participating in a PrEP trial. The two men – one a longtime advocate, the other a newly minted one – filmed an interview for #GregChats that is as good-natured as it is emotional.

As for Sadiq’s week at Mr. Gay World in Malta, he valiantly showcased both his advocacy and his eye-popping skill as a gymnast and circus performer. Alas, the crown went to Mr Spain, Roger Gosalbez Pitalug.

“I am more motivated than I have ever been and I feel proud,” says Sadiq. “I know that I am doing the right thing. I want to tell people that there is a way to protect yourself, and there is no need to judge yourself for that. To take your status into your own hands is something empowering.”

Winning the pageant was always beside the point, Sadiq believes.

“Of course,” he says, “I have already won.”

(Photo credit: Josh Auke. Videos produced by Nuno Lopes.)

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10 Things About 2016 That Would Make Harvey Milk Beam From Ear To Ear

10 Things About 2016 That Would Make Harvey Milk Beam From Ear To Ear

list-political-assassinations-harvey-milk-E

Happy Birthday, Harvey — which also means happy Harvey Milk Day! The civil rights hero would have been 86 this year, and though he helped fan the flames of the fight for civil rights, he couldn’t possibly have imagined how much progress we would have made by now.

It’s been an incredible year for LGBTQ rights, both in the US and around the world. Of course, there’s still lots of progress remaining to be made — particularly in the area of trans freedoms — but even just halfway through 2016, there’s a ton to feel great about.

1. Marriage Legalized in Colombia

Congrats to our queer friends to the south! This past April, the Colombian high court ruled 6-3 that the constitution requires marriage equality. They’ve had limited civil unions in the country since 2007, but now they can look forward to full federal equality. It’s the fourth South American country to legalize the freedom to marry, and it won’t be the last.

2. Charlotte Passes Nondiscrimination Ordinance

What could go wrong? The Charlotte City Council passed a bill in February that protected LGBT people from discrimination in the context of public accommodations, contracting, and other areas. (In other words, no more refusing to make cakes for gay weddings.) Despite having widespread support on the council, passing 7-4, state Republicans sprang into action to oppose the measure and passed HB2, which rolled back protections and created new ways to harm queer people.

3. National Outrage Over North Carolina

Fortunately, the days when politicians could demonize LGBTs without fear of repercussions are over. After North Carolina passed its draconian HB2, which made life miserable for everyone, but particularly trans people seeking bathroom access, the country flew into an outrage. The governor backpedaled a bit, but in general held firm on the bill — a stance that will likely hurt him in the upcoming election. Jerk presidential candidate Ted Cruz defended the bill as well, and before long he was out of the running.

4. The World’s First Endowed Academic Chair of Transgender Studies

You might not have heard, because it didn’t generate the kind of outrage that draws clicks, but the University of Victoria in British Columbia now has an endowed academic chair of transgender studies. We’re looking forward to the scholarship that this makes possible, thanks in large part to a donation of $2 million. That cash came from Jennifer Pritzker, a trans woman and former Army Colonel.

5. Salt Lake City’s First Openly Gay Mayor

Who’d have thunk it? A queer mayor in the home of the Mormons. Jackie Biskupski is the first openly gay mayor for Salt Lake City, although there have doubtlessly been lots of closeted mayors in the past. She’s also the city’s second female mayor, and a longtime advocate for civil rights.

6. Italy and Estonia Drag Their Feet Toward Marriage Equality

Ugh, come on Italy, hurry up. The country recently became the last in western Europe to offer relationship recognition to same-sex couples with the adoption of civil unions. And those limited protections are better than nothing, but come on — it has to be marriage. Similarly, Estonia recently legalized civil unions and adoption, but that’s still not good enough. Those countries’ slow progress is probably due to the influence of the Catholic Church, which has clung to power and wealth while oppressing people for centuries.

7. Montana Bans Discrimination — Sometimes

Governor Steve Bullock has taken a few incremental steps towards protections with the issuing of an executive order that prohibits employment discrimination on the basis of gender identity. That’s nice, but it doesn’t go far enough, failing to cover housing and public accommodations and education and finance. (You can be denied a loan in some states because you’re gay.)

8: Greenland Legalizes Same-Sex Marriage

Now that’s more like it. Take a lesson, Italy and Estonia. By a wide margin, Greenland’s parliament legalized marriage equality back in April. Couples were allowed to marry on the very same day. This had been in the works for a year, but was delayed by elections, so it’s nice to see how quickly the bill moved from concept to execution.

9. Canada’s Ceremonial First Kiss Goes Gay

Master Seaman Francis Legare and his partner, Corey Vautour, made history this year when they made out. Traditionally, the Canadian Navy selects one lucky sailor to be greeted by his or her partner upon return home, and for the first time ever the honor was shared by two men. Congrats to the happy couple! This is one area in which the United States was slightly more progressive: the first queer Navy kiss in America was back in 2011, between Petty Officer 2nd Class Marissa Gaeta and her girlfriend.

10. The First Trans Pride Flag

Hard to believe it took this long, but Santa Clara County became the first in the nation to raise the transgender pride flag. Pink, blue, and white, it flew over City Hall for Transgender Day of Visibility on March 31. Kudos to the Bay Area town that made it possible. Harvey would have been beaming.

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Jussie Smollett, Trump and Clinton Polls, Ironman, Gay Coachella, Starbucks Sneakers, Ara: NEWS

Jussie Smollett, Trump and Clinton Polls, Ironman, Gay Coachella, Starbucks Sneakers, Ara: NEWS

trump2016 ELECTION. Donald Trump – This is How Fascism Comes to America: “What these people do not or will not see is that, once in power, Trump will owe them and their party nothing. He will have ridden to power despite the party, catapulted into the White House by a mass following devoted only to him. By then that following will have grown dramatically. Today, less than 5 percent of eligible voters have voted for Trump. But if he wins the election, his legions will likely comprise a majority of the nation. Imagine the power he would wield then.”

POLLS. Trump and Clinton close in battleground states. IN NBC News national poll, Hillary Clinton leads Trump by just three points: “Clinton, who remains a heavy favorite to win the Democrat nomination, leads the presumptive GOP nominee 46 percent to 43 percent among registered voters, a difference that is within the poll’s margin of error of plus-or-minus 3.1 percentage points. In April, Clinton held an 11-point advantage over Trump, 50 percent to 39 percent, and had led him consistently by double digits since December.”

0522-03btfltrumpclinton

AN OPENLY GAY MAN RUNS THE ARMY. NYT salutes confirmation of Eric Fanning: “Read that sentence again and contemplate what it reveals about how much and how quickly American society has changed. Only five years ago, openly gay people were barred from serving in its armed forces. During Mr. Fanning’s lengthy confirmation process, his sexual orientation was simply not an issue. That is a tribute to those who fought so hard to repeal the ban, and a measure of the nation’s at times uncertain, but as yet unfailing, march toward equality.”

gay army secretary nominee eric fanning

NORTH CAROLINA. 200 triathletes pull out of Ironman events: “More than 200 athletes who had registered to compete in Ironman events in Raleigh and Wilmington North Carolina pulled out when Ironman have them the opportunity to switch to other Ironman events, a move prompted by the state’s controversial LGBT law known as House Bill 2 (HB2). Ironman gave race registrants the option to transfer to Ironman races in other states in 2016 if they made a request by May 9.”

Here’s the letter. Thanks for sending @parezcoydigo. #hb2 #Ironman pic.twitter.com/03jSboZDpl

— Heath Dotson (@heathdotson) May 5, 2016

NATIONAL SHOWDOWN. Transgender Americans see personal battle take center stage.

LA Pride‘GAY COACHELLA’. L.A. Pride blasted for selling out: “Christopher Street West this year tried to rebrand the event as a music festival, saying it was trying to appeal to millennials. It raised ticket prices and, until protests grew loud enough, shortened free events dedicated to transgender people and lesbians.   Protesters, deriding the event as a commercialized “gay Coachella,” organized under the moniker #NotOurPride. ‘What they have done is a blatant commercialization of Pride and a disregard of Los Angeles’ LGBT community’s history and legacy,’ said Peter Cruz, associate director of the Asian Pacific AIDS Intervention Team, which has spearheaded the protests.”

HRC Mark Kirk endorsementILLINOIS. Republicans divided on gay marriage, abortion at convention: “[Mark] Kirk, facing a difficult election fight against Democratic Rep. Tammy Duckworth, has supported same-sex marriage. But as the state GOP’s platform committee sought to remove previous language defining marriage as between one man and one woman, committee members were heavily lobbied by social conservatives and members of the state’s Republican congressional delegation, including U.S. Rep. Peter Roskam of Wheaton. Following nearly three hours of discussion, the committee voted 10-7 with one abstention on new language that also recognizes “non-traditional families are worthy of the same respect and legal protections as traditional families.”

MICHIGAN. Rocks at Hastings High School marred with anti-gay graffiti. “A lot of people were upset because the things they wrote on the rock were not OK,” the Hastings student said. “They were mean slurs against gay people.”

anti-gay rocks

JUSSIE SMOLLETT. The Empire actor said a tweet he wrote which suggested he was leaving the show led to death threats for Lee Daniels: “I was thinking like my little core group of amazing fans would be like, ‘What?’ But it just went so much further. Like there were calls about it and Lee (Daniels) was getting death threats about it.”

Listen 2 my words…I’ll see y’all season 3. #IAintGoingNoWhere #IAintNoDumbHo #StillIRise #EmpireFinale #empire pic.twitter.com/hqo3iMV3lQ

— Jussie Smollett (@JussieSmollett) May 19, 2016

PROMISES DOWN UNDER. Labor plans gay and lesbian rights watchdog: “Labor would appoint a champion of gay and lesbian rights if it wins government, in a move that further highlights Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull’s adherence to his predecessor Tony Abbott’s same-sex marriage stance. Labor on Saturday announced it would appoint a full time LGBTI Discrimination Commissioner to the Australian Human Rights Commission to “help build a more inclusive Australia”. The role would cost $1.4 million over four years.”

FASHION. Starbucks…sneakers?

Starbucks sneakers are here…for some reason t.co/K3PDOqeXOo pic.twitter.com/gK74j7oDZ5

— GQ Magazine (@GQMagazine) May 22, 2016

DOUBLE FLEX. Zac Efron celebrates his Baywatch wrap.

Instagram Photo

 

ARA. This is Google’s modular smartphone idea. Thoughts?

SUNDAY STUD. Trans model and this month’s Attitude cover star Laith Ashley.

Instagram Photo

Instagram Photo

Instagram Photo

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Hillary and Bernie Hammer Out Their Differences Over a Beer in SNL Cold Open: WATCH

Hillary and Bernie Hammer Out Their Differences Over a Beer in SNL Cold Open: WATCH

Hillary Clinton Bernie Sanders SNL

Kate McKinnon’s Hillary Clinton runs into Larry David’s Bernie Sanders in a bar in SNL’s cold open and let each other in on their deepest secrets.

Says Sanders: “You know how I constantly rail against the upper class? Sometimes when I go to sleep at night I dream about being a fancy millionaire or billionaire! And in my dream, I wear a fancy hat. I say fancy things like, ‘I’ll have a tuna sandwich…on a croissant!”

Says Clinton: “Can I tell you a secret? I’ve never told anyone this, but, you know the presidency? I really, really want it…and you know what else? I really don’t like people. I only talk to them because I want the presidency so bad.”

Watch:

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Celebrating Harvey Milk on His 86th Birthday

Celebrating Harvey Milk on His 86th Birthday

Today, HRC honors the lift and legacy of LGBT hero and leader Harvey Milk who would have been 86-years-old today. In 1977, Milk made history when he was elected to serve as a San Francisco City Supervisor and became one of the first openly LGBT elected officials in the country. Less than a year later, he was murdered, along with San Francisco Mayor George Moscone, on November 28, 1978.

Milk’s legacy lives on through LGBT activists across the world. He envisioned a place where all people, regardless of sexual orientation or gender identity, were treated equally.

“Hope will never be silent,” he famously stated.

The San Francisco HRC Action Center and Store in the historic Castro District is located in Milk’s former camera shop. In addition to keeping LGBT individuals and allies informed on national issues, the action center engages advocates to push leaders at all levels in support of equality.   

Today, we honor his legacy, vision and sacrifice.

Learn more about HRC’s Action Center and Store in San Francisco here.

www.hrc.org/blog/celebrating-harvey-milk-on-his-86th-birthday?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed