Trans Felons Want Lifetime Ban on Name Change Removed
Eight transgender plaintiffs in Illinois want the state to end punitive restrictions on name changes.
www.advocate.com/news/2019/11/26/trans-felons-want-lifetime-ban-name-change-removed
Trans Felons Want Lifetime Ban on Name Change Removed
Eight transgender plaintiffs in Illinois want the state to end punitive restrictions on name changes.
www.advocate.com/news/2019/11/26/trans-felons-want-lifetime-ban-name-change-removed
Roy Moore calls for a return to ‘moral’ times, before same-sex marriage
Ultra-conservative Alabama judge Roy Moore treated a Republican audience to a particularly right-wing diatribe last week.
Moore, a former Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Alabama, who wishes to stand for election to the Senate in 2020, addressed the Huntsville Republican Men’s Breakfast group, reports Alabama Political Reporter.
“We have got to go back to what we did back in the 60s and 70s back to a moral basis … Abortion was not legal when I went to Vietnam. It was passed later. It was ok’d later. We had abortion laws in our country and our state.
“We did not have same-sex marriage. We did not have transgender rights. Sodomy was illegal. These things were just not around when my classmates and I went to West Point and Vietnam.”
Related: Roy Moore is obsessed with Doug Jones’ hot gay son
Moore stood for the election to the Senate in 2017 but lost to Democrat Doug Jones. His campaign was mired by allegations of sexual misconduct when he was younger.
Several women made allegations against Moore, the youngest of whom says she was 14 at the time of the alleged incident in 1979. He has always denied any wrongdoing.
“Our education system, that is something that really gets me,” Moore continued in his speech. “Because back when I was in school in 1965, we had prayer in school. We had prayer before our football games. The Ten Commandments could be displayed in school up until 1980.
“We said the Pledge of Allegiance. We had morning devotionals. I know most of you in here over the age of 60 probably remember days like that. We are continually under attack from atheists and secular humanists who want to take those laws from us.”
Related: Evangelicals say they are more likely to vote for Roy Moore after child molestation allegations
“We have drag queens teaching kindergarten children in this state and this community … in Huntsville in Mobile they taught kids and they dress them up in drag.
“Where does this come from? Gender identity is being taught in California to young kids and parents have no choice but to let their kids be taught that.”
You can watch some of the comments on the video below.
In 2016, Moore lost his position on the Supreme Court of Alabama when he refused to abide by the Supreme Court’s decision on same-sex marriage, claiming it didn’t apply to Alabama.
In June of this year, Moore announced his intention to try and run again for the Senate in 2020 as a Republican candidate. The Republican Primary will take place on March, 3rd.
How to Tell if Your Digital Addiction is Ruining Your Life
The fear that digital distractions are ruining our lives and friendships is widespread.
To be sure, digital addiction is real. Consider the 2,600 times we touch our phones every day, our panic when we temporarily misplace a device, the experience of “phantom vibration syndrome” and how merely seeing a message alert can be as distracting as checking the message itself.
This can have real consequences. For example, other people do take it personally if you stop talking to them to answer a message. And taking a break from a task to look at your cell phone precludes deep thinking on whatever you were doing.
But this tells only part of the story. We need to also acknowledge that today’s technologies can make us more connected than ever before.
So how do we avoid the potential pitfalls while still reaping the benefits?
As a researcher in the area of technology and communications, I have spent nearly two decades looking at the ways in which interacting via screens is different from interacting in other ways, including face-to-face, on the phone and in writing.
My research group has produced study after study showing that people are more self-serving (that is, they lie more), more negative (for example, giving others lower feedback ratings) and less cooperative (more “looking out for No. 1” behavior) when they use digital means of communicating. And for children under five, there are serious concerns for brain development.
Our fears about the impact of increasing amounts of screen time on ourselves and our children involve three main areas: mental health, addiction and the level of engagement with what’s going on around us. In all three, the risks are generally overblown.
Much has been made of the potential links between depression and cell phone use – especially in teenagers – but recent evidence seems to indicate that that link is tenuous at best.
As for addiction, the field of psychology has now recognized video game addiction as a genuine and diagnosable problem. Stories from rehab centers for people whose lives have been consumed by this addiction suggest the phenomenon is real and the suffering can be quite genuine.
But this is rare compared with the numbers of people who play online games without serious consequences.
And in terms of engagement, despite growing amounts of time spent on screens, the vast majority of kids do still get educated, make friends and go on to lead productive lives.
As more and more of our interactions move away from the traditional face-to-face and into the online realm, I believe we must recognize that in some areas, richness and engagement may also be on the rise.
Colleagues can work together from afar, friends can keep in touch without restraint and grandparents can directly touch base with their grandkids without needing to schedule a visit or go through the parents.
Language changes as we interact in shorter bursts, allowing us to connect in less formal ways. Humor changes as we are able to add visuals – pictures, emojis, GIFs, memes – to our words. Even those online video games can be a portal to increased social interactions for some.
Perhaps the best way to evaluate time spent with our phones is to ask two related questions.
First, what are you doing with the time you’re devoting to your phone, and is it consistent with your values and priorities?
If you feel that you and your kids are enjoying your screen time and not risking sleep, work or in-person interactions, you may not have much reason for concern. To help with this task, tools and apps that can track your screen time and let you know where your attention is being directed – or even limit where it can go – are becoming more prevalent.
Secondly, what are your blind spots about where and how phone use might be limiting the rest of your life?
Most of us realize we shouldn’t use phones right before bed – or, even worse, when driving or crossing streets – and we know we should keep an eye on our kids and teenagers to ensure that they are building good habits both inside and outside the digital realm. But we’re less clear on how our phones might be affecting our lives in other ways.
The latest research offers some lessons. For starters, we’re not as good as we think at multitasking: We generally give worse attention to both tasks when we try to do two things at once. Over time, people who do this constantly end up with greater error rates on tasks, perhaps linked to poorer working memories.
Even the mere presence of a phone can limit your engagement with work and your ability to build relationships with others.
All of this means that even though you may not need to worry about your phone use overall, there are still moments when you’d be wise to put your device out of sight and earshot. This will give you the best chance to think about complex tasks without interruption or to engage more fully with those around you.
Putting down our phones completely seems neither realistic nor desirable: Society has moved forward, phones in hand.
But choosing the moments where being phone-free is most valuable can help keep you on track.
[ You’re smart and curious about the world. So are The Conversation’s authors and editors. You can read us daily by subscribing to our newsletter. ]
Terri R. Kurtzberg, Associate Professor of Management and Global Business , Rutgers University Newark
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
The post How to Tell if Your Digital Addiction is Ruining Your Life appeared first on Towleroad Gay News.
HRC President Calls on Trump Jr. To Apologize for Vile HIV and AIDS Tweet
Today, HRC called on Donald Trump Jr., son of President Trump, to apologize for his vile weekend tweet stigmatizing people living with HIV.
“Trump Jr. just proved again what we already knew — that he, his father and the Trump-Pence administration don’t care about people living with HIV, are undermining competent care and have no understanding of people living with HIV,” said HRC President Alphonso David. “Trump Jr.’s absolutely disgusting and ignorant tweet only serves to perpetuate the stigma faced by people living with HIV, which HRC and LGBTQ advocates have fought so long to end. Trump Jr. must apologize. And Trump and Pence must put their money where their mouth is and actually sufficiently fund the domestic initiatives aimed at ending the epidemic they claim to be combatting.”
Donald Trump and Mike Pence share a disturbing record on HIV and AIDS. In 2017, the Trump-Pence White House proposed a federal budget that would have slashed $1.1 billion in funding for international HIV-prevention programs. This was slammed by experts, who claimed it would lead to political instability and entirely reverse the gains made against the disease in the past decade. The same budget proposal called for a repeal of Obamacare that included deep cuts to Medicaid and defunding Planned Parenthood for a year, despite the sobering reality that 40 percent of Americans with HIV depend on Medicaid to pay their medical bills.
Early last year, the Trump-Pence Administration’s Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) proposed a regulation that would blatantly allow healthcare providers a license to discriminate based on their own personal beliefs, even in cases of life-saving medical care, which would drastically impact patients living with HIV and AIDS.
During Pence’s time as governor of Indiana, he oversaw the worst outbreak of HIV and AIDS in the state’s history due to his refusal to lift a ban on needle exchange programs, only backing down after his approach drew universal outrage from public health experts, including the Centers for Disease Control (CDC). His actions have since been described as “the case study for how misguided health policies can endanger lives.”
Pence has spent his career aggressively demanding Planned Parenthood be defunded, even to the detriment of HIV and AIDS prevention, calling condoms “very, very poor protection against sexually-transmitted diseases” and stated that if Planned Parenthood wanted to provide HIV testing services, they should stop providing abortions.
Donald Trump has demonstrated his own ignorance on HIV on numerous occasions. Microsoft founder Bill Gates says he has had to explain to the President — twice — that there is a difference between HIV and HPV. In 1997, Trump bizarrely characterized his early sex life as his “own personal Vietnam” — a war he avoided through five deferments — and said his avoidance of contracting STDs made him feel like “a great and very brave soldier.” In the same interview, he joked that he could have forced Princess Diana to have an HIV test.
William Barr, the Trump-Pence Administration’s nominee for Attorney General, created an “HIV prison camp” in Guantanamo Bay in 1991, which reportedly held 310 asylum-seekers in dire conditions without adequate healthcare. Barr has also made personal statements promoting a draconian approach to the federal government’s role in responding to the HIV/AIDS epidemic, including the adoption of proven methods of prevention and access to treatment. Barr blamed AIDS and other sexually transmitted infections on “sexual licentiousness,” calling them “the costs associated with personal misconduct.” He disputed public health efforts to inform the American people about the transmission and prevention of HIV and AIDS, opposing public health interventions, such as the distribution of condoms, because “by removing the costs of [sexual] misconduct, the government serves to perpetuate it.”
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Euphoria’s Colman Domingo on Being a Contented Gay 50-Year-Old
The actor, director, and playwright still wants to turn heads, but his ambitions are much bigger than in his 30s.
www.advocate.com/people/2019/11/26/euphorias-colman-domingo-being-contented-gay-50-year-old
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