5 reasons why Anthony Kennedy’s retirement is a major blow for LGBTQ rights
Daily Archives: June 27, 2018
Justice Kennedy Retires. That Means One Thing.
Justice Kennedy Retires. That Means One Thing.
I have a lot of feelings about Justice Kennedy’s retirement.
I’m angry. Angry at Republicans who stole a seat away from President Obama. Angry at those who said there was no difference between Hillary and Donald Trump. Angry at those Democrats who sat out the 2010, 2014, and 2016 elections. Angry at those caught up in a false media narrative about emails. Angry that we could have stopped this had we been smarter.
I’m worried. Worried for our country. Worried that I’m not doing enough to solve the problem. Worried that real people–mostly persons of color, sexual minorities, and women–are getting hurt while the junta running our country props up the white patriarchy and lines the pockets of wealthy corporations.
I’m in despair. Justice Kennedy’s replacement could create a solid conservative majority for generations, undermining a woman’s right to choose, anti-discrimination laws, and every protection the queer community has fought for and won over the last three decades. Kennedy was no liberal; his entire career, not just his last few opinions siding with the Court’s other conservatives on unions, abortion clinics, and the Muslim ban, prove he is a conservative through and through. That he was considered a “swing justice” says far more about the conservative center of gravity on the Court than it does Kennedy. But he did author the so-called “gay rights” decisions of Romer, Lawrence, Windsor, and Obergefell. If his replacement looks anything like Justice Gorsuch, all of those decisions are in jeopardy.
Kennedy’s career, his opinions affecting queer communities, his decision to retire, and the politics surrounding it deserve separate columns, and they are all coming soon. But his retirement means one thing right now:
It’s time for progressives to make the federal courts a galvanizing campaign issue!
This had been difficult in the past for a few reasons.
First, law is sometimes inaccessible to your average voter, and the progressive movement utterly lacks a counterweight to the powerful Federalist Society, a conservative organization that both cultivates young conservative legal scholars and works to engage conservative voters on behalf of right-wing legal interpretation. The American Constitution Society does none of that.
Second, progressives have long lived in a legal environment that seems to tilt in their favor. After all, abortion is legal, gays can marry, and we have free speech. It requires progressive to read after the headline to realize that the world is not so rosy. Conservative federal judges have put burdens on a woman’s right to choose; there are several states that are about to be without any abortion providers because of the restrictions states are now allowed to put on those providers. Gays can marry, sure, but they, and their transgender comrades, can be discriminated against left and right. Free speech is awesome, but a libertarian approach to the First Amendment allows those with the biggest megaphone (the richest) to silence the rest of us.
Third, Democratic politicians have shied away from “politicizing” the judiciary. That’s why we’ve gotten solid moderates from Presidents Clinton and Obama. Republicans have long ago abandoned that mantra, which is why they’ve given us radicals and shifted the judiciary far to the right.
All of this has to change, and it has to change now. We need new progressive institutions that make a progressive judiciary the goal. We need political candidates who don’t shrink from making the courts the issue. We need to scare our voters just like conservatives have been doing for years: “Obama is going to take away your guns and overturn the Second Amendment,” “Vote for me and I’ll vote for judges who will overturn Roe v. Wade and end the murder of babies.” Those have been campaign planks for years. There is nothing like that on the left.
So, what can we do? Take the day to despair, and to hug your friends and loved ones. And tomorrow, get to work.
The Democrats have previous little leverage to beat back an arch-conservative nominee. There is no filibuster for Supreme Court nominees. Huge protests like we saw at the beginning of the Trump presidency may persuade Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski, but don’t bet on it. Both of those senators like to leverage moderate rhetoric for a while before folding to the conservative leadership in the end. The Democrats could take back the House in November, but Senate Republicans seem far more secure and, in any event, the House plays no role in court nominations.
Therefore, we have to make the Court a campaign issue. It will take generations. It will take engagement by civil society over and above what progressives have been doing to date.
I don’t know about you, but I’ve had enough. I’ve had enough of people telling me progressives don’t understand the courts. If they don’t, then help them. I’ve had enough of people telling me we don’t want to politicize the judiciary any more than it is. If the last dozen 5-4 decisions from this Supreme Court told us anything, it is that the Court is already highly political. Give up the “we go high” nonsense and get in the game.
It’s almost already too late.
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Motorin’
Motorin’
Flint Foto Factory posted a photo:
After the annual LGBTQ Pride Parade.
Uptown, Chicago, Illinois.
Sunday, June 28, 2015.
Massachusetts House Passes Bill to Protect LGBTQ Youth from the Practice of “Conversion Therapy”
Massachusetts House Passes Bill to Protect LGBTQ Youth from the Practice of “Conversion Therapy”
Today, HRC hailed a vote of 137 to 14 by the Massachusetts House of Representatives passing bipartisan legislation to protect LGBTQ youth from the dangerous and discredited practice of “conversion therapy.” The measure now heads to the Massachusetts Senate for consideration.
“No child should be subjected to this abusive practice that has been condemned by every major medical and mental health organization,” said HRC National Field Director Marty Rouse. “Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle agree on these critically important protections for Massachusetts’ LGBTQ youth. We urge the Massachusetts Senate to swiftly pass this bipartisan legislation and send it to the governor.”
There is no credible evidence that conversion therapy can change a person’s sexual orientation or gender identity or expression. To the contrary, research has clearly shown that these practices pose devastating health risks for LGBTQ young people such as depression, decreased self-esteem, substance abuse, homelessness, and even suicidal behavior. The harmful practice is condemned by every major medical and mental health organization, including the American Psychiatric Association, American Psychological Association, and American Medical Association.
Connecticut, California, Nevada, New Jersey, the District of Columbia, Oregon, Illinois, Vermont, New York, New Mexico, Rhode Island, Washington, Maryland, Hawaii, and New Hampshire all now have laws or regulations protecting youth from this abusive practice. Similar legislation is currently awaiting gubernatorial action in the states of Delaware and Maine. A growing number of municipalities have also enacted similar protections, including cities and counties in Ohio, Pennsylvania, Washington, Florida, New York, Arizona, and Wisconsin.
According to a recent report by the Williams Institute at UCLA School of Law, an estimated 20,000 LGBTQ minors in states without protections will be subjected to conversion therapy by a licensed healthcare professional if state lawmakers fail to act.
HRC has partnered with the National Center for Lesbian Rights (NCLR) and state equality groups across the nation to pass state legislation ending conversion therapy. In Massachusetts, HRC is working with MassEquality, local advocates, and the Trevor Project to ensure that this bill becomes law. More information on the lies and dangers of efforts to change sexual orientation or gender identity can be found here.
lgbt 2018
Ty Herndon Receives HRC Visibility Award
Ty Herndon Receives HRC Visibility Award
99 Photos of Pride Beyond Borders In Seattle
99 Photos of Pride Beyond Borders In Seattle
www.advocate.com/pride/2018/6/27/99-photos-pride-beyond-borders-seattle
Lakeith Stanfield says it wasn’t actually him in that homophobic video, but rather “a character”
Lakeith Stanfield says it wasn’t actually him in that homophobic video, but rather “a character”
“I assume characters that have different viewpoints and different views on life and just different perspectives,” the actor explains.
Timothee Chalamet, Miss Vanjie, Putin Summit, Demi Lovato, Chaka Khan, Spoiler Alerts, Anton Krasovsky: HOT LINKS
Timothee Chalamet, Miss Vanjie, Putin Summit, Demi Lovato, Chaka Khan, Spoiler Alerts, Anton Krasovsky: HOT LINKS
COLLUSION. Date set for Trump-Putin summit: “The Kremlin and the White House are to formally announce the date and location on Thursday. Ushakov says the summit will take place in a third country.”
TRUMP’S EXPANDING AUTHORITARIANISM. Two ominous signs.
WHY. Trump voter Not-A-Countess Luann de Lesseps rides in SF Pride Parade.
TRUMP STAFF HIRE. A former State TV executive: “Bill Shine, a former Fox News executive who was close to Roger E. Ailes, the network’s ousted chairman, is expected to be offered the job of White House communications director, according to two people familiar with the decision.”
KYNAN DUTTON. Neo-Nazi arrested at Pride event in Tennessee: ‘A neo-Nazi who was arrested years ago for parading with a rifle through the streets of a tiny North Dakota town, threatening residents alongside white supremacist Craig Cobb, was arrested over the weekend at a Pride event in Tennessee and charged with assault. Kynan Dutton was part of an odd mix of extremists protesting Pridefest in Knoxville, Tennessee, that included members of the neo-Confederate League of the South, a smattering of other white nationalists, as well as handful of Black Hebrew Israelites. Many wore camouflage clothing and bandannas to hide their faces, but their affiliations were nevertheless on public display. ‘
PASSAGES. Michael and Janet’s father Joe Jackson dies of pancreatic cancer at 89: ‘Grandsons Randy Jackson Jr. and Taj Jackson confirmed the news in tweets Wednesday afternoon, writing, “RIP to the king that made everything possible! I love you grandpa” and “Joe was loved by the entire family and our hearts are in pain. Let us grieve.”
SPOILER ALERT. Facebook testing new feature that could keep social media spoiler-free.
MILO YIANNOPOULOS. Advocating for lethal violence against reporters.
I asked Milo Yiannopoulos to comment for a story. His response?
“I can’t wait for the vigilante squads to start gunning journalists down on sight.”t.co/Ec2d2Kz5zg
— Davis Richardson (@DavisOliverR) June 26, 2018
ANTON KRASOVSKY. The gay man running for mayor of Moscow: “Last month, speaking on independent radio station Echo of Moscow, Krasovsky revealed the news: in September he would run for mayoral election in Moscow, if the authorities allow him to. (He is registered as a candidate but to actually take part in the election he will have to collect signatures of 110 municipal deputies before July 3.)”
DEMI LOVATO. A fundraiser for GLAAD.
TUNISIA. President Beji Caid Essebsi wants to decriminalize homosexuality. “Among the 230 pages of proposals include scrapping inheritance laws that see women receive only half of what men get. The commission’s preference is to introduce equality between male and female relatives, but leave room for individuals to divide up what they leave behind as they see fit. The proposals also include decriminalising homosexuality and banning anal tests conducted on men suspected of being gay.”
WORCESTER, MASSACHUSETTS. A safe haven for gay immigrants. “From halfway around the world, guided only by an address in a city he had never heard of, Kaweesi made his way to this simple wooden church to find safe haven. In his homeland, Kaweesi had feared being tortured and killed simply because he was gay.”
AUTOTUNE OF THE DAY. I’m Vanjie.
MUSIC VIDEO OF THE DAY. Chaka Khan “Like Sugar”.
TRAILER OF THE DAY. Timothee Chalamet and Steve Carell in “Beautiful Boy”.
HUMP DAY HOTTIE. Alco Zeal.
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HRC’s Parents for Trans Equality Council and Family Members Celebrate Pride
HRC’s Parents for Trans Equality Council and Family Members Celebrate Pride
This LGBTQ Pride Month, HRC asked members of our Parents for Transgender Equality Council to share why they are proud to celebrate their young, transgender family members.
Pride events are held worldwide in cities large and small, and for some people, it is the only occasion during which they can be out and proud in their community. Pride is typically held in June to commemorate the Stonewall Riots in New York City, which marked the beginning of the modern LGBTQ rights movement in the U.S.
Below are some of our parents’ stories:
“We are proud of our son Max for having the courage to live as his authentic self in a world that still has too many bullies. He has opened our eyes to the power of unconditional love and given us hope for a brighter future.”
— Amber and Adam Briggle, parents of a transgender son
“Dear World: As proud grandparents of a remarkable, gifted transgender child, our acceptance and, better yet, advocacy is expected… As such our greatest challenge is not only to make our complex society aware of the problems we face, but to point them in a direction away from the ugliness of discrimination and hate towards education in understanding the needs of those few who are so different from the fortunate many who are not.”
— Jack and Jacky, proud grandparents of Jazz Jennings
“Jacq is like any other kid. He is kind, sweet and one of my best friends. When he first went public about his transition to his classmates in kindergarten, he was shy when they asked questions, so they went to me for answers. I had no problem with it, since I had done everything in my power as a 7-year-old to protect my brother. I wasn’t about to let my brother get hurt just because of a misunderstanding about what being transgender is, so I tried to make my answers as clear as possible. I’ll always be proud of him.”
— Sydney Tchoryk, age 12, sister of a transgender brother
Photo: Samantha Brandt Photography
“We are a sorted bunch, each of us with a different take on the world. Transgender, cisgender, genderqueer, straight – these are just some of our nuances. None of us comes to the table with the exact same set of experiences, opinions, beliefs or truths. But I actually think that’s a good thing. I’d rather be a house of many minds—united by our differences and strengthened by our love. Ultimately, it is our fierce, invisible bonds that move us forward: Toward truth. Toward freedom. And always, toward love.”
— Jodie Patterson, proud mother of a transgender child
“Parenting is inherently difficult, but loving and accepting our children for all that they are brings us ultimate happiness. I am proud of my family for embracing our truths and sticking together through the highs and lows that life brings. We are in this together and we are stronger for it. Love does win.”
— Sarah Watson, mother of a transgender child
“My trans son has taught me to look at the world in a new, less rigid way. And he has taught me a lesson that I thought I had already learned: the freedom to be who you are and express yourself as you know yourself to be at your core is an essential part to living life fully and compassionately.”
— Chris Williams, father of a transgender son