Several Injured in Mass Shooting at High School in Santa Clarita, California

Several Injured in Mass Shooting at High School in Santa Clarita, California

Several people have been injured in a mass shooting on the campus of Saugus High School in Santa Clarita, California. The situation is developing….

ABC 7 reports: “At least five people were shot Thursday morning on the campus of Saugus High School in Santa Clarita, prompting a massive response from sheriff’s deputies and paramedics, authorities said. A Los Angeles County Fire Department spokesperson confirmed firefighters responded to the shooting before 8 a.m. at the school at 21900 Centurion Way. The conditions of the victims, one of whom was struck in the stomach, were unknown. The gunman remained at large and a manhunt was underway. A detailed description of the male shooter was not available, sheriff’s officials said, adding that he was last seen wearing black clothing.”

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One Dead, Several Injured in Mass Shooting at High School in Santa Clarita, California

Policy for Equity and Equality: The Leadership of Kiara St. James

Policy for Equity and Equality: The Leadership of Kiara St. James

For Kiara St. James, “the first act of resilience is to take a breath and acknowledge that we have a right to exist.”

She is the co-founder and executive director of the New York Transgender Advocacy Group, an organization that advocates for more inclusive gender-based policies. A community organizer for more than 20 years, St. James has been instrumental in changing discriminatory shelter policies and in the passage of Gender Expression Non-Discrimination Act in New York.

After beginning her advocacy in the South, St. James came to New York City. But the city at the time was “not progressive,” she said, and the start of her time there was very hard. When she began transitioning, she lost her job, and as a trans woman, there were no real opportunities to find another.

St. James ultimately ended up living in shelters in New York. One day she seized an opportunity to join a bus to Washington, D.C. for an HIV-funding rally.

“On that bus, I met a lot of amazing people,” St. James said. “And I got this sense — wow, this is my community.”

St. James became an outreach worker and advocate, involved in housing policy, but she grew increasingly frustrated by work being done. “I’d be in these groups that would be geared toward Black trans women [but] led by others.” So St. James said, “enough is enough” and joined together with advocates to start NYTAG working in policy that is tailored to the communities it is supposed to serve.

“The beauty of policy is that it improves everyone’s quality of life,” St. James said. “When it’s done right, it means that everyone has a seat at the table. And it’s also about equity — meaning that those who need the most get the most.”

St. James has also seen how policy done wrong can fail communities.

“At any given meeting on the issues for the past 20 years, the data doesn’t really change,” she said. “It always shows Black and Brown bodies at the top of any disparity — suicide, homelessness, depression.”

She also recognizes that this work must address the urgent needs of the moment.

“Policy takes a long time but people have immediate needs,” St. James said. “We need policy to address equity and inequity as it now stands.”

St. James also wants to make sure we are not erasing the communities in most need of being uplifted.

“I’ve been in progressive spaces where people say ‘we’re all the same.’ We all have beautiful colors and identities. Why erase that? We need to recognize the nuances of our diverse community.” 

St. James’ advice to young people looking to get involved is that “you are the subject matter expert in your own life. That’s the reason you have a right to be at the table.”

“When I first got into advocacy, I started showing up, and little by little I learned the layout of the land,” she continued. “But it all starts when you show up.”

Ultimately, for St. James, it is imperative that we all call out injustice. “Zora Neale Hurston wrote, ‘If you are silent about your pain, they will kill you and say you enjoyed it.’ That’s why we all have a responsibility to speak up.”

www.hrc.org/blog/policy-for-equity-and-equality-the-leadership-of-kiara-st.-james?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed

A reminder that politician Brian Sims used to be quite a football jock

A reminder that politician Brian Sims used to be quite a football jock

Brian Sims in his senior year at university in 2000 (Photo: Brian Sims | Facebook)

Brian Sims has surprised – and delighted – many of his followers by re-sharing an old throwback photo.

The politician, 41, a Member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives for the 182nd district, first shared the photo a few years ago, but re-sharing it yesterday has prompted a huge response.

The photo has prompted thousands of reactions on Facebook and Instagram, and hundreds of… well, thirsty comments.

Related: Brian Sims banned from Facebook for sharing an anti-gay slur directed at him

Sims was born in Washington DC in 1978. The son of Army colonels, he moved from state to state before the family settled in Pennsylvania in 1990.

Whilst at Bloomsburg University he was co-captain of the Bloomsburg University team and was recognized as a scholar-athlete.

He came out to his teammates during the 2000 season, becoming the first openly gay college football captain in NCAA history.

He went on to get a law degree at Michigan State University School of Law. Sims became an attorney after university before entering politics full time.

He was elected to office in 2012. Since then, he has consistently spoken out in support of LGBTQ rights and earned great admiration as an out, gay Democratic politician – like the memorable time he welcomed Vice President Mike Pence to Philadelphia by showing him the finger.

And in case you’re wondering what he looks like now, here’s a recent photo.

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The Category Is: Canadian Tuxedo Realness

A post shared by Brian Sims (@briansimspa) on

www.queerty.com/reminder-politician-brian-sims-used-quite-football-jock-20191114?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+queerty2+%28Queerty%29

Kellyanne Conway Melts Down Over Trump-Hating Husband in Train Wreck Interview with Wolf Blitzer: WATCH

Kellyanne Conway Melts Down Over Trump-Hating Husband in Train Wreck Interview with Wolf Blitzer: WATCH

Kellyanne Conway sat down with CNN’s Wolf Blitzer on Thursday morning for a train wreck interview that included questions about her husband George Conway’s new gig with MSNBC and his denunciations of Donald Trump.

Wolf Blitzer to Kellyanne Conway: “I don’t want to talk about your marriage, I know there are issues there.” pic.twitter.com/ERvWX0L9eE

— Lis Power (@LisPower1) November 14, 2019

Kellyanne Conway melted down after Wolf Blitzer asked her to respond to something her husband said on MSNBC. #triggered pic.twitter.com/deESAcuHPB

— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) November 14, 2019

Conway was not pleased. More, via The Hill: “It’s the same stuff all the time. What you just quoted is said every day by other voices but you wanted to put it in my husband’s voice because you think somehow that that will help your ratings or that you’re really sticking it to Kellyanne Conway … Where is the shame, where is the introspection? … I think you embarrassed yourself and I’m embarrassed for you because this is CNN now? I looked up to you when I was in college and law school, I would turn on CNN to see what Wolf Blitzer had to say about war, famine, disruption abroad. I really respected you for all those years as someone that would give you the news and now it’s what somebody’s husband says.”

More of the interview below. We’ll post a full clip if it becomes available.

Here’s Kellyanne Conway on CNN casually admitting that Trump is violating the Constitution pic.twitter.com/dKUNSli6Df

— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) November 14, 2019

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Kellyanne Conway Melts Down Over Trump-Hating Husband in Train Wreck Interview with Wolf Blitzer: WATCH

100 Days In: Alphonso David is Building the Future of the Human Rights Campaign

100 Days In: Alphonso David is Building the Future of the Human Rights Campaign

Today, HRC celebrated the first 100 days of Alphonso David’s trailblazing and transformative tenure as the president of the Human Rights Campaign.

“Over the past 100 days, I have met with national leaders, supporters, advocates and volunteers — many of whom are living on the frontlines of our community’s struggle for equality,” said HRC President Alphonso David. “They have shared with me how meaningful and impactful the work of the Human Rights Campaign has been, and they have also challenged us to do better, to learn faster and to lean in on the issues that matter most to those who need us the most.

“One hundred days in, I am proud of what we have already accomplished together,” David continued. “We have launched new initiatives that will empower and support our community’s most marginalized members, protect foundational rights and institutions of our democracy, deepen our commitment to ensuring racial justice in all that we do, and expand our national footprint. And this is only the beginning. For 40 years, the Human Rights Campaign has been working to build a society in which every person can thrive — no matter who they are or whom they love. Now, as we turn toward 2020 and the most important election of our lifetimes, I am more committed and hopeful than ever because of the stronger organization, movement and nation that we are building together.” 

In his first official act as president of the Human Rights Campaign, Alphonso David embarked on a national tour of seven key cities to meet with and rally HRC members, advocates, voters and pro-equality candidates ahead of the 2019 and 2020 elections. 

This tour, as well as ongoing conversations with community leaders, members and partners, led the launch of several events and initiatives to advance equity and equality within and outside the LGBTQ movement, including:

  • Launching the Power of our Pride Town Hall with our partners at CNN– the first time in history that a major cable news network aired a presidential event devoted to LGBTQ issues.  
  • Partnering with Stacey Abrams’ Fair Fight to help combat voter suppression in the critically important upcoming 2020 election. This new partnership will bring together the organizations’ expertise in voter protection and voter mobilization to ensure fair and open elections in 2020 and beyond.
  • Deepening and expanding HRC’s work dedicated to seeking justice for transgender people with new initiatives that address their urgent needs, specifically in communities deeply affected by racism, sexism and transphobia. This major effort will be rooted in collaborative, community-based work focused on economic empowerment; capacity-building programs; targeted task forces in many of the communities hardest hit by the epidemic of anti-trans violence; and expanded public education campaigns.
  • Expanding HRC’s legal efforts by joining with seven of the nation’s top law firms to bring strategic impact litigation challenging anti-LGBTQ legislative and policy actions domestically and internationally, including the relentless attacks on LGBTQ equality by the Trump-Pence administration.
  • Recommitting the organization to deepening its racial justice work and releasing a statement of principles on racial equity and inclusion.
  • Expanding HRC’s national footprint and engagement by opening offices in New York and Los Angeles.

During the first 100 days of his tenure as the president of the Human Rights Campaign, Alphonso David has also:

In the next few months, David will be working with HRC staff, members, supporters and volunteers to develop these new initiatives and others; to strengthen the organization’s existing work; and to kick our electoral efforts into high gear in advance of the most important election of our lifetimes. 

In 2018, HRC mobilized 57 million Equality Voters in targeted states and districts nationwide to help elect pro-equality leaders at every level of the ballot. In 2017, HRC identified six priority states for their importance in both 2018 and 2020: Arizona, Michigan, Nevada, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.  In those states, pro-equality candidates won 5/5 Senate seats, 4/6 Governor’s mansions and broke anti-equality trifectas or supermajorities in 4/6 states. Now, in addition to electing pro-equality candidates nationwide, HRC will build upon the tremendous successes in these states and across the country to defeat Donald Trump and Mike Pence while electing a pro-equality president in 2020.

www.hrc.org/blog/100-days-in-alphonso-david-is-building-the-future-of-hrc?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed