Boycott of Equinox, SoulCycle Gyms Urged After News That Billionaire Owner is Hosting Trump Fundraiser

Boycott of Equinox, SoulCycle Gyms Urged After News That Billionaire Owner is Hosting Trump Fundraiser

Stephen Ross / YouTube

Calls to ‘boycott Equinox’ rang out across social media after news broke that Stephen Ross, the owner of luxury fitness chains Equinox gym, SoulCycle, Blink Fitness and PURE Yoga, is hosting a $250,000 Trump fundraiser in the Hamptons on Friday.

The Washington Post reports: “Money raised at these fundraisers will go toward Trump Victory, a fundraising committee for both the Trump 2020 campaign and the Republican National Committee.”

News of the event has inspired calls to boycott Ross’s brands.

I’ve started this t.co/aykmdJ0O2m petition to voice our outrage, as members, at this betrayal by @Equinox. Please sign it.

Equinox: Demand EQUINOX end its support of DONALD TRUMP – Sign the Petition! t.co/a09GO0FPNU via @Change

— Wilson Cruz (@wcruz73) August 7, 2019

Yikes, @soulcycle too!

— Brian Sims (@BrianSimsPA) August 7, 2019

I literally just cancelled my equinox membership because of this.

— HandsomeBLuckypants (@BLuckypants) August 7, 2019

#boycottequinox – Don’t fund hate. Plus @realDonaldTrump has been boycotting the gym for years, why support him? #WhiteSupremacistInChief

— Cornelius Suttree (@suttree7) August 7, 2019

The post Boycott of Equinox, SoulCycle Gyms Urged After News That Billionaire Owner is Hosting Trump Fundraiser appeared first on Towleroad Gay News.


Boycott of Equinox, SoulCycle Gyms Urged After News That Billionaire Owner is Hosting Trump Fundraiser

This Disney star may have just saved some lives by coming out as bi

This Disney star may have just saved some lives by coming out as bi

Cyrus, Andi Mack, Joshua Rush, bisexual, coming out
(image via The Disney Channel)

Joshua Rush — the 17-year-old actor who played Cyrus Goodman, the first Disney character ever to say the words “I’m gay” — recently came out as bisexual.

You may recall that in October 2017 Rush participated in the Disney Channel’s first-ever coming-out scene when his character in the pre-teen drama series Andi Mack revealed his crush on a boy. Although the show subsequently left Goodman’s sexuality mostly unexplored, in February 2019 his character actually uttered the words “I’m gay” in another groundbreaking first for the channel.

But Rush himself had never publicly declared his own same-sex attraction … until just yesterday.

In a Twitter thread, he wrote:

first! i win! it’s me. i’m bi. And now that I’ve said that, I have a few things to rant about. There are more important things to talk about than me liking a whole bunch of genders, but I do want to share a few things with you guys.

I saw so many of you watch Cyrus come out and said “Hey! I can be me!”

How ironic, isn’t it, that me, playing that character, never had mustered up that courage?

Instead of feeling the courage to tell you today that I am an out and proud bisexual man because of the character I played for four years, I feel that courage thinking of all of you, who felt emboldened by Cyrus to come out.

I had a close friend of mine come out to me in fifth grade. FIFTH GRADE! That was well before I had any clue of my own identity and orientation. I suffered with some level of my own internalized homophobia even while playing the first openly gay character on Disney Channel.

I stuffed the existential crisis of talking about my sexual orientation into a box in my mind for years. Today, I release it into the world.

Being bi isn’t all of my identity, nor is it the most important part of my identity. Bi erasure and issues like it are important, but trans women of color still have a life expectancy of THIRTY FIVE YEARS and that is absolutely unacceptable …

Thank you to you for giving me the courage to know who I am and tell you this today. Happy 20biteen!

He then encouraged his followers to donate to The Trevor Project and GLAAD and to read GLAAD’s page on bisexuality.

Rush’s coming out and education on bi issues are great for other bi people, for visibility’s sake and to help reduce biphobia.

In a 2018 profile of Dr. Brian Dodge, a lead researcher on bisexuality and the health disparities they face, Dodge said “the vast majority” of biphobia he faces comes from gay and lesbian people.

A 2013 Pew survey found that bisexual people come out at rates three times less often than gay men, have four times fewer LGBTQ-identified friends than gay men and report higher levels of societal mistrust than gay men. This is because of “monosexism” — prejudice against those who are attracted to more than one gender —and negative stereotypes that cast bi people as confused, deceitful, ultra-slutty or trying to benefit from “straight/passing privilege.”

As a result, research suggests that bi people stay closeted because of the discrimination they face from other queer people and face more health disparities and mental illness than gay people.

By education people on bi issues, Rush is doing his part to help reduce anti-bi stigma while possibly saving a few queer youngsters’ lives in the process.

www.queerty.com/disney-star-may-just-saved-lives-coming-bi-20190807?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+queerty2+%28Queerty%29

Tom Brady Was Upset His Son Didn’t Want to Do ‘Boy Things’ Like Play Sports

Tom Brady Was Upset His Son Didn’t Want to Do ‘Boy Things’ Like Play Sports

New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady told Men’s Health that he was upset when one of his sons decided that he didn’t want to play sports like his dad. And now he’s learned his lesson.

Said Brady of his two sons: “Jack loves sports. He wants to try hard, and he never wants to disappoint his dad. That was me. I’d wake up early on weekends to do stuff with my dad. That’s why I didn’t party a lot. If Dad wanted to golf, I wanted to be there with him. And if I ever missed those things, it would crush me. When Benny came along, I thought he would be just like Jack. So I was like, ‘C’mon, let’s do this.’ And he was like, ‘Nope.’ And I was like, ‘What? No, do this!’ And Gisele kept saying to me, ‘Would you effing understand that your son is different?’ It was hard for me. I was like, ‘What do you mean? He’s a boy; he should just do all these things that I do.’ The reality is that Benny just likes different things. And it’s great because now I just have to go do what he wants to do. When we do that, we have the best time. He’s like, ‘OMG, Dad, you’re so funny.’ He loves joking, and I joke back.”

The post Tom Brady Was Upset His Son Didn’t Want to Do ‘Boy Things’ Like Play Sports appeared first on Towleroad Gay News.


Tom Brady Was Upset His Son Didn’t Want to Do ‘Boy Things’ Like Play Sports

#AM_Equality Tipsheet: August 7, 2019

#AM_Equality Tipsheet: August 7, 2019

TODAY — HRC WELCOMES NEW PRESIDENT ALPHONSO DAVID: David, a civil rights lawyer and longtime LGBTQ advocate, is the first civil rights lawyer and the first person of color to serve as HRC president in the organization’s nearly 40-year history. He previously made history as the first openly gay counsel to the governor of New York and the state’s first deputy secretary and counsel for civil rights. This fierce, compassionate and strategic leader takes HRC’s helm at a critical time, when LGBTQ people, women, people of color, immigrants and refugees and others are being confronted with daily attacks on our most basic rights. Read more about David, whose appointment was announced in late June, in the Associated Press, Advocate, Washington Blade and HRC.

  • AN ELOQUENT FAREWELL FROM OUTGOING PRESIDENT CHAD GRIFFIN:

Leading @HRC the past seven years has been the honor of my life. Some final thoughts of gratitude as I wrap up my last day in the office. pic.twitter.com/xjOSvMcD4t

— Chad Griffin (@ChadHGriffin) August 6, 2019

HRC MARKS ANNIVERSARY OF THE VOTING RIGHTS ACT, RENEWS CALL FOR CONGRESS TO PASS H.R. 4: “The right to vote is a central principle and a bedrock of our democracy,” said HRC Government Affairs Director David Stacy (@david_stacy). “Full equality will not be achieved until we halt the systematic efforts to restrict access to the ballot box, disenfranchise voters and undermine our democracy.” More from HRC

On #VRA54, @HRC renews its call to Congress to #RestoreTheVote and pass the Voting Rights Advancement Act — critically important civil rights legislation that would ensure fair access to the ballot for all Americans is protected. #HR4 t.co/GeSK9f1yKa

— Human Rights Campaign (@HRC) August 6, 2019

CIVIL RIGHTS ORGANIZATIONS,  ADVOCATES DEMAND WHITE HOUSE AND U.S. SENATE TAKE ACTION AGAINST GUN VIOLENCE: More from Ramsey Touchberry (@ramsberry1) in Newsweek.

NO SURPRISE HERE — PENCE MEETS WITH HATE GROUP AND SAYS “THERE IS NO PLACE IN AMERICA” FOR HATE: His confab with the Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF), which has called for the criminalization of same-sex relationships, marked the third time in five days Pence has appeared with anti-LGBTQ extremists. More from ShareBlue and the New Civil Rights Movement.

WHAT WE’RE READING WEDNESDAY — THERE IS NO ROOM FOR DISCRIMINATION IN HEALTH CARE: “The truth is, no one has to accept being turned away by a health care provider or insurer because of their sexual orientation or gender identity,” writes Julianna S. Gonen (@JulieGonen) of the National Center for Lesbian Rights. More from Advocate

  • Connecticut insurance commissioner opposes Trump-Pence rollbacks on protections for transgender people. More from Hartford Courant.

HOW BLACK PRESS PAVED THE ROAD FOR LGBTQ EQUALITY: “[The Chicago Defender] provided extensive coverage of Black queer life in Chicago, and in the 1970s…it reported sympathetically on the city’s nascent movement for LGBTQ equality,” writes Timothy Stewart-Winter (@timothysw), an associate professor at Rutgers University-Newark. The Chicago Defender, which was founded in 1905 to serve the city’s Black community, has moved to an online format, ceasing print publication entirely. More from The Washington Post.

NO HATE IN THE STACKS — “TO ME, LIBRARIES ARE FOR ALL OF US”:  “They are moldable space where you take what you want and you can leave what you don’t, where you are challenged and you are comforted, but above all, they are a place where you are welcomed,” writes the Des Moines Register’s Iowa columnist Courtney Crowder (@courtneycare) about Paul Robert Dorr, who was fined for burning LGBTQ-themed books he’d checked out from the Orange City Library. More from Des Moines Register.

WE CANNOT NORMALIZE HATE — THE LATINX COMMUNITY STANDS UNITED: “The violence in El Paso is not about immigration policy. It is about promoting the hate, fear and division sown by President Trump,” writes Janet Murguía (@JMurguia_Unidos), president of the UnidosUS, in the NYT oped. “Violence is a terrifying but not unexpected outcome when our nation’s leader tries to normalize hate.” More from The New York Times.

GLOBAL EQUALITY NEWS

���� ���� HRC’S JAY GILLIAM HIGHLIGHTS LGBTQ ISSUES IN THE U.S. AND CHINA: In an interview with the National Committee on U.S. – China Relations (@NCUSCR), Gilliam explains the differences between HRC and Zhitong Guangzhou LGBT Center’s programming, including HRC Global Fellow Program, how health care and LGBTQ issues intersect and social attitudes toward the LGBTQ community in both countries. Watch more on YouTube.

WORK SHOULD BE A SAFE PLACE FOR ALL LGBTQ PEOPLE — COMING OUT AS TRANS AT WORK IN THE UK: “[T]ransitioning at work has given me a voice where I never had a voice before,” says trans rights advocate Aoife Martin (@aoifemrtn). More from HuffPost.

READING RAINBOW – Bookmark now to read on your lunch break!

Medium features a powerful profile of  HRC Foundation Board Co-Chair, author and activist Jodie Paterson (@jodie_GeorgiaNY); NewNowNext shares that Andi Mack actor Joshua Rush (@JoshuaRush) came out as bisexual.

Thank you for sharing your truth, @JoshuaRush, no doubt inspiring other bisexual people along their journeys to living authentically.

This #thread is a powerful reminder of the importance of telling LGBTQ stories and sharing our experiences. ������ t.co/6i9wml9n4X

— Human Rights Campaign (@HRC) August 6, 2019

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

www.hrc.org/blog/am-equality-tipsheet-august-7-2019?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

Beto O’Rourke Blasts Trump ‘Racism’ After Tweet Calling Him ‘Phony Hispanic’

Beto O’Rourke Blasts Trump ‘Racism’ After Tweet Calling Him ‘Phony Hispanic’

Donald Trump attacked 2020 Democratic presidential candidate Beto O’Rourke overnight ahead of a visit to San Antonio following the mass shooting there.

Tweeted Trump: ‘Beto (phony name to indicate Hispanic heritage) O’Rourke, who is embarrassed by my last visit to the Great State of Texas, where I trounced him, and is now even more embarrassed by polling at 1% in the Democrat Primary, should respect the victims & law enforcement – & be quiet!’

O’Rourke tweeted back: “22 people in my hometown are dead after an act of terror inspired by your racism. El Paso will not be quiet and neither will I.”

22 people in my hometown are dead after an act of terror inspired by your racism. El Paso will not be quiet and neither will I. t.co/dakFPKj0vJ

— Beto O’Rourke (@BetoORourke) August 7, 2019

Protests of Trump’s visit are planned and local lawmakers say they don’t want him there.

Said state Rep. Lina Ortega to CNN (watch below): “I think that this community is not ready to have him return. He has said many hateful things about immigrants. He doesn’t understand El Paso. We consider Ciudad Juarez as our sister city. We have many people that live in El Paso, have family that live across the border. He has done — his actions that he has taken with regard to migrants have hurt our community. And this is not the right time for him to come. We have a community that is in mourning,” she added. “This was a horrific, unbelievable massacre that occurred here. People do not need him at this time to come and visit. And if he is coming, he better be sincere in terms of what he has been saying. And he sometimes tweets things, and a couple of days later he turns around and says something different.”

“This is not the right time. … We have a community that is in mourning. This was a horrific, unbelievable massacre that occurred here. People do not need him at this time.” -Democratic state Rep. Lina Ortega on President Trump’s pending visit to El Paso t.co/ocUtQF2e2M pic.twitter.com/yXbmQLUnLX

— CNN (@CNN) August 7, 2019

The post Beto O’Rourke Blasts Trump ‘Racism’ After Tweet Calling Him ‘Phony Hispanic’ appeared first on Towleroad Gay News.


Beto O’Rourke Blasts Trump ‘Racism’ After Tweet Calling Him ‘Phony Hispanic’

We Will Win: Get to Know New HRC President Alphonso David

We Will Win: Get to Know New HRC President Alphonso David

This article first appeared in Equality magazine. Read the most recent issue at hrc.org/magazine.

Alphonso David has been fighting for LGBTQ equality for his entire professional career — his commitment to civil rights born out of his personal experiences as an immigrant, a refugee and a Black gay man

When he takes the helm of the Human Rights Campaign in August, David will become the first civil rights lawyer and the first person of color to serve as HRC president in our organization’s nearly 40-year history.

It’s not the first time he’s made history — most recently, as the head of New York’s Office of Civil Rights, Alphonso helped lead the fight to win marriage equality in the Empire State three years before the Supreme Court guaranteed that right to every American. 

Under his watch, New York banned the abusive practice of so-called “conversion therapy” in minors, expanded Medicaid coverage to cover transition-related care, made it easier to amend gender markers on birth certificates, and enacted policies and regulations to support people living with HIV and drive new diagnoses to an all-time low statewide. 

HRC President Alphonso David at World Pride in New York  

CIVIL RIGHTS IN NEW YORK

He has also helped lead efforts to expand access to reproductive healthcare, restore voting rights to New Yorkers, advance workplace protections for disadvantaged communities, and require access to free translation services in essential state services. Prior to his work for New York State, David served as a staff attorney at Lambda Legal Defense and Education Fund.

David has fought tirelessly to make New York a fairer, freer place for everyone. Now, he will lead the nation’s largest LGBTQ civil rights organization as our new president.

“Alphonso has devoted his career to expanding the civil rights of LGBTQ people across New York State and the nation,” said HRC Board Foundation Board Chair Deb Taft. “At a time when LGBTQ people, women, people of color, immigrants and refugees, and so many others are being confronted with daily attacks on our most basic rights, Alphonso is the fierce, compassionate, and strategic leader HRC and our broader movement for equality needs.”

David has known from a very young age about the struggle for freedom and equality. He was born in the U.S. but grew up in Liberia, where his uncle and father were political leaders. 

MAKING HISTORY AND LEADING OUR MOVEMENT FORWARD

In 1980, his uncle was assassinated and his father was incarcerated during a violent military coup. At the age of 14, his family escaped Liberia for a new life in Baltimore. In Baltimore, he was acutely aware about what it meant to be different. He was often the target of ridicule.

“I soon learned what it meant to be different: an immigrant, an African and a Black person in the United States,” said David.

Eventually, he came to understand that he wasn’t just a Black man, an immigrant and a child of refugees. He was also gay.

“I had to, at a very young age, understand the purpose of life, the value of democracy, and really think about, ‘Why am I here? What am I going to do?’” said David. 

He became a civil rights lawyer and built a career on fighting for equality. Despite monumental gains for LGBTQ equality in New York and across the country, we now find ourselves at a perilous time in our nation’s history.

Time and again, the Trump-Pence administration has attempted to undermine the rights of the LGBTQ community. They have banned brave transgender troops from serving in the U.S. military. They have nominated anti-LGBTQ extremists to judicial positions. They have remained silent on anti-LGBTQ violence abroad. They have targeted transgender and gender non-conforming people’s access to critical healthcare. And they are attacking children and parents in the child welfare system.

Meanwhile, anti-equality legislators at the state level are trying to ram through legislation that targets our community. There is an epidemic of violence that targets the transgender community, especially Black transgender women

Alphonso David at HRC HQ

TAKING ON TRUMP-PENCE

Since Donald Trump and Mike Pence took office, LGBTQ people have been under attack by an administration hellbent on ripping away our progress. David is ready to lead HRC as we take on Trump-Pence — and all foes of equality — together.

“I see a tremendous opportunity to overcome these attacks,” said David. “I believe in the single mother trying to access affordable healthcare for her family. I believe in the Black trans woman who is preparing for that big interview. I believe in the teenager wondering if others will see them as they see themselves when they look in that mirror. I believe in the construction worker who is building the courage to come out to his peers. And I believe in the young, queer immigrant who came to this country so that they could live authentically.

“I believe that together, all of us, we can harness the strength that’s inherent in our differences, to stand together in the face of fear and division,” said David.

Chad Griffin, HRC’s outgoing president, knows better than anyone what it takes to lead the organization and the challenges that David will face from day one in the position.

“Alphonso David is a brilliant strategist, leader and civil rights lawyer, a fierce and compassionate advocate for LGBTQ equality — and he’s someone I’ve truly admired for years,” said Griffin. 

Alphonso David has served in New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s administration since 2011. Starting in August, he takes the helm at the Human Rights Campaign. 

Members of Congress, leaders of social justice organizations, celebrities and others lauded the Human Rights Campaign board’s selection and expressed excitement about next steps for David, HRC and the LGBTQ movement.

Vanita Gupta, the president and CEO of the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, pointed to David’s lengthy civil rights advocacy experience when she congratulated him.

Congrats, #AlphonsoDavid!

In this crucial moment for our country & the fight for equality, Alphonso brings a tenacious determination & long track record of advancing civil rights. I look forward to working with him to continue defending our democracy & advancing equality. ✊��✊��✊�� t.co/KeHZjAaRgf

— Vanita Gupta (@vanitaguptaCR) June 25, 2019

It won’t be long before David makes his first trip to Capitol Hill as HRC president to meet with members of Congress to talk about HRC’s legislative priorities such as the Equality Act, which would provide consistent and explicit non-discrimination protections for LGBTQ people across key areas of life, including employment, housing, credit, education, public spaces and services federally funded programs, and jury service. 

Big congrats to #AlphonsoDavid! A great choice to spearhead @HRC at a critical time. Look forward to partnering together in the months and years ahead. t.co/pIKf9lL3Oa

— Rep. Joe Kennedy III (@RepJoeKennedy) June 26, 2019

Of course, HRC’s mission will always be to fight for full LGBTQ equality and nothing less.

“If we want to win full equality, that’s going to require us to come together, to dig deep, to be resilient, to embrace our differences, to tenaciously defend the most vulnerable among us, to fight with every ounce of determination we have,” said David. “I promise you this, I will fight for each and every one of us. All I ask is that you join me, that you join the Human Rights Campaign in our fight for true equality. In unity, we will fight back and we will win.” 

David shares how his life story and career as a civil rights attorney prepared him to lead HRC forward in a new video, Difference Is Our Strength. Watch it now at hrc.im/meetalphonsodavid

www.hrc.org/blog/we-will-win-get-to-know-new-hrc-president-alphonso-david?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed